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200110_ALI_Dartmouth.indd2019.07.15_ALI_Ivy_Ad_Dartmouth.indd 1 1 11/19/1911/15/19 10:2711:48 AM “YOU MUST TAKE RISKS TO EFFECT REAL CHANGE.”

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20-050 VP ADV DAM Campaign Ad May/June Bonnie Henderson_v1.indd 1 3/13/20 5:24 PM BIG PICTURE

Waiting Game The N.H. National Guard arranges approximately 100 cots in West Gym on April 10. The site was one of 14 prepared by the state to treat Covid-19 patients if hospitals become overcrowded. “We plan for the worst and then just pray we don’t need it,” said Hanover Town Manager Julia Griffin. As of press time, the gym had seen no patients. Photograph by Rob Strong ’04 CHECK OUT DIGITAL DAM ALUMNI MAGAZINE Editorially Independent Since 1905 YOU KNOW DARTMOUTH. VOLUME 114 • NUMBER 5 Sean Plottner WWW.DARTMOUTHALUMNIMAGAZINE.COM EDITOR Wendy McMillan ART DIRECTOR Theresa D’Orsi NOW DISCOVER ASSOCIATE EDITOR TUCK. Svati Kirsten Narula ’13 DIGITAL EDITOR Sue Shock “To take a complete time-out from work, to go sit in a EDITORIAL ASSISTANT class with smart people and smart professors and do Thomas Pitts BUSINESS MANAGER something for yourself—that’s enriching, especially Sue Jenks PRODUCTION MANAGER when you get to return to Dartmouth to do it.” Christopher Cartwright ’21 — Michael Kolis ’87, Tuck Leadership and Strategic Impact participant Emily Sun ’22, Lucy Turnipseed ’22 INTERNS

TRAINING FOR WAR AT DARTMOUTH Lisa Furlong REMEMBERING THE CHANGES THAT TOOK PLACE ON CAMPUS WHEN THE SENIOR CONTRIBUTING EDITOR COLLEGE INSTITUTED THE NAVY V-12 PROGRAM DURING WORLD WAR II Mark Boillotat Lauren Zeranski Chisholm ’02     Jim Collins ’84, C.J. Hughes ’92 Dirk Olin ’81, Hannah Silverstein INCLUDES “SEEN & HEARD” Jake Tapper ’91, Bryant Urstadt ’91 A WEEKLY SELECTION OF ONLINE-ONLY MUST-READS ABOUT Jennifer Wulff ’96 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAKING NEWS AROUND THE WORLD CONTRIBUTING EDITORS

Advertising Chris Flaherty (603) 646-1208 [email protected] ADVERTISING MANAGER Heather Wedlake (617) 319-0995 Director of Operations IVY LEAGUE MAGAZINE NETWORK JACK KORNFIELD ’67 EMILY ESFAHANI SMITH ’09 JODI ARCHAMBAULT ’91 Mindfulness expert shares Journalist opines on fi nd- Standing Rock Sioux tribe Editorial Board guidance on coping with ing meaning during the member schools the Met on Jamie Trowbridge ’82 (Chair) anxiety and fear. Covid-19 pandemic. Native American art. Justin Anderson Rick Beyer ’78, James E. Dobson Julie Dunfey ’80, John Harvey ’78 BE SURE TO BROWSE THE DIGITAL DAM ARCHIVE Abigail Jones ’03, Carolyn Kylstra ’08 Liz Cahill Lempres ’83, Th’84 EVERY. ISSUE. EVER. Matthew Mosk ’92 MORE THAN 100 YEARS OF DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE AVAILABLE Julie Sloane ’99 AT YOUR FINGERTIPS IN A SEARCHABLE, PRINTABLE ARCHIVE Sarah Woodberry ’87 Cheryl Bascomb ’82 (ex officio)

FROM THE ARCHIVE DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE 7 Allen Street, Suite 201 AFTER THE CRASH Hanover, NH 03755-2065 By Jake Tapper ’91 Phone: (603) 646-2256 • Fax: (603) 646-1209 March/April 2010 Email: [email protected]

Former Treasury Secretary ADDRESS CHANGES Hank Paulson ’68 looks back Alumni Records: (603) 646-2253 on his role during the 2008 Advanced Management Program Leadership and Strategic Impact fi nancial crisis. Email: [email protected] Other Dartmouth offices: (603) 646-1110 July 11 to 23, 2021 Oct. 25 to 30, 2020 | May 16 to 21, 2021 Dartmouth Alumni Magazine is owned and published by Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755, and is produced in cooperation with the For experienced executives seeking to develop an enterprise-wide For high-potential executives seeking to cultivate their strategic Dartmouth Class Secretaries Association. The purposes of the Magazine are to report news of the College and its alumni, provide a medium for the mindset and visionary approach to leadership leadership style and maximize their organizational effectiveness exchange of views concerning College affairs, and in other ways provide editorial content that relates to the shared and diverse experiences and interests of Dartmouth alumni. This publication is guided by Dartmouth’s AMP.TUCK.DARTMOUTH.EDU LSI.TUCK.DARTMOUTH.EDU 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. Tuck Executive Education | exec.tuck.dartmouth.edu | 603-646-2839 | [email protected] WWW.DARTMOUTHALUMNIMAGAZINE.COM We hope you or a colleague will join us. Dartmouth alumni and their referrals enjoy a 10% discount. Group discounts are also available. 6 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE

LSI May2020 DAMad_3_043.indd 1 1/21/20 11:21 AM LYME, NH Spacious colonial sited on NORWICH, VT 1 floor living: 3 mins 12.75+/- acres. Close to skiway and AT. from Dartmouth! 2 BR, 2 BA. Hardwood,

3 BR 3 BA. Land on both sides of road. updated windows, roof, siding and SOUND BITES Large master suite. $598,000 furnace. 1 car garage. $369,000 MAY | JUNE 2020 DEPARTMENTS “Don’t pass down intergenerational 10 | YOUR TURN Readers trauma. Pass down react. intergenerational wisdom.” Notebook —LEA DEFRANCISCI LIS ’98 16 | CAMPUS News and PAGE 104 notes from around the Green 25 | FACULTY OPINION Professor Eric Schaller recommends dysto- pian literature for the self-isolated. BY SEAN PLOTTNER 26 | MEDIA “You always want Podcaster Latif Nasser plot, character, emo- ’08 embarks on a quest tions, big questions, to find a prisoner held in dramatic twists.” Guantanamo Bay—and Service. —LATIF NASSER ’08 himself. PAGE 26 BY LISA KOCIAN ’94 28 | TRIBUTE Students of the 1950s and 1960s remember NORWICH, VT Magnificent 4 BR HANOVER, NH Distinguished home the legendary lessons of 3.5 BA home on 54+/-ac. Fabulous with gorgeous light. New kitchen and dean Thaddeus Seymour horse barn, dressage arena. Pristine bathrooms, new roof, new heating (1928-2019). pastures. $2,499,000 system. Lovingly maintained. Walk to 31 | ON THE JOB everything! $1,475,000 Alums in the Peace Corps Charming in-town “What’s next is had no choice but to HANOVER, NH LYME, NH On a quiet road, light evacuate as the coronavi- home in walk to everything location. already here. and bright, 12' ceilings, gourmet kitchen We just haven’t 46 rus spread. 3 BR, 1.5 BA. Hardwood floors. Light and open to family room. 5 BR, 4 BA, guest recognized it yet.” BY LISA KOCIAN ’94 bright. Lower level with separate entry. suite, barn, tennis court. Fabulous! —DANIEL LUCEY ’77, DMS’81 $867,000 $1,249,000 PAGE 40 34 Pursuits The New Abnormal 51 | VOICES IN THE Campus in the time of Covid-19 WILDERNESS PHOTOGRAPHS BY ROB STRONG ’04 NBA attorney David It’s Weiss ’02, haiku master Scott Mason ’74, director 40 Lorna Hill ’73, and film- what The Front Lines maker Josh Berman ’00 “Overwhelming.” “Frustrating.” These are some of the “It’s tough when you adjectives used by alumni doctors and Class Notes make big changes in epidemiologists as they battle the deadly contagion. we do. life and the change 74 | THE CLASSES BY LISA FURLONG & C.J. HUGHES ’92 isn’t up to you.” 99 | CLUBS & GROUPS —JOSHUA PEREZ ’17 100 | ALUMNI COUNCIL PAGE 31 46 100 | DEATHS Capital Achievement 104 | CONTINUING ED For NHL team owner and president Dick Patrick ’68, winning Child psychiatrist Lea the Stanley Cup runs in the family. DeFrancisci Lis ’98 on sex ed and self-esteem for kids BY MATTHEW MOSK ’92 On The Green BY LISA FURLONG Lyme, NH 03768 WWW.DARTMOUTHALUMNIMAGAZINE.COM ON THE COVER:

603-795-4816 MIKE MCQUADE BY ILLUSTRATION • Photograph by Rob Strong ’04 Allen Street Dartmouth Alumni Magazine (Vol. 114, No. 5) (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 FAIRLEE, VT “Edgewater”: the perfect Hanover, NH 03755 THETFORD, VT Long range views, open Press Inc., 1000 Hinesburg Road, South Burlington, VT 05403. Periodical postage paid in Hanover, N.H., and additional mailing offices. Copyright © 2020 Dartmouth College. summer retreat. 4 BR, 2 BA, 100' of lake 603-643-4200 floorplan, pond, new heated barn. 3 BR, POSTMASTER: SEND ADDRESS CHANGES TO DARTMOUTH ALUMNI RECORDS OFFICE, DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, 6066 DEVELOPMENT OFFICE, HANOVER, NH 03755-4400 frontage. Waterfront porch, dock. • 3.5 BA. 26+/-acres. Great for entertaining. $585,000 www.marthadiebold.com $569,000 MAY/JUNE 2020 9

MDiebold.DAM.MayJun20.indd 1 4/16/20 12:07 PM YOUR TURN readers react For new beginnings

Only his help, smile, and hard work. We got our Please spare us the stilettos—this kind of god built in time, and our student lives car- cover has little use on an alumni magazine. ried on. RODGER EWY ’53 I graduated and spent a fifth year on Boulder, Colorado campus finishing my engineering degree. Bruce graduated and entered the Navy, ul- Whoever made the decision to pose Lis timately becoming a navigator on a jet. His Smith on the cover of DAM should be look- plane was shot down coming back from a ing for new employment as soon as pos- mission over Hanoi. I do not believe it has sible. I like Mayor Pete and his stand on ever been found. Of all the friends and ac- the issues. He seems honest and forthright, quaintances I knew who were killed during two traits not shared by the article. How the Vietnam War, he was the one whose possibly could DAM promote her as a role Snowpocalypse name I sought out at the Vietnam Veter- model? This appears to be either a serious I enjoyed reading the article by Jim Collins ans Memorial. Seeing his name carved into error in judgment, a deliberate fraud, or THE WILLARD HOUSE MAGNIFICENT RIVERFRONT RETREAT RIVERFRONT PROPERTY ’84 about the Winter Carnival snow sculp- the monument choked me up. I realized I part of a political agenda with the result Build by Steadman Willard in 1840, this simplified In a constantly connected world, privacy and peace are Situated on 17.5 country acres, this three-level Colonial ture [“End of an Era?,” March/April]. I was had never told him how much his help and being the same: You (DAM) are not to be Greek Revival home is an elegant and historic property. fleeting. This magnificent riverfront retreat is nestled on style home is minutes away from I-91, and conveniently a four-year veteran of center-of-the-Green friendship meant to me. I wish I had. taken seriously. You have demeaned not ORFORD, NH | $795,000 | MLS# 4775704 21.5 acres and 1,000+ feet of pristine riverfront land. located to Dartmouth College, DHMC and area ski resorts. snow sculpting (1980-83). One year was STEVE BRENNER ’63, TH’64 only yourselves but also the College and EVAN PIERCE | C: 201.401.4934 LYME, NH | PRICE UPON REQUEST | MLS# 4783889 SPRINGFIELD, VT | $899,000 | MLS# 4781055 particularly noteworthy. In 1980 there was Portland, Oregon all the alumnae and alumni who love her. LORI SHIPULSKI | D: 603.676.7350 RODNEY CONRAD | C: 518.360.7043 no snow, so a bunch of us on the Carnival Your actions are disgraceful. UNDER CONTRACT IN 2 DAYS! Council managed to have snow blown on I wish to add one more Carnival tradition RALPH WOODMAN ’69 to the Green. As memory serves, the key that has disappeared. My father, Emil Rye, New York hurdles were getting the town of Hanover Rueb, owner of the former Camera Shop to donate a few million gallons of water and of Hanover, used to photograph all the The Bare Truth getting Killington to loan us three snow- snow statues. He then printed postcards Kudos to Sharon Lee Cowan ’78 for her blowers and an operator. The Hanover Inn to sell in the store. The Camera Shop was thoughtful piece [“Full Disclosure,” March/ gave the operator a place to stay, and a open on Sundays, unusual in those days, April] on her decision to pose for Playboy. SEVEN TAVERN LANE ANTIQUE FARMHOUSE PRIVATE COLONIAL WATERFRONT truck with a pump large enough to blow so that people could buy postcards of the I would suggest she stay with her original One of the foremost homes within a 15-mile radius An 1870 Farmhouse with water frontage and private dock Featuring shorefront on both Center Pond and snow was driven up from New Orleans. Yes, statues. As a Hanover “townie” growing up thinking and avoid falling into the objecti- of the Hanover Green, distinguished by its discrete along the Ompompanoosuc River. This three bedroom, two Silver Lake, exquisite period residence with location at the end of a small country road. bath home has three-car garage and sweeping river views. my grades suffered from spending so much in the 1950s, I recall those days fondly. The fication trap, from which there is no logical updated kitchen and baths, stable barn and fields. LYME, NH | $1,495,000 | MLS# 4790391 NORWICH, VT | $485,000 | MLS# 4797896 time building snow sculptures. On the statues, especially the ones on the Green, exit. We (all of us) objectify things through- NELSON, NH | $1,650,000 | MLS# 4797223 JOHN CHAPIN | C: 603.290.0275 JOANNE KENT | C: 802.345.8736 ANDY PETERSON | C: 603.496.9172 other hand, I fondly remember my fellow were amazing. I admired the crown for the out our lives as a cognitive means of dealing Carnival Council friends and cherish those Carnival queen, displayed in the window of with a chaotic world. This includes food, memories. They are an amazing group of Ward Amidon’s, the jewelry store down the movies, classes, books, cars, and, most em- people, and I consider myself lucky to have street from the Camera Shop, and once, as a phatically, members of our preferred sex. been a part of that. I’d do it all over again. young skater, I participated in the outdoor Other things are not us, and every choice NEIL DONNENFELD ’83 evening held on the golf course. Perhaps we make is based on some form of objec- Warner, New Hampshire some of my father’s postcards still exist in tification. A beautiful sunset and babbling the memorabilia of alumni. brook, snowy woods on a quiet evening— In 1962 the Winter Carnival Council se- DENA RUEB ROMERO objects, objects, objects. Beauty and youth QUIET PRIVACY IN HANOVER STONEFIELD ESTATE LONG-RANGE STUNNING VIEWS Rarely do you find such privacy and beautiful views to Classic Georgian style home on 18+ meadowed acres, barns, This property offers unique features of a builders home. lected Igluk (our newly created god of fun) Hanover help make the world go ’round. Being con- Vermont with a Hanover address so close to downtown. beautiful landscaping, crafted swimming pond. Near Lake Sited on 12.4 acres with attention to details such as as its center-of-campus statue design. I fident enough to share yours with the world Great spaces for groups large and small. Sunapee, 40 mins. to MHT-Bos. Airport, 80 mins. to Boston. placing of the structure to capture the sunlight and views. was the council member tasked with Polarized is something to celebrate, not denigrate. HANOVER, NH | $1,350,000 | MLS#4702613 WARNER, NH | $997,000 | STONEFIELDPROPERTY.COM NORWICH, VT | $819,000 | MLS# 4797607 getting it built, but really a number of us After reading your story on Lis Smith ’05 EVAN PIERCE | C: 201.401.4934 STEPHANIE WHEELER | C: 603.344.9330 LINDA MAYO | C: 802.345.5202 were responsible. The job taught me a lot [“Trailblazer,” January/February], am I WRITE TO US about responsibilities. We did not have a supposed to be impressed? Her profanity We welcome letters. The editor reserves the lot of snow in the winter of 1962, so it was and her choice of relationship partners re- right to determine the suitability of letters trucked in from the Skiway. Students were mind me of another political figure, Donald for publication and to edit them for accuracy hard to corral for construction duty. Fra- J. Trump. and length. We regret that not all letters ternities and dormitories were solicited NICHOLAS HUNT ’75 can be published, nor can they be returned. and assigned nights. Some came up with Atlantic, Iowa Letters should run no more than 200 words in length, refer to material published in the volunteers, while others did not. Packing magazine and include the writer’s full name, QUIET COUNTRY LIVING LUDLOW - 18 ACRES WITH POND LAKEFRONT LIVING ON CRYSTAL LAKE slush onto an ever-growing mound is not Your cover and article should lay to rest any address, and telephone number. The design of this bright and sunlight filled contemporary Architecturally designed in 2004 with six bedrooms, This elegant waterfront property was designed to take full fun at night in the cold. remaining doubt that admitting women Colonial blends inviting outdoor spaces with an interior three baths and generous open living spaces. advantage of lake views and lakefront living. With over Write: Letters, Dartmouth Alumni With time, I came to respect one Win- that offers a nice mix of formal and informal living spaces. LUDLOW, VT | $875,000 | MLS# 4692609 200 feet of frontage on pristine 400+ acres on Crystal lake. was the best decision the College has made Magazine, 7 Allen Street, Suite 201, NORWICH, VT | $685,000 | MLS# 4791579 TERESA DINAPOLI | C: 802.236.3375 ENFIELD, NH | $1,075,000 ter Carnival member, Bruce Nickerson ’64, since admitting me. Nicely done. DAM has Hanover, NH 03755 SUSAN ZAK | C: 802.359.3641 EVAN PIERCE | C: 201.401.4934 a reliable, enthusiastic leader who could truly become a great magazine. Email: [email protected] be counted on to recruit and guide student ART LAFRANCE ’60 Online: dartmouthalumnimagazine.com HANOVER O: 603.643.6070 | NEW LONDON O: 603.526.4050 | OKEMO O: 802.228.4537 | PETERBOROUGH O: 603.924.3321 | FOURSEASONSSIR.COM workers. Night after night I could rely on Green Valley, Arizona 17 Offices throughout New Hampshire and Vermont | Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated.

10 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE LETTERS readers react Dartmouth helped me find my Sharon’s mom (like most moms) was right. ors. That fabled team was awarded the cov- DAVID MCKINLAY JONES ’78 eted Lambert Trophy, emblematic of the passion for advocacy. Tucson, Arizona East’s best football team, boasting a 14-0 shutout of Harvard, seven All-Ivy First Oh Brother Team selections, and ranking higher na- I want to pay that forward I enjoyed seeing all of the sibling faces tionally than traditional gridiron powers WOODSTOCK FARM and reading the article, “Sibling Revelry” Penn State, Syracuse, Army, and Boston A modern architectural masterpiece and important for the next generation. work by award-winning and internationally [March/April]. Attending Dartmouth with College! recognized architect Rick Joy, Woodstock Farm my brothers certainly enhanced my college PHILIP K. CURTIS ’67 presents a dramatic shingle and stone house and experience. Decades later, we can share Atlanta barn set on over 200 acres of Vermont countryside minutes from the picturesque village of Woodstock our common memories and remind one and in close proximity to Dartmouth College another why we all bleed green. My sib- The Bear Truth in Hanover, New Hampshire. The high concept lings: David Frem ’92 and Daniel Frem ’96, The story by Put Blodgett ’53 about going Contemporary design is executed with the sharpest attention to craft and draws on the vernacular Th’97, Th’98. hunting as a Dartmouth student and prop- of the rural northeast. The main residence offers LAURA FREM ’94 ping up a dead bear in a Topliff bathroom a 152-foot elongated gable house with massive end walls of Lake Champlain bedrock and cedar Northborough, was great [“Continuing Ed,” January/Feb- cladding on the roof and side walls. Set at a subtle ruary]. Please publish more stories about angle to the barn, the north facade of the main hunting and game processing and fewer house engages the purity of the setting and looks Fandom out onto a large, deep, spring-fed swimming pond The entertaining and moving “A Fan’s stories (none would be fine) about progres- and the rolling pastureland. Notes” [March/April] by Robert Sullivan sive politics and climate religion. Woodstock, VT | $9,750,000 | MLS# 4792976 ’75 brought back memories of my father, WILLIAM ROBBINS ’83 WOODSTOCKFARMVT.COM Jack Little ’40. He followed Dartmouth 17 1/2 Lebanon St. | Hanover, NH 03755 football with fervor. Dad was a wordsmith [email protected] FourSeasonsSIR.com and a gardener. At one point he created a Good Energy O: 603.643.6070 | C: 802.291.0436 hybrid vegetable to convey his desire to In reading “Fuel for Thought” [“Campus,” Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. defeat the Crimson: “lettuce beet Harvard.” January/February], about how College of- CARL LITTLE ’76 ficials are rethinking plans for the biomass Mount Desert, Maine plant, I am heartened to hear the College listens to the experts, as President Han- You can find Terrific article. I felt like I was reliving lon suggests students do [“Nothing But every moment described. I was one of the the Truth,” November/December 2019]. few diehards at the Brown game last fall. Beyond doing what is right, whether sci- DAM online I went solo (my regular companion, Stu entifically, socially, or ethically, it is the Cable ’75, was out of town). I was looking ability to stop, think, listen to others, and Sindhura Kodali ’08 and on Facebook! for familiar faces but didn’t see any. I guess re-evaluate that is most impressive and I was looking for faces as I remember them important for ensuring the best possible Pediatrician, Valley from years ago. Brown’s quarterback scared future for the College. Glad to hear Dart- Children’s Hospital, www.DartmouthAlumni me to death. It wasn’t until the sack by Niko mouth is practicing what it preaches and Madera, CA; advocate Lalos ’20 at the very end that I relaxed a leading by example. for vulnerable children Magazine.com bit—I knew we had them. Then, when Isiah SCOTT LACY ’13 Made Dartmouth a life Swann ’20 intercepted the last pass—I sort Aspen, Colorado insurance beneficiary of expected it—I let out a sigh of relief. www.facebook.com/ I was also at the Harvard game (with More Concerns WHY Cable) to the very end—what a thriller. I Daniel Benjamin’s contention [“A World was texting all my Midwest buddies that it of Trouble,” March/April] that our prima- DartmouthAlumniMagazine was better than a Ted Perry ’74 field goal. ry task with China is “engagement with AL AUSTIN ’75 China’s President and General Secretary DARTMOUTH Hingham, Massachusetts Xi and his lieutenants” is astonishing. Our primary task is to engage China in an un- I enjoyed Robert Sullivan’s impassioned ending series of covert and information Keep our Dartmouth community strong. article on the famed Dartmouth-Harvard operations to bypass its great information WHY NOW Include Dartmouth in your estate plans football rivalry. Like the author, my loyal- firewall, a censorship system second only ties through the years have been occasion- to North Korea’s, to break the hegemony of and help future students fulfill their DAM ally challenged—I have degrees from both the Communist Party. To talk about China highest aspirations. institutions, although I remain steadfastly without mentioning the more than 1 mil- in the Big Green camp. While the 2019 ver- lion Chinese Muslims now in slave labor Learn more: dartgo.org/Sindhura or sion of Dartmouth football is to be lauded, camps is inexcusable. ONLINE call 800-451-4067 I can’t help but think that Bob Blackman’s PETER HUMPHREY ’76 undefeated 1965 squad deserves top hon- Rockville, Maryland Dartmouth Gift Planning 12 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE

19-252 GP_DAMad_NovDec19_f_rev1.indd 1 4/14/20 3:57 PM campus 16 faculty opinion 25 media 26 tribute 28 on the job 31 When the markets twist, turn to us for practical advice. notebook Though downturns can be nerve-wracking, they’re a normal part of the market cycle. We’ve experienced many dips, dives and rallies and can offer a practical perspective when markets plunge.

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UPFRONT JOHN BANKS, CFP®, D’90 ▲ Managing Director Financial Advisor Man of T 585.485.6341 [email protected] Steel johnbankswealthmanagement.com College welder Jimmy Martell teaches his art to locals in a course he calls “Playing with Fire.” Here he uses an © 2020 Raymond James & Associates, Inc., member New York Stock aluminum spool gun to modify Exchange/SIPC. 20-BR3RM-0013 TA 3/20 a College carpentry shop truck. (For more on his work, see page 17.)

ROB STRONG ’04 STRONG ROB MAY/JUNE 2020 15 BLAST FROM THE PAST CAMPUS notes from around the green LOOK WHO’S TALKING “Welding > JIMMY MARTELL, College Welder is a very The Influenza intimate

VISITING VOICES Epidemic ▲act.”

What’s your typical day like? ALUMS IN ACTION A lot of times welding will play a very small role in what I do. It’s all the other stuff I have to do to get ready to weld: You’ve got to be able to figure out square feet, you’ve got to be able to do a lot of dif- Rank of2 Dartmouth ferent types of math. It may sound very simple, but among small schools reading a tape measure—you wouldn’t believe how with the most Peace many people struggle with that. Corps volunteers What do you love about welding? FROM THE NOVEMBER 1918 It’s one of the finest crafts on Earth. It’s a specific ISSUE OF DAM motor skill that requires tremendous concen- PANDEMIC IN THE RED Dartmouth and Hanover, healthful tration between your eyes and your body, as is their location, were unable your hands, your mind. It’s something to escape the ravages of the What’s Next? that takes years to be really good at. epidemic of Spanish influenza, or influenza-pneumonia as it is more Decision on fall term is coming soon. $83 “Leadership is What’s a tough job you did recently? properly called, which has swept million We replaced a bunch of steam lines so disastrously over the country Will students return to campus in September? Provost Projected revenue not an in the ground by Alumni Gym. We this fall. Several hundred cases > loss for the College Joe Helble says we’ll know by June 29. The College will replaced about 70 or 80 feet of pipe. of the disease occurred in the for fiscal 2020 individual sport.” community, among the students, open for the start of the school year, scheduled for September When I had to weld it together 14, and embrace one of three scenarios: another term of remote —FORMER UN AMBASSADOR SUSAN RICE, the enlisted men of the training SPEAKING ON CAMPUS FEBRUARY 27 down in the trench, I had to put learning, a full return to normalcy with students living on detachment, and the residents a mirror underneath the pipe— of the town. Five students, ten campus, or a hybrid version of the two. then stay above it, look in the soldiers in the detachment, Helble announced the deadline in late April during the mirror, and weld backward because one member of the faculty, and first of a weekly series of live online broadcasts he plans to I couldn’t get underneath. several townspeople died. But hold every Wednesday during spring term. The key factor in the epidemic was brought to a any decision, he says, will be “the health, safety, and well-being How old is the steam line? stop here much more quickly of the community” and “ensuring educational continuity for I would say that some of it could be 70 or than in most communities and the percentage of fatalities was lower, our students.” 80 years old. Some of that system is fairly antiquated, and we end up running into a so that we may congratulate The College will hold no in-person classes this summer. ourselves on our good fortune in “A residential summer term relying on social distancing and lot of repairs where we have to fix pipes that escaping so easily as we did. severe restrictions on activities and gatherings would pose a are leaking. One of my toughest challenges That which contributed significant public health risk to our students and to our faculty here is maintaining that system. most to the quick control of the situation was the stopping of all and staff, their families, and the Upper Valley community,” How do you prepare for difficult jobs? class work of the College for a Helble announced in mid April. I’m the kind of guy who just looks at the period of two weeks. All academic Commencement and reunions will not take place on the job and goes, “Yeah, when we walk away work ceased on the morning of Green. Instead, these events will be held virtually. As of early from this, I’m going to win.” I do whatever October 1…to be resumed on the May, no specifics had been announced. The only years Dart- I have to do for as long as I have to do it. morning of October 14, when mouth has not held a full-fledged Commencement ceremony And then, when it’s over, I sigh a big breath further spread of the disease ap- were 1943 through 1945 due to World War II. of relief and go, “Okay, where’s the next peared to be checked. During that Several students tell DAM they would gladly accept a hybrid period…the only activity was the one?” drilling of units, and the students arrangement for the fall rather than endure another full term of Why did you decide to become a were thereby kept out of doors remote learning. “Even if social distancing measures need to be welding teacher? for at least nine hours a day—in in place if we go back, I would still be willing because being on itself a good preventive of the Ten years ago, if you’d asked me if I was campus means a lot to my mental health,” says one undergrad. influenza. ever going to teach it, I would have said, During the broadcast Helble explained how the severe Part of the gymnasium “What are you—crazy?” And now I just financial shortfall the College faces cannot be alleviated simply ordinarily used by the home and absolutely love it. When you get to be my visiting teams was turned into a by dipping into the endowment (valued at $5.7 billion last fall), age and you have a really good skill set, hospital under the direction of the which is “not a rainy day fund,” he says. Contrary to popular it seems silly that I should take that to local chapter of the Red Cross. thinking, the endowment, he noted, “can’t be used to address Too high praise cannot be given my grave without being able to share it institution-wide operational funding deficits.” Meanwhile, to the members of that chapter, with as many people as I possibly can. three highly compensated College administrators—Helble, who gave their services night and day in nursing, cooking, and President Phil Hanlon ’77, and executive VP Rick Mills—are ONE TO REMEMBER What’s the story behind your cool otherwise caring for the sick for donating 20 percent of their salaries to Dartmouth during the As athletic director from 1967 to 1983, Seaver Peters ’54 helmet? (see previous page) a period of nearly four weeks. oversaw the advent of women’s sports at the College. The next year. A spokesperson says other members of the senior It’s actually a tribute to veterans. When conditions improved the former hockey captain also made sure Thompson Arena administration are also giving back a portion of their salaries, My old man was in World War II. men were removed for convales- became a reality. Peters died in February. He was 87. TOP LEFT: ROB STRONG ’04; NEAR LEFT: DARTMOUTH COLLEGE LIBRARY COLLEGE DARTMOUTH NEAR LEFT: ’04; ROB STRONG LEFT: TOP “but it is up to them whether to be public about it.” —Betsy Vereckey cence to College Hall. IMAGES GETTY

16 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE illustration by ANDY FRIEDMAN photograph by ROB STRONG ’04 MAY/JUNE 2020 17 CAMPUS GUIDING YOU BY THE NUMBERS

CAMPUS CONFIDENTIAL Sports HOME

ROOF WITH A VIEW SHOW OF HANDS THIS AIN’T NO The newly renovated Dartmouth Dining Hopes to hold Winter Car- Anonymous Hall (formerly Services is looking into nival events inside a giant Dana) features a rooftop using biometric technology inflatable “snow dome” on terrace with solar panels for students, who would the Green were thwarted and a café. swipe their hands, not when the vendor failed to cards, to enter dining halls. deliver its 50-foot-diameter DDS director Jon Plodzik bubble. Problems with HOP TO IT says it would be “a game customs at the U.S.-Canada Virtual programs made changer.” border forced a planned available by the Hopkins silent disco to relocate to Center include classical mu- the Top of the Hop. sic watch parties, live dance BALLOT RUSH parties with DJs, and even a More than 1,000 people, 15 National rank of the women’s dance-off competition. mostly students, registered MOUNTAIN KING to vote at polls in Hanover The Skiway has a new lacrosse team, which went 5-0 during the N.H. primary director. Mark Adamczyk, before the season was canceled GOOD FELLOWS February 11. former director of outdoor Professor of earth sciences adventure at Winter Park Hanover, New Hampshire | $1,750,000 Hanover, New Hampshire | $1,875,000 Mukul Sharma and geology Resort in Colorado, started Magnificent Horse Farm Located On 14.75 Acres Architect Designed Home On 52 Acres Of Pure Magic professor Frank Magilligan BAD NEWS in January. have been awarded Gug- Two varsity sports teams, Nan Carroll 802.356.3560 | MLS# 4795754 Amy Redpath 603.643.9405 | MLS# 4795092 genheim fellowships. two sororities, and three 10 Dartmouth athletes named to the frats have been sanctioned GONE TOO SOON for hazing and drinking Executive associate athletic winter Academic All-Ivy League HOUSE PARTY violations during the last director Brian Austin died Team in early April by making Former president of College three years. of cancer in January. He significant contributions to their Democrats Riley Gordon ’22 was 59. teams and maintaining at least a is running for the N.H. state 3.0 grade point average rep position currently held BOARD MOVES by Garrett Muscatel ’20, Three alumni-nominated NEW LIGHT who is not seeking trustees—Susan Finegan Montgomery Fellow Zia reelection. ’85, Odette Harris ’91, and Haider Rahman, author of In Gregg Lemkau ’91—and the Light of What We Know, one charter trustee—Susan spoke to English students on 11 THE CORONA FACTOR Huang ’84—were elected to campus in February. Skiers who made the NCAA The development office has the board in March. championships, which were postponed its global sum- canceled after one day mit events scheduled for MISSING LINKS April in Toronto, Canada, NEW PARTNERSHIP In a survey of students by Lyme, New Hampshire | $550,000 Lebanon, New Hampshire | $569,000 and August in Lima, Peru. The Andrew Mellon The Dartmouth, 9.6 percent Foundation has awarded of respondents said they do Charming Antique Cape Offering Peace & Tranquility Gorgeous Home Just Minutes From Downtown a $500,000 grant to not have stable internet con- Rowan Carroll 603.359.2574 | MLS# 4797061 Jennifer S. Fogg 802.369.9050 | MLS# 4797304 HOT HOUSE Dartmouth Library and the nections for remote learning. 12 A small fire that started in Hood Museum, which will Wins for the men’s basketball team, a bathroom at Phi Delta use it to bolster connec- its best showing since the Alpha in February was tions between them, 2014-15 season quickly handled by local fire faculty, students, and departments. people of Native Ameri- can and indigenous Arctic descent. 21 Goals scored by Drew O’Connor ’22, who was named the Ivy League’s men’s hockey Co-player of the Year before signing with the NHL Pittsburgh Penguins in March ROMAN MURADOV QUOTE/UNQUOTE FINANCIAL AID Lyme, New Hampshire | $745,000 Lyme, New Hampshire | $850,000 “Is the performance of financial Custom Contemporary With Fabulous Views Extensively Renovated Antique Home On 42 Acres 2 Emily Goss 603.643.1882 | MLS# 4797710 Rowan Carroll 603.359.2574 | MLS# 4759301 markets the real index of our 55 Former female football coaches at happiness? And what about the Ranking of the College Dartmouth who are now working among the most for National Football League teams: inequality of suffering?” Jennifer King () and generous to financially Hanover eastman Quechee ludlow

—Religion professor Randall Balmer needy students Callie Brownson (Cleveland) COLLEGE DARTMOUTH TheCBLife.com sunapee new london concord 1.603.643.6406 18 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE lincoln franconia littleton COnway Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. CAMPUS | EUREKA! new findings and research THIS DARTMOUTH MOMENT Connection Roving Eye Mars—land of lakes? “While we work from far away, >>> For the past several years, NASA’s Curiosity rover has been sending images I still feel the presence of our Dartmouth community. back to Earth suggesting that a long, long time ago, the Red Planet was in- I miss supporting each other as we learn together. habited. Not by people, but by microbes. Assistant professor of earth sciences Marisa Palucis spends much of her time But when the time comes, peering at the rover’s selfies, finding evidence of ancient, life-supporting oa- I’ll return with a renewed sense ses. “It’s really exciting, because a lot of us have been looking at this one crater, called Gale Crater,” says Palucis, a geo- of purpose and intention.” morphologist who started at Dartmouth in 2017. “Gale was likely connected to a very large groundwater system and NAIA MORSE ’22 surface water. This whole region of Mars would have been covered in lakes 3.5 billion years ago. That’s an important finding, that the reservoir of near-surface MEDICINE and surface water on Mars was probably quite large.” Now almost all the water on Mars exists as ice or atmospheric vapor. Climate change, Palucis notes, is A Quest for Antibodies not unique to Earth. “Early on, I think the two planets were more similar,” she says. Engineering lab shifts focus to investigate the coronavirus. “But they diverged over time.” —C.A. Six years ago, when Joshua Alex Weiner, Adv’14, earned his Ph.D. in biochemistry, he could not have foreseen the worldwide pandemic that lay ahead. Now he’s managing a research project in the lab of Thayer engineering professor Margie Ackerman, investi- Gender Politics gating antibodies that fight the deadly coronavirus. Women get out the vote. The duo made a sudden pivot from similar work they had been doing on polio and HIV. “One day in early March I was late coming back to my office and found four Ph.D. students at my door wanting to talk to me about their plans to contribute to the Covid-19 pandemic,” says Ackerman. “They saw the importance and recognized what they could personally contribute. The troops gathered and we went to work.” In collaboration with the Geisel School of Medicine, the Ackerman lab is analyzing samples collected from patients at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center who have recovered from the disease. “If you’ve gotten sick and healthy again, you did a good job fighting the infection and your immune system’s going to tell us something about how it did that,” says Weiner. With colleagues from the University of Texas, his team is studying the so-called spike protein, a prime culprit in infection, and learning what the new coronavirus does—or does not—have in common with its less lethal cousins. >>> Politicians and pundits, take note: “We’re taking bits and pieces of Covid-19 and those same bits and pieces of the spike The gender gap is real. Women are protein of other coronaviruses and putting those into an assessment tool,” says Weiner. likely to outvote men by 10 million “We want to find out, when people get better, which antibodies they are generating and ballots in November. That hasn’t always what those antibodies are targeting.” been the case, says economics profes- sor Elizabeth U. Cascio. “My grand- Unlike many other labs, the Ackerman team is looking at not only serum samples, but mother, born in the 1930s, used to stay also mucosal deposits favored by the new coronavirus in the nasal and intestinal tracts. in the car while my grandfather went to Their data will help other scientists develop Covid-19 therapies and vaccines. Acker- vote,” she notes in a new paper on the man is financing the project through the lab’s discretionary account as she applies for 100-year history of the American female external funding. “It is unclear what the scope of testing will be and how much money voter. “My mom votes as often as my dad.” Cascio finds that the higher turn- will ultimately be needed,” she says. —Charlotte Albright out by women has favored Democratic candidates over time. Many women left the Republican Party during the Reagan QUOTE/UNQUOTE years, when leaders failed to support the Equal Rights Amendment, opposed 7 “People normally just think about them- abortion, and embraced the conserva- Percentage of Americans selves; they don’t think that, if every- tive view that a woman’s place was in who read an article from a the home, not the workforce. Today, fake news site during 2018 body is acting as they act, we end up with though, women “occupy a uniquely midterm campaigns, accord- nobody thinking about the public good.” powerful place in the American elector- Your annual gifts to the Dartmouth College Fund ing to research by govern- —Math professor Feng Fu, who uses mathematical models to ate,” according to Cascio and coauthor

ment prof Brendan Nyhan determine how to promote human kindness Na’ama Shenhav. —C.A. ISTOCK TOP: ZUKAUSKAITE; KOTRYNA LEFT: create moments that change lives. Thank you. dartgo.org/dcf

20 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE

20-041 DCF_MayJune_DAMad_Revise_vFINAL.indd 1 4/14/20 12:16 PM

CAMPUS notes from around the green

1 2 3 4 5 6 CLUB SPORTS The New College Tri The Dartmouth triathlon club offers coach- ing, training plans, and camaraderie year- round—including a popular spring break trip to Florida, which was canceled this year due to the coronavirus. To stay connected remotely this spring, and despite the lack of races on the horizon for the foreseeable future, the team has been convening virtu- ally each Wednesday for strength workouts on Zoom, logging workouts as a club in the fitness app Strava, and assigning workout buddies to each other every week to stay motivated. “It’s been so comforting being on Zoom calls with teammates, a reminder 7 that this community is so strong and is here 8 9 10 11 to support each of us,” says captain Andrea Sedlacek ’20. The club’s 65-person roster is full of former high school athletes, but hardly any of them had completed a triathlon (a single race that involves swimming, biking, and running) before coming to Dartmouth. “I find that having three different sports in which to train helps to keep me entertained, motivated, and uninjured,” says Colin Good- bred ’21. “Teammates are able to mentor each other based on the strengths that they come in with and each person always has clear ways they can improve.” —Svati Kirsten Narula ’13

1. Carly Tymm ’20 2. Andrea Sedlacek ’20 3. Connor Spencer ’22 4. Thomas Clark ’22 5. Derek Faith ’22 6. Jacqueline Thompson ’22 7. Christopher Chon ’20 8. Joe Gyorda ’22 9. Maia Madison ’23 10. Hunter Dominick ’20 11. Emily Martinez ’21 12. Megan McCabe ’20 13. Abby Mans ’22 14. Maya Khanna ’22 12 15. Colin Goodbred ’21 16. Jackson Danis ’21 13 14 15 16

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notebook B by Dystopian literature for theself-isolated The Future IsNow illustration byBRIANREA writer, follows the music scene in a near-future setting defined by social dis- ➤ life andagood society.” All ofthisisunderpinnedby asearching inquiryinto what makes for agood molecular, ecological, astronomical, andpolitical conceptswithequalvigor. when itcomesto therange ofsciences at hisliterary command,handling ➤ more relevant thanever. recommend some of his favorite sci-fi titles. Here are a few that now seem and “weird darkfiction.” Before DAM thepandemic hit, original” critical acclaimas“bold, Air tion, Schaller’s 2016 shortstory collec A Song for a New Day 2312(2012),by Kim Stanley Robinson. “He is oneofthebest sci-fi writers

(Undertow Publications), earned SEAN PLOTTNER FACULTY OPINION Meet Me inthe Middleof the knows hisscience fiction. knows hisscience. He also iology professor EricSchaller (2019), by Sarah Pinsker. “The author, a musician and -

I imagine.” and less coherent than “The world islarger

asked theprof to

➤ Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang (1976), poetic beauty.” still understandable andhasitsown raw, is told inadevolved form ofEnglishthat is ban. “Set inafar future England,thistale ➤ and horrific.” technology, theresults beingbothmagical everything hasbeenremodeled through bio toxic waste ofacity, a world inwhichalmost young woman protagonist salvages inthe ➤ relevant.” a half-century ago, they are still remarkably deterioration of the environment. Written stories dealwithover-population andthe Look Up ➤ Stand onZanzibar(1968) andTheSheep a flu-like pandemicthat swept the world.” tancing, theresult ofterrorist activity and war.”nuclear a preserve an enclave of civilization following use scientific methods, includingcloning, to eral generations of a family attempting to by Kate Wilhelm. “A story that follows sev Riddley Walker (1980),by Russell Ho- (2017), by Jeff Borne (2017), VanderMeer. “A (1972), by John Brunner. “These MAY/JUNE 2020

- - 25 notebook I 26 by find aprisoner heldinGuantanamo Bay—and himself. Podcaster Latif Nasser ’08embarks onaquestto What’s InaName? pose after transfer,” says Cmdr. Candice about thepotential threat a detaineemay conversations withthereceiving country GTMO ismadeonlyafter detailed,specific own conclusions. rocco. Nasser wants listeners to draw their But he is still waiting to go home to Mo- lease in 2016 by apanel of civil servants. an edge-of-your seat narrative. , are nuancedanddevelop through those questions, whichhesets outinhis we’ve Nasser’s doneto him?” answers to this guydo? Andisitproportional to what Nasser tells bin Laden. cused of being amilitary advisor to Osama ered adisturbingpicture ofaterrorist ac- Nasser’s research uncov this otherLatif? googling andmakingphonecalls. Whois the first episode ofthepodcast. He started they were talkingaboutme,” Nasser says in I thought—this sounds crazy—I thought thought his name was one of a kind. “At first for Nasir’s release. Until then,Nasser had tweet from anonprofit law firmadvocating years earlier, whenhestumbled across a both startled and intrigued Nasser three er explores Nasir’s trueidentity. Abdul Latif Nasir. In The Other Latif tery man, a Guantanamo detainee named episode The story hasnow culminated inasix- a manhecouldn’t stop wondering about. investigatingjournalist, the background of Casablanca, Nasser wasn’t astudent buta much more urgent, questionsaboutidentity. to thecountry to askslightly different, and he know that 12years later hewould return ants what itmeant to beMuslim.Little did question Ihave beenobsessing with,” DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE

LISA KOCIAN ’94 “The decisionto transfer adetaineefrom Nasir was unanimouslycleared for re “ThatBut isthata thereal story? The resemblance to hisown namehad On hissecond trip, in2018, thistimeto streets ofFez, , askinginhabit study program, Latif Nasser walked the n 2006, whileonaDartmouth foreign MEDIA Radiolab podcast aboutthemys DAM

. “What, if anything, did . “What,

, Nass - - - - -

love through “You writing: always want storytelling Nasser hascome to know and next about Guantanamo Bay,” says Nasser. next abouteels’reproductive organs, the we can betalkingaboutfigure skating, the show first, isn’t pigeonholed. “One week loves that niche. (True crime,anyone?) ButNasser ploded and,hesays, becomeincreasingly motley interests together. and podcast that allows himto weave his Peabody Award-winning publicradio show 2014. From there helanded at Radiolab a , in thehistory ofscience from Harvard in gering my sense ofself.” he wanted to be.“Itwas sort oflike rejig- childhood, buthewas strugglingwithwho considered Islamanimportant partofhis group? DoIwant Nasser to beapartofit?” does itmeanto beMuslim? What isthis Toronto. “Iwas really grappling withwhat says Nasser, whogrew upinasuburbof ences Ihadinmy life. Itwas so formative,” “It was oneofthemostprofound experi he says,that, made the deepestimpression. terests, butitwas theprogram inMorocco him thefreedom to explore hismany in er didn’t have to declare amajor, whichgave must accepttransfer.” ing anappropriate hostnation, thedetainee transfer doesnotoccur. Inadditionto find- If we donotreceive adequate assurances, the the detainee from re-engaging in terrorism. to ensure humanetreatment, andto prevent in order to sufficiently mitigate that threat, “The receiving country willtake measures Tresch oftheU.S. Department ofDefense. share thesame elements of Since he started, podcasts have ex After DartmouthNasser earnedaPh.D. As asenior fellow at Dartmouth,Nass my sense ofself.” “It was sort oflike rejiggering Radiolab, because it was a radio

- - - - photograph byMATTHEW SEPTIMUS

LISA KOCIAN his mother, his Tazim. and makingadifference inthe world,” says because andhope it represents “laughter his own name? Hisparents settled on Latif one,’means ‘bright whichwe loved.” says Mensch. “We looked Fivel upandit Mineand is India. from Russia and Poland,” family isoriginallyfrom Tanzania“Latif’s Muslim side, Fivel reflects her Jewish side. both oftheirheritages. Nasser covers the son, Fivel Nasser, whose namerepresents in LosAngeles withtheir21/2-year-old of a playwright, television writer, and cocreator has also delivered two TEDtalks. New Yorker andTheAtlantic websites. He er haswritten for The Boston Globe up to him.He glows withenergy.” meant to be a reporter, and people just open I’ve ever met,” says Lechtenberg. “He was “Latif isthemostinsatiably curious person who moonlights as a professional wrestler. cast project profiles ananesthesiologist Nasser is director of research. His next pod berg, executive producer ofRadiolab, where ing offonRadiolab,” says SuzieLechten The Other Latifexpertly weaves together attention. “Richindetailandatmosphere, tunities Nasser did. to his namesake if he had the same oppor- Nasser wonders what might have happened names. Nasir dreamed of an education, and my name.Icouldn’t. Iwasn’t allowed.” on. Ijustwanted to yell outhisname,also was sitting onachair, hehadheadphones ing for him.I’m pretty sure Isaw him.He er. “Iwent from cellblockto cellblocklook looking for your favorite animal,” says Nass where heviews prisoners anonymously. is rejected, buthetravels to Guantanamo, er alert:Nasser’s request to interview Nasir stricted by the absence Spoil of its subject. reflections,” wrote theFinancial Times. Nasser’s heartfelt andsometimes troubling ethical inquiry, investigative legwork...and challenges, andThe Other Latif at Dartmouthbackinplaywriting class.” dramatic twists—the stuffIlearned about character,plot, emotions, bigquestions, Glow, theNetflix series. Thecouplelive Nasser ismarriedto Carly Mensch ’05, In additionto hisRadiolab work, Nass “This isthestepping stone to Latif tak Nasser hasreceived significant media The parallels go well beyond their “It feels like you’re at thezoo andyou’re But podcasts do come with their own And how didLatif Nasser endupwith lives inBoston.

MAY/JUNE 2020

was re andThe 27 ------notebook O 28 hanging off. weekends inhisantique car, aPackard, Ithink,withway too many people [I remember] hiswell-known parading around campus onfootball to live right next door. —Greg McGregor ’66 official responsibilities, asa great dean would,simplybecause hechanced many times. Ihadthefeeling that hefilledthis role over and above his inform usonceagain to cooldown andcleanup. Thishappenedmany, We would pickup, knowing whoitwould be,andhearhisfatherly voice water fight orotherhooliganism, he would ringourfirst-floor payphone. facto dormfather ofBrown Hall. Whenitwas timeto bringanendto a Dad Thadlived across from theChoate Road dorms. That madehimde attended Dartmouth. retiring in 1990. Two ofhisfive children and two ofhisgrandchildren of Wabash College in Indiana and Rollins College in Florida before and rowing coachfrom 1954 to 1969. He later served aspresident (1928-2019). the legendary lessons ofdeanThaddeus Seymour Students ofthe1950sand1960sremember Dad Thad DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE TRIBUTE making his markat Dartmouth as an English professor, dean, Florida lastfall. ThaddeusSeymour attended Princeton before ne oftheCollege’s mostinimitablelords ofdiscipline diedin

 —Dick Jones ’68

innocent time.” said. “Itwas apretty professionally,” he as I’ve ever had were “as muchfun years at Dartmouth Seymour’s early THAN LIFE LARGER

food, so it seemed I had died and gone to good freshmen I had subsisted on Thayer hors d’oeuvres Ihadever seen. Like all table set withsome ofthebest-looking take melongto angle my way upto a party at some fancy location. Itdidn’t we were all invited to anhors d’oeuvres It was earlyinourfreshman year that his words were reassuring. is fall forward. Ididpass thecourse, but about sixfeet to go, andallyou have to do gets this close to graduation, hehasjust Thad, andhesaid that whenastudent graduate ontime.Ibrought thisupwith I thought might impactmy ability to worried aboutfailing onecourse, which In thespringofmy senior year Iwas illustrations byBENKIRCHNER —Paul Smith ’68 membered inAnimal House. Ihadgiven infamous food fight inThayer Hall, re Freshman year inthefall witnessed the freshmen. Amere kidby today’s standards! stature was only34years old when we were this giant person ofso muchauthority and I have found even more remarkable isthat was to find some fundoingjob No. 1.What addition to job No. 1,learning,job No. 2 someone whoalways remembered that in was humble, friendly, never threatening— Thad was bigger than life to each and yet he experience so specialhadjustbeenformed. of those bondsthat make theDartmouth a word said between us, we knew that one and went about ourseparate ways. Without pockets, too! We both grinned at each other saving grace—Dean Thadwas stuffinghis the terror that gripped me, I observed a bation. Butat that same despite moment, that Iwould endupondouble-secret pro- career at Dartmouthmay have endedor through my mindthat my short-lived observing everything I was doing. It flashed and there across thetablewas DeanThad, ful into my sportscoat pocket, Ilooked up the evening. Just asIwas putting ahand- morsels would bediscarded at theendof crying shame that some of the remaining at onetime,itoccurred to methat itwas a many items asIcouldreasonably digest culinary heaven. After Iwolfed down as was to find some fundoing job No. 1.” addition to job No. 1,learning,job No. 2 “He always remembered that in —Rick Reiss ’66 —Jim Hale ’62 -

on variousclass websites. You can find more stories about Thad Seymour call, hehadapretty good arm!—Tom Brady ’66 helping bothsidescarry AsI onthefight. re- ball fight, Dean Thad was on the front line Instead ofpunishingusfor our annualsnow wasn’t quite sure itwas true. a boonto every awkward adolescent who that wonderful thing,theDartmouthfamily, kind. He made you feel that you belonged to larger thanlife, always and,most important, He was awonderful fulloffun, optimist, Someone turnedmeinfor having adogin for Dartmouth credit. fund, andtake some useful evening courses work on Wall Street, rebuild my education guidance ledmeto take some timeoff to from Dartmouth.Hisunderstanding and Thad, I probably would not have graduated after ThadSeymour. Were itnotfor Dean My wife, Jean, andInamedour second son anyone would bethat kind. the mascot for Tri Kap. Icouldnotbelieve while he healed. Noche eventually became dispensation to keep Noche inthedorm dog. He gave mesome sort oftemporary help, financialorotherwise, caring for the Thad immediately asked ifIneededany and Iwas nursing himbackto health. that my dog,Noche, hadbeenrunover my dorm. Thad called me in. I explained Thad was wise to make noexceptions. and that’s good enough.” Andthat was that. then.” Thadreplied, “Your mealticket was saying, sir, “But, Iwasn’t even inHanover $25 Iprotested perstudent. to DeanThad, by used mealtickets—was something like at thescene ofthecrime—asdetermined was going outoftown. Thepenalty for being my meal ticket to an upperclassman since I MAY/JUNE 2020 —Phil Freedman ’68 —John Isaacson ’68 —John Beckert ’61 —Jim Morse ’62 29 - 10 Morgan Drive|603.643.5600 |Marriott.com/lebcy ers theWay Refresh You Travel • Just 2 Miles from Dartmouth College• Just2MilesfromDartmouth with Complimentary ShuttleServices • A Variety of BreakfastandDinner • Specialty Starbucks®Beverages • Ask About OurSpecial Rates for when you stay accommodations. inourluxury • New State-of-the-Art Lobby • Free High-Speed Internet • 24-HourBusinessCenter • FitnessCenter andPool Options at The Bistro Dartmouth Alumni Dartmouth • An EveningBar 32 Centerra Parkway |603.643.4511 |Marriott.com/lebri • Complimentary EveningReception M-W • Just 2 Miles from Dartmouth College• Just2MilesfromDartmouth • Separate Spaces for Working, Living with Complimentary ShuttleServices • Ask About OurSpecial Rates for • Studio, 1and 2BedroomSuites • Free High-Speed Internet • Free HotBreakfastBuffet • Fully-EquippedKitchen Dartmouth Alumni Dartmouth • Exercise Room • Pet Friendly

notebook I by coronavirus spread. Alums inthePeace Corps had no choicebutto evacuate as the Mission, Interrupted volunteers who were evacuated safely from 60 countries, according to the Peace Corps volunteers returning home.He was oneofapproximately 7,000 far you’ve come,you’re helpingto prepare themealaswell.’ ” like spaghetti. “Ihelpedslaughter thechicken, andthey were like, ‘Lookhow him atraditional sendoff meal, so they hadchicken withtallarin,whichis to be doneright now.” life that was “tranquilo,” hesays, to anAmerican mentality of“things have to school-aged children about nutrition and fitness, went abruptly from a health volunteer teaching Zumba classes to older host parents thenews. again earlyinthemorningto tell his caught alittle more sleep andwoke After packingfor afew hours, he my books were most important to me.” my bags. In the haste of the moment “Immediately Ijuststarted packing and beginevacuations. “It’s kindoflike a flight-or-fight response,” says Perez. March 15announceditwould temporarily suspendvolunteer operations phone,” Perez tells DAM where hewas inthemiddleofa14-day self-quarantine, asrequested ofall

LISA KOCIAN ’94 He had about 12 hours to say his goodbyes. His host family wanted to give Perez, whowas acommunity The messages shookhimawake. Dueto Covid-19, thePeace Corps on “My fan wasn’t working, and Irolled over andsaw some messages onmy Perez spoke to DAM 1 a.m. from1 a.m. theheat. Joshua Perez ’17 was having ahard timesleepingandwoke uparound t was sweltering that night inthesmallcity ofMaria Antonia, Paraguay. ON THEJOB from hisparents’ homeinSilver Spring,Maryland, .

Peace Corps like this.” a total shutdown ofthe “Never hasthere been senoras andgivingtalks Paraguay. depart goodbye and 12 hours to say Perez had Volunteer SHOCK CULTURE

Korea soon after graduation andthen “It’s justabigwaiting game at thispoint.” Onge says sheisconsideringgoing back. open. Dependingonwhenthat happens, St. turned into aparty bus.’ ” I didn’t realize this had and thought, ‘Whoa, through theplaneride.Iwoke upfrom anap there would bealcohol.We ran outhalfway lot ofuswere jokingthat we didn’t know if shocked,” shesays. “We were flyinganda Not everyone hadtime.“We were stillshell- to say goodbye to friendsandcolleagues. counts herself lucky because shewas able emotional whirlwind, says Onge, St. who because of the country’s conflict with Russia. leave theirhomesinCrimeaorelsewhere displaced people,Ukrainians whohadto teer, shewas tasked withhelpinginternally community economic development volun begun hers inAugust 2019. Working as a jor ingovernment andeconomics, hadjust Onge,end ofhisservice, adoublema St. projects.” understand thepeoplearound you andthe a shameto bepulledoutwhenyou finally start these bigger projects, andit’s justsuch had just kind of begun to hit our stride and from herparents’ homeinNew Jersey. “We air travel. nounced itwould soon cease allpassenger to evacuate Ukraine after thecountry an earlier because thePeace Corps decided news as Perez. She found out aday or so OngeSt. ’19 in Ukraine received the same during thisglobal healthcrisis.” the hard work ofourstaffaround the world proud oftheresiliency ofourvolunteers and expedited processing. We are incredibly for another27-month term ofservice with sentative. “Evacuated volunteers may apply as soon as conditions permit,” said a repre will beready to return to normaloperations Peace Corps press office.“The Peace Corps Chuck Hobbie ’67volunteered inSouth The chartered flight home was an Unlike Perez, whowas approaching the “There’s alotofemotions,” says Onge St. She said she’s hopefulUkraine willre- On theothersideofglobe, Isabella MAY/JUNE 2020 31 - - - - ON THE JOB Inspiring Design

MODEL UNITS ARE NOW COMPLETE AT TREETOPS! Interior Design Seventy-Five Unit Complex • One-Bedrooms Two-Bedrooms • Two-Bedroom Plus Den Options Custom Fabrication Covered Parking • Rooftop Terrace Exercise Room • Efficient Convenient to Dartmouth/DHMC Renovations

Call for showings with appropriate social Visit our dedicated Bath distancing in NH or ask for the virtual tour link! worked for the Peace Corps off THERE AND her Peace Corps service in the BACK AGAIN & Kitchen showroom for C: 201.401.4934 | O: 603.643.6070 and on for another 17 years before Dominican Republic last year. a level of selection and retiring in 2018 as an associate Isabella St. Onge ’19 “People are returning to the was one of 15 alumni expertise unrivaled in general counsel for litigation. volunteers evacuated with no home, no Evan Pierce Northern New England. 17 1/2 Lebanon Street He recalls evacuations from by the Peace Corps. car, no credit, and no money, She and these evacuees Hanover, NH 03755 multiple countries, such as when which is difficult,” says Hey- [email protected] in Kiev, Ukraine, had O: 603.643.6070 | C: 201.401.4934 Ebola broke out in 2014, but to switch hotels after borne, who majored in biology nothing like the current pandem- another flight was and economics and now works in bumped. ic. “Never has there been a total data analytics for the One Earth Hanover, NH shutdown of the Peace Corps like Future Foundation. 603-643-3727 this,” he says. “In fact, in many countries, The Peace Corps as well as the non- Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. when the countries were engaged in war, profit National Peace Corps Association gilberteinteriors.com civil wars and other wars, volunteers have are working hard to help support returning stayed in place because they are so care- volunteers, she says, and Heyborne is one fully protected by their own communities. of several former volunteers raising money Nobody can protect them from this.” on Facebook to fill in the gaps. Dartmouth has a storied history with Perez, who had been preparing to leave the Peace Corps, which once used the Paraguay April 28, was a step ahead of those Rassias method of language instruction, earlier in their service term because he was familiar to legions of Dartmouth students, already lining up a job with the Food and to train volunteers. Since the Peace Corps’ Drug Administration, which he is hoping founding in 1961, 657 alumni have served will work out. DARTMOUTH CLASS RINGS abroad as volunteers. Fifteen were serving Still, it’s quite an adjustment. A CLASSIC FOR OVER 30 YEARS . HANDCRAFTED IN THE USA when the pandemic hit. “You miss the people, you miss the A Lifetime of Joshua Warzecha ’17, an Arabic stud- routines that you develop. In Paraguay you ies and linguistics major, was on vacation spend a lot of time sitting and talking with Creating Custom Rugs with his family in the northern part of Mo- people,” he says. rocco when he got the evacuation message And nothing compares to the fresh fruit, for Beautiful Spaces. and had to race back to his post in Tata, a he adds. Perez already misses mangoes and province in the southwestern part of the fresh-squeezed grapefruit juice. country. He arrived in country in September “When mandarin orange trees bloom, 2018 and was due to come home this fall. the entire tree turns orange,” says Perez, an He worked in the youth development sec- environmental earth sciences major. “You tor, spending much of his time teaching learn to see the world in terms of the fruit Full Design Assistance English to teens and young adults. seasons.” Online and by Appointment He is in the Bay Area at his parents’ He says the Peace Corps did the right [email protected] home, under self-quarantine and texting thing bringing volunteers home, given the 603.667.7721 with his former students. They are sad and circumstances. Of course, that doesn’t Officially licensed by Dartmouth College angry, telling him Tata is too hot for the coro- mean it’s easy. “You continue to process it www.innerasiarugs.com navirus to survive in. “A lot of ‘We miss you,’ in waves,” says Perez. “It’s tough when you Customize your Dartmouth Ring and Order at: a lot of ‘Why did you have to leave?’ ” he says. make big changes in life and the change isn’t signitas.com/dartmouth “We’ve agreed the anger is more frustration.” up to you.” Not all Peace Corps volunteers have [email protected] 800-643-3776 a ready place to land back home, accord- LISA KOCIAN is a Boston-based writer and ing to Sarah Heyborne ’16, who finished former staff reporter for The Boston Globe.

32 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 33 C.J. HUGHES ’92 AND LISA FURLONG

THE \ NEW \ ABNORMAL CAMPUS IN THE TIME OF

PHOTOGRAPHS BY ROB STRONG ’04

34 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 35 A QUIET PLACE The week after winter term finals, a bus departed campus for Boston, taking some of the last students in town off to their spring break. This was March 17. Little did we know. As the eerie sounds of silence descended on campus, photographer Rob Strong ’04 donned a mask to wander and capture images that convey a stark COVID-19 reality: The heart and soul of Dartmouth—its students—were not coming back for the spring term. 36 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 37 BEYOND SOLITUDE No games. No reunions. No Commencement. But plenty of Zooming. Unprecedented times have created a somber serenity on campus that may last at least through the summer. In these photos, the majestic grounds and facilities of Dartmouth seem to yearn for the human element—for students, professors, anyone—to return and bring back the vibrancy and vitality that make the College so meaningful to so many.

38 MAY/JUNE 2020 39 THE FRONT LINES BY LISA FURLONG AND C.J. HUGHES ’92

“OVERWHELMING.”

“INEVITABLE.” “FRUSTRATING.”

THAT’S HOW ALUMNI DOCTORS AND EPIDEMIOLOGISTS DESCRIBE THEIR BATTLE WITH THE DEADLY CONTAGION. ERIC GAY/ASSOCIATED PRESS

40 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 41 CLINTON WHITE ’77 cal importance of social distancing to slow Island) had almost 600 Covid-19 patients, amazingly relevant as it raises issues of Professor, Infectious Disease a disease’s spread to buy time to prepare, roughly half of them in New Haven. A denial from government, pathos, feelings University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) avoid hospital overcrowding, and reduce month earlier, when the virus appeared of despair but also heroism and humanity.” Galveston, Texas the total numbers of cases and deaths. in Connecticut following a much-publi- From his window, White has a clear view of Origins of the guidance to simultane- cized party in Westport, Yale New Haven MARGARET “MAGGIE” FEENEY ’92 Galveston National Lab, whose mundane, ously shutter public spaces, impose social Health installed a Covid-19 call center and Professor/Chief, Pediatric Infectious office-building appearance seems at odds distancing, and isolate the sick might be transformed its consulting model from in- Diseases and Global Health, UCSF School of with what goes on inside. The structure—the surprising. Cetron and his team dug into person visits to telemedicine. Medicine/UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital only one of its type at a university hospital— newspaper archives and studied reports Previously focused much of the time San Francisco contains a biocontainment facility where about 43 American cities during the 1918 on clinical trials, Meyer began manning the For Feeney, the pandemic served up a triple experts study deadly pathogens. The prox- influenza to see which policies worked and hotline, which was receiving thousands of challenge: dealing with the shutdown of her imity of the lab, which in 2014 worked on an which did not. Cross-referencing school, calls a day—sometimes from clinicians and lab (later reopened as essential because of Ebola vaccine, has upsides: It’s stocked with theater, and church closings with death patients as far away as Tanzania—and con- its study of mother-to-child disease trans- hard-to-find testing equipment. Though counts, Cetron found that cities such as St. sulting remotely not only on clinical care, mission), physical limitations on her ability Galveston has been relatively unscathed by Louis, which imposed a mass shutdown, but also on “de-carcerating” prisoners at to care for young patients, and having her Covid-19, the supplies have allowed those in cut losses far better than, say, Philadelphia, high risk of infection. Given its nature, her 7-year-old twins at home instead of in school. the area who need tests to get them. where a World War I-themed September work has always extended beyond clinical Feeney is pleased with the effective- White isn’t surprised the lab is well parade so sickened the crowds that every care into advocating for patients and trying ness of her hospital’s “successful transition supplied. “The business principle that hospital bed in the city was filled within “WE ARE NOT ALL GOING TO to inform public and health policy. “But not to telemedicine,” which, in some cases, she “WHAT’S NEXT IS ALREADY keeps warehouses lean, like Amazon’s, it’s three days. DIE. BUT WE ARE ALL GOING to this degree,” she says. “When you live says, has been as good as seeing patients the same with hospitals. They don’t keep “It’s really too late to act when you’re under this big red dot that represents cases face to face. She also considers herself for- HERE. WE JUST HAVEN’T stores of masks and ventilators to lower already piling up bodies like cordwood, as TO KNOW SOMEBODY WHO in our part of the country on a national map, tunate to work in San Francisco. “I can’t say RECOGNIZED IT YET.” —DANIEL LUCEY costs,” he says, “but there are societal ben- some of the newspapers back then would DIES IF THIS BECOMES A 1918 everything feels different.” enough positive things about the exemplary efits to avoiding a lean supply chain.” The Yale hotline was particularly in- way the Bay Area has dealt with the pan- say,” says Cetron, a member of the Dickey SCENARIO.” —PETER H. KILMARX Galveston may not be a corona hot spot, Center board of overseers and frequent structive: “Day One we had people from the demic,” especially the speed with which but it does have infected pockets, such as lecturer at Geisel Medical School. He was [Westport] party calling; Day Three it was stay-at-home orders were issued, Feeney ary. He says the coronavirus is like nothing Hospital Galveston Unit, a prison for which in Hanover when he learned of the viral family members; Day Five it was neighbors; says. “It’s incredible the way people have he’s seen before. rallied together and stepped up.” UTMB provides care. When White spoke outbreak in China and raced back to At- in less than two weeks. South Korea, he Day Seven the schools closed. Day One we “The United States has a structure in had 371 calls; one week later we had more In her lab, researchers study blood place that could have been sufficient to with DAM, nine prisoners were being treat- lanta. Working 18-hour days and focused says, deserves credit for mining the phone than 2,400. You could just watch the virus samples from mothers and infants to learn deal with Covid-19,” he says. “But equally ed in one section of the facility; another on the here and now, Cetron suggests that records of victims to retrace their steps three were convalescing in a converted balloon out.” if fetal transmission from a mother to her important are the people populating the handshakes might not survive the current and determine such granular detail as their operating room. White expected the situa- crisis. Perhaps, Cetron says, people can As stressful as the overload of patients fetus occurs and how infants respond im- structure. There is a tendency in the United seats in theaters. The data was shared with tion to worsen there, as employees seemed greet each other with their arms crossed and callers has been, Meyer remains buoyed munologically. “We can be informed about States to believe in the government. I’d like the public so people could see if they’d to be spreading the virus: “Prisons are not on their chests, like the “Wakanda forever” by her colleagues. She found “cathartic” an how to proceed in the future by learning to think that if someone with responsibility crossed paths with the infected. “You could set up to socially distance people. Prison- salute from the Black Panther film. evening Zoom book group discussion with why children seem to be less affected by for monitoring the national stockpile [of do a robust response like this in a wired and ers are isolated from society but not from fellow members of Yale’s infectious dis- the virus,” she says. She has consulted on medical supplies] told people in Congress moderately authoritarian society,” Kilmarx each other.” PETER H. KILMARX ’83, DMS’90 ease department. The book they had hastily cases of children who were infected and there were no masks because the money says. “It would be a challenge in a federation White’s hospital is also one of the Deputy Director, Fogarty International Center, agreed to read? Camus’ The Plague. “It was says much more has to be learned about had been spent on small pox vaccine, like the United States.” sites for trials of remdesivir, an experi- U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) underlying risk factors. someone would have said, ‘That’s a false mental, intravenous anti-viral recovery Bethesda, Maryland Well-versed and deeply prepared— Reflecting on her experience in the first dichotomy. We need both.’ ” drug from Gilead Sciences that had early Kilmarx does not flinch from disease. back in February Kilmarx bought boxes weeks of the pandemic, she can’t forget one Proof of Lucey’s prescience can be seen signs of success but whose efficacy has While serving in the Peace Corps from 1984 of plastic gloves while urging friends to patient in the bone marrow transplant unit at the Smithsonian National Museum of been questioned. “It seems to have better to 1986 in what’s now the Democratic Re- make sure their home Internet connections at UCSF whose mother had two other chil- Natural History in Washington, D.C., when results than hydroxychloroquine, which public of Congo, he suffered from bouts of were up to speed—the director is also just dren at home. “That mother was trying to it reopens. “Outbreak: Epidemics in a Con- in some cases,” White says, “can be worse malaria every few months. In 2009, when another civilian trying to stay safe. When trade off time between her children even nected World” has been on display for two than the disease itself.” his wife contracted H1N1, Kilmarx took ordering takeout to his Maryland home in as her police officer husband responded to years. Organized in conjunction with a care of her at home. In 2014, he toughed it March, he asked that it be left on the steps. 911 calls between his own parenting shifts. Smithsonian anthropologist, it highlights MARTIN S. CETRON ’81 out in Sierra Leone during its brutal Ebola He wore gloves to unpack it and rinsed the That is the reality,” Feeney says. animal-to-human pandemics and how Director, Global Migration and Quarantine outbreak as the response-team leader for containers with soap. to combat them. The final plaque quotes Centers for Disease Control and Prevention the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). DANIEL LUCEY ’77, DMS’81 Lucey from years earlier: “What’s next is Atlanta Today, Kilmarx helps coordinate interna- JAIMIE (PAUL) MEYER ’00 Senior Scholar, O’Neill Institute for National already here. We just haven’t recognized “If you don’t have an appropriate amount tional coronavirus research and is hopeful Infectious Disease Physician/Assistant and Global Health Law, Georgetown Law it yet.” of humility and fear, then you have lost a about an NIH-funded Phase 1 trial with Professor of Medicine, Yale Medicine/Yale Washington, D.C. The 300 people at the exhibit’s open- healthy amount of respect for the power of human volunteers that began in School of Medicine You name it, Lucey has seen it. He’s been ing, Lucey acknowledges, included some Mother Nature,” says Cetron, a pandemic in March. New Haven, Connecticut a leading researcher of diseases including top people from the NIH, CDC, U.S. De- expert who coauthored a 2007 CDC paper If Kilmarx is unflappable, it may be With a practice populated by HIV patients HIV, anthrax, SARS, MERS, Ebola, Zika, partment of Health and Human Services, that may have introduced the now-ubiq- no surprise he admires boldness in oth- and women returning home from prison, yellow fever, influenza, and plague. After and FDA, but he received no calls from at- uitous concept “flatten the curve.” Cetron, ers. China’s response to Covid-19, he says, Meyer is used to challenges, but Covid-19 COVID-19 “TURNED OUR reading a December 30, 2019, posting from tendees asking how best to prepare for the an infectious disease doctor and Emory was “just remarkable.” Wuhan, the ground “turned our world upside down,” she says. WORLD UPSIDE DOWN.” the Hong Kong health department about next pandemic, something on which many professor, modestly declines credit—“This zero of the pandemic, benefited from 1,800 As of mid-April, Yale New Haven Health unexplained pneumonia cases in Wuhan, of them were working. The focus of their is not a me moment, this is a we moment,” teams of epidemiologists tracking the virus, (which operates four hospitals in south- —JAIMIE MEYER China, he wanted to get there but was organizations was primarily on influenza, he says—but the paper spells out the criti- plus a new hospital that was constructed ern Connecticut and one in western Rhode forced to settle for Hong Kong in Febru- not on a new coronavirus, Lucey says.

42 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 43 His discussions with colleagues in Hong after engaging unsuccessfully with states RACHEL BENDER IGNACIO ’04 not possible global pandemic, on the order Kong and Singapore has led him to ques- and groups with that kind of baked-in dis- Physician-Scientist/Assistant Professor in of Covid-19,” she says. “It was keeping us tion the alleged source of the coronavirus crimination that weren’t willing to change.” Infectious Diseases/ Associate Director, AIDS up nights as soon as news from Wuhan outbreak in Wuhan late last year. “I think White also advocates for legal immu- Clinical Trials Unit, broke, so it was very frustrating to see at this virus emerged as early as September as nity for those doctors who make life-and- Seattle the national level a political rather than a naturally occurring spillover event from a death decisions when they are following Like many HIV researchers, Ignacio has preparedness response. Only in the United still-unknown animal species into our hu- sound state guidelines. seen her research “back-burnered” by the States is there a perceived conflict between man species—and certainly not in December frantic search for therapeutic treatment of individual liberty and the provision of in the Wuhan wet market,” he says. PETER F. WRIGHT ’64, DMS’65 Covid-19 patients. “We’re talking about the universal healthcare, a disconnect when Specialist, Infectious Disease and International same communities being most affected,” it comes to social justice. I hope people will DOUGLAS WHITE ’95 Health, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center she says. “Those where people dispropor- think very seriously about the ramifications Critical Care Physician/Ethicist/Professor Lebanon, New Hampshire tionately work in public transportation, of this epidemic on social disparities and University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine The face of the battle against the coronavi- gig economy, day labor, manufacturing, on our public health infrastructure when Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania rus may be doctors hooking patients to ven- and other jobs where they have less abil- they vote. We need to protect the safety of White has made end-of-life decisions, tilators in isolation wards, but a deep bench ity to stay home and higher risks of job loss. our elections and fight for mail-in ballots specifically those made in ICUs, a focus of behind-the-scenes players is performing As people in the communities I serve say, in all states.” of his research. Collaborating with legal research that may be just as critical. Toiling ‘We’ve been here before.’ They are rallying and medical scholars and philosophers, he daily in a lab on a floor that’s been mostly “I’VE HAD REMOTE to be sure that Asians aren’t stigmatized NORMAN MOORE ’88 “VIRUSES DON’T LIKE PLAYING coauthored “A Framework for Rationing empty for weeks because of a work-from- CONVERSATIONS ABOUT and to take up the advocacy piece of the Director, Global Infectious Diseases, Abbott Ventilators and Critical Care Beds During home order, Wright studies blood from a fight.” Scarborough, Maine BY THE RULES.” —NORMAN MOORE the Covid-19 Pandemic” in the March 27 on- half-dozen Covid-19 survivors to learn how DIFFICULT END-OF-LIFE There are no treatment “magic bul- “If you love things that are black and white, line edition of the Journal of the American their antibodies behave. “A question we are DECISIONS.” —MARK FRANKLIN lets,” says Ignacio. “Studies in Europe and you can go into chemistry or physics,” says Medical Association, as well as the Univer- very interested in is, if you get the disease, China hint that a few FDA-approved drugs microbiologist Moore. “I love microbiol- fornia, he found himself on a plane—then sity of Pittsburgh white paper published in do you become immune?” he says. may be effective. Due to the urgency of the ogy because it’s gray and filled with ‘what self-quarantined with its pilots while pandemic and hype in both the press and April, “A Model Hospital Policy for Allocat- Wright, working with doctors else- South Dakota-based Avera eCARE ICU to ifs.’ Viruses don’t like playing by the rules. waiting—to collect and bring the enzyme scientific communities, we have put clini- ing Scarce Critical Care Resources.” The where, wants to learn precisely how the explore supporting other area hospitals be- There’s so much that changes, there’s al- safely back to Maine, where it was put to cal practice before evidence. The trials I am papers set forth protocols already adopted antibodies destroy protein spikes, those fore launching its own teleICU in July 2019. ways a new one.” immediate use. involved in are double-blind, randomized, by the states of Pennsylvania, Massachu- wine-colored bumps on the surface of the The hub serves not only DHMC’s 60 adult As he prepared to turn 50, however, controlled trials that will be analyzed by ex- setts, Colorado, several hundred U.S. hospi- virus in that ubiquitous illustration that ICU beds but also hospitals in Bennington, Moore was determined to do something de- DANIEL J. SKIEST ’84 pert statisticians. This is mandatory before tals—including Dartmouth-Hitchcock—and makes the virus resemble a forested planet. Vermont, as well as Keene and Littleton, cidedly non-science. “As I told my wife, it’s Director, Clinical Research, Division of we can say that any of these therapies work. Infectious Disease, Baystate Health health systems from South Africa to New The spikes hook into lung cells, allowing New Hampshire, where ICU capabilities going to be less expensive than me buying a Zealand to Mexico. “The reaction has been “One hundred percent of infectious Springfield, Massachusetts the virus to take root. The researchers’ data are limited. He has colleagues, friends, and sports car to celebrate my mid-life crisis,” overwhelming,” he says. may impact NIH to develop its vac- disease doctors and epidemiologists “Collectively we’ve been warning about a efforts many patients—including one who recov- he says. Instead he wrote a humorous book, White’s recommendations, known as cine. “We think the trial is very relevant,” anticipated an international pandemic, if If I’m the King of My Castle, Then Why Am pandemic for years. It was only a question ered from Covid-19—he has never met in “The Pittsburgh Model” and to be used Wright says, “and is moving forward well.” I Holding a Dirty Diaper? (2015). Little did of when and what,” says Skiest, who helped person, only on screen. “A sick patient is a only in national emergencies, put decision- Wright, who did his residency and fel- Moore realize, despite holding eight U.S. his hospital prepare for the inevitable with sick patient,” he says. making in the hands of a triage team lowship at Boston Children’s Hospital and and 39 international patents including a flurry of moves. Policies evolved. Elective Practicing telemedicine does have its headed by a triage officer who can be teaches pediatrics at Geisel, is curious why tests for Legionnaires’ disease and pneu- surgeries stopped. Patients who arrived in differences, though: “Initially the toughest objective when reviewing competing kids seem to have lower death rates than monia, that five years later he’d be dealing the emergency room with a fever and cough adjustment was navigating separate medi- demands of physicians and provide clear adults when it comes to Covid-19. He has with the biggest crisis in modern history. were immediately brought to the back and cal records,” says Franklin. Now a Philips criteria for ICU admission, ventilation, been aware for many years how quickly dis- Moore, who earned a Ph.D. from the not left in the waiting area where they could eCareManager platform brings records, lab and reassessment of continued critical eases can ravage a country. Since the 1970s University of New Hampshire in 1994, expose others. Only one visitor was allowed test results, other remote data, and predic- care. “Race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic he has volunteered his services in Haiti as travels frequently to lecture at confer- per patient, then none. A 30-bed ICU for status should not factor at all into triage it has struggled with cholera outbreaks. “A tive analytics to monitors instantaneously. ences about best practices—“educational, cardiac patients became a Covid-19 ICU as decisions, nor should any predictions colleague told me I would learn more about “Practicing medicine stays the same,” says not commercial,” he says. In years to come, the number of patients grew from two per about long-term life expectancy,” he says, infectious disease in two months in Haiti Franklin, “but telemedicine means working though, he may get questions about gain- day to 20 to 25 per day. An entire hospital “because that can be affected by things like than in the rest of my fellowship,” he says, through AV capabilities to build trust and ing approval from the FDA for Abbott’s ID wing was devoted to treating the virus. low socioeconomic status, poor access to “and he was right.” partnerships. You always want to discuss, NOW. The new Covid-19 test was touted at Most important, he says, are the three- healthcare and healthy food, and dangerous But America has hardly been immune, not dictate.” During the pandemic his big- White House briefings as Americans des- dozen teams the hospital designated to living situations.” and anyone who has paid attention to previ- gest challenge, he says, has been getting perately wanted to learn whether they’d handle Covid-related issues such as As for the wisdom of medicine being ous outbreaks, such as H1N1 in 2009, should doctors he knows only virtually “to believe been infected without having to enter a employee testing, research, and ethics. regulated at the state level in the United realize this country is vulnerable, he says. they can go farther than they have gone hospital, and cities, such as Detroit, wanted Those teams were asked to respond nim- States, White acknowledges, “Having guid- “I think this was all somewhat inevitable.” before and to do things they haven’t done to test their police. “I’d never seen the FDA bly, changing procedures every couple of ance from the federal government would before, because that’s what’s needed.” “ONLY IN THE UNITED STATES IS act so quickly,” he says. Next came the chal- days in some cases, as new techniques give you consistency at the expense of states’ MARK FRANKLIN ’98 After the Covid-19 victim was out of THERE A PERCEIVED CONFLICT lenge of mass production. came to light. For instance, discovering rights, which goes against foundational prin- Critical Care Physician, danger, one of the onsite caregivers in- BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY Isolating with his wife and two of his that victims breathe better lying on their ciples of U.S. governance structure. There Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center troduced Franklin to the patient as “the three sons while Abbott’s production facil- stomachs, when their air sacs aren’t as are a handful of states that don’t give any Lebanon, New Hampshire physician who saved your life.” Franklin AND THE PROVISION OF ity was on lockdown to protect its workers, prone to fill with fluids, prompted a new guidance and, equally important, others that Franklin has worked in DHMC’s intensive deflected the accolade. “As I hastened to UNIVERSAL HEALTHCARE.” Moore did have one outing beyond the su- policy. “We are learning as we go along give problematic guidance that discrimi- care unit since 2008. Starting in 2016, he point out, I was one of many people who —RACHEL BENDER IGNACIO permarket. To assure secure procurement because the literature is coming out nates against individuals with disabilities. branched out into telemedicine as the hos- treated him, I’d just been on duty a lot,” he of an enzyme needed for the Covid-19 test daily,” Skiest says. “Everyone is just sort I started this work more than a decade ago pital partnered remotely with Sioux Falls, says. “But I’ll admit it was nice to hear.” that was available only at a site in Cali- of rolling up their (continued on page 100)

44 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 45 ILLUSTRATIONS BY MIKE MCQUADE

Capital Achievement

FOR NHL TEAM OWNER AND PRESIDENT DICK PATRICK ’68, WINNING THE STANLEY CUP RUNS IN THE FAMILY.

BY MATTHEW MOSK ’92

46 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 47 ith 33 seconds left in the second pe- Patrick, then a young real estate law- riod, mayhem breaks loose on the ice yer, had deep ties to pro hockey. To say he last November. Washington Capitals is descended from hockey royalty is not an forward Garnet Hathaway reaches understatement. Patrick’s grandfather, Les- over a referee to grab the collar of ter, and Lester’s brother, Frank, joined with Anaheim Ducks defenseman Erik their father, Joseph, to form the Pacific Coast Gudbranson. The players exchange Hockey Association in 1911, a rival league foul-mouthed insults and prepare to where they devised many of the early rules fight. As the referee wedges between that define the game of as it is them, Gudbranson breaks free and played today. No less of a source than the shoots a sucker punch across Hathaway’s chin. Encyclopedia Britannica credits the Patricks In response, the Capitals player rears back his head—and for essential elements of the sport, such as the shoots a thick loogie directly into Gudbranson’s face. blue line, the penalty shot, even numbers on The next morning, sports radio is abuzz. They’re calling it the backs of jerseys. The two brothers were “spitgate.” To a hockey world that cheers bloody brawls and thun- well-known stars of the game who had their dering checks, spitting crosses a line. The Capitals get word the names etched on the Stanley Cup before rival NHL commissioner’s office wants to talk. leagues merged to form the NHL. Enter Washington Capitals president Dick Patrick. Whether Dick mentions the time the moment calls for someone to guide a player through league his grandfather was coach discipline or solve the mathematical riddle of how to stack a roster “HOCKEY PLAYERS and general manager of the with superstars without busting the league’s stingy salary cap, ARE A GREAT in game it is Patrick, 74, who has calmly overseen the winningest NHL two of the 1928 Stanley Cup franchise of the past decade. GROUP OF PEOPLE finals—and a goalie took Hockey is big business. Patrick compares the league to “what TO BE AROUND. a puck to the eye. Lester I would imagine a well-run Fortune 500 business would be.” But YOU CAN’T HELP stepped off the bench and a typical day as a team president is nothing like an executive at took his place. He was 44 Walmart or CVS would experience. The Capitals offices sit uncer- BUT LOVE IT.” and famously told his team, emoniously on the rooftop of a seven-deck parking garage in the “Boys, don’t let an old man D.C. suburbs. The main entrance leads directly into two spacious down.” The Rangers won the game and the se- practice rinks, and anyone walking into the lobby can hear the ries. Dick’s father, defenseman Muzz Patrick, distinctive smack of pucks being fired into the boards—and catch helped the Rangers win the 1940 Stanley Cup a whiff of sweat-soaked hockey gear. On game days Patrick drops before he, too, served as coach and general by the team’s morning skate, touching base with the trainer about manager. And Dick’s cousin, , says Patrick, who accepted the job of team president even though STICKING TOGETHER League of Legends, Dota 2, Hearthstone, players who are nursing injuries and checking in with the general had his name added in 1991 and 1992 as the he considered it a sideline. “I didn’t even take an office. I was still FROM LEFT: DICK’S CS:GO, Heroes of the Storm, Overwatch, manager rinkside. general manager of the Pittsburgh Penguins. doing real estate.” FATHER, MUZZ, Halo, Street Fighter, and Super Smash Bros. After a short walk up a sleek staircase, he enters a suite that Dick played hockey at Kent School and Patrick tapped into his network of relatives for advice. He GRANDFATHER LESTER, Melee. The team raked in $2.5 million in looks like a dot-com headquarters. He’s been spending a lot of was recruited by Dartmouth. On the ice his brought in a new general manager and began guiding the team on AND UNCLE LYNN, prize money that year. Patrick marvels at time in his spacious corner office, reviewing salary figures ahead teammates knew him as “Boomer.” At 6-foot- a slow climb up the standings. His “sideline” gradually grew into SHOWN HERE IN 1955, the entirely new field of play. “These men MADE THE FAMILY NAME of the looming trade deadline. A three-quarter-sized replica of 5, the defenseman had a thundering shot and a fulltime job. Patrick’s son, Chris, now director of player person- SYNONYMOUS WITH practice 10 hours a day and they compete in the Stanley Cup sits on a small end table by the door. “Every day I a wingspan that made it seem he could cover nel with the team but then just a grade schooler, remembers how HOCKEY. arenas,” he says. “It seems so odd to me, but think, ‘This is a tremendous experience,’ ” he says. “Hockey players half the ice by himself. each season would end—Dad talked as if the adventure were over. even our hockey players follow it closely.” are a great group of people to be around. They work so hard, care Despite his size, Patrick was more of a “Every year I would ask him, ‘Dad, are you going to do this thing Patrick used to worry about Capitals players breaking curfew dur- so much about what they do. You can’t help but love it.” skill player—not a goon. Teammate Tom Long with the Caps for another year?’ And he would make out like he ing road trips and finding trouble in the local bars. “Now they’re Patrick has, arguably, one of the most unusual jobs in North ’68 was more of an agitator, and he remem- was thinking about it,” says Chris, who played hockey at Princeton. in their rooms and you worry—are they going to get enough sleep America. He is part business executive, part hockey strategist, and bers a time he mixed it up with an enormous “He probably knew the whole time he was going to keep it going.” because they’re up playing Fortnite until 3 or 4 in the morning? You part camp director—making sure a locker room of testosterone- player from Yale. “If Patrick hadn’t stared him The Capitals evolved, and Daly eventually sought new owner- have to call and tell them, ‘Turn off your computer! Go to sleep!’ ” fueled pro athletes gets enough sleep, stays out of trouble, and down, I’d be dead,” Long says. Their teams ship for the team. Patrick helped identify tech mogul Ted Leonsis Perhaps the most significant moment of Patrick’s effort to -re plays great hockey. “The job of team president varies from club to struggled on the scoresheet, and Patrick as a replacement for Pollin, which Daly calls “the greatest thing that build the hockey club came in January of 2008, when the Capitals club,” says Bill Daly ’86, who has been deputy commissioner and never contemplated following his family’s ever happened to the franchise.” In 1999 Leonsis paid Pollin $200 signed Russian prospect Alex Ovechkin to a $124-million deal. It chief legal officer of the NHL for 24 years. “The model Dick fits well-worn path into the pros, heading instead million for the team and a minority share in Pollin’s Washington was the first NHL contract worth more than $100 million, but its into? He’s involved in everything. He’s seen it all.” to American University for law school. He Sports & Entertainment holding company. length—13 years—grabbed headlines. The average NHL player lasts Patrick has been part of the club for nearly four decades—in- played briefly on a semipro team and “had Leonsis modernized and rebranded team operations. Patrick five years. As one blogger said of the deal: “It probably goes down cluding a minority ownership stake, though the exact amount is some fun,” says the former English major. remained a minority owner as Leonsis formed Monumental Sports as either the smartest or dumbest decision in Capitals’ history, not public. And he has occupied senior posts in the front office. “But by then I was a lawyer and getting in- and Entertainment. The privately held company, valued at more but we won’t know for a long time.” When he arrived on the scene, the team was a perennial cellar- volved in real estate development and was than $3 billion, also owns the Washington Wizards of the NBA Now we know. The durable winger has notched eight league dweller. The Capitals joined the NHL in 1974. After nine dismal really just a fan.” and the Washington Mystics of the WNBA. For a time, Patrick’s scoring titles and gone 11 seasons with more than 40 goals. Pat- seasons, the team had under-performed, even for a newcomer, Pollin offered the young lawyer a stake portfolio extended into every aspect of the business. rick says Leonsis considers the contract the best decision of their with the fewest wins of any club in the league. Owner Abe Pollin in the team, but he wanted more than money Today that includes a fledgling e-sports and video gaming fran- ownership tenure. “A lot of people thought we were crazy,” he says. was frustrated. “They were terrible,” Patrick says. “They had a ter- in exchange. Pollin wanted Patrick to “run chise. “Know what those are?” he asks, laughing. “I didn’t either.” “What if he falls off as a player? What if you don’t like him? You’re rible record. Pollin was losing money, and he had started talking the hockey.” In 2016 the company bought an interest in Team Liquid, a ros- really committing yourself to a long, long time.” about moving them out of town. That’s when he approached me.” “He wanted no part of it at that point,” ter of more than 50 professional gamers competing in StarCraft 2, Of course, no achievement in pro hockey (continued on page 102)

48 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 49 DAVID WEISS ’02 | SCOTT MASON ’74 | LORNA HILL ’73 | JOSH BERMAN ’00

Celebrating over 50 years of Service, Knowledge & Results

voices in the wilderness in the voices pursuits

Stony Brook • Dorset, VT Brook Farm Vineyards • Cavendish, VT Selcombe • Brookline, VT

SPOTLIGHT

DAVID WEISS ’02 On the Ball NBA attorney helped halt league play at a critical moment. Birch Tree Farm • Woodstock, VT Long Hill Farm • Woodstock, VT WHEN THE NBA SUSPENDED ITS season abruptly, the world took notice. “We were in the position to be the first U.S. business with our level of visibil- ity to cease operations,” says Weiss, a former geography major who man- ages the league’s player health group and was part of the team that made the March 11 decision. “With our hundreds of employees in China, the coronavirus was an issue that we had been track- ing.” The senior VP had sent a memo to all teams on January 31 to promote awareness and preliminary preventive measures regarding the virus. Weiss, who says his height (“I was 5-foot- Hells Peak • Weston, VT Henry Shreve House • Hopkinton, NH Cobble Hill Farm • Londonderry, VT nothing when I started high school”) kept him off the hardwood, now helps 12.74± Acres • $2,400,000 573.59± Acres • $2,495,000 STONY BROOK: LONG HILL FARM: Select Offices: communicate with teams every day as Dia Jenks | 802-238-1549 | [email protected] Ruth Kennedy Sudduth | 617-357-0455 | [email protected] Four The Green, Woodstock, VT 05091 the league—like the rest of us—awaits 802-457-4977 BROOK FARM VINEYARDS: 43± Acres • $1,995,000 HELLS PEAK: 31.4± Acres • $1,190,000 an end to the corona hiatus. “The NBA Story Jenks | 802-238-1332 | [email protected] Story Jenks | 802-238-1332 | [email protected] One Capitol Street, Suite 300, Concord, NH 03301 will continue to work with the Centers 603-228-2020 for Disease Control and other experts SELCOMBE: 750± Acres • $1,090,000 HENRY SHREVE HOUSE : 14.64± Acres • $975,000 Ten Post Office Square, Boston, MA 02109 to understand when it is safe to come Story Jenks 802-238-1332 [email protected] Kristin Hayes Claire 603-494-9448 [email protected] | | | | 617-723-1800 back,” he says. —Sean Plottner BIRCH TREE FARM: 468.36± Acres • $5,500,000 COBBLE HILL FARM: 149± Acres • $999,500 Story Jenks 802-238-1332 [email protected] Dia Jenks 802-238-1549 [email protected] www.landvest.com | | | | photograph by MARK MAZIARZ SEPTEMBER/OCTOBERMAY/JUNE 20202013 51 >>>> Berman traveled PURSUITS to Drung, Kashmir, for a voices in the wilderness 2016 film shoot.

LORNA HILL ’73 Stagecraft Director elicits hidden talents.

IF YOU THINK YOU CANNOT SING OR DANCE, HILL will prove you wrong. “That’s what happened to me at Dartmouth,” says the founder and artistic director of Ujima, a theater company in Buffalo, New York. “[Former language professor] John Rassias saw me on stage and said, ‘I want to talk to you.’ I was discovered with a kind of innocence and generosity.” Hill says she can now pass on the gift Ras- sias gave her through the youth theater training program she teaches. Hill started the company 41 years ago for black stu- dents. “There’s great validity in the Marxist concept of ‘seize the means of production,’ ” says Hill. “While it’s ostensibly a black theater company, our membership is now and always has been multi-ethnic, -cultural, -gendered. JOSH BERMAN ’00 We’re the only ones in our bailiwick with that credit.” Ujima is Swahili for “collective work and responsibil- ity,” says the Philadelphia native. She majored in history but was regularly involved in Motion Pictures College and local theater productions when they needed Filmmaker keeps his eye on the slopes. SCOTT MASON ’74 to cast black actors. Hill is now overseeing a project that converts a seven-minute play Ujima created called The BERMAN LAUNCHED HIS FILMMAKING CAREER Legacy of Lead—the story of a mother and her son, who is after an unfortunate accident ended his off-term ski dreams Light Verse affected by lead exposure—into a feature film. She is also during his senior year. “My choices were to go back to Dart- Haiku is poetry for everyone. directing The Gospel at Colonus, a black musical version mouth late or figure out something to keep myself busy,” Ber- of Sophocles’ Oedipus at Colonus. man says. He opted to pick up a $500 VHS camera. With his left “As a director you get to identify talent that people leg immobilized, he skied on one leg at the competitions and “FOR ME, HAIKU IS A LIFE PRACTICE,” MASON SAYS. didn’t even know they had,” she says. A couple of the actors events he had planned to attend anyway. The footage became “Unlike other people who are writers or poets, I don’t in this show have never performed before. But Hill notes 2000’s Balance, his first film. schedule a particular time each day to write. Instead I jot that once people are in one of her shows, they usually want Last year his production company, Level 1, released its down things that somehow move me as I encounter them to continue performing. —Lucy Turnipseed ’22 20th ski film. “I remember shooting the bonfire and making in my everyday life.” films about that and selling them to freshmen for 10 bucks Mason, who lives with his wife in Chappaqua, New apiece. I think that’s how I started to fund some of my initial Hill says she’s York, has won more awards than any other haiku poet who passing on the camera equipment purchases,” Berman recollects. As a fifth- writes in English. Recently, he published his work and lessons learned year student, Berman majored in film studies modified with that of other haiku poets in The Wonder Code. He is also from professor photography while he created his next film,Second Generation. John Rassias. >>>> an editor at the online haiku journal The Heron’s Nest. The He also established a Level 1 website to sell his VHS tapes, book is organized around themes of mindfulness he feels and when a Japanese distributor contacted him, the young are often overlooked in Western life. “I see wonder almost filmmaker went international. everywhere and in everything. It sounds like a platitude, After College, he allowed Level 1 to grow organically into but for me it has become a reality,” Mason says. a full-size production company. “I don’t think I ever had a The former studio art major spent most of his career in real expectation of having a scalable business,” says Berman. marketing. After a vacation in Japan several decades ago, “I was very cautious and very conservative. Without a busi- he became interested in haiku—short poems of unrhymed ness plan in place, I wasn’t swinging for the fences.” With the verse in three parts. “A good haiku will conjure a particular release of his latest, Romance, a new era has begun for Berman experience with an emotional affect,” he says. “A haiku is and Level 1. He plans to spend the next two years working only half completed when the poet writes it. It’s only com- on a documentary as other employees focus on short films, pleted when the reader or listener takes it in. The role of podcasts, and more. Reflecting on the time betweenBalance readers or listeners is to insert themselves in the gaps and and Romance, Berman is shocked by the evolution in the ski connect the parts in a way that’s personally meaningful.” industry. “This past winter I was shooting people doing triple Mason notes that nearly all the haiku writers he knows corking—video game-status stuff that people couldn’t have are accountants, housewives, office workers, electricians, dreamed of 20 years ago,” he says. “Level 1 was really around dentists, students. “Haiku is anything but rarefied or to document and get involved in that evolution.” elitist,” he says. “It’s the closest thing we have to ‘world —Christopher Cartwright ’21

poetry.’ ” —Lucy Turnipseed ’22 DEANE (LEFT); K.C. COURTESY

52 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE illustration by ROBERT NEUBECKER MAY/JUNE 2020 53 Today We Dream. BARTLETT Tomorrow We Travel. TOWER SOCIETY HONOR ROLL This is a challenging time for many, and an unprecedented one for us all. Please know how grateful we are for you— our Dartmouth alumni, families, and friends—who are supporting our future generations of leaders. The Bartlett Tower Society—named for the tower inspired by President Samuel Colcord Bartlett to symbolize building on the past to benefit the future—honors all those in our community who have remembered Dartmouth in their estate plans.

List of members as of April 1, 2020. If your name is not listed and you believe it should be, please contact Dartmouth Gift Planning at 800-451-4067. Thank you.

CLASS OF 1929 George A. Hersam* Charles M. Shaeffer* Mr.* & Mrs.* Stanton W. Davis Harold S. Hirsch* Mr.* & Mrs.* Walter D. Sherwood Mr.* & Mrs.* Dudley M. Day Anonymous (2) James W. Hodson* Dmitry A. Shiraeff* Clark Denney* Dwight H. Allen* John C. Hubbard* Olive & Carl E.* Siegesmund Edmund B. Downey* Katherine P.* & F. W.* Andres Mr.* & Mrs.* Richard E. Hunke Donald R. Simpson* Harrison F. Dunning* Harry W. Baehr Jr.* Edward L. Spetnagel* Katherine T.* & Merrill G.* Beede J. Frederick Ingram* Lee A. Eisler* Benjamin F. Stacey* Mr.* & Mrs.* Frederick J. Bereman John W. Irving* Henry S. Embree* Henry J. Stein* Myvanwy* & Walter C.* Bergstrom Edmund E. Jacobitti* Mr.* & Mrs.* Charles K. Faye Nicholas F. Vincent* Herbert D. Bissell* Laflin C. Jones* William N. Fenton* Erwin P. Vollmer* Kathryn G.* & Richard W.* Black Edward A. Kennard* Edith B.* & John R.* Fitzpatrick Janet* & Paul C.* Woodbridge Christian E. Born* Harold H. Leich* Milton W. Fleischman* Archer E. Young* Anne* & A. M.* Braverman Harry T. Lewis* William M. Fletcher* Ruth E.* & Thomas T.* Brittan Mary S.* & William* Magenau Mr.* & Mrs.* George W. CLASS OF 1930 Richard W. Brown* Daniel Marx Jr.* Fredrickson Edwin C. Chinlund* William D. Mooney* Charles H. Adams* G. Warren French* John Clements* Kenneth M. Moran* Horace W. Allyn* Mr.* & Mrs.* John French Caroline* & Edwin B.* Coddington Richard R. Morgan* Richard Barnard* George W. Geiger* David G. Cogan* Howard G. Nichols* Henry R. Bishop* Avery H. Gould* John H. Cornehlsen* Kingsbury S. Nickerson* Louise G. Perry* & Wallace R. Gordon Granger* John A. Dearth* Arthur H. Nighswander* Blakey* Carl W. Haffenreffer* Christina* & John S.* Dickey Wesley A. Nord* Nathaniel A. Blumberg* Donald Hight* Robert T. Drake* Florence* & Dudley W.* Orr Victor G. Borella* Henry T. Hillson* Mr.* & Mrs.* Charles M. Dudley Jeanne R. & Laurance A.* Paisley Martha* & Arthur M.* Browning Richard B. Hood* Richard F. Eberline* Stanley K. Platt* Richard B. Butterfield* Robert E. Hooker* Edwin P. Felch Jr.* John H. Quebman* Llewellyn L. Callaway Jr.* Mr.* & Mrs.* Jerome W. Howard Allen R. Floyd* Rollin J. Reading* Clarence R. Chase* Evelyn W.* & M. L.* Leatherby Stanton A. Freidberg* George B. Redding* Mr.* & Mrs.* Herbert E. Chase Fannie H.* & Alan N.* Leslie Jack D. Gunther* Rich R. Rimbach* Robert H. Chittim* Daniel W. Loeser* Raymond C. Hedger* Mary Lougee & Harold C.* Ripley Vivian* & E. Shaw* Cole G. Evarts Low* Dartmouth

Alumni Travel *Deceased

alumni.dartmouth.edu/travel Dartmouth | Gift Planning • 800.451.4067 • [email protected] • dartgo.org/giftplanning

19-184 AR_Travel_MarApr_DAMad_Final_rev.indd 1 3/26/20 11:32 AM 20-043 GP_DAM AD May/June 2020 - BTS Honor Roll_FINAL.indd 1 4/9/20 1:44 PM BARTLETT TOWER SOCIETY HONOR ROLL LIST OF MEMBERS AS OF APRIL 1, 2020

Charles S. Lynch* Mr.* & Mrs.* Robert W. Fraser Jr. Marie A.* & John F.* Barry John Swenson* John C. Manchester* Mr.* & Mrs.* William S. Emerson Robert L. Wildman* Maurice Rapf* Eugene F. Magenau* Francis E. George* Barbara B.* & Robert S.* Black Bernard P. Todd* Helen* & John H.* Manley Harry F. Espenscheid* Irja H.* & William L.* Wilson Frederick W. Raymond* Robert M. Marr* Malcolm W. Hall* George M. Blaesi* Edward H. Truex* Ford Marden* Richard J. Fowle* Fred Wolf Jr.* Alistair E. Ritchie* Mr.* & Mrs.* Robert McClory Edmund M. Hanauer* Joseph R. Boldt Jr.* Adrian A. Walser* Philip A. Marden* Jeremiah E. Fries* Helen H.* & Arthur L.* Wood Neil F. Roberts* Walter A. McCulloch* Mr.* & Mrs.* Orodon S. Hobbs Robert B. Buckley* Nathan H. Wentworth* James P. McFarland* Therese* & Joseph B.* Furst Perry S. Woodbury* Howard B. Rowe* Kirt A. Meyer* Hawley Jaquith* Benjamin D. Burch* Frank H. Westheimer* John F. Meck* Harry B. Gilmore Jr.* Charles H. P. Yallalee* Jack M. Rubin* Edward S. Meyers* A. Searle Leach* Joseph G. Byram* Frederick R. White* Vincent N. Merrill* Elizabeth G. Lauppe* Alfred Yankauer* Dudley J. Russell* Lou C. Mourey Jr.* Wilbur R. Light* Eugene H. Catron* Jay C. Whitehair* Frederick A. Meyer* & Homer T. Gregory* Dero A. Saunders* Harold D. Newman* William E. Little* Marvin Chandler* Barbara Bogdan* H. Burling Naramore* Robert W. Griffin* CLASS OF 1935 Eleanor* & Donald K.* Saunders William L. OBrion* David S. Loveland* Alexander Christie* & Robert C.* Wilkin Robert E. Niebling* Richard F. Gruen* Anonymous (1) Mr.* & Mrs.* Richard C. Schneider Frederick W. Page* James Lyall* James D. Corbett* Max H. Wolff* John L. Parker* Melville A. Gunst* Frank L. Allen* Charles H. Sewall* Richard Peabody* John B. Martin Jr.* Donald E. Dalrymple* Marjorie K.* Virginia* & Judson T.* Pierson William B. Hart* O. Fay Allen Jr.* Eleanor* & David P.* Smith Joseph C. Placak Jr.* Charles S. Marx* Belden L. Daniels* & Gustavus H.* Zimmerman William G. Raoul* William N. Hartman* Alexander S. Atherton* Robert S. Smith* Charles A. Pooler* Willard E. Matteson* John O. Zimmerman* Mr.* & Mrs.* Reuel N. Denney Lorrin A. Riggs* David T. Hedges* H. Reginald Bankart* Jane L.* & A. John* Todd Jr. Charles E. Rauch* Henry J. McCarthy* Delfina* & Aniello F.* DeStefano F. Fuller Ripley* Alice* & Edward M.* Heffernan Mimi* & Murray R.* Beiley Helen* & John* Wallace Mr.* & Mrs.* Charles V. Raymond John H. McCortney* CLASS OF 1933 Mr.* & Mrs.* Tennant R. Downs Mr.* & Mrs.* Richard A. Rocker Laurence T. Herman* John F. Blanchard* Virginia T.* & William B.* Walrath Mr.* and Mrs.* William J. Reinhart Susanna* & W. C.* McDonald Mr.* & Mrs.* Benjamin W. Drew Anonymous* (3) John H. Rockwell* Alan E. Hewitt* Frances* & Robert L.* Boehm Kenneth W. Webster* Lawrence S. Richmond* Val* & Edward T.* Mecutchen Thomas D. Dublin* * & Clarence H.* Albaugh Carl E. Rugen* Edward L. Hilton* Betsy & Charles H.* Brown Jean K.* & Adolph* Weil Jr. Griffith W. Roberts* Joseph P. Merriam* Ralph B. Elias* Ralph E. Alexander* John M. Scanlon* Richard H. Houck* Allen S. Brush* David D. Williams* Mary L.* & Herman T.* Schneebeli John F. Milos* Ted Ellis* Robert B. Allen* Mr.* & Mrs.* W. Clark Schmidt Gordon R. Hunter* David A. Buxbaum* Philip A. Wilson* Harold H. Sherburne* John M. Nelson* Wilbur H. Ferry* William F. Atwood* Malcolm E. Sherwood* Hubert A. Johnson* Richard E. Carpenter* Thomas E. Wilson* Charles E. Simmons* Louise* & Franklin T.* Nichols John E. Fish* Frederick H. Awalt* Everett A. Shineman* William H. Judd Jr.* B. Cramton Carrick* Lila & Frank J.* Wright Richard C. Squire* George C. Nickum* Kay* & James E.* Gardner Gustavus Babson Jr.* Henry P. Smith III* Mary H.* & James K.* Keeley Lewis D. Cole* Carolyne* & James S.* Ziemen Samuel M. Stayman* Robert S. Oelman* Mr.* & Mrs.* Herman S. Goodman Janet D.* & Wesley H.* Beattie Roger V. Smith* Edward N. Klee* Robert H. Collins* G. Winchester Stone Jr.* John T. Patterson* Mr.* & Mrs.* Rodney N. Hatcher John S. Black Jr.* Chilant* & Mansfield D.* Sprague Emile Kluge* Ruth M.* & George H.* Colton CLASS OF 1936 Florence S.* & Leon H.* Sturman Roland F. Peterson* Richard Hazen* John H. Branson Jr.* Helen L.* & Justin A.* Stanley Joseph B. Lehmann* Franklin J. Cornwell* Anonymous (2) James H. Taylor* George L. Phillips* Louis B. Heavenrich* Constance* & Roland W.* Burbank Sidney Stoneman* Arthur J. Leonard Jr.* Jean E.* & Daniel C.* Cotton Roy A. Adams* John M. Tiedtke* Alice Wolfe* & John H.* Reno Roger W. Hofheins* Robert E. Burns* John S. Thompson* Charles L. Levesque* Dean H. Couper* Dorothy* & Richard K.* Allen Doris* & W. Scott* VanDerbeck James W. Rice* Everett P. Hokanson* Carleton P. Burrill* Mr.* & Mrs.* Charles W. Tozier Leslie A. Lummis Jr.* Carlyle W. Crane* Donald W. Andrus* Mr.* & Mrs.* John S. Whipple Roger K. Richardson* Edward S. Judd Jr.* Doris* & Ralph O.* Campbell Maxwell O. Waldsmith* Ruth E.* & Arthur P.* Moebius William D. Crouse* Arthur I. Appleton* Alene* & Charles E.* Widmayer Allan A. Rikkola* Calvert G. Keirstead* Henry P. Carruth Jr.* Jay E. Weidenhamer* Roald A. Morton* Ellwood F. Curtis* Lockwood C. Barr* J. Walker Wiggin* Frank Rogers* Mr.* & Mrs.* William H. Kendall Alexander S. Cunningham* Jo Stafford* & Paul Weston* John D. Murphy* Gardner C. Cushman* Louis T. Benezet* Theodore R. Wolf* Isabel* & Robert A.* Rolfe Henry R. Kingdon* Ernest S. Davis Jr.* Philip F. Whitbeck* Henry Necarsulmer* Elizabeth A.* & Harry S.* Ferries Lindley S. Bettison* Sidney S. Rubin* Mr.* & Mrs.* Francis H. Lathrop Walter S. Douglas* Stanton H. Whitman* Robert G. Newman* Charles W. Ganzel* Mr.* & Mrs.* Joseph W. Bishop Jr. CLASS OF 1931 Virginia E.* & Charles D.* Ryder Thomas L. Lott* George P. Drowne Jr.* Nancy* & James F.* Woods Lionel H. O’Keeffe* George E. Goodman* Charles C. Brooks Jr.* Charles A. Schneider* Anonymous (2) Eleanor* & Donald E.* Marcus Stuart H. Durkee* Mr.* & Mrs.* Charles F. Orvis Robert K. Hage* Sumner Burrows* Katherine* & William M.* Schuyler CLASS OF 1934 George M. Adams Jr.* Edward B. Marks* Mr.* & Mrs.* Darrow A. Dutcher Robert C. Palmer* John S. Harrison* Robert E. Button* Wilson T. Seney* Eva V.* & Thomas G.* Anderson John T. McRae* Norman W. Erlandson* Anonymous (2) John H. Poole* Grant Herman* Court Catron* Edmund Sieminski* Robert E. Asher* Dorothy S. & Charles F.* Meyers May Fechheimer* Stanley A. Abercrombie* John S. Randall* Betty* & Colson H.* Hillier Hugh C. G. Chase* Fred A. Slaughter* Basil F. Austin* Virginia & Robert W.* Mitchell David V. Flynn* Robert F. Allabough* Louise* & James C.* Reardon Jr. Richard W. Hube* Mr.* & Mrs.* Richard T. Coffin Elgene A. Smith* Baxter F. Ball* Walter H. Modarelli* Wood R. Foster* John F. Anderson* John B. Roberts* James A. Hughes* George E. Cole* Tower C. Snow* John K. Benson* Constance N.* & James B.* Moore Samuel A. Gass* Robert P. Balgley* Charles E. Rolfe Jr.* Nicholas B. Jacobson* Joseph W. Davis III* Gabriel Bromberg* Parker F. Soule* William H. Morton* Richard Gerstell* Rosamond L.* & Harlan P.* Banks Oscar M. Ruebhausen* Janet* & Loring P.* Jordan Albert W. Doolittle Jr.* Edward C. Brummer* Edwin F. Studwell* James D. North* Richard P. Goldthwait* Perkins Bass* Mrs. Wallace M. Sheridan* Gregoire Karch* Ilona* & Edwin J.* Drechsel Robert W. Caverly* James B. Sudduth* Richard W. Olmsted* Robert J. Grow* John N. Bathrick* & Donald C. Sandy* William E. Kuhn Jr.* Mr.* & Mrs.* Clifford W. England John H. Chamberlin* Charles L. Sullivan Jr.* Howard W. Pierpont* Francis A. Harrington* Thomas M. Beers* Oliver M. Sargent* George W. Lansberry* Allen F. Flouton* Barbara Jefferson* Elizabeth* & Edmund A.* Symonds Olin V. Porter* Parker T. Hart* Sidney S. Bernstein* George P. Sayre* Judith E.* & Victor H.* Luneborg Baxter T. Fullerton* & Richard B.* Chase Robert A. Wallace* Frederick A. Post* Henry A. Hawgood* Helen* & Richard N.* Campen William H. Scherman* William H. Mathers* Albert L. Gibney* Frank B. Clarkson* Mr.* & Mrs.* Hart E. Walter Robert D. Reinhardt* Florence* & Carl E.* Hopkins Samuel G. Carson* Robert M. Smith* Douglas C. Mook* Dean R. Gidney* David G. Clifford* John S. Weatherley* Joseph Y. Roberts* Mr.* & Mrs.* Howard C. Howe Bernice & Irving M.* Cohen Stanley C. Smoyer* Reynolds E. Moulton* H. Frederick Gonnerman Jr.* Rhoda* & Joseph M.* Clough William T. Wendell* Harry P. Rowe* Jack B. Huntress* Oscar Mandel Cohn* Herman M. Spitzer* Richard D. Muzzy* Paul L. Guibord* George W. Conklin* Willard C. Wolff* Mr.* & Mrs.* Walter S. Rushmore Frederick L. Jackson* George N. Collins* Mr.* & Mrs.* William M. Stein Robert W. Naramore* Richard J. Hefler* Frank B. Cornell* Eric E. Wollaeger* Harold M. Sack* E. Clifford Johnson* Jerry A. Danzig* Mr.* & Mrs.* Isaac M. Sulzbacher Charles F. Nayor* Horace M. Huffman Jr.* Daniel Denham* Bruno M. Saia* William R. Jones* Edwin R. Davis* Robert F. Thompson* Edward P. Offutt* Robert R. Kable* CLASS OF 1932 Vance Dickerman* Howland H. Sargeant* Martin M. Kerwin* Gerry Scherman & Emerson* Day Barbara* & John D.* Tobin Wilfred R. Ogg* Robert T. Keeler* Walter D. Douglas II* Anonymous (5) George C. Sawyer* Ralph S. Keyes* Andrew Donaldson Jr.* John B. Torinus* Rudolph Pacht* William A. Kirk* Peter B. Evans* Robert E. Ackerberg* William P. Shaw* Katharine* & Henry B.* King Orvil E. Dryfoos* Carleton M. Vail* Edwina* & Charles S.* Parsons Charles A. Lehman Jr.* Walter L. Farley Jr.* Nelson S. B. Alexander* Anise* & Mark* Short William H. Lang* Seymour B. Dunn* Edward L. Valier* George Price* A. Thomas Luey* Mr.* & Mrs.* Ronald W. Findlay Deborah E.* & Arthur E.* Allen Jr. Edmund S. Smith* William B. Lewis Jr.* David V. Easton* Arthur D. Ward* Donald Radasch* Paul B. Lynch* George E. Frankel* Lillian T.* & Milton* Alpert Richard E. Stoiber* Eloise* & Robert T.* Ley Mary* & Richard L.* Emerson Jeanette L.* & Karl H.* Weber Edwin L. Ramsey Jr.* Earnestine*

*Deceased

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20-043 GP_DAM AD May/June 2020 - BTS Honor Roll_FINAL.indd 2-3 4/9/20 1:44 PM BARTLETT TOWER SOCIETY HONOR ROLL LIST OF MEMBERS AS OF APRIL 1, 2020

& William G.* Martens Jr. Jonathan W. Coggeshall* Mr.* & Mrs.* Thomas F. VonTacky Ralph E. Sethness* & LeRoy E.* Middleworth Clifford A. Falkenau* Richard D. Hill* Dewilda N.* & William P.* Harris Ross Martindale* Charles A. Collis* Tudor A. Wall* Arthur Turner Soule Jr.* Cornwall Miller* Gardner L. Friedlander* Mr.* & Mrs. Arthur R. Hills Edwin Hawkridge* Lawrence Marx Jr.* Eleanor K.* & G. Gardner* Cook Thomas N. Willins Jr.* Eben Stoddard* Ruth E.* & Frederick W.* Mowatt Edward M. Fritz* Jean P.* & William E.* Hotaling Jane W.* & David* Heald Morton D. May* LeRoy Cooley Jr.* Richard G. Wood* Richardson Stoughton* Irwin Naitove* Thomas R. George* Betty* & Irving G.* Jackson Edward R. Hodgson* Lee S. McGonagle* Richard F. Cooper* Frances A.* & Gilbert R.* Tanis Virginia* & George F.* Neiley Jr. Alvin P. Gutman* Mary B.* & Hugh* Kenworthy Jr. A. Camp Hopkins Jr.* William McNulty Jr.* Robert J. Crabb* CLASS OF 1938 Philip P. Thompson Jr.* Herbert C. Nichols* Allen C. Hessler* Clayton T. Koelb* Trumbull Huntington* Fred E. Huntley* H. Clay Mellor* Marion C. Cruce* Anonymous (2) Russell F. Tolles* Louis F. Oberdorfer* Robert W. Hewitt* Carl C. Krogh* Albert W. Momenee* Frank K. Danzig* John L. Tower* Louis F. Oldershaw* Ned L. Jacoby* Lawrence S. Kryle* Joyce & James M.* Idema Donald B. Badger* James H. Ingersoll* Richard H. Morton* John D. Detlefsen* Gerald H. Ullman* John F. Page* William J. Kieckhefer* Edward A. Larner Jr.* J. Clark Barrett* Ward S. Jenkins* William U. Niss* Mr.* & Mrs.* John H. Dingle Jr. George H. Wheelock Sr.* Virginia Risley Decourcy* Ruth W.* & Stafford J.* King Robert R. Leske Jr.* Arlington Bensel* E. Burton Keirstead Jr.* John C. Patrick* Mr.* & Mrs.* A. Benedict Doran Helen M.* & William J.* Wiggins & William H. Risley* David W. Leake* Felix Lilienthal Jr.* Leroy Benatar Block* Richard W. Lawton* James P. Pollock* Gross T. Williams Jr.* Harvey L. Rohde* John W. Little II* Jere E. Duffy Jr.* Virginia H.* Stuart L. May John D. LeSeur* Isabelle* & William F.* Pounder Robert L. Ekin* & James* Bonnyman Jr. Everett W. Wood* Howard M. Rowe* Crosbie* & Robert W.* MacMillen George B. McCallum E. Wayne Martz* Boyce P. Price* John E. Emerson* H. Ross Borneman* James R. Yankauer* Andrew C. Ruoff III Stuart L. MacPhail Sr.* Edward N. McMillan Jr.* Richard B. Maxwell Jr.* John C. Reardon* Carl L. N. Erdman* Donald W. Boyle* James O. Sampson* Carla Manley-Russock J. Albert Meier* Sylvia McElin-Corrigan Charles E. Richards Jr.* Bill Falion* David J. Bradley* CLASS OF 1939 Donald A. Sayia* & John M. Manley* Frederic H. Meyer* & Thomas W. McElin* Brinton T. Schorer* Mary B.* & Francis T.* Fenn James A. Briggs* John K. Adams* Mr.* & Mrs.* Henry A. Schueler Mr.* & Mrs.* William F. Martin Thomas E. Oakes* William G. Miller* R. Jackson Smith* Peter H. Ffolliott* Irving E. Brown Jr.* Robert Alpert* Edward J. Searles* Harold C. McAllister Jr.* Samuel M. Pratt* William J. Mitchel Jr.* C. Franklin Sornberger* Wallace C. Fisher* Sidney B. Cardozo Jr.* James D. Andrews* Harry F. Sinclair Jr.* John M. McDonald* Harris S. Richardson Jr.* John Montagne* Richard H. Spencer* Frederick D. Forsch* Howard E. Casler* Wayland Avery Jr.* Howard G. Snyder* H. Dwight Meader* Harold P. Rodes* Lois & Arthur J.* O’Mara Marian H.* & Richard M.* Spong Quincy E. Fortier* Robert S. Cheheyl* Margaret L.* & James H.* Barr Hilliard Spitz* William C. Mercer* H. Alexander Salm* Proctor H. Page Jr.* Morris Stein* Josiah M. Fowler* Runyon Colie Jr.* Howard K. Bemis* Roger D. Stanwood* Edith J.* & Fred W.* Miller Malcolm F. Scott* Anne* & Joseph C.* Palamountain Richard R. Peebles Jr.* E. James Stephens Jr.* Donald H. Frank* Du Val Cravens* Mildred* & John A.* Boynton Elizabeth* & Howard* Stoughton Bettina Towne* & John B.* Moore George A. Simpson Jr.* Betty M. & Henry E.* Pogue William H. Stimson* Phyllis* & Bertram* Geller William I. Dennen* Clement F. Burnap* Robert M. Sullivan* Frank E. Orenstein* Stewart H. Steffey* Edward J. Rasmussen* Stevens S. Stotzer* Albert R. Gray* John H. Emerson* Peter S. Cardozo* Merton B. Tarlow* W. Robert Reid Jr.* Donald H. Stillman* Henry S. Reynolds* Richard W. Stowell* Ralph L. Griffith Jr.* Robert L. Emlen* Mr.* & Mrs.* Howard P. Chivers Alan V. Tishman* Louis I. Rose* Donald M. Taber* Barry C. Sullivan* Leonard W. Harris* Robilee* & William S.* Tomkins John W. Schleicher* Edmund A. Tanzi* Athalinda* & William G.* Russell Paul H. Feakins* H. Foster Clippinger* Frederick W. Schaefer Jr.* Gene P. Tamburi* Dorothy* & William B.* Heroy Frederic D. Tower* Hugh W. Schwarz* Isabella* & Alexis M.* Tarumianz Robert H. Frese Jr.* Colby A. Cogswell* Theodore R. Schoonbeck* Dora Ann* & Richard H.* Taylor Crawford H. Hinman* Frederic K. Upton* James P. Scott* Theodore Wachs Jr.* Mr.* & Mrs.* Edward J. Griffing Jr. Henry Conkle* Robert K. Schoonmaker* Frank H. Teagle Jr.* Richard Varey* Richard L. Seidman* Stewart R. Wallace* Elizabeth V.* Walter W. Halfman* James O. Corner* Robert P. Sherman* James K. Tindle* William O. Webster* Joseph S. Sudarsky* & H. Franklin* Irwin Jr. E. W. Hartung Jr.* John L. Coulson* Walter H. Winchester* Richard G. Smith* Arthur B. Toan Jr.* Marjorie Tomlinson* Gordon K. Wentworth* H. Eugene Jones* R. Philip Harty* John S. Cumming Jr.* Lucy Hawkes* Robert J. Strasenburgh* W. Brewster Towne* Stetson Whitcher* Mortimer L. Karp* Richard C. Higbee* John N. Davenport* & Ralph C. Wright* & Stephen W.* Winship Guy A. Swenson Jr.* James D. Tracy* Sidney Lansburgh Jr.* Marion L.* & Parker* Holden Patricia M.* & Robb M.* DeGraff Bettina Wyman Emmons* Lorraine S.* & Samuel C.* Williams James B. Thompson Jr.* Robert M. Tyler* Irene* & Stanley W.* Lappin Richard T. Holt* Roy C. Demmon* & Richard M. Wyman* Fanny* & John F.* Willson CLASS OF 1942 Vincent B. Tibbals* Charles F. Venrick* Ethel H.* & Harold S.* Wonson Donald C. McKinlay* Ralph J. Hossman* John D. Diffenbaugh* Anonymous (2) Madge G.* & Thomas P.* Wagner Frank T. Weston* Florence* & Lansing P.* Moore John D. Johnson* Daniel L. Dyer* CLASS OF 1940 Huntly Allison* Raymond W. Wattles* CLASS OF 1941 Donald A. Williams* Alice H.* & Sherman A.* Murphy Robert B. Jones Jr.* Michael Ellis* Anonymous (1) Lydon E. Amy* Robert M. Whelden* William T. Wyman* Thomas D. Nast* George T. Kingsbury* Herbert McLean Furlow* T. Gary Allen* Anonymous (2) Bert W. Anger* Duncan E. Williams* William H. Newburger* Asher B. Lans* John H. Gauntlett* Dorothy & Kenneth J.* Arwe Eugene B. Adkins* O. James Barr III* Milton L. Williams* CLASS OF 1937 Jason E. Newton* William R. Lansberg* Mr.* & Mrs.* Thomas B. Gist Jr. Margaret T.* & Lloyd G.* Marion* & Herbert E.* Bailey Harry O. Bartlett* Robert P. Williams* Donald B. Albertsen* Seymour F. Ochsner* Philip F. Leach* C. Henry Glovsky* Blanchard Richard F. Blanchard* Thomas S. Blankley* Andrew M. Wood* Angela C. & Herman E.* Anstatt Patricia Leopold Charles T. Main II* Wesley D. Goding* Leila & Richard W.* Bowman Stewart C. & Gustave T.* Broberg John D. Brewer* Jack H. Zimmer* Frances R.* & Frederick* Asher & Robert E.* Olson Robert L. Manegold* Joan* & William S.* Green E. Robert Breech Jr.* Emily E.* & Frank P.* Brooks Sidney H. Bull* CLASS OF 1943 Charles H. Bassett* Mary J.* & Edward B.* Petersen Mary S.* Barnard Robert S. Hagge* Joyce T.* & Elmer T.* Browne Bruce L. Brown* John C. Campbell* Raymond W. Bauer* H. Wilder Pierce Jr.* & Philip J.* Merritt George R. Hanna* John H. Browne* Robert M. Chase Jr.* Richard H. Cardozo* Anonymous (1) Robinson Bosworth Jr.* Harold B. Putnam* F. Charlton Mills III* Ruth* & Ernest H.* Heydt Virginia* & Karl F.* Bruch George F. Clabaugh* Frederick W. Cassidy Jr.* Charles M. Arnstein* William S. Clark* Elizabeth P.* & Lem W.* Bowen Mr.* & Mrs.* Theodore B. Ripsom Hamilton B. Mitchell* Mr.* & Mrs.* Louis A. Highmark Robert P. Bunker* William L. Clark* Joan D.* & Robert C.* Barnum Jr. Richard L. Clarke* Lester G. Bratton Jr.* Franklin E. Robin* Paul I. Ossen* Herbert E. Hirschland* Mr.* & Mrs.* Irvin L. Chipman George R. Cruze Jr.* Robert W. Bradford* Franklin S. Cushman Janet* & Emerson E.* Brightman William B. Rotch* Robert L. Clark* William S. Danforth* Hazel* & Richard M.* Bugbee Harald Pabst* Richard L. Hobbs* Michael J. de Sherbinin* Richard H. Rush* Katharine* & Laurence F.* Brooks Frances M.* & W. J.* Parker Ralph E. Holben* Everett W. Czerny* George C. Denny* Mr.* & Mrs. Robert G. Emerson Mr.* & Mrs.* Robert M. Clark Jr. Natale L.* & J. Willcox* Brown William M. Sayre* Phyllis Addison* Martin H. Howell* W. David Dance* John C. Everett* Rosanna E. & Clifford B.* Ewart C. Carlton Coffin Jr.* Ronald W. Brown* John A. Schilling* & Robert S.* Pollack Evelyn M.* & Robert L.* Kaiser Suzanne* & Ray S.* Dau Priscilla K. Maynard* Rumsey Ewing* Albert Coons Jr.* Clara S.* & Alan W.* Bryant Jerome B. Sherman* Sarah H.* & John A.* Rand David M. Lilly* Ellen B.* & Frederic A.* Davidson & Henry M. Frechette* A. Alexander Fanelli* Charles R. Cusack* Frederic S. Bunce* Furman K. Stanley* Carl A. Raymond Jr.* Alden E. Loberg* J. Malcolm de Sieyes* Genie M.* & Russell M.* Garfield Melvin M. Figley* Charles J. Dittmar* Douglas E. Butman* Kendall Stearns* H. Robert Reeve* William L. Lyon* Walter G. Diehl* R. Jordan Gotshall* Clifford J. Fuller Jr.* Anne Luise & David C.* Donaldson Oliver Butterworth* Mr.* & Mrs.* Carl W. Stern Robert H. Reno* Robert F. MacLeod* Kelvin Doyle* Philip H. Hall* Robert L. Gale Ruth* & Charles M.* Donovan David M. Camerer* Harvey C. Tull* Robert H. Ross Jr.* Sally* & Bertram R.* MacMannis Alfred S. Eiseman Jr.* Robert B. Hamilton* John B. Glesmann* Robert J. Fieldsteel* Barbara* & Benjamin M.* Cardozo Robert Turner* John S. Russell Jr.* Henry W. Merrill Jr.* J. Bruce Espy* John P. Hands* Daniel L. Hagge* Howard E. Geer Jr.* A. Bancroft Coggeshall* Frederick H. Vogt* Karl F. Seidenstuecker* Helen M.* Richard C. Everett* William D. Hartman* Thomas J. Harriman Thomas W. Gerber*

*Deceased

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20-043 GP_DAM AD May/June 2020 - BTS Honor Roll_FINAL.indd 4-5 4/9/20 1:44 PM BARTLETT TOWER SOCIETY HONOR ROLL LIST OF MEMBERS AS OF APRIL 1, 2020

James L. Gilfillan* John William Craig* John E. Leggat* James F. Lynch Jr.* Joseph G. Kurey Walter DeHoog* Scott C. Olin* Peirce McKee William M. Glovsky* Joseph A. Dammann* W. Carter Lockwood* Mary Jane Sybil T.* & Jay L.* Laskey Charles K. Dodge* David C. Pendleton* Loye W. Miller Harry L. Gustafson Jr.* Dorothy M.* & Richard A.* Davis Mr.* & Mrs.* Vincent P. Malahan & Horace M.* Macartney Thomas E. Leggat* Richard O. Elliott* W. Scott Peters* Richard A. Miner Dorothy J.* & H. Brereton* Hall Alfred J. Densmore Jr.* J. Donald McNamara* Albert W. Martin* Irving Levine* Carl V. Granger* Herbert B. Ray* Robert H. Moore* Philip M. Harmon* Merlin K. DuVal* Leslie F. Murch* Mary Y.* & Thomas J.* McCollow G. Richard Lezius* Ralph Greenhouse* Richard A. Robie Albert H. Mori* Frank W. Hartmann* Christina* Arthur N. Nichols Thomas R. Montgomery Jr.* Barry A. Marks* Barbara & Vail K.* Haak Jr. K. V. Rothchild Alfred H. Moses Ora M. & George R.* Hebard & Carleton G.* Eldridge Jr. John C. Osborn* Edward W. Norton* Joseph F. Marsh Jr.* Orton H. Hicks Jr.* William R. Sapers Marr P. Mullen Beverly* & David L.* Hoffman Richard P. Ettinger Jr.* Scott Parrot* Arthur P. O’Hara Jr.* H. Jefferson Mills Jr.* Edward R. Hunt* Marvin M. Stephens Jr.* Amy & Henry Nachman Jr. Gertrude* & Richard W.* Clinton C. Gardner* Eugene T. Pinney* Roger F. Patterson* Robert T. Mortimer* J. Michael McGean* James Stevens III* Wesley L. Nutten III* Houghton Robert L. Gifford* John D. Reed* Laura* & Charles D.* Perry Jr. John M. Murray Jr. Emmanuel W. Metz* William S. Stone II* Paul W. Orth C. Walter Howe* Alexander J. Gillespie Jr.* John M. Robinson* James H. Pert* Bernard D. Nossiter* Dana E. Miller* Carroll M. Swezey Jr.* Joan & Martin B.* Person D. Joseph Hurley* John E. Grimm III* Theodore Safford Jr.* William W. Poole Robert W. Owens* Donald E. Mose* Peggy & James D.* Vail Andrew L. Pincus Charles F. Kane* Priscilla* & John M.* Haffenreffer Arlene Ellen & Paul H.* Samek Philip J. Reinertsen* Gerald F. Phillips* John H. Mudie* Robert V. P. Waterman* Richard C. Pugh* Donald L. Kersting* William B. Hale* Nichol M. Sandoe Jr.* Robert H. Reny* Blanchard Pratt* Emil J. Popke Jr.* Robert S. Wilkinson Jr. Aaron R. Rausen* Robert R. Krumm* Beatrice R. & Robert A.* Harris Donald M. Sisson* Ann* & Harry S.* Sarkisian James Smith Rudolph* Raymond J. Rasenberger* Charles M. Richardson Jr.* Richard M. Lansburgh* Don R. Hinkley* Martha E.* & Edward B.* Smith Edward M. Scheu Jr.* Paul H. Spiers Jr.* Bertram Rodman* CLASS OF 1951 Samuel R. Roberts* Barbara C.* & Robert W.* Liming Allen E. Howland* H. Matson Smith* Henry F. Stern* David F. Squire Robert C. Rooke Anonymous (1) James B. Robinson* Herbert L. Marx Jr.* Arthur H. Kiendl* Vesta & Victor C.* Smith Robert W. Stevenson David G. Stahl* John H. Schaaf* Dwight L. Allison Jr. James D. Rogers John D. Milburn III* Mr.* & Mrs.* Warren S. Leopold Robert L. Steiner* Lowell Thomas Jr.* Frank A. Weber Alma & Donald B.* Scully Thomas B. Arnold* Janet & Robert L.* Rutstein C. William Milmore* Martha Louise G.* Virginia Pacala Guy W. Van Syckle* Eugene P. Whittier Jr.* Roger H. Sheldon* Charles D. Bagot* Henry M. Sanders* Joseph B. Miskell Jr.* & Richard H.* MacDonald & Edwin G. Strasenburgh* Nancy R. & George H.* Vogt Arthur R. Wilson* Martha A.* & Kenneth W.* Soule David W. Batchelder* Benjamin Schore Emil Mosbacher Jr.* David B. MacGregor* Andrew Ten Eyck Jr.* Edward S. Waring* William C. Yakovac* Winifred Anthony* Adolph J. Berger* Parke H. Sickler Elinor Bunin* & George B.* Munroe Barbara H. Andrews* Edward G. Washburn* Dorothy* & Harvey* White & John P.* Stearns George B. Biggs Jr. Edward P. Sine* John J. Murphy Jr.* & Richard E.* Mayberry John W. L. White* Charles H. Whitmore Jr.* CLASS OF 1948 Carl C. Struever Jr.* James A. Bovaird III* Albert F. Streelman Jr.* Robert E. Ott* William H. McElnea Jr.* Jane T. & Homer A.* Yates John T. Witte* Thomas J. Swartz Jr.* Robert C. Brod John J. Sutton Jr.* Robert B. Power Edwin W. McGowan* Richard W. Young* Anonymous (1) Phyllis M.* & Robert B.* Swift W. Hayden Thompson* Peter H. Batchelder* William M. Brooks* R. Donald Reich* Mary P. & Harry R.* Morse CLASS OF 1946 Gordon A. Thomas* Joan & Alan Brout Stanley Van Den Noort* John W. Reps Joan* & Edward A.* Mortimer Jr. CLASS OF 1947 Everett E. Chapman* Thomas H. Towler Ralph F. Watkins* Anonymous (4) Elaine W. & Howard T.* Cook Bruce H. Bryant John S. Robinson* Richard T. Murchie* Judith & Earle K.* Angstadt Jr. William O. Bailey* Raymond F. Truncellito H. Richard Bucey* Jack A. Weingarten Gerson M. Rosenthal Jr.* Francis P. Murphy Jr.* Robert H. Cormack* Ernest W. P. Vesey* Betty* & Edward A.* Weisenfeld Edward A. Attix* Lee E. Bartholomew* Dorothy & Warren F. Daniell Jr. Marcus V. Cole* Norman B. Smith* Lois* & Allen* Myers De Witt C. Baker III* Philip E. Booth* Chester F. Cotter Josiah H. Welch James M. Stewart* Robert E. Nystrom Burton Elliott* CLASS OF 1950 David Wiggins* Donald W. Barr* Wallace D. Bradway Janice Barrett & Carlton F.* Evans James M. Culberson Jr. Fred F. Stockwell* Robert H. Purnell* Robert A. Barrows* Albert C. Burbank* Charles L. Abbe* Russell C. Dilks* Erich S. Wisiol* Donald H. Taylor* Charles C. Richardson* Donald R. Gilmore* Julius R. Wolf* Richard L. Bowser* Julie A. C. Noolan Judith Cross & John H.* Hatheway Francis M. Austin Jr. William H. Duke* Richard B. Tower* Robert J. Riggs Jr.* Arthur W. Bullock Jr. & Daniel T. Carroll* Barbara S.* & James G.* Birney David W. Emerson* Stephen J. Wolff Jr.* Henry H. Townshend Jr.* George S. Springsteen Jr.* Heather & Harland Hoisington Arthur F. Worden Jr. Mary* & Robert F.* Case Hugh M. Chapin* John C. Jansing* Carol Virginia* Robert A. Gatzert* John G. Troster* Thomas W. Streeter Thomas W. Cohn* Paul R. Cohen* & Seward B.* Brewster John L. Giegerich Jr. E. Smedley Ward Jr.* James W. Towsen* Robert W. Jeavons* CLASS OF 1952 William M. Cooper* Elizabeth W.* & Albert J.* Colton Walter W. Kliebe* William H. Carpenter Irene* & Carl L.* Glassberg Larned A. Waterman* H. William Trease* Anonymous (10) William B. Davidson Jr.* Roger H. Dickinson* John R. Mahoney* Smiley N. Chambers Jr.* Howard A. Glickstein Charles J. Webb II* Hubert W. Williams* Roberta E.* & William* DeStefano Samuel C. Doyle* Philip C. Chapalas David K. Hall* Jay H. Anderson Allen E. McMichael* James D. Wells* Dudley A. Wilson Jr.* Henry H. Dodd* Donald W. Edwards* Kenneth F. Clark Jr. Michael A. Harris* Emanuel S. Balkin George R. Michalek* Frank West* Frank K. Ettari* Alan R. Epstein Adolph B. Cramer* Kenneth M. Henderson Jr. John A. Bartlett* CLASS OF 1945 William G. Pace III* William T. Wolf* Stanley H. Feldberg* Sheila* & Donald J. Evans Judith & William J.* Cross John Higley* Nancy L.* & Charles E.* Benisch Foxhall A. Parker* Paul F. Young* Anonymous (1) Duncan M. Fitchet* Norman S. Fink* Albert V. Durand* David H. Hilton* Patricia & Robert D. Brace Hugh Shearer* Catherine* & Henry M.* Abbot Samuel C. Florman Lila* & Joseph M.* Flounders Sally* & H. Newcomb* Eldredge Charles O. Hoban* Richard M. Bressler CLASS OF 1944 Morton Smith Thomas P. Beaumont* Charlotte & Harold S.* Frank John W. Fondahl* Joseph M. Ely Charles H. Hood* Suzette & Peter W. Burnside John A. VanRaalte Anonymous (3) Craig J. Cain* D. Wayne Frerichs Mr.* & Mrs. George B. Gerrish J. William Embree III* Robert W. Hopkins John W. Collins Kenneth T. Young Jr.* Stanley Barr* B. L. & Paul J.* Caravatt Mr.* and Mrs.* Daniel B. Fuller Alan Goldstein Daniel F. Featherston Jr.* John A. Hoskins* Wendell H. Cox* Roger V. Zorn* Eric G. W. Barradale Eva* & Charles B.* English Leonard J. Gammel* Harry E. Graves* Katharine B. & Walter L.* Fisher Nason A. Hurowitz* Percy Crosby* Ruth* & Alexander L.* Bensinger Raymond J. Fontana* Thomas H. Gillaugh* Jack H. Halpin Richard K. Frey* Robert G. Hustek* Margaret* & John B. Crowell Jr. CLASS OF 1949 John W. Berry* Maurice E. Frye Jr.* William W. Graulty* Townes M. Harris Jr.* John G. Gammie* Michael Iovenko* Richard B. Dalbeck* Burton M. Bickford Richard C. Gilman* Frank J. Guarini David H. Hauser* Anonymous (2) Caro & James* Gregg Harold C. Johnson Jr.* George A. Davis* John T. Billington* Alvin C. Gluek Jr.* Harold C. Gurnee Eleanor & W. Hardy Hendren III Robert J. Bellemare* Jacques Harlow Stuart M. Johnson Jr.* Charles F. Dey Homer G. Bogart* Harry L. Hampton Jr. George W. Hilton* Robert R. Huffman* Michael Bernkopf* Dick T. Hollands Allan R. Karcher* Judith & David A. Drexler Sydney D. Bowers* Frederick T. Hatch* Doris & Le Roy U.* Jerman Jr. Ann D.* & David D.* Huntoon Sarah R. & William H.* Boardman Larry Huntley* Nancy Gordon & Herbert B. Knight Roger F. Evans Jr.* W. Dale Brougher* R. Gordon Hinners Jr.* Paul H. Kaemmerlen* Harold Johnston* Maurice L. Bombar Jr.* Joan R.* & Paul J.* Lena David S. Krivitsky* Theodore F. Frankenbach J. Whitney Brown* Stephen S. Hull* Patrick F. Kennedy* John M. Kaufman* H. Allen Brooks* John George Henry Lotter* William J. Leffler II Ann & Francis I. Frellick Walter Burke* Frank M. Hutchins* Mr.* & Mrs. Joseph Dray Kepes Joseph R. Kincaid* Peter R. Brown* James H. McCrum Jr.* Hugh P. MacBrien* Alden Guild* Harry H. Carey* Edmund R. Kohn June* & Edward S. Kirkland Robert B. Kirsch* John N. Dahle Henry P. Meijer* Lucretia & Peter B. Martin George C. Hibben Marshall Clark* Robert G. Lee* Robert A. Levinson Carl A. Kuniholm George F. Day Kingsland Oakes* Richard D. McFarland George M. Howard

*Deceased

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20-043 GP_DAM AD May/June 2020 - BTS Honor Roll_FINAL.indd 6-7 4/9/20 1:44 PM BARTLETT TOWER SOCIETY HONOR ROLL LIST OF MEMBERS AS OF APRIL 1, 2020

King L. Howe* Robert L. Callender* Edward Van R. Spurgeon John F. Steel III Ralph L. Sautter* Noel E. Sankey Thomas H. Schwarz S. Peter Pappas Remsen M. Kinne III* Fred Carleton* David G. Stanley* Richard A. Steinberg* Willard A. Small* Lawrence W. Scammon Jr. John Scully* Richard H. Pew Jr.* John C. Klein* William L. Chamberlin* Frederick H. Stephens Jr. Donald A. Swanson Jr. Peter V. Teal Robert R. Slater Dan Searby Gerald M. Polin Charles M. Liddle III Harry Leroy Cherry Jr. Lowell S. Thomas Jr. Lloyd B. Tepper James M. Wechsler* Charles E. Soule Frederick W. Searby* Joel B. Portugal Drewry E. & Frank A. Logan Clyde R. Claus* Richard B. Thomas* David R. Thielscher Matthew B. Weinberg Frank P. Strong Jr.* Robert L. Shirley* Joel Potash Paul C. T. Loo* Russell A. Cook* James A. West* Thomas L. Tyler Carl G. Weisenfeld* Jonathan Strong* C. F. Simpson* Arthur D. Raybin* Katharine M. & Charles M.* Lyon Robert A. Derzon* Ann & Thomas W. Wiley Myra Annette & Frank M. Weiser Robert L. Wenz Eric Valentine* John B. Spring* James F. Riffle Terence S. Malone John B. Dodge* A. Donald Williams III* Genevieve Howard M. Zelikow John K. Van de Kamp* John A. Stempel* Robert H. Rudolph Ann & Stephen F.* Mandel Richard S. Dunham* Edward T. Wood & Glenn A.* Wesselmann Alice Spell & Elliott G. Weinstein George H. Stern John M. Ryan* Lawrence T. Markin Robert G. Edgar* Robert S. Yates* Sheldon M. Woolf CLASS OF 1956 Bert R. Whittemore* Jane M. & Josiah Stevenson IV Frank E. Sands II Frederick J. England Jr.* Mary Louise* & Frank A.* Mate Gerrit W. Zwart Anonymous (1) Kristin & R. Stewart Wood Jr. Eugene P. Stichman* Joseph J. Slotnik Richard D. McDonough* Harlan W. Fair CLASS OF 1954 Richard Worrell Richard W. Sunderland Samuel G. Smith Philip S. Fast Joel D. Ash Dorn C. McGrath Jr. Anonymous (3) CLASS OF 1955 Kathryn & Peter A. Bernard James C. Tankersley James R. Spence Jr. Peter F. McSpadden* Richard T. Fleming CLASS OF 1957 David C. Thompson* William R. Stevens Michelle & David W. Florence Richard D. Barker Neal M. Allen Jack L. Billhardt Robert S. Medvecky James R. Treadwell Jr.* Philip B. Stoddard Adolph Franz II Donald L. Berlin Harry T. Ambrose* Robert J. Bransten Anonymous (1) Donald P. Moore Jonathan P. White Andrew H. Thomas* Leonard I. Gochman* Robert V. Berry* Sue Born & John W. Ballard II Robert W. Burnham Wallace E. Ackley Evan L. Nelson Jr. Nancy Ellen & Charles D.* Winslow Thomas C. Towse* Richard H. Goodman* Donald K. Brief John P. Barker Prentiss Carnell Virginia & Randolf H. Aires Lawrence J. Noling Christopher S. Wren Linda & John C. Trimble Lillian P.* & Donald C.* Goss Wilbur W. Bullen Jr. Stanley N. Bergman Leonard J. Clark Jr.* Ricardo J. Alfaro II* John S. North* Walter W. Vail Edwin H. Grant Jr. Thomas K. Clarke Richard K. Blodgett John E. Cotton Philip A. Anderson* CLASS OF 1958 Otto G. Wagenbach Joe Novak* John C. Green Marilyn T. & Robert* Clements Elizabeth & Hugh M. T.* Brady John W. Crowley Majid Arbab David G. Weber Herbert R. Nubel* Richard S. Greene Roy R. Coffin Jr.* John C. Braestrup Robert A. Danziger Robert Baehr* Gershen M. Abraham Franklin T. Osgood Jr. Rudolf K. Haerle Jr. Paul Dalton Peter F. Branch Charles P. Driscoll Jane Noyes Patricia & Melvin G. Alperin Lowell W. Wilder Everett H. Parker* Richard A. Hall Clark S. Davis* Charles B. Carpenter* H. Stephen Farmer* & Alfred C.* Bancroft Jr. Bryant Barnard* Susan* & Peter D.* Williamson Nathan K. Parker Jr.* David G. Halloran Joseph L. Davis Jr. Donald J. Charbonnier Robert R. Faulkner William K. Beard Jr. Philip B. Bell Jack Wolper* Edwin T. Rice* Robert F. Heilmann Donald R. DesCombes* John H. Cogswell* James L. Flynn* Bruce H. Bernstein John C. Bennett Philip F. Wood* Kenneth Roman Robert P. Henderson* Edward F. Everett* David L. Conlan Frederick K. Franz* Marlene H. & Edward K.* Bixby Harold J. Bernsen James B. Young William W. Rooke* Sylvia & Ralph E. Heyman Stephen H. Fast Jere R. Daniell Glendon E. French Robert A. Burton Jr. Joseph B. Blake James H. Rosenfield Sr. Catherine H. & George H.* Michael M. Finigan Alice & William G.* DeLana Samuel E. Fry Jr.* Arlan Y. Cady* Frank H. Blatz Jr.* CLASS OF 1959 Elisabeth W. & Angus M.* Russell Jacobus Judith & Morton Galper John T. Dinan Jr. Harold Gordon* Larrie S. Calvert* Harvey M. Bloom* Anonymous (1) Preston H. Saunders* L. W. Johnson William H. Garland* John J. Doyle Jr. David E. Haight Jr. F. Peter Carothers Robert S. Bolinger Nancy & Samuel S.* Adams Charles A. Schuck Jr.* John H. Kennedy Toby & Arthur J. Geller Robert D. Fanger Sandra & Thomas J. Harper Walter S. Clark Jr.* Ann D. & David H. Bradley Thomas J. Adriance* George J. Scully* W. George Krall Roger Gilmore Lynn S. & William Foggle Dudley D. Heath David W. Cook Frederick G. Coggin Rodger S. Agre James F. Shepherd* Mary A.* & Robert L.* Lambert Richard E. Gorsey John French III Kenneth L. Herrmann Robert K. Creasy John M. Coulter Jr. G. Thomas Aley Jr. Nicholas Skylor Mary & C. Blair Law William A. Grover* Lane W. Goss* John H. Higgs William P. Curry Charles H. Cowperthwaite Mary Atchley & David H.* Allen Patricia & E. Martin Spencer Liliane* & Ronald H. Lazar Frederic C. Hartman Peter A. Greenfield Emerson B. Houck* Ann & William H. Edgerton Mel Croner Frances A. & Jerome B. Allyn Peter W. Stanley* Richard J. Loewenthal Jr. Brenda Storrs & Edwin J. Hayes Jr. Asaph H. Hall* Duke Hust* Eric Y. Eichler Robert N. Downey Peter I. Barber* Edmond A. Sullivan* Richard D. Lombard* John J. Heyn Alice K. & Warren S.* Hance Whitney A. Jenkins* Adelaide & Clark A. Griffiths John D. Durno Arlyss & Ray E. Becker Robert F. MacNally II* William H. Thomas* Dorothy Ann* Roy B. Hill* Henry A. Kappel Daniel P. Harrington Barnet C. Engler Burton C. Binner Robert A. Malin Victor R. Trautwein Jr.* & Herbert J. Hillman Jr. Paul F. Jacobson* Herbert D. Kleber* Frank B. Hoefle Peter B. Flowers Kurt P. Christiansen Helen & Thomas P. McCrea III Donald R. Wagner* Anthony Kane Julian R. Klein* John E. Kramer Jr.* Francis P. Howland Richard W. Frisch William S. Colehower Zeta & Donald E. McMichael Drew E. Waitley* Elizabeth* & Thomas V. A. Kelsey John H. Krumpe* Paul Kreindler Byron C. Huse James B. Geier* Timothy C. Crane* Laura Campbell & Allan L. Miller Charles H. Weed* Kent M. Klineman* Robert W. Lenker Thomas R. Kuhns Edward M. Jennings Bruce A. Gemberling Stanley I. Cundey Jr. John W. Newton* Virginia Dye & Emerson W. White I. Robert Levine Neil M. Levenson* Nils H. Larson Jr.* Clarence D. Kerr III* Carroll McR.* & Robert D.* Gilges Robert A. Danielson Lynne J. & Gilbert S.* Osborn Henry W. Williams Jr. Anne E. & Dana E. Low Harry T. Lewis Jr. J. Richard Leaman Jr. W. Stan Knipe* Robert F. Goodell Frederick R. Davidson Robert H. Williams* Paul D. Paganucci* John W. Patten Edward L. May Donald A. MacKay* Gordon K. Lenci Victor P. Kohl Jr. Craig B. Haines Jr. Dix F. Davis Louis A. Zehner Jr.* Douglas D. Perkins John M. Moran Paul Mannes* Earle S. Lenker Stephen C. Lampl Phalen G. Hurewitz Charles J. Donovan Alice Marian & Peter H.* Zischke Donna & Charles C. Reilly Stephen M. Mullins* Leon C. Martel Ronald L. Lewis Sharon* & Richard P.* Lanahan L. Joseph Jacquet* Ben W. Drew Jr.* William E. Murane* Joseph D. Mathewson Robert L. Long, Jr. Michael L. Lasser Robert M. Jaffe Max C. Fischer* CLASS OF 1953 David C. Salter Barron W. Schoder Jr.* Daniel M. Neiditz Paul Merriken William J. Magavern II June & G. Robert Macdonald Joseph W. Kabat Jr.* John B. Folmer Wallace F. Ashnault* Arthur B. Schweich Hugh T. Nolin* Betsey & David P.* Miller Thomas S. Marvel* J. Thomas Macy Preston T. Kelsey II Wayne G. French John B. Auerbach* Frima & Gilbert L. Shapiro Richard M. Page Robert L. Morse* William B. Norton* Katherine & Leon I.* Mann Sandra & Jerry Manne Mark T. Gates Jr. Richard W. Badger* Bruce R. Sherman Richard A. Pearl Richard B. Mount John S. Parke* Robert Marchant Ralph N. Manuel James W. Giddens Abdul S. Bahrani* Walton K. T. Shim Lynn Saidenberg & Arthur I. Rauch David K. Page* Henry J. Pratt* Harrington K. Mason* David E. Maryatt Goodwin O. Gilman Philip E. Beekman Andrew C. Sigler Charles M. Reed Jr.* A. Brooks Parker III H. Flint Ranney* Frank J. Mooney III* Kathryn L. Earl W. Glazier Jr.* Burton Bernstein* Anne P. & Robert C. Simpson John A. Reed Jr. Robert A. Perkins* Nancy* & George J. Records Robert W. O’Neill & Brendan V. McAdams Jr. George Hampton Jr.* Putnam W. Blodgett* Mary L. & Russell S. Smale Hugh L. Roberts Jr.* G. Gale Roberson Jr.* Lester A. Reid D. Monte Pascoe* Donald H. McCree Jr. A. Stuart Hanson Richard J. Blum Denny W. Speidel* Howland S. Russell* Allen W. Root George D. Robison III Richard F. Perkins Donald O. McIntyre Craig B. Harlan* Edgar Boody Audrey M.* & Edward J.* Spiegel Thomas D. Sayles Jr.* Malcolm S. Roth* David K. Rubin J. Robert Porter Jr.* Trygve Myhren David L. Heine* Charles B. Buchanan Jane & John K.* Springer Peter R. Schenck Gordon W. Russell Kevin G. Ryan Peter L. Powers Charles J. Neff Jr. Constance & Michael M. Hellman

*Deceased

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20-043 GP_DAM AD May/June 2020 - BTS Honor Roll_FINAL.indd 8-9 4/9/20 1:44 PM BARTLETT TOWER SOCIETY HONOR ROLL LIST OF MEMBERS AS OF APRIL 1, 2020

Dolores V.* Richard H. Chase Jr. Samuel W. Parke Jr.* Pete Hanauer Gabrielle & Roy J. Halstead Jane & Barry R. Linsky Marguerite Sven B. Karlen Jr. & Laurance P.* Hurlburt Bruce M. Clark John C. Passeggio George C. Harrington Peter L. Halvorson Helen C. & Geoffrey E. Nothnagle & Robert S. MacArthur III Edward A. Keible Jr.* Richard G. Jaeger Jonathan L. Cohen Andrew R. Paul Arthur L. Jacobson Richard J. Hannah Kenneth J. Novack Charles L. Marsh Jr. Diane G. & Stuart J. Keiller Peter Jaffe Robert J. Colyer Robert M. Philips Marsha & Bruce K. Johnson Carl F. Herbold John Lee Patterson* Gene B. Marshall* Charles D. LaFiura Richard P. Karpawich* Peter J. Crumbine W. Robert Prouty Carol & Ivar A. Jozus Edward Hirsch A. Thomas Perry Arthur McGinnes Richard P. Leach Jr. Robert L. King Jr. Walter E. Daniels Andrew J. Purdy* Gerald P. Kaminsky Carl G. Jaeger Timothy V. I. Ratner Mr.* & Mrs. Fredrick S. Meils Douglas C. Leitch* Leslie H. Larsen Jr.* Alan S. Danson Susan C. & Harry W. Quillian Nelda Hawkins & Richard F. Keith Zaida & Peter T. Knight Thomas R. Richards Douglas G. Montgomery C. Thomas Long Dann H. Lewis Richard I. Davidson Kenneth Reich* Arthur M. Kelton Jr. Jack A. Lavine Steven B. Rosen Paul R. O’Connell Jr. Jaan Lumi Robert P. Liberman Robert M. Derderian Thomas J. Reilly II John G. King Warren T. Loomis* Percy H. Russell Jr. Kevin O’Gorman John S. Macdonald Jr. James K. Lust Bruce W. Eaken Jr.* Beatrice M. & E. Lee Robbins Michael W. Kirst Stefan M. Mason* John L. Steffens E. Christopher Palmer Lisa L. Gasstrom W. Thomas Margetts Jessee E. Fate III* Sol Rockenmacher Norman R. Klath Gordon A. McKean Petra & D. William Subin Frederick M. Rothenberg & Michael W. Mascari David E. Marshall Quentin P. Faulkner Linda & Frederick A. Roesch Laurence R. Levy Erwin H. Miller Richard P. Suttmeier John W. Russell Robert S. McConnaughey Allan F. Munro* Estelle Bender Eric A. Sailer Gerald Libby Penelope & William A. Obenshain Richard B. Swett John H. Sanders Jr. Kenneth R. McGruther John B. Nason III* & T. Richard* Fishbein Roger F. Schaefer Richard E. Lodmill E. Prather Palmer Jr. Stanley W. Tebbetts* Gale & Stephen A. Sherman Jane A. & Thomas E. Meacham James E. Neff Richard J. Foley Donald A. Sheffield Susan & Morton D. Lynn William C. Pierce Frederick D. Thompson* Robert L. Shirley III Roger D. Meade J. Barlow Nelson Walter G. Freedman D. Barry Sibson Harris B. McKee Ben S. Read Jr. Gaetano R. Vicinelli Harvey M. Tettlebaum Stanlis D. Milkowski Edward H. Noll* Paul J. Freud Stephen Sayre Singer Patrick B. McManus Alice A. & J. Stephen Reid Thomas G. Washing Sue & Eugene R. Veto Richard T. Mosher Jr.* Lewis A. Noonberg Alan H. Friedman Dudley R. Smith J. Michael Murphy Karen J. & Joshua A. Rich Jeffrey G. Weaver Nancy K.* & Brooks* Wheeler Mark E. Nackman Wilfred Ogg Jr.* Haley J. Fromholz Albert M. Stark Donald F. O’Neill Steve Roth Gordon C. Weir Edward G. Williams Michael B. Orr Diane & D. Scott* Palmer Sheldon M. Gisser H. Gordon Starkey Jr.* Peter M. Palin Mike Rouzee Judith R. Derasse Becky and Larry D. Williams Paul C. Pringle G. Richard Paul Allan H. Glick* Gary J. Stass* David E. Prewitt John D. Ryder & William R. Wellstead James Wright Peter A. Sapione* Charles D. Pinkerton Sidney H. Goldman Leila M.* & Melville* Straus Fredrick T. W. Reed Allene A. & Robert H. Sayre Barbara & Richard Wong Richard K. Shaw Stephen J. Plank Dennis C. Goodman Richard W. Strehle Victor S. Rich Jill G. & John T. Schiffman CLASS OF 1965 Barbara E. Shiers David K. Porter John Goyette Seth Devore Strickland Constance D. & David G. Robinson David L. Smith CLASS OF 1964 Karen F. Kolodny & Joel W. Sternman Kent L. Rickenbaugh* Henry H. Greer Charles B. Stuart John T. Russell Virginia R. & Manning J. Smith III Anonymous (1) & Carl H. Amon III Peyton A. Storli Richard E. Sameth Thomas C. Grow The Reverend Kenneth W. Taber II John E. Schlachtenhaufen Robert P. Sprafkin Larry M. Ayres* Theodore W. Atkinson Jr. Bruce S. Wagner Robert G. Sands William E. Gundy Allan R. Walker Walter C. Schliemann Thomas C. Sturgill William Barnet III Richard J. Avery Marshall F. Wallach Herbert M. Schoenberg Jerome E. Gurst Kenneth E. Weg Frederick L. Schwab Daniel P. Tompkins Robert V. Bartles Charles M. Bailin Stephen L. Waterhouse* Peter J. Schreier Robert M. Hager John R. Wheaton James S. Silen Paul Weinberg Robert I. Bayer Richard B. Beams William O. Webster Jr. Donna & Gerald D. Silverberg J. Roger Hanlon Douglas W. Whitney Dawn C. & Franklin M. Stephens Virginia* & Gordon R.* Williamson Steven D. Blecher Thomas C. Bettman Robert R. Williams Barry D. Smith Bruce H. Hasenkamp* Thomas C. Wood Peter F. Stuart Timothy H. Brooks Robert D. Blake Judith & Allen W. Zern Roger W. Squier Jr. Susan & Michael Heitner Frederick L. Yocum* Andrew W. Urquhart CLASS OF 1963 Thomas B. Campion Jr. Donald M. Boardman Paul A. Stein David B. Hiley Roger L. Zissu Margot & Kenneth K. Walker Anonymous (1) Henry E. Clay Jr.* Carl A. Boe CLASS OF 1966 Samuel T. Swansen Urban C. Hirschey Hartley D. Webster Lawrence B. Bailey Alfred J. Cotton Jr. Theodore L. Bracken Sr. Anonymous (4) William R. Sweet* Jack N. Hodgson* CLASS OF 1961 Maynard B. Wheeler Stephen P. Bank Sabin Danziger Donald E. Bradley Robert M. Bach Michael A. Tighe Jr. David S. Hull* Anonymous (3) R. Oakley Winters Ann & Lyle H. Bjork Charles Devens Jr. Mark J. Brodkey Judith Liff & Joseph N. Barker Walter W. Topham* Patricia Ann & Russell W. Ingersoll David G. Armstrong Ronald Wybranowski George C. Bonstelle Jr.* Amy Dennison & Carl S. DuRei Timothy C. Bryant* A. George Battle Dorothea & Joseph A. Alexander V. W. Ingham Oscar P. Arslanian John L. Zabriskie Jr.* William E. Brazda Dale F. Eickelman J. Gary Bucher L. Graeme Bell III Wattleworth Murray J. Janus* William E. Atkinson Jr.* Douglas P. Zipes Robert M. Bysshe Wilmer C. Faust III* John D. Bullock George W. Berry* Kurt J. Wehbring Linda Radtke & Robert A. Jervis Samuel R. Baker Michael H. Cardozo V George J. Fesus Brian E. Butler Richard H. Blacklow Albert B. Wende* Kenneth E. Johansen Morris W. Banks CLASS OF 1962 W. Scott Carlisle III Edward J. Gingras James F. Carey III Elizabeth C. & Thomas E. Brady Jr. James D. Wilson* Norris C. Knosher* Ralph G. Barton Anonymous (1) Thomas M. Chandler Peggy & Leonard L. Glass Karen Bell & Robert M. Cox Jr. Michael R. Bromley Joanne & Douglas* Wise Eugene H. Kohn H. James Baum Karen G. Smith Robert G. Chavey Mariellen & Thomas A. Good Harry B. Crosswell James M. Byers III Gerold C. Wunderlich Morton M. Kondracke David H. Blake & Thomas B. Ackland James L. R. Clouser Newell M. Grant H. Lee Daneker Robert E. Cleary* Emily Neece & Alan R. Ziegler Neil M. Koreman Ruth & Peter A. Bleyler Gordon B. Aydelott Phyllis & Bruce A. Coggeshall Marc A. Grinberg Richard J. Davey Robert M. Cohn Philip C. Kron Michael G. Burnett Anderson G. Bartlett III Theodore J. Cutler Paul E. Hale Stephen R. Demeritt Richard D. Daly CLASS OF 1960 Susan & Richard M. Levy R. Bruce Callahan Lynn & David E. Bishop David Dawley John E. Holobinko Robert J. Eckert Richard J. Dellamora Anonymous (5) Sheldon A. Lippe* Cleve E. Carney* Jeffrey K. Brinck David A. Downey* James S. Hughes Robert Z. Ernst Peter J. Dorsen James R. Adler Bruce R. Lively Roger D. Coates Karen* & Alan W.* Bryant Jr. Charles B. Faegre* Roger H. Hull John Chris Fisher Peter Schuyler Eddy Joel B. Alvord Franklin X. Loeb* Thomas S. Conger Philip L. Cantelon James M. Friedman Glen R. Kendall Thomas W. Flechtner William P. Ferris J. Eric Anderson Roberta D.* & Martin A.* Lower Robert H. Conn John E. Clark Jr.* Maurice G. Friedman* Marc S. Kirschner Marcia & Peter G. Frederick Jeffrey L. Futter Marc A. Austen William B. Lum G. Barclay Corbus Charles C. Cohen Francis X. Gina Jr.* Stephen L. Koch Michael Gonnerman Glenn E. Gavin Jr. Joseph L. Batchelder Richard T. Lyman Jr.* Duane H. Cox Edward M. Cohen* Ann & John R. Goellner David W. Kruger James W. Griffiths Brewster H. Gere Jr. Dwight A. Beebe Barry L. MacLean John L. Damon II Sandra & Lewis H. Coronis William V. Hindle Jr. Donald E. Kubit* James W. Hamilton* Edward S. Grew Pamela F. & Don M. Betterton R. Duncan Mathewson Charles K. Dayton William H. Davis Gary Russell & John L. Huber Kenneth M. Lapine H. Roger Hansen Wayne Hill Patricia & Russell E.* Brooks Reynolds E. Moulton Jr.* Kenneth DeHaven James G. Godsman Reginald L. Jones Richard J. Lessow Richard J. Harris Jr. H. Gaylord Hitchcock Jr. Douglas C. Bryant Allen F. Muglia G. H. Denniston Jr. Robert L. Goodman John B. Kovas* Deborah A. & Roy J. Lewicki Christine & H. Bradford Hawley Joanne & Alan C. Keiller Martin L. Budd Roderick O. Mullett Henry E. Eberhardt III Richard G. Green Abby & Dennis M. Kratz Franklin O. Loveland* Gary C. Herbst Eric M. King* Paul S. Cantor Richard P. Ossen Irwin L. Facher David H. Gundy John L. Kubacki Mark L. Lowmiller* John D. Herney Marya & Paul F. Klee Robert L. Caulfield Ryan M. Ostebo* Bruce M. Forester James B. Haines V Virginia & Michael R. Leone Peter E. Luitwieler Bruce D. Jolly Roger C. Kline*

*Deceased

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20-043 GP_DAM AD May/June 2020 - BTS Honor Roll_FINAL.indd 10-11 4/9/20 1:44 PM BARTLETT TOWER SOCIETY HONOR ROLL LIST OF MEMBERS AS OF APRIL 1, 2020

Stephan P. Lanfer CLASS OF 1968 & William H. Greenwood III Allen E. Bassler Karen R. & Charles B. Schudson Richard F. Spellman Nicole Perben Peter F. Volanakis R. Bradley Laycock Jr. F. Thomas Hopkins III Gail V. Coleman William G. Schur Robert J. Stevenson & Michael J. Montgomery Marianne Enos Walsh Anonymous (1) Thomas D. Lips Robert F. Houser & Kenneth M.* Bruntel Bruce J. Shnider John F. Wehner Marion McCoy Mustard* Michael R. Walsh Charles A. Anderson Wayne W. LoCurto Thomas C. Hunt Charles W. Collier* Neal D. Traven Jennifer B. & R. Owen Williams Cheryl A. Newman Jeffrey F. Welles Roger Arvid Anderson Elizabeth R. Norman A. Jacobs Samuel M. Cuddeback III Roger G. Wilson Richard G. Woolworth Jr. John K. Nicholson Sr. Maud Iselin Welles Jonathan G. Axelrod & James M. Lustenader Byrd Charles W. Kempe* David P. Edson Brita S. Reed Thomas B. West Tamae & William L. Beers Jeannette C. & Oliver O. Miller William J. Kneisel Eugene R. Elrod CLASS OF 1973 CLASS OF 1975 Rob Saltzman Donald H. Wiviott Christine and John J. Blair James M. Oathout Stephen C. Larson Andrew H. Shaw Alexander B. Wood Warren E. Connelly Michael L. Fay Anonymous (1) Michael Caldwell K. Peter Orbanowski David H. Lieberman* John F. Shepherd Jocelyn Shaw Woolworth Frank E. Couper* Jon G. Fox Patricia & Robert A. Barr Lynn & Gregory M. Fisher David P. Osborne* Donald A. Lofty John S. Sherman Dennis F. Donahue Bruce D. Frankel Michael S. Bell Robert W. Fortenbaugh John W. Rollins Jr. David M. Shribman CLASS OF 1978 John S. Engelman Loren C. Lortscher David C. Herrick Jim Brandstetter Susan Story & Jesse Andrew Galt Alan W. Rottenberg David P. Spalding John C. Everett Jr.* F. Lane McBurney Wayne P. Hobin Doreen L. & David I. Chemerow Patricia L. Chan Anonymous (1) Robert Serenbetz Rita Diane Stiles Helen D. & Peter M. Fahey Alan D. Neubert William E. Hoover Jr. Robert G. Conway Jr. & Howard M. Hodel Martha V. & Mark T. Arnold Richard D. Sheaff Thomas J. Swartz III Edward S. Heald Stephen S. Page Darrell A. Hotchkiss David G. Duggan Alexander Kandabarow Mr. and Mrs. Martin I. Cole Charles R. Sherman Neil T. Tarzy Lawrence F. Himes Charles C. Pineo III Stephen K. Hoverman Sarah P. & James S. Fleischer Daniel L. Kenslea Barbara Dau Augustus R. Southworth III Gary R. Hobin David L. Prentice Katherine Stevens* Constance M. Haddad Peter F. Kolack* Stefanie B. Valar Andrea & Clark B. Dickson David B. Spring Stanley A. Hooker III R. Hampton Rich & Kenneth P. Jacobsen & David R. Garver M. William Macey Jr. & Edward A. Hauck David G. Dietze George R. Trumbull III Gary N. Horlick Daniel Romer James K. Jenkins Susan L. Gordon Mark A. Myers Robert O. Wetzel Mara J. Dinsmoor Pieter VanDenSteenhoven* Benjamin H. Johnson James J. Ross Malcolm L. Jones & F. Gregory Barnhart John L. Reed Paul K. Windrath Edward J. Dohring George A. Vincent III William J. Kolasky Gerald H. Schulze Bruce R. Karr* Michael D. Havern Claude A. Saucier Kenneth C. Wright Diane L. Fountas Stephen H. Zeller Edward M. Kuss C. Troy Shaver Jr. Robert Y. Lider Harley D. Kaufman Pamela Brewer Smyth Judith M. Yablong* David L. Graham* Joanne N. & Roger R. Lenke James E. Sheldon J. Michael Maynard Todd S. Keiller A. Coleman Tuggle Mark C. Hansen CLASS OF 1967 CLASS OF 1977 F. Richard Heath Susan & Charles S. Lenth Robert D. Shellard Jeffrey K. McElnea Patrick F. Kennedy Steven P. Wise David C. Hodgson Anonymous (1) Susan & D. Terence Lichty Tower C. Snow Jr. James G. Meyer* Theresa Look Philip J. Andryc William P. Hunt Jr. Steven E. Ayres S. Christopher Meigher III Paul K. Tuhus Willis H. Newton Jr. Jonathan D. Low CLASS OF 1976 Anne A. & Daniel F. Attridge Charles T. Berry Virginia P. & David S. Wakelin Jeffrey R. Immelt Linda M. & John W. Melski Peter S. Pratt John F. Lundgren Anonymous (2) Robert L. Baum Susan & Ethan M. Braunstein Susan DeBevoise Wright Lisa Kaeser John G. Migliori James T. Rager Richard L. Merrill Michael F. Aylward Kristin M. Bjorklund Bruce J. Chasan Melinda R. Kassen Maxwell P. Milton Jr. Henry K. Ricklefs Steven C. Morelli David M. Bandfield Leslie Embs Bradford R. Stephen Cheheyl CLASS OF 1970 Bruce A. Kaufman William C. Mutterperl Katherine Duff Rines William G. Nisen Timothy A. Beasley Cathy A. Burnweit Lee C. Clyburn* Kathryn & Richard H. Kimball Richard B. Noyes James V. Aukerman Michael J. Ross Trevor Q. O’Neill* James L. Beattie Scott J. Cameron Kenneth J. Davidson* Charles R. Kreter Kevin F. O’Donnell Thomas Lynn Avery* Philip T. Ruegger III Peter S. Shedden* Martha Johnson Beattie Amy Cammann Cholnoky Lawrence J. Fabian David Michael LeMay Nancy L. & Roger C. Overholt Charles R. Bacheller* Robert B. Schnabel Nicholas M. Simonelli Carol Vaughan Bemis David M. Cutler Frederick W. Geissinger Cynthia M. & Charles E. Dana Curtis P. Oberg Patrice & Jonathan R. Page Wayne B. Bardsley Mark H. Totman Debra Ann Clark Thaddeus A. Bennett James R. Gifford Beth Daniell Judith A. Osher Kenneth R. Page Gary T. Brooks Paul C. Waldman & D Randall Spydell Catharine J. Brennan Blanca & John K. Hager B. Cort Delany Jeffrey Paul Petrich Henry M. Paulson Jr. Arthur E. Brown Peter B. Webster Bruce C. Stuart John J. Brennan Marina & Kip K. Harris Susan Dentzer Peter E. Raskind James A. Payne Thorne Gordon Butler Samuel J. Webster John S. Weatherley Jr.* Timothy W. Caldwell Erik E. Joh Eric D. Donnenfeld Christine Hayer Repasy Patricia McKee & Donald E. Pease Jeffrey S. Dahlman Frances D. & Thomas W. Wolf Jonathan H. Winer* Judith Burrows Csatari William H. Judd III A. P. Duffy Margaret McGrath Sherman Linda & Theodore Renna R. Demarest Duckworth III Holly & Bernard B. Wysocki Jr. Christopher H. Daniell Richard F. LaRoche Jr. Donna E. Fletcher Steven F. Strauss Walter D. Richter Joseph L. Garrett CLASS OF 1974 William C. Davison Harold McIver Leich CLASS OF 1972 Garth H. Greimann Mary-Ellyn Tarzy Charles W. Schweizer Peter F. Kardon David C. Bonga K. Brewer Doran Elizabeth R. & David C. Lindsay L. Greimann David A. Taylor Paul H. Schweizer Susan L. Gershenhorn David G. Bailey Lowenstein Gerald G. Bowe David Q. Ferguson Frank T. Ittner Charles G. Wise Daniel Tom & James Lazarus Peggy M. Bissell A. David Mangelsdorff William B. Cater Jr.* Jonathan Fine Elizabeth Epstein Kadin R. Clark Wadlow Andrew D. Lewis* CLASS OF 1979 Nicholas B. Mason Bruce W. Boyd Thomas C. Csatari Robert G. Fisher Jr.* Elizabeth C. Kent Ronald P. Weiss Brian A. Maher John F. Meck Peter S. Broberg Sheryl & Michael W. DeGenring Robert S. Foerster Jr. Scott D. Kepner Laurie A. Branch Roger M. Witten David F. Noyes* Jane E. Minasian & J. Grant Pamela J. & Christopher B. Cain Michael R. Draznik Andrew Gettinger Lori D. & David R. Kinnard Mark Connolly* Gerald E. Wunsch Stewart G. Rosenblum Monahon Daniel Cooperman John W. Elsenhans Susan & John L. Gile Mary Collins McDougall Barbara & John H. Currier Geoffrey G. Scott William M. Moore* Joseph R. Davis Christopher C. Gates Pamela Gile* T. Martin Milligan Matthew J. Donovan CLASS OF 1969 Edward E. Shumaker III Gloria G. & Stanley C. Morson John P. de Regt William F. Geiger Amy J. Gillenson Peter B. Mills Peggy Epstein Tanner Michael S. Smith Kathleen & Peter J. Nistad Jr. Anonymous (1) Laura & Gary Dicovitsky Kenneth F. Hall Carey E. Heckman Lawrence S. Peiros Gail Frawley Granowitz Thomas K. Tiemann Samuel D. Ostrow Michael D. Adickman Susan & Robert H. Doerr William G. Hart Thomas J. Heim Katharine A. Phillips Peter C. Greulich Johanna Gingo & Stephen F. Pond Bruce S. Alpert Peter H. Van Demark Kimball S. Fuiks David S. Johnson W. Philipp Hertz Jr. David G. Pierce Harry E. Griffith Jr. Charles A. Riley Stephen W. Bates Thomas R. Wentworth Jane N. Winter Dwight L. Kingsbury Hilary W. Hoge Gary A. Rogers Anne S. & J. Andrew Heller Michael W. Seely J. Lawrence Carter Stuart G. Zuckerman & Richard A. Larson Kenneth J. Marable Naomi Baline & Joel M. Kleinman Georgina Tugwell Russo Jennifer H. Hughes Howard F. Sharfstein Allen T. Denison Lawrence E. Lieberman Bruce D. Miller Peter K. Leer Thomas A. Russo Pamela J. Joyner CLASS OF 1971 Donna F. and Mark K. Sisitsky Robert W. Dickgiesser* Beverly R. Love Christopher S. Pfaff Gary L. Love Paula L. Selis Laurie Laidlaw Robert S. Smith John S. Gilbert Anonymous (2) R. Michael Meehan Ann C. & Matthew D. Putnam Laurence M. & Anthony J. Magro John Storella Michelle R. Lavigne Robert L. Thurer Nancy Lee & Gary L. Goodenough Buck G. Allen III Michael E. Moore* Neal E. Rakov Melanie Fisher Matte* Elizabeth Fauver Stueber Richard A. Magnuson Jr. John S. Toomey* Kathryn H. & Judson Graves Bonnie McCall Christie C. & Win J. Neuger John R. Sample Charles P. McCann Robin Travers Nancy Schwartzman Malmquist Aubrey B. Willacy Kathryn Irene & G. Jeffrey* Ashworth Gary G. Null Joel B. Sanborn* Sylvia and Stephen Melikian Nancy Parssinen Vespoli Debra Bray & William H. Mitchell

*Deceased

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20-043 GP_DAM AD May/June 2020 - BTS Honor Roll_FINAL.indd 12-13 4/9/20 1:44 PM BARTLETT TOWER SOCIETY HONOR ROLL LIST OF MEMBERS AS OF APRIL 1, 2020

L. Philip Odence & Kenneth Stanley Taratus E. Ralph McDevitt III Paul S. Hill Gregory S. Nerland CLASS OF 1989 CLASS OF 1991 Shelby Jean & Andrew K. Ellen Gomprecht Mark A. Terrero Joanne L. McMullen David A. Hodess Lynn Tracy Nerland Silvernail Anonymous (2) Geoffrey V. Bronner & William J. Oppenheim Jr. Ellen J. Remsen Webb Peter K. Moran Chip M. Kelly Jr. Alicia Strohl & David H. Resnicoff Gregory K. Waller Catherine Baggia Duwan Kristen K. Bronner Bruce T. Peyser Jonathan F. Weed John M. Moscarino Martha Lamarre McCoy James F. Minter Thomas R. Beecher III Donna Lax-Edison Vicki S. & David A.* Philhower Maja C. Wessels David L. Noonan Aaron J. MacArthur* & David J. Schnabel CLASS OF 1995 Lenora I. Brown & Andrew M. Edison Janet & Ben Riley Laura Gold Zimmerman Sherri C. Oberg Cola G. Parker Lucie Haswell Voves Jan B. Brzeski Deborah Karazin Owens Janet Elizabeth Cheston Victoria Riley Suzanne & Andrew P. Peisch Kevin S. Rosen Kendall Burney Wilson Eric L. Bunting Lauren & Mike Lazar Julie S. Erikson Elizabeth P. Roberts CLASS OF 1981 David L. Plekenpol Deborah L. Stahl-Hannam Walter H. Colsman Darshana D. Patel* David-Alexandre C. Gros Stanley S. Sack Pamela & Shaun Rai S. Tien Wong CLASS OF 1987 Amy M. Beringer Bryan T. Cooper P. Peter Sagar* Aya Kamaya Adam H. Samuels Steven R. Schuh Karen McKeel Calby Anonymous (2) Susan S. & Scott W. Ellison Donna Soave Weber Lara E. Morse Mark P. Snyderman Robin L. Shaffert CLASS OF 1985 Holly K. Dustin Roseanne Wood Arseneau Nancy Bernard Felix Lisa Koestner Mortell Kathryn & David A. Stone Phoebe C. & Andrew D. Turner Lynne Hamel Gaudet Anonymous (1) Mark E. Chavey Jeffrey B. Gerst CLASS OF 1992 Alexander A. Nikas George S. Stone Amy B. Warner & Steven Robert J. Gaudet James C. Alex* Ashok R. Gangolli Adam D. Glick Carolyn G. Rice David A. Thomsson Kosowsky Anonymous (1) Robert M. Goldbloom Holly S. Andersen Laura E. Gasser & Marc David Katz Philip D. Harrison Matthew R. Riley Thomas J. Tomai Steven A. Zilber Craig G. Bergstrom Pamela M. Hedstrom & Douglas A. Hirsch Kathleen Joyce Kusiak Nancy H. & Eric S. Heaton Louis C. Spelios Mark Tomalonis Paul and Carolyn Biondi Paul E. Kinson Barry H. Bass Deborah Rowe Marchiony Kenneth L. Horton Jared K. Sprole David A. Van Wie CLASS OF 1983 Elizabeth A. Cavanagh Steven L. Kroll Pamela Lower Bass H. Randall Morgan Jr. Ann M. Huebner Elizabeth B. Tedeschi R. James Wasz Lynne Schiffman Delise Alain G. Moureaux Anonymous (3) Eamonn F. Brady Peter D. Murane David W. Irwin Robert M. Delise Paul F. Wetmore Anne Scott-Putney Guy G. Bacigalupi Lorenzo A. Chambers Tracey Salmon-Smith Nancy Obler Kaufman CLASS OF 1996 Tracy S. Echikson Nancy H. Wilder Richard T. Silverman Stephen J. Baggott Todd L. Cranford Joseph J. Voves Peter K. Kong Dan Fisher-Owens Heather Miles Brady Mark M. Winkler Edward V. Spurgeon Jr. Thomas S. Bain Jennifer & Thomas R. Eldridge Jonathan C. Winslow Elizabeth Mahoney Loughlin Susan A. Fisher-Owens Jason H. Brady Claudia Sweeney Weed Michelle R. Martinez Campbell Patricia & Michael W. Fadil Philip H. Loughlin IV Enrique G. Colbert CLASS OF 1980 Winnie W. Huang* Lori A. & Martin J. Weinstein & Jeffrey R. Boffa Keith T. Goggin CLASS OF 1988 Susan & Neil F. Luria Kyle K. Huebner David S. Erikson Anonymous (2) Maren J. Christensen Kathleen Reilly Gross Peter Lurie Anonymous (1) Geoffrey Kim Jeneen Di Benedetto Graham Merle Adelman CLASS OF 1982 D’Maris Amick Mark Gross Paul M. Mahoney Jr. Daniel M. Kalafatas Nobuko Akashi-Reed Suzanne Sellers Kolenski Mark R. Alperin & Joseph F. Dempsey Jr. Jonathan P. Grussing Jennifer Kochman Marrus Elizabeth A. Kelley Emily P. Bakemeier Jennifer R. & Alex M. Azar II Kelly Shriver Kolln Stuart Bell Lisa Feinberg Densmore Valerie Hartman Laura Fitch Mattson M. Hadley Mullin Stephen W. Berger Danielle Green Barney Thies O. Kolln Camilla & Daniel J. Berry Heather Roulston Ettinger Nancy C. Hill Michelle Martine Gabriel S. Schlumberger John T. Blunt Jr. Elena H. B. Baum Mark R. Larson Brent R. Bilger H. McIntyre Gardner Elizabeth Gilman & Everett A. McCassey II Gina Blus Catherine Craighead Briggs Anthony B. P. Moody Cameron Crone Bilger Andre A. Hunter & William T. Hobbs II Anne E. Moellering CLASS OF 1997 Thomas S. Burack Kristen Ramstad Laura A. & Richard M. Murawczyk Brian D. Boyer Kelly Fowler Hunter Merrick R. Kleeman Peter C. Monaco Ronald K. Chen E. Christopher Caravette & R. Craig Carlock Jennifer K. Newsom Emily S. Auerswald Sharon Lazar James M. Laden Antonia Rutigliano Nedder I. John Cholnoky Anne Remmer Cole C. Alec Casey Jeffrey A. Owens David S. Belden Samuel P. Reckford Aloke K. Mandal Christie N. Reilly Jeffrey N. Demers William A. Cole Victoria Woodin Chavey Alice S. Paik Stephen E. Echikson Anni Dupre Santry Edward L. Pascoe Richard T. Reilly Jane S. & Alexander C. Frank Melissa T. Cook Richard L. Cloobeck Theresa M. Ellis Patricia M. Shepard Susan S. Reckford Mary Kate Rejouis Robert J. Garry Kelly Dixon Cooper Cuong V. Do Elizabeth A. Robischon Taja-Nia Y. Henderson Melanie Law Shugart Lauren S. & David M. Rosen Jon S. Wilkins Christopher P. Gorton Amelia Craig Cramer Janine Rauch Eagle Linda Salzhauer Swenberg Shefali Shah John L. Sinclair Rich Stoddart John D. Tantum Andreas P. Graham Charles G. Crane Jevin S. Eagle CLASS OF 1993 Peter M. Sisitsky Earl M. Grossman William B. Crenshaw Elliot A. Stultz Daniel R. Studnicky Scott D. Gentry Andrew J. Thompson Wade W. Herring II Carol E. Davis Barbara A. Thistle Tormondsen Kathryn C. & William B. Tyree Traci A. Byrne Gentry John O. Van Hooser Alexis A. Boss* CLASS OF 1998 Steven E. James-Herrmann Albert E. Dotson Jr. D. Reed Webster Rachel Milliken-Weitzman Ross P. Waller Todd C. Brady Marjorie Wallace Gibson Vikram R. Krishnan Charles E. Jarrett M. Peter Feer Stephen W. Webster & Jeffrey W. Weitzman Elizabeth H. & Andrew W. Ward Beth P. Krakower* Mary Flounders Green Kevin M. Robbins Regina R. Ketting Edward K. Frechette Stanton N. Williams Jennifer Archibald Williams Cindy A. Larson Geoffrey Hyatt Tracy L. Van Dorpe Katharine Wiley Laud Peter C. Frechette Alexander E. Izzard III CLASS OF 1990 Robert K. McConnaughey CLASS OF 1984 CLASS OF 1986 Nicole E. Nelson Joseph R. Mannes Heather Guild Katherine C. Kellogg T. Gregory Ames III Marianne R. Nikas CLASS OF 1999 Catherine H. McGrath Donna L. Halverstadt Anonymous (1) Anonymous (5) Tammron J. Kleeman Sarah J. & John S. Banks Todd Pellett John O. Hastings Jr. Charlotte Peter Arnold Anne C. Kushwaha Trina T. & Quyen D. Chu Cathleen Millett Thomas David M. Altman Cynthia Shortell Peyser Jennifer Chandler Hauge & William E. Bannister-Parker Sarah Metzgar Boggess Janine K. Lambert Kristen Politica Eckler Chad S. Thomas Allison J. Fisch Stacy Donna Phillips Corinne J. Heyes Geoffrey R. Berlin Thea H. Cleminshaw Robert W. Lasher Todd H. Eckler Elise A. Vincentt James D. Gallo Cornelia Mahn Purcell Charles F. Hoffman David S. Chao Brian B. Conroy Christopher J. Lena Bruce H. Greenberg Charles D. Gibson Keith P. R. Quinton Matthew B. Hoffman CLASS OF 1994 Michael Ho Charles C. Richardson Jr. Janine Gordon & Derek A. Chow Krista Thomas Corr Glory Martyn Lena Catherine Griffiths Harrison Dale S. Janik Hali A. Croner Peter E. Gibson Stephanie Welsch-Lewin Jacqueline S. Joy-Ames Cathy A. Birkeland Courtney V. Peschel Robert M. Rough Jamison N. Peschel Carla Boehm Sloan Amanda & Gregory A. Jones Fran & Aris Damianos Celeste Boatwright Grace David B. McConnell Jeffrey S. Martz Robert C. Bordone Gabriel M. Kind Philip J. Ferneau Craig B. Granowitz David J. McCusker Jr. Stefanie R. & Daniel W. Offit Kristin J. Forbes Bryan A. Stennes Edward P. Sloan Curtis R. Wilgosh Laurel J. Smith Elizabeth Leggat Karen C. Francis-DeGolia Mark C. Lamarre Stephanie G. McCusker Kate F. & Barnett D. Osman & Steven C. Calhoun Christine M. & William K. Wynne Perry M. Smith Sarah R. Lilja Leigh Miller Garry Marie A. Longo Catherine de V. Rainey Chandra T. & Gil B. Rosenthal Andrea J. Darling Susan G. Spagnola Adrienne R. Lotson W. Kyle Gore Coltrane & Christopher H. Lord Kristin G. & John B. Replogle Mark S. Sternman Nathan Herring CLASS OF 2000 Mark S. Speers Bruce F. Martin Peter T. Gunn James C. Lynch Robert L. Striker Brian G. Urkowitz Charles F. Kessler Paula Ness Speers Jamie F. Martin William P. Hamlen William A. Marozas Taylor G. Thomas Jonathan D. Weatherly Jacob W. Mortell Errik B. Anderson Ellen Martin Sally Gaines McCoy Robert L. Harteveldt Kimberly J. McDermott Peter S. Woolley Eric D. Wellons Melanie & Steven B. Norall Joshua B. Green

*Deceased

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20-043 GP_DAM AD May/June 2020 - BTS Honor Roll_FINAL.indd 14-15 4/9/20 1:44 PM BARTLETT TOWER SOCIETY HONOR ROLL LIST OF MEMBERS AS OF APRIL 1, 2020

Caroline B. Hribar CLASS OF 2009 Jane R. GR’89 Joanne V. Scott TU’77 Robert W. Christy Mrs. John B. Handrahan* Sammy K. McLean* Kay H. & Richard A. Ryder Sean D. Padgett & Richard B. Evans Jr. TU’51 David P. Southwell TU’88 Burton A. Cleaves* Susan E. Hanifin Edgar Mead* Barbara K. Sawyer* Jillian G. Chingos Elizabeth A. Roberts David Brooks Fernald TU’75 Andrew R. Steele TU’79 Marjorie L. Cohen* Mary O. Hardigg* Irene W. Meister-Armington* Hans L. Schlesinger* William B. Meredith* Mrs. Ralph S. Schmitt* CLASS OF 2010 Roderick W. Fletcher TU’86 William J. Stoloski TU’63 Barbara L. Cook* Dorothy Harmon* CLASS OF 2001 Lindsey M. Forsythe TU’95 F. Richard Svelta TU’67 Marian Miner Cook* Jean Harmon* Geneva M. Merrill* Elizabeth L. Schultz* Anonymous (1) Sean A. Alpert John H. Foster TU’67 John S. Taylor Sr. TU’79 William W. Cook* Ruth L. Harris* Marian Michl* Eric Schwarz Nathan L. Bruschi Brian S. Lavoie Martha C. Fransson TU’70 Alexis Teitz* GR’93 Mary Louise Corbus* T. James Harvey* Joyce Harris & David Wilson Milne Dorothy W. Sears* J. Conor Grogan Katherine R. Norton Koster S. Frosig* TH’52 John R. Trauth TU’66 Marian Cordiner* John M. Head* Ivy Minely* Ellen J. Selden* Sujan S. Patel Michael E. Garst GR’74 Margery Trumbull* GR’89 Edward Hyde Cox* Dorothy Behlen Heinrichs Donald J. Molick* Milton L. Shifman* CLASS OF 2011 David G. Garvey TU’77 Suzzanne M. & John P. Ward TH’86 Carol Crotty* Mrs. William A. Henry* Maureen K. Molloy* J. Davis Shuster* CLASS OF 2002 Joseph L. Coleman Jeffrey T. Gill TU’81 G. Page West III TU’77 Eva R. Crowley* Patricia W. Hewitt* Joseph C. Moore Emanuel M. Sickel* Richard C. Goldstein* TU’66 Edward A. Wiese TU’84 Daphne H. & John T. Cunningham Mabel F. Hirsch* Eleanor W. Morgan* Demetrios Simopoulos* Eli B. Diament CLASS OF 2013 Paul D. Grand Pré TU’83 John T. Wiseman* TU’56 Fred L. Daggett* Ethel H. Holden* Jane M. Muller* Edward A. Sitzer* Jeffrey S. Hafner Faye & Jeffrey S. Greenwald Gary F. Wood* TU’72 Marilyn Daniels Irene Hollister* Lois Elizabeth Mulliken* Jennette Campbell Skinner Jeffrey L. McDaniel Anonymous (1) MED’76 Erik Paul Young TU’96 Mrs. Eric W. Davidson* Kenneth B. Hopkins* Pauline S. Murray Florence M. Small* Philip Mone Jonathan B. Webster Catherine E. Grein TU’74 Pamela Ruth & Oglesby H. Young Alfred J. Densmore* James F. Hornig* W P L. Myers* Blanche H. Smith* Heather S. Pixley Frederick H. Grein Jr. TU’73 MED’75 Susan Diamond* Frances T.* & Earl H.* Huff Gertrude M. & J. David Naparstek Stephen W. Smith* CLASS OF 2014 Jonathan M. Sussman Kate Wojciechowski Grussing TU’91 Roger C. Dixon* Katherine Jackson* Evelyn S. Nef* Dorothy Spanos* Erica Y. Sun Deven D. Hickingbotham* TU’80 FRIENDS & RELATIVES Robert T. Drape* Antoinette B. Jacobson* Valerie Boisseau Nelson* Mrs. Everett Stein* CLASS OF 2003 Peter K. Hoffman TU’72 Anonymous (30) Julius Duberstein* Harry P. Jeffrey Sr.* William H. Nelson Arlene W. Stern Travis R. Escobedo CLASS OF 2017 Harry H. Holland TU’61 Robert L. Adams Robert W. Dudley* Beatrice M. Johnson* Rosemary Nicholson* Frank Stetz* Andrew S. Wilkins Nevin J. Cunningham Michael D. Jeans TU’72 Ann M. Aikens S. Judson Dunaway* Barbara H. Jones & Bin Lewis* Jeanne M. Norris Jane M. Stevenson David C. Jung* TU’64 Herbert C. Altholz* Robert B. Earley* Barbara M. Jones* Elizabeth M. Oliver* Otto F. Stock Sr.* CLASS OF 2004 CLASS OF 2018 Cindy M. & Paul W. Kaplan GR’93 Heidi E. & Richard G. Anderson Carol A. Elliott* Paul Jones Sr.* Ruth C. Overhiser* William H. Storrs* Donald R. Kendall Jr. TU’76 Maxine Farmer* Frances R. Jordan* Will Owen* Marion Stratton* Abiel Acosta Anne A. & Daniel F. Attridge Emily V. Wechsler Darcy A. Kerr MED’10 Dorothy A. Farrell* Lynne A. Kalustian Isaac Pacht* Mrs. Clarence W. Teal* Patrick S. McCarthy Alice Katharine Awad* Nancy P. King TU’77 John J. Fennessey* Arthur Kantrowitz* Shirley N. Pan* Marie Elaine Tefft Marina L. McClure CLASS OF 2019 Marion F. Bailey* Keith H. Kuhlman TU’67 Bernice O. Barr* Mr.* & Mrs.* Robert J. Finney Mrs. R. Peter Kernaghan* Winifred N. Park* Henry L. Terrie Jr.* CLASS OF 2005 Jonathan A. Lu Paul J. Laud TU’84 Edmund E. Barrett Jr.* Gertrude C. Fisher* Mrs. Kenneth K. Kesser* Virginia Patterson* Chester A. Thompson* John P. Levis III* TU’90 John P. Bassett* Timothy James Floyd* Eugene F. Kettering* Helen MacGregor Paul* Marcia Thompson* Matthew S. Guernsey GRADUATE Nicolai A. & Ronald E.* Lewis TU’74 Jonathan W. Battle Claire J. Fowle* Lillian W. Kingsbury* Albert N. Pelz* Nelson B. Todd* S. Caroline Kerr & PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS Todd Thomas Liker TU’00 Mary E.* & William W.* Nancy K. Frankenberry Joan S. Kleeman* Theodora F. Penrose* Rueben E. Tostman* Kristine M. O’Keefe Carl W. Lindquist MED’68 Mrs. Arthur L. Frellick* Laurence T. Knott* Dorothy E. Perri* Joan & Tom B. Towers Anonymous (10) Kathryn Bernard Kyle J. Polite Gene E. Little TU’67 Katherine V. French* Mrs. Richard J. Koblitz* Frances P. Perri* Genevieve W. & Earl Tso Ariel F. Acuna TU’94 Celia Bernhard* W. Curtis Livingston III* TU’67 John Robert Friday Margaret L. Koch* Evelyn R. Peterson* Mary S. Tucker* Lauren E. Adler TU’95 Loren M. Berry Sr.* CLASS OF 2006 Robert B. MacIntosh TU’83 Henry M. Fuller* Patricia Kuss Mr.* & Mrs.* Earle B. Pierson Celeste Weed Tuttle* Peter B. Andjiano* TU’31 Suzanne C. Beyea Roderick J. MacLennan TU’62 Elizabeth Gaffney* Margaret E. LaHaye Edmund C. Platt II* Howard S. Upton* Christine Benally Peranteau John H. Antil TU’70 Agnes C. Bole* Alan J. Mandel MED’79 Joan I. Gale* Michael Stephen Lajoie Lilla M. Pond* Virginia Van Meter* Megan C. Berman Justin C. Barton-Caplin Barbara M. Bossi* Donald D. Marsden* TU’46 George W. Gay* Philip K. Langan Sr.* Pauline Portland* Jeannette B. Varnum* Grace Crandall Escobedo GR’04 MED’04 Debbie & Larry D. Brady Kevin M. McGonigle TU’89 Hildegarde Gebhardt* Mrs. Peter A. Lankenner Sr.* Patricia & Herbert Prem Victoria & Fabrice Vasques Julie M. Crudele Eugene H. Bauer* TU’66 Sybil Bralver* J. Vernon McHugh* TU’38 Alice C. Gilbert* Julius J. Lankes* John J. Preotle* Elizabeth Walker* Mariah P. Cunnick Robert J. Beitel Jr.* MED’46 Susan F. & James P. Briggs Patricia Bishop McKean GR’64 Bernice B. Godine* Nancy Laubach Marie I. Preston* Martha Bartlett Walker* Dana H. Guernsey Barbara T. Blough* GR’74 Elizabeth B. Brockunier* Clemente Micara-Sartori TU’86 Irwin Goodman* Heather and Joseph Lauricella Horton R. Prudden* Xiaoyu O. Wang Megan L. Rast Alastair Marc Bor TU’00 Samuel Bromberg* Carl Bliss Monroe* MED’70 Dorothy B. Goodstein* Theodore Lazar* Virginia A. Quinn Elizabeth J. Watson* Alexandra R. Stein Robinson Bosworth III TU’67 Ada E. Brown* Adele M. Morrissette TU’82 Hope M. Gordon* Helen F. Lazarus* & Hiroshi Kumazawa Esther R. West* Philip R. Boulter MED’64 Lucy Brown* Winifred White* Patricia S. Gosselin T. Benson Leavitt* Guido R. Rahr Sr.* Gustave Wetterhahn* CLASS OF 2007 Suzanne C. Boulter MED’66 Anna T. Burnap* & Leonard E.* Morrissey Jr. Barbara Grace* John C. Leggat* Gertrude H. Rehor* Elizabeth P.* Anonymous (1) Susan Boyd* TU’93 Philip Burnham* TU’48 GR’64 Joseph L. Grant* Mrs. Nathaniel W. Leonard* Elizabeth N. Rhoten* & Henry M.* Wiesenfeld Andrew S. Eastman Jim Butterworth TU’91 John J. Byrne Jr.* Matthew W. Okamoto TU’96 Marion Weathers Grassi* Eberhardt E. LeSchin* Jenifer* & Eugene D.* Richter Katherine H. Williams* Sofia A. Faruqi Guy F. Campbell III TU’68 Marion H. Callender* Barbara M. Osborne* MED’67 Robert J. Greene* Keith D. Lewandoski Mrs. George Roberts* Mrs. Leo E. Williams* Charles E. Kircher Gregory Paul Carlson TU’75 Mrs. Forrest Callihan* Robert N. Parke TU’69 Patricia Ann Seaton Griffin* Agnes M. Lindsay* Gloria Robinson* Julia M.* & Arthur M.* Wilson Lisa B. Kircher John N. Catlett TU’66 Nardi R.* & Thomas B.* Campion Georges Peter MED’62 Robert Grinnell* Adelaide B. Lockhart* Mary C. Rockefeller* Mary J. Wilson Catherine S. Lacey Amy & Mei-Wei Cheng TU’87 Annette M. Carroll* Karen E. Lauterbach Harold B. Gross* Darius S. Long Patricia Rogers* Clara N. Wisbach* Elizabeth H. Wol Christine Clark* MED’66 Irene Cash* & Mark A. Powers MED’77 Elizabeth P. Guenther* Eugene M. Lyons* Ellen S. Rogoff* John J. Witherill* Kate W. Cook TU’82 Gregg A. Cerveny Harold A. Prusa* TU’53 Mr.* & Mrs.* Charles Hall Dorothy J. MacLean* Kendall S. & Douglas S. Rohlen John H. Wolfenden* CLASS OF 2008 Thomas A. Cook TU’82 Mrs. Frederick C. Chandler* Tore Rynning-Nielsen TU’85 Evelyn J. Hall* William C. Magelssen* Alice W.* & Robert L.* Rooke John D. Woodberry* Alexander MacDonald Cutler TU’75 Kathryn E. Chapin* Peter N. Chau Charles N. Santry TU’89 Mrs. Paul K. Halter* Richard V. Mandeville* Mrs. Edward W. Rosston* Marilynne Wool* Joan R. de Regt TU’79 Robert A. Chase Timothy A. Chingos Paula P. Schnurr GR’85 James H. Hamlen* Lina Mariani* Wendy J. Gordon Martha Wright* Jason Paul DeMont GR’85 TH’85 Ruth Chaskel* Drury J. Heinz & William A. Nelson Frances F. Hampshire* Carolyn P.* & Gordon L. Marshall & Lawrence J. Rowe Carole & Walter O. Young Laurie F. Draughon MED’85 Robert Chmura Sindhura Kodali Lawrence J. Scinto Jr. TU’94 Harriet Hanauer Barbara E. Mathews* C. Carter Ruml Fred H. Young* Sandra J. England GR’81 MED’81 Dorothy G. Cholnoky

*Deceased

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20-043 GP_DAM AD May/June 2020 - BTS Honor Roll_FINAL.indd 16-17 4/9/20 1:44 PM the classes 74 clubs & groups 99 alumni council 100 deaths 100 classnotes

FROM THE ARCHIVES

Lucky to Walk On Monday, May 27, 1918, graduates received their degrees during a somber Commencement that acknowledged classmates who had served and died in World War I. Later that Gates & Dickson year, the new alums faced another national calamity: the great influenza.

DARTMOUTH COLLEGE LIBRARY COLLEGE DARTMOUTH MAY/JUNE 2020 73 CLASS NOTES 1938-1949

will see it in the newsletter. We were seniors during the summer of 1942, reunion a year from this fall. At least half of our Dean Neidlinger, who allowed him to come back The party was “fabulous,” in Christine’s when the College instituted classes so we could attendees at our 70th reunion were family mem- to Dartmouth, where he graduated from Tuck Give a Rouse▲ The Classes words, with a TV tribute on the Pittsburgh To- graduate six months early, in December 1942. bers. Let’s do it again, wheelchairs and walkers School in 1948. day Live show. There were 128 guests, consisting They were accelerated programs due to WW included. Thoughts? I noticed in Frederic “Tad” Comstock’s obituary of family and friends from 11 states. Some of the II. The U.S. and Allied forces were losing on all —John L.E. Wolff, M.D., 500 East 77th St., Apt. 1833, that he joined the U.S. Marine Corps, where he >>> James Wooster III ’59, Th’60, Tu’60; Russell Editor’s Note: These columns were written before guests provided music for the evening, and Bob fronts. Gas ration coupons were impossible to get. New York, NY 10162; (917) 975-3175; (212) 772- served with an engineering demolition unit during Wolff ’89, Tu’94; and Veree Hawkins Brown the pandemic that closed campus and postponed received a personally signed letter from Presi- Hanover became a Navy town as 900 midship- 9933 (fax); [email protected] the battle of Iwo Jima, where, with Okinawa, more ’93 received 2019-20 Dartmouth Alumni June reunions and Commencement. dent and Melania Trump and a certificate from men arrived—90 days later to become ensigns than 20,000 troops were lost in 1945. By then our Awards, and Kyle Polite ’05 and Nathan Brus- the Pittsburgh Sen. Pat Toomey. bound for wartime duty. President Hopkins an- Editor’s Note: The magazine has learned that Dr. submarine fleet had virtually eliminated Japanese chi ’10 received 2019-20 Dartmouth Young As I write this column, we are days The other day I was talking to Jon Mendes on nounced that the total student body was 1,984, Wolff passed away March 22 from heart failure. shipping and their Air Force was history except for Alumni Distinguished Service Awards. away from St. Patrick’s Day—a day the phone and he told me he is coming out of re- the lowest in 20 years. Dartmouth’s newest objec- Enjoy more of his insights in the feature, “Wisdom the kamikaze attacks. Nonetheless, our military Find their citations at alumni.dartmouth. for the wearing of the green. I wonder tirement as the oldest to run a marathon in N.Y.C. tive: Prepare students for service in the nation’s of the Sages,” at the DAM website. had made plans to invade Japan. As part of the edu/serve/recognition. 38 at the age of 96 to best that record by entering the armed forces. which came first in this historical tradition: St. occupying forces, I walked the beach where I was >>> Two classmates have earned honors Patrick and the Irish or dear ole Dartmouth—but 2020 marathon at 100! He has been accepted, sub- Thanks for your phone call, Doc. You made I recently received a note from Larry told my outfit, the 112th Regimental combat team in the 2019 U.S. Masters Swimming Top it doesn’t really matter: Any day is a good day for ject to his doctor’s approval. He also told me he is my day! Goodman, which prompted me to call attached to the 1st Cavalry Division, was supposed 10 national list for competitors in the 80- the wearing of the green! addressing the Dartmouth Club of New York on Our class sends heartfelt condolences to the him. It seems Larry and his wife were to land. It was enfiladed on both sides by high cliffs 84 age-group. Bill McClung ’60 was No. 1 at The class has received the following note longevity and why completing the marathon at family of Oliver “Ollie” Lazare, who died on Decem- 47 invited for a visit to the Smithsonian Air and Space honeycombed with gun emplacements. the 50-meter butterfly in Atlanta, andBob from a member of the class of ’22 we support. And 96 was not an accident. ber 12, 2019, in Scarsdale, New York. Museum’s Udvar-Hazy Center in Washington, We also recently lost Foxy Parker, a very nice, Colyer ’60 came in first in the 200-meter I thought I was busy! “Thank you for continuing to On the Dartmouth news website I read that —George Shimizu, 2140 Sepulveda Ave., Milpitas, D.C. They were invited by Chris Browne ’80, modest man who was class treasurer, member breaststroke in Orlando, Florida. Colyer fund my Dartmouth journey this year. Dartmouth Forbes ranked Dartmouth among the top colleges CA 95035-6142; (925) 937-2504; marymariko@ who is deputy director. According to Larry, the of the executive committee, and attendee of all also won the 2019 National Senior Games has given me so much, from a uniquely flexible producing volunteers for the Peace Corps because comcast.net building is absolutely massive, with every vintage our reunions. He regularly visited his daughters 100-yard individual medley in Albuquerque, education to beautiful friends to cooking skills the College emphasizes the value of being global plane imaginable, including the F-14 Tomcat. He in Colorado, who noted, “The Parker family first New Mexico. to (many) bruises from slipping on the winter ice. citizens and being service-minded. I stop here to A legendary member of the class of describes it as a massive piece of hi-tech and the went to Vail [Colorado] for a spring break ski trip >>> Jonathan Wiesner ’73, who It is obvious to me now, after a year, that I would point out that the New York City College of Tech- 1946 died on January 11. Our class landing of it on a carrier as a “controlled crash.” in 1968 and Foxy fell in love with March’s bluebird served for 25 years on the not have had these experiences anywhere else. nology, where Leo Caproni was a professor, devel- sympathy to the family of Nelson S. While at Dartmouth in the Navy V-12, Larry helped skies and deep powder. His swooping descents in board of the International 46Bryant Jr. It is its own New England garden, with Nordic oped the Leo F. Caproni Global Citizens Award, , who led a life devoted to living in “the form the Dartmouth Flying Club at Bugby’s Field Stein Erickson style were a treat to watch. He took Rescue Committee, has been skiing and Green Key as native plants growing which is awarded annually to a deserving student. silence of the woods” in Martha’s Vineyard, Mas- in White River Junction, Vermont, where he his last runs at the age of 89, swooping a little more named CEO of the nonprofit in season and its students constantly planting Clearly Dartmouth influenced Leo. I am privileged sachusetts, where he was born, lived, and died. He learned to fly on a grass strip. carefully but with the same joy as ever.” Garrison Institute. The non- and watering new ideas. I would not have been to present that award in Leo’s name. told his story in a featured section of the March/ I also received a note from Hardy Hendren, —Dave Kurr, 603 Mountain Ave., Unit 331, New sectarian organization was able to be a part of it without your gift. You have The class of 42 has the sad duty to announce April 2017 DAM as a nonagenarian who had been a another Navy V-12 who left early and became a Providence, NJ 07974; (781) 801-6716; djkurr@ founded in Garrison, New made it possible for me to experience the Dart- the loss of Franklin S. Cushman November 28, former outdoor columnist for Navy pilot. I sent the article to Liz Sistaire for pub- verizon.net York, in 2003 to “apply the transformative mouth garden, and even sow a few seeds myself. 2019, at age 99. The class sends condolences to for 30 years. lication in the newsletter. The Hardy family has power of contemplation to pressing social Because of you, I made it through my first quarter the family. Although accepted for a summer semester many connections at Dartmouth, including sons Bruce Crawford, Tom Towler, and I and environmental concerns.” of organic chemistry, all the late nights and tan- —Joanna Caproni, 370 East 76 St., Apt. A 406, New at Dartmouth in 1942, he applied for Airborne, Will ’75, Rob ’78, and David ’83 and granddaughter get together frequently in Sarasota, >>> George Shackelford ’77 organized two gible desperation in office hours, worth it because York, NY 10021; [email protected] where he was accepted only because he covered Charlotte ’14. Florida, and Joel Berson joined shows at the Kimbell Art Museum included I ended up enjoying it—so much that I am now his legally blind right eye twice and passed the eye The January/February 2020 issue of DAM 49us twice to get away from New York’s weather. in ’s Top 10 list of considering a minor in chemistry in addition to It was January 6 as I wrote this, and test by reading out of his perfect-vision left eye. had several articles that caught my attention. I Other than that, not much current news, but the U.S. art exhibitions of 2019. The Kimbell my planned major in philosophy modified with I was watching the Golf Channel. My He wrote in a salty, uninhibited, down-to- have always been an outdoorsperson, playing obituaries are piling up. deputy director organized Renoir: The Body, classical studies. Because of you, because I am phone rang and I saw the name “Doc” earth style as noted in describing his parachute shinny hockey at a very young age on a local pond Allen Clarke Church died on March 2, 2019, The Senses and Monet: The Late Years, the 43Fielding here, I am at a school where I can complete the on the screen. He was calling to wish me jump into Normandy as a member of the 82nd when winter was really winter and then skiing in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, where he lived. highest-attended exhibition at the museum pre-medical track and still delve deeply into other a happy New Year and I reciprocated. He sounded Airborne Division the night before D-Day, when he and playing a variety of other sports. So, I was im- Clarke spent his entire 42-year career with Procter in Fort Worth, Texas, in two decades. aspects of human experience that fascinate me, just fine in Massachusetts, and I told him, “It’s “crossed his legs to save his balls” before crashing pressed reading about Kelly Wood ’14. She grew & Gamble, working in 55 countries; his last title >>> Cara Abercrombie ’97 has been named such as ancient virtue ethics and, now, chem- 60 degrees here in sunny northern California.” into a tree. Thanks to this thoughtful maneuver, he up in Hanover, loving the mountains, skiing, and was VP for sales for Canada and Latin America. the first president of the Defense Security istry. During the summer I am taking a term to According to the San Francisco Chronicle that was able to sire four grateful children. nature, and majored in earth science and education Clarke and his wife, Jane, were especially helpful Cooperation University, a U.S. Department work full-time researching cellulosic biofuels by day, it was 37 degrees in Boston. On his postwar return to Dartmouth he at Dartmouth. She now teaches geology, wildlife, to my late wife, Vi, on our Dartmouth trip to Ireland of Defense (DoD) center that opened last genetically modifying bacteria. I thank you over What a joy it was to hear from a favorite ’43. wanted to be a poet. He describes his failure to and conservation for the National Park Service at (9/11 time), when Bill Ballard, Punchy Thomas, Bob fall. She will head efforts on campuses in and over for allowing me to reap what I have sown We reminisced about bygone days. I reminded keep Dylan Thomas sober for his lecture at Baker elementary schools and in the parks. It warms my Baum, and Burt Proom were fellow companions. Arlington, Virginia, and Wright-Patterson Doc about our first dinner at our 70th reunion Library before a thousand people. In spite of that, so far here. I cannot wait to see what will grow in heart to read about another outdoorsperson who’s Besides Jane, Clarke leaves sons Allen ’76, Ken Air Force Base, Ohio, to train the roughly at the Hanover Inn: At our table were Doc and Thomas, pushing aside piles of lecture notes on the the future.” To my dear (very dear) members of traveling on a great journey. ’80, Tom, and Steve. 20,000 DoD personnel involved in build- his date; my daughter, Carol, and her husband, lectern, spoke brilliantly for one and a half hours. the class of ’38: Our generosity will live on and on. We are saddened to report the death of Charles Robert Joseph Amirault died on October 8, ing the capacity of foreign security forces. —Jean M. Francis, 2205 Boston Road O-139, Wilbra- Tommy; Bob Ehinger; Henry Keck and his signifi- Our class sympathy to the families of our de- K. Barton in Glastonbury, Connecticut, on Janu- 2019, in Dunnellon, Florida, where he lived. Bob >>> Rhode Island Hospital ham, MA 01095; [email protected] cant other; and myself. Henry regaled us with ceased classmates whose loss we share equally. Carl ary 5. was a pitcher on the 1948 Ivy League champion psychologist Lindsay Orchowski his inventive stories, pure genius at our table. E. Sternkopf, a former Navy V-12, died September —Joe Hayes, P.O. Box 57, Rye Beach, NH 03871; (603) baseball team, along with the late Al Quirk, and ’03, an expert in the fields of As I sit this day, I am looking at a blank One story led to another, and who there will ever 20, 2011. Richard D. Fitzgerald died November 26, 964-6503; [email protected] also lettered in football and hockey. He spent his sexual assault and domestic page. That is not unusual, but today it forget variety night and jam sessions in front of 2019. He was a Tuck ’49, graduated with honors career with IBM. Bob is survived by his wife, Mary violence, has earned Lifespan’s is because earlier this week I wrote Robinson Hall and Webster Hall? Who was the and Phi Beta Kappa, served as a Navy Supply Corps I had a cheerful conversation with John Louise, and son Alan. 2019 Bruce M. Selya Award 42 talkative master of ceremonies? You’re right, officer on the aircraft carrierUSS Midway for two this column and saved it—or at least I thought I VanRaalte and his son and daughter. Loomis Grosvenor Dana died on October 8, for Excellence in Research. did. Know that this is the second version, which is our own Doc Fielding! One wag lately told Doc, years, prized the commendations from admirals John doesn’t have his usual vigor but 2019, at his home in South Burlington, Vermont. Orchowski is a member of never as good as the first. On that note, let me begin. “Thanks for a great show. We ran out of gas ration he served under, and retired from Price Water- 48 is hanging in there. It reminded me of a fun letter I Loo served with various civic organizations in the Lifespan Physician Group In my last column I spoke about Bob Gale’s coupons so had to settle for your act.” house in 1986 in London as deputy chairman of PW received from Jim Field ’45. He remembers playing Vermont: YMCAs, a park and recreation depart- and a research professor at the Brown 100th birthday and the party being thrown by his Doc and I reflected on our 55th reunion (or World, where he started in 1949. William C. Grant John in a challenge match set up by coach Red ment, and local council on aging. He is survived by University Warren Alpert Medical School daughter Christine December 27, 2019. Today I was it our 60th?), when Doc and his Suzie mes- Jr., Ph.D., died November 28, 2019. He earned an Hoehn for tennis team position the day before sons Gregory and Richard and daughter Christine. in Providence, Rhode Island. am pleased to report about the event. Christine merized everyone (including those in the classes A.B. (cum laude) in zoology and a Ph.D. in biology the first match in 1946. Showing how mixed our Edward Hayes Grant died on November 28, >>> Katherine Milligan ’98 is the new head has sent photos and a copy of the toasts, some of of ’38 and ’48) with their song and dance, corny from Yale, serving in the Pacific Theater 1943- ages were due to the war, Jim was no callow youth 2019, at his home in Osterville, Massachusetts. of gender and diversity with private which will appear in the class of ’42 newsletter, stories, and wonderful entertainment in the Hop- 1946, and in 1971 was named chairman of the Dart- at that point. He had been at Dartmouth for 18 Ed was president of his eponymous company, a equity firm Bamboo Capital Partners due out this spring. I wrote a toast from the class kins Center. Then two banjo-playing ’38s brought mouth biology department, where he worked for months and then spent three years in the Army manufacturing agent. He enjoyed year-round golf in Geneva, Switzerland. Previously, she of ’42, which Christine read. I also sent a class of down the house by leading us all in singing golden 35 years. James D. Kennedy Jr., a member of Dragon Air Corps as a fighter pilot, returning to William on Cape Cod. Ed is survived by his wife, Carol, was the executive director of the Schwab ’42 pin. Some of you will remember it depicting oldies from the 1930s and 1940s. What a night for Phi Gamma Delta, died February 4. & Mary because, “I didn’t want no boys college son John, and daughters Leigh and Katherine. Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship. Eleazar Wheelock. Bob wore it at the party. You all the old-timers! Please give serious thought to our 75th full no more.” After one year, however, he called Carl Victor Granger died on December 29, 2019,

74 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 75 CLASS NOTES 1950-1958

in Amherst, New York, near where he lived. Carl years. child, Jasper. Congratulations! Henry is still We have thank-you notes from in- them at the beginning of March. Ed Matthews, 1957-62: Alaska and Hawaii are received his M.D. from NYU and taught at Yale, A recent issue of The New York Times book boating, but makes no mention of the practice terns. From Gabrielle Hunter ’20: We proudly report that the town of Needham, admitted as our 49th and 50th states. Tufts, and Brown before becoming chairman of section featured a new book, Stronghold: One of law in the Rochester area. We also received “Thank you so much for the oppor- Massachusetts, named its new municipal building Tom Schwarz, 1962-67: J.F.K. is assassinated; Paul Black 54 Jack Cogswell the department of rehabilitative medicine at the Man’s Quest to Save the World’s Wild Salmon, by a nice message from Dr. , writing from tunity to have engaged in enriching professional in the memory of , longtime trustee the first American troops enter Vietnam. University of Buffalo. He received several national Tucker Malarkey. The “one man” is Guido Rahr Worcester, Massachusetts. He and his wife, San- development. It is through kind people such as and town leader. Joe Stevenson, 1967-72: Martin Luther King honor awards for developing a uniform data sys- III, the son of our late classmate. Like his dad, dra, moved there several years ago after retiring you that I was able to discover more about my ca- There is no news as yet about rebuilding Jr. and Bobby Kennedy are assassinated; Neil tem for measuring medical rehabilitation, used Guido III is an ardent outdoorsman and conserva- from his longtime medical practice in Boston. reer interests. Through my experience as a global the Hellgate Gorge Cabin, which was lost in a Armstrong walks on the moon. by Medicare, Medicaid, and internationally. As tionist. A photo accompanying the Times review Paul says they are doing fine. We assume you health policy intern at the Centers for Disease chimney fire November 15, 2019. Watch for vol- Dave Cook, 1972-77: Women are admitted to his obituary noted, Carl was the son (his father shows Guido III, the spitting image of his father, saw the promotional photo of Dave Drexler and his Control and Prevention Center for Global Health, unteer opportunities to assist in the rebuilding Dartmouth; Watergate brings down a president; was a 1918) and grandson of black physicians. He casting a fly on the Columbia River in Oregon. wife, Judy in the last issue of the alumni maga- I was empowered to create change and tangible or contributions. Apple and Microsoft are incorporated. is survived by daughter Marilyn and son Glenn. Dotty Mori, who lives just down the road from zine. They’re looking well, too. We are sorry to impact in the global and public health industries. Sadly, we report the passing of H. Ogden Morse George Southwick, 1977-82: The Episcopal —John Adler, 75 Silo Circle, Riverside, CT 06878; Hanover in West Lebanon, New Hampshire, report the passing of several more friends in Thank you for your kind hearts and your giving Jr., William Rollins, Peter Terplan, M.D., and Walter Church ordains a female priest; Ted Turner (203) 622-9069; (203) 637-3227 (fax) reports her delight in finding several Native our class: Charles Clough and John Barto, both of spirits. I am forever grateful.” Van Dorn. founds CNN. American artifacts donated by the Rahr family Concord, New Hampshire; Brewster Sturtevant of From Maya Frost-Belansky ’20: “I really can’t —John Dinan, 20 Gardiner St., Richmond, ME Jim Dalton, 1982-87: Chernobyl melts down This is your class secretary writing on display in the newly renovated Hood Museum. Longmeadow, Massachusetts; Buck (Zuckerman) thank you enough for sponsoring my internship at 04357; (207) 252-7442; [email protected] in Ukraine; the space shuttle Challenger disinte- with an especially heavy heart at the Paul Staley was the author, with Bill Noel, of Henry of Los Angeles; George Davis of Stamford, the Boulder County [Colorado] public defender’s grates in space; Time magazine names the com- loss of a giant of the “touch of class”: Questioning Corporate Hierarchy, published just Connecticut; John Suter of Pasadena, California; office. It was undoubtedly my most meaningful Until recently, I have been reporting puter “Man of the Year.” 50Jack Harned prior to his death in 2018. The book reflects Paul’s Joseph Lyon of St. Charles, Illinois; and Richard professional experience and will guide my next two to four classmates passing on. Jack Hall , past class president, lifelong genial , 1987-92: The Berlin Wall comes host (with Jilly by his side), team manager during highly successful tenure as CEO of PQ Corp. and Little of Morgantown, West Virginia. career steps as I pursue a law degree. It was also Then, in my last report in December down; protests take over Tiananmen Square; soli- William Montgomery 56 his college years, and all-around champion. asserts that freedom-based management should — , 11 Berrill Farms Lane, Ha- a singular personal experience that helped me 2019, I sadly reported eight deaths. Now once darity wins in Poland and Havel’s Civic Forum This is an especially tough month for us all, replace hierarchical control as the organizing nover, NH 03755; (603) 643-0261; wmontgod52@ pinpoint my intellectual passions. I am so grateful again I have to report on eight deaths. However, I wins in Czechoslovakia. with 17 missing classmates (see my list at col- principle of effective businesses. aol.com for your generous support. Thank you!” will not begin this submission with such a downer. Clark Griffiths, 1992-97: South Africa elects umn’s end). Don and Jan O’Dowd sound all-too-familiar We have also received a thank-you note from Instead, I will report on all the recent contacts I ; Fox News channel debuts; the On a more upbeat note I submit the 2020 themes: “Our pace of life is slower in every way. Our class has suffered a huge loss. Bob Ceplikas ’78, deputy director of athletics: have had with classmates—contacts that show first black female astronaut orbits the earth. travel schedule of our trip tsar, prez Bob Kirby, and We no longer travel far, most of our entertainment Our dear president, Allen Collins, has “Your class’ annual gift to the athletic sponsor that these folks are still alive and kicking. This Dick Perkins, 1997-2002: England hands Hong Brownlee McKee: March 13-29, skiing Colorado; is in daylight hours, our walks grow shorter, medi- passed away. He wore the green with program has provided crucial resources for bring- includes telephone conversations with Bill Loyer, Kong to China; scientists clone Dolly the sheep; 53 Phil Hinkle, Al Friedman, July 7-24, Baltic cruise; October 30-November 1, cal appointments more frequent. We have stepped dignity and conviction. To my knowledge he is ing the best and the brightest to Hanover, first by and Sandra and Diane the world gasps on 9/11. the big 70th reunion (all expenses paid by the Col- down from volunteer activities as younger, more the only person to have held all of the offices: making it possible for our coaches to travel far Elliott and Alice Weinstein, and Harry Nutting. In Randy Aires, 2002-07: Enron goes on trial; the lege); and December 7-17, Chile and Argentina for energetic people take over. We still see lots of president of the Alumni Council, president of and wide to identify and evaluate exceptional addition, I have had written contacts from Mike United States seizes control of Baghdad, ending the solar eclipse! Speaking of the meet and greet dance and theater programs—Santa Barbara, the Association of Alumni, and head of the Alumni student-athletes, and then by enabling those elite and Margie Grunebaum, Jack Crowley, Tom Bechler, the regime of Saddam Hussein. in October-November, I have a nice note from California, is a friendly place for the arts!” Fund—and that was not all. He was ubiquitous, prospects—regardless of their means—to visit Tony Carleton, Karen Merrels, Hugh and Lizzie Erwin, Bob Marchant, 2007-12: Steve Jobs introduces Sandy McCulloch to Joe Medlicott alerting us to the Nearby family brightens the life of Ann Small- managing to attend every class function or gath- the campus to see for themselves what a special and Kevin and Sue Ryan. It is good to know that all the iPhone; the world economy dives; Nancy Pe- fact that Sandy and Dotty (celebrating their 70th wood, Frank’s widow, who still lives in Shelburne, ering, always accompanied by his warmth, his place this is. Every year your support has opened of these folks are still with us and we hope we may losi becomes first female speaker; in June, followed by his 94th birthday in July) are Vermont, near Burlington. “Thirty of us were on wit, and his camera. He was a district enrollment doors of opportunity for extraordinary young men get to see them at an upcoming class get-together becomes first black president. planning on our 70th on the Hanover Plain. The hand for a recent reunion. I’m awaiting my sixth director and very active in the Hartford, Connecti- and women while ensuring that Dartmouth has Now for the sad news. I received notices from Bruce Bernstein, 2012-17: Sandy Hook El- man drives 12 miles to work every day at his office great-grandchild.” Ann serves on the building cut, club. We shall miss him sorely. His life was varsity teams in which we can all take great pride.” the College of the passing of five classmates and ementary mass shooting breaks a nation’s heart; in Providence, Rhode Island, where he “jousts committee for a new town library and is active in celebrated by his family, at which his children, 11 We note the passing of the following class- word from classmates of the passing of three oth- the United Kingdom votes to leave the Euro- with the teachers’ union reluctant to change.” the local community center and chamber music grandchildren, and the following members of our mates: Carlisle Lewis, Hsung-Cheng Hsieh, Tim Sul- ers: Steve G. Chontos, David H. Dolben, Roger B. pean Union; a controversial U.S. president is John Weber and Shirley (his bride of 71 years) festival. class participated: Put Blodgett, Margie Cook, Cyn- livan, Robert Oxford, and Fred Page. Griffin, David E. Klein, M.D., and Dean E. Sheldon inaugurated. are planning on the big one, as is your class loud- We report with sadness the deaths of Woody thia and Dave Donovan, Dick Fleming, Sharon ’83 —Wayne Weil, 246 Ridge Road, Rutherford, NJ 07070; Jr. In addition, Di Zock reported that Richard Zock Tom Macy, 2017-present: Immigration, cli- mouth and daughter Rebecca. Klein, Pete Smart, and Tom Trolle. and Ron Lazar, Dick O’Connor, Donna Reilly, Thelma (201) 933-4102; [email protected] passed away of a heart attack, Jack Crowley re- mate change, impeachment divide the nation; A nice note from our next-door class secre- —Pete Henderson, 450 Davis St., Evanston, IL and Fred Stephens, Joan and Bernie Sudikoff, and ported that John L. Wanamaker died suddenly, and Dartmouth celebrates its 250th anniversary. tary, Pete Henderson ’51, about his very good pal 60201; (847) 905-0635; pandjhenderson@gmail. Nancy and John Thornley. Put Blodgett had agreed We’re counting down to our fabulous Harry Nutting called to let me know that Dave So there’s the promised list of our 13 class Hugh Brower with sad but touching notes from com to assume the presidency of the class; but we have 65th. Be alert for an email or regular Stackpole passed on. These eight classmates presidents since graduation, along with a few Hugh’s wife, Jane, and one of his children. since learned that he passed away on March 3, mail invitation in July to officially reg- follow the Barbary Coast jazz band as it plays a highlights of events during their times in office. 55 Once again I am happy to forward to any We recently received a note from Dr. 2020. On the positive side, our class enjoyed two ister. Please do so promptly. mournful tune and marches up Main Street led Sixty-three years is a long time, fully one-quarter classmates any materials (such as obits) on any Gordon Kay letting us know that he and holiday luncheons; one in Hanover at Kendal and Had a great chat with Bob Lieder, who has by Samson Occom dressed in buckskins. As they of Dartmouth’s 250, and it’s not over. We have deceased classmates here listed ( as well as those 52his wife, Nancy, were making a move the other in New York City at the Dartmouth Club. lived in Sun Valley, Idaho, for several years. He march three times around the Green, we, the liv- more promises to keep. More miles to go…. mentioned in the past): Clarence A. Beutel; Phillip H. from their longtime (49 years) home in Fairfax, Both events were well-attended. I am very happy loves to relate his plethora of Hanover stories, ing, all bow our heads in silent tribute. —John W. Cusick, 105 Island Plantation Terrace, Vero Chase, Ph.D.; John T. Degraff Jr.; John F. Fallon; John Virginia, to a retirement community. Their new to recommend to you a new book by our newslet- including the Beta-Psi U tag-team bike race to I encourage all classmates that remain ver- Beach, FL 32963; (772) 231-1248; johnwcusick@ A. Foster; George B. Harris III (one personal note: home is also in Fairfax, which minimizes the cul- ter editor, Dave Halloran. Dave combines beautiful Northampton, Massachusetts, with a glorious tical to attend Homecoming or our upcoming aol.com I still play the Paramount banjo I got from my ture shock, but it is still a major change in lifestyle photographs as well as videos to produce a novel picnic afterward. He had three fine years serving reunion. good dear pal); Charles W. Lake; William D. Miliken; and relationships and we wish them well. In re- in ebook format, An Eternity Soaring Through with the Marines on Okinawa. Bob married Lucy I close with the second stanza of my poem Writing on Washington’s birthday in S. Donald Miner; Louis A. Narva; George R. Nugent; cent years we have reported many others making the Universe. The inspiration for the book came Buck, the love of his life who has passed away after titled “Classmates Forever.” this election year calls to mind, with a Capt. T.R. O’Neil (Navy retired); Harold C. Peters; similar change and, in virtually every case and for from the words of scientist and Jesuit theologian 46 great years. He invites any and all to the great Faint echoes of library bells, sigh, the caliber of past leaders such as Walter F. Schuette Jr.; Alan H. Teele whatever reason, it has worked out well. Locally, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, who concluded, “We trout fishing in Idaho. Bob also sees Gordy Russell Winter scenes casting North Country spells; 58 (parent of a Dr. Franklin, His Excellency George, Honest Abe, ’73, ’74, and ’78); Hugh Brower; and Jack Harned. here in Hanover, we have numerous examples and are not humans having a spiritual experience; we from time to time. Feet crunching on snow, and the Roosevelt boys. “A house divided cannot —Tom “Smiley” Ruggles, 8 Concord Greene #5, Con- we also know of several as close as Boston and as are spirits having a human experience.” You may Iris and Bob Fanger are spending two months Along paths long ago, stand,” Abe warned exactly 100 years before we cord, MA 01742; (978) 369-5879; smileytmr@ far away as California. Sometimes, as in the case find it will expand your imagination and perhaps in Sarasota, Florida. Iris Fanger, ballet critic for Deep inside the experience dwells. left Hanover, and he was right—then and now. aol.com of the Kays, it is a move as a couple, but often your convictions as to what eternity might be like. The Boston Globe, will give a lecture to a group —Joel D. Ash, P.O. Box 1733, Grantham, NH 03753; So what’s new from you? Our snowbird the move takes place after the loss of a spouse This has been a particularly difficult time for our in Sarasota on her experiences in that position. (603) 863-3360; [email protected] classmates in southwest Florida had their Bo- Most exciting news of the month: A or partner, as many of you are well aware. If you class. In addition to Allen and Put we have lost the Bob related that Mary Lynn and Nick Kotz are nita Springs annual dinner on March 10, with note from Mrs. Joe Welch (Deirdra) have had the experience of moving to a retirement following classmates: William Andre, Jim Washburn, just down the road. I subsequently had a lovely Promise kept: You asked for a chrono- Sandy Bromwell of the Dartmouth College Fund describes their recent marriage and community, we would like to hear from you and Daniel Ernst, Len Gochman, John Buchanan, Herbert interface with Nick. Both of the Kotzes are well logical list of our ’57 class presidents, as a special guest, says John Trimble—with a pos- 51 any advice you might offer. Borovsky, and Winfred Case. Our thoughts and con- along on new books. Mary Lynn’s Upstairs at the loyal sons of Dartmouth who have led idyllic life in the totally rebuilt family cottage on sible “surprise” guest. Maybe some disoriented Henry Williams 57 Plum Island, just two miles from Joe’s longtime Elsewhere, of Scottsville, dolences go out to their families. White House is on the bestseller list for the third us these 63 years since graduation. Each served a Philadelphian lured south during his city’s snow- home in Newburyport, Massachusetts. Deirdra, New York, reports his family continues to grow —Mark H. Smoller, 401 Lake Shore Road, Putnam time since its original printing in the 1970s. Nick term of five years. Included is a mention of signifi- less winter. a retired school superintendent, has been Joe’s and prosper. This past year he welcomed his first Valley, NY 10579; (845)603-5066; dartmark@ is writing about his last 40 years as a journalist. cant events during each of their terms to provide Two surviving spouses—Joe Jacquet’s Lynne frequent partner at class gatherings in recent great-grandchild, Abigail, and his 17th grand- gmail.com Susan and Bill Lenderking were coming to visit reference points for our aging memories. and John Whiteley’s Kim—who’ve long kept in

76 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 77 CLASS NOTES 1959-1965

touch sent kind words about the Sound & Fury. And as always, feel free to drop me a line tendees, it was deemed better to be safe than in Cambodia and Paris, go to the “Class of ’62 games, which helped launch him on a career in then drove the ball into the end zone on a power A note of thanks also came from Bill Hartley’s with updates about you, your classmates, and sorry. Joan and Dave Prewitt, who planned and Photographers” page on the class website: 1962. computers and communications—not what he left led by Jan Dephouse and ‘Fat-Willy’ Curran. Heather Mallinson of Melbourne, Florida, for your activities. organized the San Diego mini, are to be com- dartmouth.org. Any classmates wanting to at- expected when he enrolled at Columbia for gradu- Kicking the extra point, we earned a share in the our coverage of his parting, here and in the S&F. —Charlie MacVean, 3528 Liggett Drive, San Diego, mended for their efforts and wise recommenda- tend the opening reception at the University of ate work in German literature. Paul studied in Ivy championship.” Baltimore-based Morton P. Fisher Jr. wrote that his CA 92106-2153; (619) 508-4401; crmacvean@ tion. In spite of the cancelled mini and scheduled Paris on September 10 should contact David at Munich, Germany, and when he, wife Betty, and Good coaching, good leadership! “The Bullet middle name is Poe, a namesake quoted evermore msn.com class meeting, the electronic and mail vote on the [email protected] for an invitation. son Matthias returned to New York, he took a job instilled in me,” says Dana, “that when things in the S&F to the evident displeasure of Frank draft amended class constitution, sent previously Indeed, ’round the girdled earth we roam and in computers at Prudential. The rest is history. look dark, you persevere, you tenaciously persist, Gado, who reminded us that Herman Melville Formal registration (online only) is to classmates, was approved overwhelmingly by get together. Pics are posted on the class web- The family moved for another computer assign- you don’t quit, you put out your best and inspire could write a whale of a lot better. But as pure now underway for our 60th reunion, the many ’61 classmates who voted. As a result, site of nano-reunions in Los Angeles; Houston; ment to Montreal, where Paul got recruited for others to do the same.” poetry, Poe stuff is easier on the ears. June 15-18. Go to alumni.dartmouth. all spouses and widows of our classmates are Peabody, Massachusetts; and Waccabuc, New the Olympics. Our next Class Notes will focus on the Charlie Pierce 60 Gordy Aydelott Michael Hirschenson For something uneasier, edu, click on “engage,” click on “reunions,” then now informal (and voting) members of the class York, for ’s 80 birthday celebration , retired French arts pro- Olympic experience. We will then try to pick suggests The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After click on “Class of 1960.” Also, see the latest of 1961. attended by Tom Davies, John Knight, Carl Funke, fessor and museum administrator, was reported up creativity as a theme for submissions from Warming by David Wallace-Wells. In reviewing schedule there. Looks like a big turnout. Early One classmate who warrants mention is Barry Alperin, Jim Biggs, Wouter Goedkoop, John in January as having recently bicycled 121 miles classmates. Wallace-Wells’ unrelenting 228-pager, he called registration is extremely helpful for budgeting Ford Daley. For nearly a decade Ford has been per- Knight, and Carl Jaeger. in the Pacific Northwest when the correct num- —Jay Evans, 274 New Aldrich Road, Grantham, it “the most frightening book I ever read”—and and planning. forming (as a singer and musician on the guitar Jim Blair reports full recovery from a recent ber was 191. This past winter he visited the Galá- NH 03753; [email protected] a must-read. U.S. Masters Swimming released its 2019 and harmonica) as half of a duo, Ford with Julia, stroke, allowing him and Wendy to repulse an pagos Islands off the coast of Ecuador. A pleasant email exchange with Tryg Myhren national top 10 lists, which show 1960 class- in and around Hanover and the Upper Valley attack of jumping worms on their rustic digs in Join classmates for “Tanglewood on Pa- Greetings! It’s been an easy winter recalled how on campus breaks we fellow Penn- mates ranking first and second in two events at senior housing facilities, senior centers, and upstate New York. rade,” a ’63 mini-reunion July 27-28 featuring in Minnesota. I’m writing at the end sylvanians dropped him at his boondocks home- for the 80-84 age-group. Bill McClung was first health and rehabilitation facilities. Ford’s concert I regret to report the deaths of the following the Boston Symphony, Boston Pops and the of February, and we’re anticipating Bob Colyer John T. “Jack” Edwards 65 town of Palmerton. “No one else from Palmerton at the 50-meter butterfly and led for goals are simple: to make his audience happy and classmates: on Novem- Tanglewood Music Center Orchestras perform- a couple of 40-degree days. Suitable reason to ever went to Dartmouth,” he said. Tryg was a New the 200-meter breaststroke. Bill swam his times to improve their emotional quality of life. Ford’s ber 6; Dennis G.R. Wilson on November 8; Gary L. ing Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture with fireworks. break out shorts and T-shirts. Forty degrees feels York Times campus correspondent in those days. in Atlanta and Bob at Orlando, Florida. Bob also hair may be gray and thinning, but his spirit is Crellin, Th’64, on September 27; Richard G. “Dick” Contact Steve Kurland, [email protected], (508) toasty after 10 or 20 below. (We forget that March We also had a memory-refreshing catchup chat won the 2019 National Senior Games 100-yard still young and vibrant. Maynard on December 28; and Dr. John E. Clark Jr. 864-7979. is often our snowiest month.) with Pete Flowers from Lebanon, the home of individual medley at Albuquerque, New Mexico. Remember, the next ’61 mini-reunion is in on February 20. Obituaries and remembrances Polly Seymour penned a thank you and trib- And speaking as we were about calendars Pennsylvania’s famed bologna. Retired physi- Gail and Bob Derderian wintered in Vero Hanover October 2-4 and is being organized by can be found on the class website. ute to the class in memory of Dean Thad, who and warm weather, I hope you’re planning for cian Pete and Ann now live in nearby Palmyra Beach, Florida. They had dinner with Britt-Marie Maynard Wheeler and his “staff” of one classmate —David L. Smith, RR4 Box 225B4, Galveston, TX died last October, that appears in the March issue the 55th reunion, coming up sooner than we all (she hailing from the same tiny town of Camp Hill and Andy Paul, who both “looked great.” Andy and assistant. Also remember our 60th reunion is in 77554; (775) 870-2354; [email protected] of the class of ’63 newsletter, which you can read think the week of June 14. There will be a trip to as Ted Harris, Terry Doran, George Salkeld, and me). Bob also played a round of golf. Before leaving Hanover June 14-17, 2021, and is being organized on the class website. Moosilauke and an informal dinner at the Ravine In memoriam: Mike Bzullack notes the De- for Florida the Derderians visited Pat and Dick by Pete Bleyler and his “staff” of 24 classmate When retirement beckoned, these I regret to report the deaths of Dave Elders, Lodge on Sunday, June 14. The reunion starts on cember 16 passing of Jack Conklin, a member of Ossen prior to their river cruise in Europe. In assistants. Pete is leaving no stone unturned. As classmates responded each in their Joe Connors, and Sherman Bendalin. Obituaries of Monday, June 15, and runs to Thursday, June 18. the large Torrington, Connecticut, delegation of November Peter Farquhar and Mary made their you are undoubtedly aware, our small entrance own way. classmates may be found in the magazine online We will be staying in the East Wheelock Cluster 63Ed Wirth Tige Harris Mike Gonnerman, Roger ’58s; several guys sent clips of The New York Times annual two-week trip to Mazatlán, Mexico. class is now shrinking rapidly. We currently have “retired” at least four times, first edition, authored by class necrologist . across from Alumni Gym. of December 17 obit of Don Shagrin, a longtime They were joined by Jim Blaisdell and his lovely fewer than 500 known survivors, and by next in 1995 from AT&T/Lucent, where he served 30 —Harry Zlokower, 190 Amity St., , NY Hansen, Dick Harris, Steve Fowler, and George Wit- class officer; and Phil Ranney of Cleveland left us former-teacher wife, Iris. The “boys” enjoyed month or so that number will be reduced even years in executive positions. Then came a second 11201; (917) 541-8162; [email protected] treich are the reunion committee and are hard on Christmas Day. attending a Mazatlán Venados baseball game. further. Also, there are increasing disabilities stint from 1997 to 2000 as chief business devel- at work on planning events. These will include —Steve Quickel, 411 North Middletown Road, Apt. No matter that they lost! Larry Dingman writes for nearly all of us to contend with on an ongoing opment officer at GVN Technologies, a telecom When asked about leadership, several a film and presentation on Dartmouth computing F-310, Media, PA 19063; [email protected] from Massachusetts: “Jane and I sold our historic basis. Therefore, any upcoming mini-reunions equipment startup, followed by a third gig from Palaeopitus members said that the by Dan Rockmore, head of the Neukom Institute, house in Eastham in 2018 and transitioned to an and our upcoming 60th reunion are significant 2002 to 2006 as president and cofounder of Ener- 64 real leaders on campus were Dart- and John McGeachie and John Kunz. There will be While we may all be thinking of the apartment in Yarmouth with our dog and cat. milestones, and opportunities, for all of us to safe, manufacturer of remote battery monitoring mouth’s football players. Perhaps they were right: a talk by the college librarian, a memorial service memories of those Green Key week- Although downsizing was a struggle we enjoy mingle together perhaps one more time as twi- systems, and most recently finishing up as ad- Everyone knew Scotty Creelman, Tom Spangen- for deceased classmates, and a reception and ends, it is really time to be thinking our new situation. We exercise by walking in the light slowly comes to the class of 1961, the small junct professor at Eckerd College, St. Petersburg, berg, Dana Kelly, Jan Dephouse, Bill Curran, Bob dinner with President Hanlon. More activities 59 Komives about the next mini-reunion. The fall mini- surrounding woods. I wrote a third edition of my class that could achieve—and did! Florida. Ed still runs his own EDW Consulting in , and the other Indians standing tall on in and around campus will make for full days and reunion will be on October 2 and 3, which is hydrology textbook a few years ago and mentor —Victor S. Rich, 94 Dove Hill Drive, Manhasset, NY marketing and management and teaches online Saturdays and behind Coach Blackman at rallies. nights. Gonnerman notes that there are “lots of Homecoming and the Dartmouth game against a Ph.D. student at the City University of New 11030; (516) 446-3977; [email protected] university courses. With Mary, a retired medical Tom Spangenberg, who caught a bunch of moving pieces” at this stage; with this group mov- Penn. Dave Marshall and Barry Smith are working York. I play trombone in a couple of swing bands technologist, Ed has six children, plus grandchil- passes and led the team in rushing yardage, at- ing those pieces around, the puzzle is going to be the details and they will be provided; but mark and a concert band—having all these musical Congratulations to Ted Beal on the dren and great-grandchildren. tributed the importance of football and athletics a good one. (How’s that for a limping metaphor?) your calendars now. opportunities has proven to be a wonderful and publication of his book, War Stories John Rose might still be working full-time generally to being an all-male college of well- You will have by now received registration The class leadership team has met on several unexpected benefit of retiring to Cape Cod! I talk from the Forgotten Soldiers, “a col- were it not for politics. A Yale-trained lawyer, rounded students. He notes that today the Col- materials. If, by chance, that did not happen, Bob Luce 62 occasions to ensure the class of 1959 is in good with every week or two and occasion- lection of 31 riveting stories told by soldiers” John served as assistant chief prosecutor in lege is far more diversified and that it recruits email Roger Hansen at [email protected]. hands and moving in the desired direction. The ally with Dunc Mathewson and Gordie DeWitt. I’m stemming from nearly 5,000 interviews of com- New Haven, Connecticut, then in private prac- exceptional, “spiky” students. Tom felt that “if While we’re on the subject of the reunion, latest meeting was led by Bill Boyle, president. thinking seriously about reunion.” bat veterans Ted conducted as a psychiatrist at tice for 36 years in nearby Hartford, appointed ever there was a model of how to manage for suc- class pride, and communication, drop me a line Chris Cundey, John Ferries, Dave Marshall, Mike “Well,” says Max Eveleth, “we continue to Walter Reed Army Medical Center. The book, Hartford Corp. counsel, back to private practice, cess, the Blackman model was one of the very for the next column. Since we’re reuning, remi- Nolen, Barry Smith, Joanne Wise, Jim Wooster, and hang out on the coastline of southern Maine with an endorsement by President Emeritus Jim and most recently back to New Haven as cor- best,” and he carried it forward in his life. niscences are in order: What foolish thing did Bob Werbel all participated. Topics discussed until the rising tides push us out, once and for Wright, is available on Amazon. Be sure to leave poration counsel from 2015 to the end of 2019, Leadership can be taught, writes quar- you do in those magnificent few days between included the Dartmouth College Fund, the need all. In a few weeks we will celebrate our 63rd a review. when Democratic Mayor Toni Harp lost her bid terback Dana Kelly: “It was deep in the fourth comps and graduation (it was a few, wasn’t it, or for a webmaster, an update on Women’s Initiative anniversary. We have three grandchildren so far, Our very own research anthropologist and for re-election, putting John out of a job. But quarter, Princeton leading 21-7. Things looked did it just fly by for me?) or the first job or intern- Network’s activities, communications method- and their weddings are ramping up so we are most award-winning documentary filmmaker, Dr. Da- John has plenty to keep him occupied, includ- really bleak. However, our coach was a leader as ship? Or tell me about the transition for a lot of ology, and an in-depth look at the financials as optimistic. Health-wise we are slightly below vid Feingold, and his wife, Dr. Heather Peters, ing daughter Anika, star in the 2006 Academy well as a marvelous football tactician. The ‘Bul- you from college life to military life (I count 88 highlighted by Mike Nolen. This team, along with average but given several days to recover we can have prepared a stunning photo exhibition, Award-winning filmDreamgirls , and son Khari, let’ turned to me and asked, ‘Dana, can we win classmates in the commissioning ceremony.) others, continues to work tirelessly to meet the still cut a rug here and there.” Cambodia: War and Beauty, from photos that who owns a gymnasium in Taylor, Texas. John this game?’ In complete honesty my true thought or where your undergraduate degree took you. needs of the class. See you in June. he shot in Cambodia and in refugee camps along enjoys his grandchildren and at least two books a was we may not make it. I don’t know if we can I went off to business school, later imbibing op- Because of scheduling conflicts, the winter —Sid Goldman, 78575 Avenida Ultimo, La Quinta, the Thai-Cambodia border since he first went week, especially espionage thrillers by Ben Coes do it: It’s late and we’re down 14 points. Black- erations research. Those courses in how to do San Diego micro-reunion was reduced to Bob CA 92253; (305) 849-0475; sidgoldman@gmail. there in 1961. Pictures include those taken with and the Jack Reacher adventure series by British man was challenging me as quarterback to be a things, from accounting to finance to math, were Filderman and Charlie MacVean. “Fildy” again set com the Khmer Rouge and three other factions in the author Lee Child. leader, to do my best. My lips said, ‘Yes, we can!’ the intellectual equivalent of the stuff you score the standards for another lunch to remember. 1980s, focused on the revival and preservation Paul Howell writes novels in retirement, but And I carried this message out to the huddle. We at Home Depot with that holiday gift card. The Look hard at your fall schedule and make The class mini-reunion scheduled for of Khmer dance, focused on David’s work with his first book,Montreal Olympics: An Insider’s scored and then, in the waning light, Princeton English major probably wouldn’t have gotten me plans now to attend the fall mini-reunion. With late March in San Diego was cancelled deminers and the impact of mines, and the return View of Organizing a Self-financing Games (Mc- snapped the ball from their own third-yard line. a job (after all, Starbucks was years in the future), Homecoming as a backdrop to the weekend, it 61 unfortunately due to the increasing of King Sihanouk. For a sampling of his photos Gill-Queens, 2009) derives in large part from his Dave DeCalestra slammed into their quarterback, but it and Dartmouth gave me a way to look at the should be a memorable time. spread of the coronavirus. At the age of our at- and details of dates and locations of exhibitions experience as technology consultant to the 1976 causing a fumble that he recovered. Dartmouth world and at the problems my day job presented

78 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 79 CLASS NOTES 1966-1970

that made all those other tools work. I’d like to in the environs of a rural university steeling itself medicine. He is now 98 years old and still vibrant, nonprofit that helps American college students weather to sail an ice boat.” Peter has given a big Insights: China has a surprising merchant cul- hear your thoughts. against a world degenerating into medievalism.” active, and mentally intact.” Dick Clapp says he study overseas, Sherwood Guernsey’s foundation assist in finding missing classmates, is doing well, ture, a little like Las Vegas, and India, with dozens Finally, the College has belatedly learned of What’s not to like? Learn more at www.jeffryjohn- would “like to have dinner with Nelson Mandela, operates computer learning centers in Panama, and sends his best. of languages and dialects as well as religions, is the deaths of three of our classmates: Don Del Dio stein.com or Amazon. one of the most inspirational leaders of our life- and Eric Hatch’s Faces of Addiction works in pre- Tom and Jan Cronan “have officially become more challenging still. Bali is a land of beauty, and in April 2019; Capt. Bill Mackey (Navy, retired) in Our deepest sympathies to family and friends time,” while Tom Brudenell “would invite Gandhi vention and recovery. See more and fuller over- snowbirds” on St. John in the Caribbean, enjoy- Singapore is quite modern and relatively easy November 2016; and David Street in December of four classmates who recently passed: John Free- to learn how he maintained such steadfastness to views, along with how to enlist in the project, at ing warm sunny weather and doing repairs in the for Americans to navigate, being a business hub. 2005. man, a noted Aspen, Colorado-based orthopedic non-violence when faced with violence against the class website. wake of hurricane season. Tom says their home Larry Ebner writes of his affection for Dean See you at the 55th! doctor and consultant to the U.S. Ski Team; David him.” More responses are on 1967.dartmouth.org. Join us in Hanover on May 23 for the next stood up well, but Irma and Maria were devas- Thad Seymour and his sadness upon Uncle Thad’s —John Rogers, 6051 Laurel Ave., #310, Golden Val- Goldstein, an avid golfer who coached the Uni- Finally, we are saddened to learn of the pass- class meeting! tating for many islanders. There are still houses passing. Sharing our love of history, he also boosts ley, MN 55416; (763) 568-7501; johnbairdrogers@ versity of New Hampshire ski team for 14 years; ing of Peter Muilenberg on August 25, 2019. His Now, sadly, I must conclude with the news with “blue tarp” roofs, as supplies and contractors the National Museum of Civil War Medicine in comcast.net Jeremy Reitman, CEO of Canada’s largest women’s obituary will appear on the DAM website and a of the passings of Kirby Nickels and Bill Paschke. remain scarce. Many islanders left, having lost Frederick, Maryland, as a hidden gem for tour- apparel retailer; and Larry Simms, an expert on longer one will be found on 1967.dartmouth.org. Very best regards from the city that’s not nearly everything, but many more are resilient. ists. Also with sadness we report that classmate Rob Cleary flew 208 combat mis- the First Amendment who clerked for Justice —Larry Langford, P.O. Box 71, Buckland, MA 01338; quite yet under either lava or, more likely, water. “At the end of the day,” Tom says, “it is a wonder- Phillip Morris passed away in Missouri, and we are sions as a Marine bombardier and Byron White. More about each at dartmoutha- [email protected] —Jack Hopke, 157 Joy St., River Ridge, LA 70123; ful adventure. We get up every day to one of the seeking his family or friends. If you can help, email navigator in Vietnam in 1969 and lumnimagazine.com/obits. (504) 388-2645; [email protected] most beautiful vistas on God’s green earth.” Tom your secretary at the address below. 661970. When he returned home, to keep in touch —Larry Geiger, 93 Greenridge Ave., White Plains, At Class Notes’ deadline, a number cannot confirm, but he is told that the Dartmouth —John “Tex” Talmadge, 3519 Brookline Lane, with college friends he organized a small reunion NY 10605; (914) 860-4945; [email protected] of us are headed to our next class In the winter of our relative discon- Club of the Virgin Islands has the largest mem- Farmers Branch, TX 75234; (214) 673-9250; of what he called the Society of Mutual Friends committee meeting in Alexandria, tent (epidemics, market crashes, bership of all! [email protected] 68 Norm Jacobs in D.C. That tradition continued to grow with We are celebrating our collective 75th Virginia. We’ll enjoy lunch and a couple of D.C. 69politics), our class remains on the sends word that his tour of Viet- informal reunions in New England, Canada, and birthday in 2020 by getting together in attractions afterward. (We’ll miss newsletter move and our correspondents roam around the nam and Cambodia was a terrific experience. (Sev- Our 50th reunion is just two months throughout the West. Even after Rob’s sad pass- 67groups small and large, raising a glass, editor Mark Waterhouse. Good luck with the back girdled earth. Dudley Kay sends word that after 16 eral other classmates have said good things about away. An astounding number of class- ing in 2015, Rob’s wife, Judy, and many friends and taking photos to share on 1967.dartmouth.org. surgery!) At the same time, the next mini-reunion, years of courtship, he and the lovely Jill (Ford) the Vietnam tours.) Norm also alerts us that we 70mates are making the trek to Hanover. have kept the now annual gathering going strong. Kicking it off in New York City in January were a ski event, will get underway at Mammoth Moun- married in December! The beautiful couple will will celebrate a ’69 BBQ Boston mini-reunion Quite a few are traveling long distances and from The most recent event took place in Albu- Dave Sicher, Jack Harris, Sam Ostrow, Jim Peck, How- tain in California. Class members planning to honeymoon on rivers in Europe, so we anticipate on May 30 at the Cambridge Boat Club. RSVP to other countries. Stu Zuckerman reminded me of querque, New Mexico, during Balloon Fiesta. ard Sharfstein, and Hugh Freund. Bill Bogardus and attend are Larry Griffith, Peter Fahey, Peter Emmel, the arrival of very cool postcards. People do still [email protected]. the phrase, “Though ’round the girdled earth they Pam and Steve Abram, Dorothy Drummer and Ted Neill raised a glass in Naples, Florida, while Rick Pabst, Scott Reeves, Rich duMoulin, Dave Di- send postcards, right? Dona Heller and Norm have also scheduled roam, her spell on them remains.” Greg Eden, Margot and Don Graves, Joyce and Paul Killebrew posed with Tom Rath at his political belius, Paul Fitzgerald, Steve Schwager, Jim Lawrie, Peter Schaeffer, on eastern Long Island, re- the 75th birthday party for May 21, 2022, in New Tex Morgan, 50th reunion chair, says we are Tony Muller, Chris and Pete Richardson, Linda and panel discussion in Hanover. A few weeks later Rusty Martin, Sandy Dunlap, Joe Lowry, and first- flects that growing up in suburban New York his York City, along with many other activities during expecting a record turnout. Check out the full Kevin Trainor, Flo and Steve Zeller toasted Rob, the a huge turnout at the 37th annual Boston din- timer Paul Schweitzer. Happy trails to all. gang played hockey on frozen ponds every winter. the weekend! Stay tuned for details. reunion schedule on our class website and register group’s founder, and mourned the loss of their ner included Susanne and Curt Anderson, Betty I heard via phone and email from a couple “In the 28 years I’ve lived here on the island we’ve Ted Adams is our other Asia correspondent, now. We begin on the afternoon of Thursday, June good friend, Howard Neff ’63, who, with wife and Steve Ayres, Wayne Beyer, Sharleen and Larry of friends who send greetings to you and wish only had one winter when we had enough freezing having covered China, India, Bali, and Singapore. 11, with a welcome reception and dinner in the Sheri, had been scheduled to attend. Bowen, Dick Clapp, Maureen and Steve Cheheyl, to report that things are most pleasant and busy Dr. David Harris, a fellow of the College of Tina and Richard Chu, John Feltner, Becky and Ed in their circles. Jim Frey and wife of 51 years Iris American Pathologists, has been in the private Gray, Chuck Hobbie, Bill Judd, Pris and Ed Kern, returned to their native Lancaster, Pennsylvania, practice of anatomic and clinical pathology since Joyce and Paul Killebrew, Eric Kinter, Pokey and to retire among family members and new friends 1979. While working and living in Malaysia for John Kornet, Candy and Larry Langford, Dave Larson, of diverse geographical and cultural backgrounds. the past decade, he has coauthored two research Drew Ley and Carol Searle, Dwight MacKerron and Their travels have included visits to all 50 U.S. papers on an RNA method of predicting the risk Joan Bryant, Susan and John Manaras, Nick Mason states. Iris helps chair the resident council of their for developing cancers of the liver and throat. So, and Karen Mathies, Judy and Sam Ostrow, Beth community and Jim serves on the board of the what’s David most excited about now? Why his Paolino, Ann and Jim Paull, Carol and Tom Pyles, Jim Lancaster Cleft Palate Clinic and as a SCORE wife, Bee Har, his 2-year-old “talkative and very Rooks, Sandy von Unwerth and Bill Sjogren, Shari mentor for businesses. active” granddaughter, Eleanor, and his grandson, and Bob Thurer, Susan and Mike Tucker, Susie and John Hamer, whose goal to become a Navy Isaac, born last July, of course. Bill White. Later at CarniVail, celebrants included SEAL after ROTC was frustrated by a horrific Nice work if you can get it: Jonathan Wiesel Rosanne and John Lobitz, Jan and John Meck, Jac- car crash on his way back to Hanover after win- has spent 40 years in the world of cross-country quie and Ed Arnold, Susan and Jack Brock, Judy ter break of senior year, has always nonetheless skiing, writing and consulting on more than 120 and Dean Ericson, Larry Langford, George Wood, remained very active, even in retirement. He and Nordic-related projects across North America. Maureen and Steve Cheheyl and their daughter, wife Mariana kayak often on Lake Washington, Now he’s back in Bozeman, Montana, working to Juliette. Meanwhile, Rob Kugler and Mike Pryor near their home on Mercer Island, Washington. The highest caliber of senior living, combining transform snowbelt golf courses into snowshoe were raising a glass aboard ship departing Dune- John is a Rotary member, tutors at a Seattle el- both lifestyle and support for your peace of mind. and fat-bike areas. “It’s amazing,” Jonathan re- din, New Zealand! ementary school, and helps absent fathers re- ports, “how many Dartmouth people are in the We asked who you would like to have dinner engage with their children by volunteering with • • tiny cross-country ski world—coaches, competi- with, and Ben Mixter said he would like to have Divine Alternatives for Dads Services (DADS). Chef-Prepared Meals Medication Management We’d be delighted tors, consultants, writers, area operators.” dinner with his maternal grandmother, “without The couple also enjoys watching Dartmouth foot- • Private Apartments • Dementia, Alzheimer’s & Memory Care to meet you. “Somehow, it still seems natural to be work- whom my growing up would not have been as fun, ball games with former Sen. Slade Gordon ’50, ing at age 74 (the new 54?),” says David Johnston. instructive, and loving.” Peter Golenbock would of whose international policy center Mariana • Activities, Music, Arts, Entertainment, • Transportation Please call A few years ago David founded and now directs “invite Branch Rickey, who signed Jackie Rob- was president. Fitness and Outings • Housekeeping Gretchen Stoddard the Center for Higher Education Retention Excel- inson to play for the Dodgers in an America not Gerry Hills writes that he and Martha have • at (603) 643-7290. lence (CHERE) based in Hartford, Connecticut. ready for integration in sports or any place else.” recovered from their Pahoa, Hawaii, house being 24-Hour Assistance/Care • Rehabilitation Therapy CHERE has run 21 conferences and works with For John Kornet it’s “Jim Henson and Steve Jobs,” inundated with 30 feet of lava—this not long after • Long or Short Stays • a coalition of schools to increase college and em- while Bill White says, “That’s easy—Marilyn Mon- leaving their previous residence of St. John ahead Superior care for aging in place ployment success for challenged and underrep- roe. Need I explain why?” Ted Haynes would like of extensive hurricane destruction—and have • Elegant Common Areas gracefully resented students. Dave and Hera just welcomed dinner with Ken Oshman, president of ROLM moved into a bamboo house, also in Pahoa. Gerry their first grandchild in November and will be Corp., with whom a dinner conversation would says he’s about a hundred yards from the ocean, at celebrating their 50th anniversary in May. be brilliant (at least on his part), inspiring, and about 60 feet of altitude, and so theoretically safe Valley Terrace 2820 Christian Street, White River Jct., VT 05001 Here it comes. Mediaevil, the fifth novel by thoroughly enjoyable.” Bruce Pacht would “invite from both global warming and another eruption, Physical location: Wilder, VT near Norwich former motion picture executive and collegiate the late Dan Gould, the strangest and most original the latter of which isn’t due for 50-plus years. Wheelock Terrace 32 Buck Road, Hanover, NH 03755 film course teacher Jeff Stein (nom de plume of guy I’ve ever met in my life.” John Lobitz would Peter Hofman forwarded me some selected J.J. Stein), has just been published. Jeff describes dine with “Dr. John Benson, who is the reason overviews of community service project vol- Woodstock Terrace 456 Woodstock Road, Woodstock, VT 05091 TerraceCommunities.com it as “a dystopian satire about the near future set that I went into gastroenterology and internal unteers’ activities: Peter Temple helped create a

80 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE UVJ6682 Highest Caliber 6.8125x4.875 4c_DM.indd 1 MAY/JUNE11/10/15 4:442020 PM 81 CLASS NOTES 1971-1975

new Moosilauke Ravine Lodge. On the morning clinical professor of family medicine at the Uni- home. One of their lecturers was Lech Walesa, Early Daughters of Dartmouth: Blazing the of Sunday, June 14, we lead the class of 2020 to its versity of Colorado School of Medicine. David will who signed his book, which Bill had previously Trail to Coeducation, 1969 to 1972, premiered to graduation ceremony. Our class tent will provide be working with terrific colleagues in this depart- read! It was an extraordinary trip. a standing room only audience in Filene Audi- a comfortable and inviting space for visiting old ment, across the university’s Anschutz Medical I also heard from one of our classmates who torium in October. Narrated by actress Connie friends and making new ones. Campus in Colorado and nationally. The short recounted a wonderful story about our own George Britton ’89, the documentary tells the story of Class president Jeff Demerath had a lengthy description of this work is “how do you transform Buesing. Some of you may remember George. He the early female exchange students and others list of reasons why classmates might not travel the health system for disadvantaged people from was a tall, handsome young man who excelled at who directly influenced the animated debate that to Hanover. A bad back since his 30s has become one focused on repairing illness, where most of many things while at Dartmouth. The classmate ultimately resulted in Dartmouth going fully coed unbearable and very difficult to walk or stand for the grants are spent on specialists and acute care, who wrote to me wants to remain anonymous to in the fall of 1972; on-camera interviews of the more than a few minutes. Planned surgery in May to one focused on producing thriving people with keep this short story focused on George. While I female students, professors, and administrators and subsequent recovery precluded attending the a focus on vitality and well-being?” David will be am glad to honor that request, I will also use the from that time period include those with Ann reunion. Jeff knew the reunion might be the last commuting every other week from the District of text of his email message to recount this lovely Birchall Tarbox and Cindy Saranec Livermore. time to see so many classmates and talk of won- Columbia. Arthur Hittner’s third novel, titled The tale. Steve Toll had a photographic art exhibit, derful shared memories, our plans, and hopes for Caroline Paintings, has just been released. It’s an “George was a stellar athlete (football and American Splendor, in the main corridor of the our last few decades on this earth. Consequently, art sleuthing novel loosely inspired by the saga of crew), outstanding student (premed), and an main building at the Hotchkiss School from late he postponed surgery until July. Jeff will endure Andrew Wyeth’s Helga pictures. The description extraordinary friend who always had time to September through early October. the pain to march with his class at graduation and on the book’s back cover reads, “a Florida retiree, chat, notwithstanding his busy schedule. After In January the Garrison Institute selected experience this once-in-a-lifetime five days. Jeff dabbling in the art market, buys the contents of a graduating he went to medical school. Just as he Jonathan Wiesner its next CEO. A nonprofit orga- hopes you can join him in Hanover if you and your storage locker in a foreclosure sale. Included in his was about to graduate, he discovered that he had nization that applies the transformative power family can possibly do so. bounty is a cache of unsigned paintings of a beau- leukemia. Rather than continue with the specialty of contemplation to today’s pressing social and Tim Welch plans to arrive Wednesday or tiful young woman by a supremely talented hand. for which he was training, George spent the rest environmental concerns, helping build a more Thursday and stay through Tuesday morning. Who is she, who is the artist, and what gave rise to of his life providing medical care to drug addicts compassionate, resilient future, the institute de- He especially looks forward to the panel discus- these poignant works?” Buy the book on Amazon in Jersey City. George died on January 14, 1981. velops and hosts retreats and symposia, produces sions Jeff Dahlman’s committee has organized. to learn the answers to these and other questions. A fund was established to honor and preserve research and publications, and provides a hub for Mark Heller, Tim Welch, Denny Brown, and Steve Hoverman has graciously accepted the class George’s memory and to provide financial as- ongoing learning networks. It has established Wayne Bardsley were headed to Beaver Creek, executive committee’s nomination to serve as sistance to needy Dartmouth students.” key initiatives in the fields of ecology, caregiv- “We’ve made so many new friends.” Colorado, in early March for a week of skiing as our new class alumni councilor. He succeeds Ted I think many of us try to give back to our fel- ing, education, and organizational leadership. part of a scientific experiment to see whether Eismeier, who has ably represented our class dur- low man when presented with the opportunity to “The organization is exceptionally appealing to You will too, as part of a vibrant senior community meticulously modern equipment can compensate for aging ing his three-year term. Quite a number of class do so. But I dare say that most of our efforts would me because of its smart and unique approaches designed for independent residents only 10 minutes from the bodies. They will surely have lots of tales to tell. events have been scheduled in 2020, including the pale in comparison to the extraordinary service addressing both of my priorities: helping refugees Dartmouth Green. Faculty and alumni say they chose The Woodlands Bruce Rich concluded a wonderful run of 46 MS Walk in Boston on April 5 with Steve Zrike and given by George Buesing so many years ago, even and aid workers and protecting our planet. I have a years practicing law. Bruce is a fellow at Har- his award-winning team; the Mississippi cruise as he realized that his time on earth was short. profound respect and admiration for the organiza- because it is just the right size to have the sense of community they vard’s advanced leadership initiative to further April 26-May 4; San Francisco dinner on April 6; What our anonymous classmate did not want tion and its mission and look forward to helping value, with the amenities they want all under one roof. develop his expertise in the education reform Denver dinner on May 16; N.Y.C. dinner, date to me to say is that he was the one who “got the ball grow its work and impact.” Previously, Jonathan field as board chair of English language education, be determined; U.S. Open at Wingfoot June 18- rolling” to establish the George F. Buesing Memo- served for 25 years on the board of the Interna- training teachers to give promise for meaningful 21; Upper Valley mini with dinner, “Carnevale,” rial Fund mentioned above. And through the many tional Rescue Committee (IRC) and is currently lives to K-12 public school students nationally. and Lake Sunapee boating and brunch July 10- gifts given by the Dartmouth community during chairman emeritus. The IRC is one of the world’s He is serving on the New York regional commit- 12; class cruise in Russia July 18-29; Nantucket, the past almost 40 years, that fund has now grown leading humanitarian relief organizations. tee supporting the Call to Lead campaign and Massachusetts, mini August 27-30; Homecom- to almost $73,000. Because it is used to provide Atop the stairs of the McLane Family Lodge recently was appointed to the board of visitors of ing October 1-3; and VOX weekend in Hanover financial assistance to Dartmouth students who at the Dartmouth Skiway is a new oil painting by the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy. He and October 16-17. And, of course, there’s our 50th meet the requirements of the College, George Nils Johnson of skiers and a snowboarder coming Melissa plan to attend the reunion. reunion June 11-15, 2021. Speaking of which, I continues to serve those in need even though he down a section of the Howie Chivers trail. An Chip O’Brien reported that Dwight Timbers died welcome your creative thoughts on what should has passed away. avid skier, Nils spent many hours on the Skiway’s on February 11. Chip had convinced Dwight to be the theme for our 50th. Send me an email with If you knew George during his time in Ha- slopes and remembers, “In the old lodge, an old return for our 50th reunion, but his illness got your recommendations. I am deeply saddened to nover, drop me a line. And to our anonymous painting of a snow scene.” When the new lodge Call Peggy Cooper at 603-443-9575 to schedule your visit. the better of him. We will honor Dwight and other report the deaths of our classmates John S. Self- classmate, thank you ever so much for taking was built, he wanted to provide a new, more vi- classmates at Rollins Chapel, remembering that ridge, Darrel R. Gavle, and John D. Pfeifle. “The hill the time to brighten our world a bit. brant painting. The painting brings to life the www.TheWoodlandsNH.org “there is no time like the present” for all of us to winds know their names.” Kind regards. exact motions and excitement that is happening come back to Hanover. —Bob Lider, 9225 Veneto Place, Naples, FL 34113; —David Hetzel, 997 State Blvd., Franklin, TN on the slopes outside the lodge. See it at cam- I look forward to seeing you for our reunion [email protected] 37064; [email protected] pus-services.dartmouth.edu/news/2020/01/ on June 11-16. new-painting-brings-skiway-life. —Gary Miller, 7 East Hill Road, Canton, CT 06019; Bill Roberts reports that last summer Spring is upon us. Sadly, Paul Frangos died at home of multiple [email protected] he and his wife, Ingrid, went on their This past fall Baker Library myeloma in late January. See dartmouthalumni Do you need Are you fourth Dartmouth alumni travel ad- presented displays titled Adventure- magazine.com/obits. 73 Val Armento a lawyer? a lawyer, Our 2019 Class of the Year has received 72venture. In July they landed in Stockholm, In- some Spirit, highlighting the College’s past, one of — , 227 Sylvan Ave., San Mateo, CA letters from three students who have grid’s paternal grandparents’ homeland. After two which was captioned “Dartmouth Trailblazers,” 94403; [email protected] Find a but not a been recipients of class of 1971 schol- days of remarkable excursions there, including focusing on the Afro-American Society and the 71 Ted Eismeier Matt Putnam member of the arships. Thanks to , our class web- visits to the banquet halls, a 17th- formation of black studies, Native students, and President , reminds us: Dartmouth alum master, you can read these letters in the news century warship, and two nights of sumptuous Native American studies, and the first alumnae. “Our efforts focus on raising a full Dartmouth section of our class website, 1971.dartmouth.org. dining, they boarded a French ship for a Baltic Sea Contents included a photo with George Riley and scholarship for our 50th reunion. in the The expressions of gratitude from these students cruise with fewer than 200 passengers, including Derek Rice, along with Swift Barnes and Steve Stet- 74Please start saving and contribute early.” Thanks. Dartmouth Lawyers underscore the impact that our scholarships have 10 wonderful Dartmouth alumni and spouses and son (all wearing beanies), the first two pages of —Philip Stebbins, 17 Hardy Road, Londonderry, DARTMOUTH had on their Dartmouth experience. We should Dartmouth professor Lynn Patyk. They visited transfer students contained in the 1976 Freshman NH 03053; [email protected] Lawyers Association? continue to support the fund’s growth so that we Helsinki, St. Petersburg, Tallinn, Estonia, Visby Book, the first page of the 1973 Aegis senior photos, LAWYERS can provide scholarship funds to more talented on Sweden’s Gotland Island (with its intact me- as well as a Commencement photo of Mary Allen Life in the slow lane is interesting Association Join today students in pursuit of their academic goals. Con- dieval Old Town), Gdansk, and Copenhagen. In Stifler. Also on display was a June 1975 letter from during the winter months. The pace at tact Jim Rager if you would like to contribute to Denmark, Bill’s maternal grandfather’s homeland, Robert Kilmarx ’50 to several people, including seems a bit more relaxed and one can directory at ASSOCIATION the 1971 endowed scholarship. Congratulations to they stayed with friends and visited Tivoli Gar- Michael Hanitchak, thanking him for his work as 75perhaps appreciate the world in a more leisurely bit.ly/dlafi nd bit.ly/dlajoin David Aylward, who has been appointed assistant dens, Hamlet’s Castle, and author Karen Blixen’s co-chair of the Native American Council. fashion. Such leisure may even allow us the time Are you a lawyer, but 82 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 83 not a member of the Dartmouth Lawyers Association? Join today at dla.org “Governor’s Farm”, w/ Antique Cape & Large Dairy Barn, River Frontage CLASS NOTES 1976-1979 A special, magical, beautiful waterfront property, two parcels totaling 18.62 ac. total, 1474’ river frontage, one parcel a separate building lot, offered as package at $650,000. Meadows, beautiful door yard, gardens, forest, flowers, mature hardwoods, Christmas tree grove, stream, hiking trails, sugar grove and P&B sugar house frame, just ½ hour drive from the heart of Upper Valley & CLOSE TO MAJOR SKI AREAS. Some land designated “Prime Agricultural Soils.” Could be purchased with less/add’l to connect with classmates before the year starts he and Noreen Quinn Fisher took their first stroll the highest-attended exhibition at the Kimbell whose failures in the professional world have land—several options available. HOUSE has great potential for further restoration and expansion. 19x45’ ell needs finishing to get away from us. freshman fall. He writes: “Trying to be the gentle- in two decades. sent them on downward spirals. A classmate who touches (heat, finished bath). Great for grazing animals, as vacation home, small farm, B&B (w/4 bedrooms each having a In one such story from the medium lane man, I walked along the muddy outside edge so featured a lengthy, recently died was described by a friend as being dedicated bathroom), recreational, or any combination thereof. Package deal subject to approved septic design by seller. comes word from William Carney. He and I are Noreen could be on higher, dryer ground. Much front-page profile of Diana Taylor in its style sec- “essentially destitute and alone, having alienated connected via Strava, where I am also connected to my surprise she looked at me with a mischie- tion. The article focused on “her personal stature, just about every living family member and friend to his son, Tom, who is presumably far fitter that vous grin and pushed me into the pond. Reacting her formidable resume, and her independence” he ever had.” we are, but I digress. I reached out to folks on Face- quickly, I grabbed her hand and pulled her in with on the campaign trail for former mayor Mike What’s most troubling is that we are often book and asked if anyone had a Peloton. William me.” They emerged mud-covered and smitten, Bloomberg. The piece offered a unique view into helpless to change things for our fellow class- was negative, but did relay this episode. a fitting prequel to one of the first and longest- one woman’s personal and professional journey at mates. Sometimes we don’t know the circum- “Last year I was hanging onto Tom’s (- running double Dartmouth marriages, now in its a time of fundamental change in our society. The stances until it is too late. Other times the person WILLIAM “STAR” JOHNSON, ‘70, BROKER tive word: hanging) wheel in Rock Creek Park out- 47th happy year. A recent, random confluence of essay touched on Diana’s Dartmouth experience in dire straits doesn’t want help or is unable to BIGGREENRE.COM • (603) 643 3942 • 5 OLDE NUGGET ALLEY, SUITE 5, HANOVER, NH side D.C. We passed a rider who then jumped onto classmates involved Martha Johnson Beattie, Jim (“I absolutely loved it; but it was hard.”) as well as accept it. There are no easy answers. No button Big Green Real Estate is not affiliated with nor officially sanctioned by Dartmouth College. my wheel. After a couple of minutes he passed me Beattie, and I running into the ebullient Jack Boyles her career and charitable activities since college. to push, no fund to contribute to that will make and chatted with Tom, who was wearing Dart- at a Boston Symphony Orchestra concert. Jack To read the article, search for our classmate’s it all better. Some classes have formal systems mouth kit. The rider told Tom that he was a ’75. is Boston’s best ambassador, a fixture at Red Sox name at washingtonpost.com. in place for classmates in need of counseling or Tom said, ‘Slide back and meet your classmate.’ games and ever-enthusiastic at cultural events. Aimee Ballantyne is the CEO of her own com- mental health assistance. Perhaps these rumina- It was Robert Bell.” Clearly they were all going at We then happened upon Rick Hill’s wife, Sue, who pany, called Friends in Stitches Recovery Bee, tions will spark some discussion on whether we a conversational pace! reported Rick was away skiing even after just LLC. Its mission is to recycle fabrics and return should embrace such a plan. But the truth is, we In a separate hit from Facebook, the infa- finishing a major ski adventure in Japan with Jim to traditional values such as hand-sewing. The can’t always catch people before they fall. GIFTS AS MEMORABLE AS YOUR mous, newborn poster boy Dr. Walter Evans gave Beattie, Bruce York, Eric Copenhaver, Craig Reininger, online website, friendsinstichesrecoverybee. We can, however, remember. I am working me the high sign on Peloton. He is “DocWalt” and Craig Stone, Kim York ’77, and Gary Schillhammer com, keeps the community informed about the right now to make sure there is a web obituary for DARTMOUTH EXPERIENCE ITSELF. I am “fratergray.” If anyone else is a Peloton user, ’77. Condolences are due Dave Clark for the loss business with no carbon footprint. Aimee oper- every classmate who has died during the last 40 Personalize a handcrafted design to look us up. of his mother, Mary Higgins Clark, best-selling ates the business out of the house she co-owns years, even when information is scarce or painful. Paul Parsons was also getting around this win- suspense novelist. When Dave’s dad died in 1964, with classmate Wayne Ballantyne. She plows every Under class president Barbi Martinez, we have set add meaning all your own. ter. From his travels to the D.C. area comes this she persevered in earning not only her own col- penny she makes back into the company. It stays up a system to ensure that classmates who die in note of connection with Jim Thiel: “I was there lege degree but in working to send to college five solvent by sending many prints right back into the the future (chances are good it will happen to all of 15 South Main St, Hanover NH with wife and daughter for the latter’s graduation children, including Dave. Her first big hit,Where community in the form of cottons delivered to us!) are appropriately commemorated. Obituaries simonpearce.com from Department of Justice training, fulfilling her Are the Children? debuted our junior year and is local dog groomers, who cut them into bandanas can be found on the ’78 website’s “In Memoriam” 800.774.5277 childhood dreams. Jim has worked in Alexandria now in its 75th printing. We mourn the passing for newly groomed pooches. page, at 1978.dartmouth.org/in-memoriam. More as an M.D., as does his wife. We were part of the of Jeff Shiffrin, beloved by family, friends, and a We have recently learned that Linda Peppard information is always welcome. Dartmouth lightweight crew team that rowed devastated world skiing community. Tributes Hart-Buuck died in January 2019. After Dart- Not all classmate stories are happy ones. But at the Henley Royal Regatta right after gradua- can be found on this magazine’s website, our class mouth, where she was a proud member of the we owe it to one another to honor and remember tion and haven’t really talked much since then. website 1976.dartmouth.org, and multiple media ski team, she earned master’s degrees in anthro- every one. I’m retired with a lymphoma and Jim is barely outlets, including The New York Times and Sports pology and special education, worked in special —Rick Beyer, 1305 S. Michigan Ave., #1104, Chi- working, from what I can tell. Was great to match Illustrated. Look for a class newsletter tribute by education, and was an avid community volunteer, cago, IL 60605; [email protected] up memories of days gone by and compare notes Steve Bell gathered from heartfelt reminiscences all the while raising three sons on her own due CALLING ALL on the life paths our alma mater prepared us for. of longtime friend Jeff Longand multiple Psi U to the sudden death of her first husband, Glen Buckle up and get ready to start your We’ve both been very lucky, I think, and are opti- brothers, including Chris Daniell and Scott Simons. Hart. Her bubbly personality and ever-present engines gang, because our “Building mistic and excited about the possibilities for the Jeff’s daughter, Mikaela, Olympic and World Cup smile eventually drew the attention of Charlie 79Bridges” 40th reunion is now just two DARTMOUTH future. Wah-hoo-wah!” alpine ski champion, called him “our ocean, our Buuck, whom she happily wed in 2007. One fellow months down the road! If you haven’t done so I have it on good authority that Paul is doing sunrise, our heart, our soul, our everything.” Con- member of the ski team described Linda as “the already, please visit our class website at 1979. well and feels great. The pictures on our Facebook tributions may be made to “Friends of Dartmouth epitome of tenacity and optimism.” Friends say dartmouth.org and register for what promises to AUTHORS! page are great and always take me back—lots of Skiing.” Linda lived every day to the absolute fullest and be a truly special and inclusive milestone event. familiar faces. That’s all—happy spring! —Sara Hoagland Hunter, 72 Mount Vernon St., Unit was an inspiration to all. We will celebrate our extraordinary shared ’79 August 15, 2020, is the DEADLINE Vox clamantis in Tejas. 4B, Boston, MA 02108; [email protected] — Robin Gosnell, 31 Elm Lane, Princeton, NJ 08540; experience and honor those we have lost, includ- —Stephen D. Gray, 3627 Avenue M, Galveston, TX [email protected]; Eric Edmondson, DC Ad- ing beloved classmates Dave “Coach” Philhower to showcase your book in 77550; (650) 302-8739; [email protected] Lucy Townsend is a caterer and event visory, 425 California St., Suite 19, San Francisco, and Dave “Rusty” Joyce most recently. The tragic Dartmouth Alumni Magazine and planner in Cooperstown, New York, CA 94104; [email protected]; Drew Kintz- and unexpected deaths of Coach and Rusty on reach 61,000 Dartmouth alumni, The view from the Hanover Inn to looking forward to serving Derek inger, 2400 M St. NW, Apt. 914, Washington, DC January 27 and February 3, respectively, leave Baker Tower still stirs the excitement 77Jeter when he is inducted into the National Base- 20037; [email protected] gaping holes in our hearts. faculty and staff. 76of possibility I felt one snowy night in ball Hall of Fame this summer. Her largest event, Brighter news comes from Lori Arviso Alvord, 1971 at dinner with my parents after my admis- “Belgium Comes to Cooperstown,” featured a plat- Part of my role as class secretary is to who went by her maiden name (Cupp) during our The November/December issue of sions tour and interview. Admissions officer Sam ed eight-course dinner for 800 guests. Her most note the passing of classmates in Class time at Dartmouth and who has lived a remark- DAM will feature the Dartmouth Smith ’49, a pioneering Dartmouth alum himself, stressful event was a lobster bake for 100 people. 78Notes and on the “In Memoriam” page able and accomplished life. Please enjoy Lori’s Alumni Bookshelf—a special had told me I was the first woman he had ever in- One propane burner broke down and she was of our class website. This is not as morbid a job as bountiful update, which we greatly appreciate terviewed and encouraged me to apply. I couldn’t able to manage only four lobsters at a time, while it seems. Obituaries are not about death. In fact, her sharing: “Thank you, Stanley and John, for advertising section for authors. Your wait! To this day, that quintessential campus view clams, potatoes, and corn steamed in a convection they are celebrations of life. Often it is a joyous inviting me to write a few words. Let me first say ad includes a full-color book jacket across the Green pinpoints my coordinates of oven. Her most memorable compliment came experience to learn about and recount a person’s that, outside of some members of the Dartmouth photo and 250 characters of text. place and affection. I asked classmates their own from Jacqueline Onassis: “Lunch was divine!” accomplishments or the lives they touched. Nev- Club of the Upper Valley and some Native Ameri- memorable spots. Former lightweight crew team The key to success: “Stay calm when you’re not.” ertheless, the process sometimes leads to somber can alumni, I don’t know most of you. For Native It will appear in both the print and member David Slade chose the Connecticut River The Wall Street Journal named two Kimbell reflection. Not all life stories have happy endings. Americans such as me (I was born Navajo and online editions of DAM. and the boathouse because they helped him “stay Art Museum projects in its Top 10 U.S. art exhibi- In getting a chance to go to Dartmouth, we spent my formative years on the Navajo reser- mentally connected” with his family’s summer tions of 2019. Critic Karen Wilkin listed Renoir: each, in a sense, won the lottery. But not everyone vation in Crownpoint, New Mexico) and other For more information about pricing place on Lake Winnipesaukee. Dave and wife The Body, The Senses and Monet: The Late Years has been able to hold on the prize. There are ’78s people of color, relative undergraduate isolation and ad specifications, please contact Marilyn have now restored his grandparents’ lake as two of the most striking and compelling exhi- who have taken their own lives, some a long time at predominantly white academic institutions is Chris Flaherty at home. He is hoping for extended stays when he bitions of the year. George Shackelford organized ago, others more recently. There are ’78s who have a not uncommon shared circumstance. The un- “finally manages to retire” from duties as general both shows. The Renoir exhibit gave viewers the found themselves in homeless shelters or out fortunate reality is that the gulf between sharply 603.646.1208 or counsel of the U.S. Export-Import Bank in Wash- opportunity “to savor [Renoir’s]…marriage of in- on the street. Others’ lives have been devastated contrasting backgrounds and adolescent experi- [email protected]. ington, D.C. Rip Fisher cites Occom Pond, where ventive color and mass.” The Monet exhibit was by mental illness or addiction. There are those ences has always been a difficult one to bridge.

84 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 85 CLASS NOTES 1980-1985

I won’t bore you with everything I’ve been do- ask “Gov. Moonbeam” about Linda Ronstadt but so respectful. I actually really like hanging out My birthday twin, Marty Jacobs, is making the victory, the Dartmouth players turned to the free time? In gratitude.” ing since graduation, but here are some of the didn’t. Somebody lured a bored John Anderson with them.’ ” He sums it up with, “It makes my progress on her Ph.D. (after a series of health chal- rousing students and alums standing arm-over- Caia Brookes identifies strongly both as a New highlights. I was the first person in my tribe to into the basement of Bones Gate for a game of heart smile and gives my spirit hope that these lenges last year), after successfully defending her arm in the stands and joined them in singing the Englander, where she grew up, and a Californian, become a surgeon and am currently working as Wales Tales with Hans Morris, Jim Novo, and me. are the young humans we’re sending out into the dissertation proposal last June and having her alma mater. Of course, there were several tailgate where she’s lived in San Francisco for 29 years. a general surgeon in eastern Washington State. I Earl Grossman and I played some beer pong with a wide, wide world to be the agents of acceptance institutional review board application accepted parties as well as post-victory celebrations at Caia loves the weather and natural beauty of the am the author of The Scalpel and the Silver Bear, feisty and competitive John Connelly. and change in years. As you can see, in the fall in record time. She is on track to finish Billy’s Sports Bar in the Bronx. Amy Bloch has state, and appreciates the diversity, tolerance, and a bestselling 1998 memoir that is still being used Forty: Do I need to remind you that our 40th although the question might be mine (Who is this summer and graduate in September. Looking been practicing psychiatry for 23 years and is mostly liberal tendencies of the people in the area. in many university courses. I was associate dean reunion is scheduled for June 18-21, two short included when you use the pronoun, ‘we’?), the an- forward to another doctor in the class! the author of a newly published book, The Power Jim Kreissman moved to San Francisco in for student affairs and admissions at Dartmouth months from now? Registration is open: Just swer—as you might have guessed—is all of ours.” Eric Fisher is an architect in Pittsburgh. He of the Heart. Amy never expected to write a book 1999 to open the Silicon Valley office of Simpson Medical School from 1997 to 2009 and have had Google “dartmouth reunions 2020” for infor- We are our brother’s keeper—with influences of writes, “I worked in Berlin for six months as an but felt compelled to share her discovery of the Thacher and has been there ever since. Jim’s a the honor of giving several speeches for Dart- mation. Hundreds of your favorite people have President Kemeny, circa 1981. Jody Awad Evans architect just before I completed grad school in heart’s power in the midst of personal crisis. litigator handling securities litigation and govern- mouth, the most recent being the 2017 baccalau- already signed up. Rub elbows with a smoother replied, “Learn to tolerate and embrace ambigu- 1987. That was a couple years prior to the wall Amy’s daughter, Emily, was born with severe brain ment and internal investigations, with clients in reate address. I have also served at the colleges of Rob Rough! Say hi to Jonathan Bye! Preempt your ity—how else do we grow?” And Greg Clow gave his coming down. I lived near the Ku’damm on Ble- damage. Upon hearing the devastating news, Amy the United States and Asia. Jim believes northern medicine at the University of Arizona and Central friends from talking behind your back. Reunion own admittedly biased opinion, “I live in Boise, ibtreustrasse and rowed when I could with the fell into a state of despair and fear, but tapping California is the best place in the United States for Michigan University. In 2013 I was nominated to co-chairs Cathy McGrath and Alex Frank will take it Idaho, these days. A wonderful, beautiful place Berliner Ruder Club out in Wannsee. I had many into her heart enabled her to find strength and the combination of weather, food, wine, outdoor be the surgeon general of the United States and in personally if you don’t show up. Don’t make them which some know principally because our Top adventures for sure, but the coolest thing I did was courage. Amy believes our brains don’t know activities, interesting people, and economic dy- 2018 I received a Lifetime Achievement Award put a horse head in your bed. 25 football team plays on a blue turf field. During take a week off and bicycle from Freiburg over the everything, and when our hearts step in, we’re namism. Other than traffic, life is good. in Medicine from the Stanford University School Fifty: Remarkably, this class column is my the season signs shout out, ‘We bleed blue!’ This Gotthard Pass down to Florence.” stronger, smarter, authentic, and better able to live Lauren Woodhouse Mathews recently had of Medicine, where I earned my medical degree. 50th one. It is also my last. When I first started always brings a smile to my face, because I bleed The Dickey Center for International Under- with uncertainty and know our true selves. Rick one of those rare California experiences: boogie I do a lot of work in Native American health and as class scribe, my son, Luke, who will enter high green, and almost every football field in America standing at Dartmouth is working with our class Eggleston recently joined Worcester Polytechnic boarded in the Pacific Ocean in Half Moon Bay healing practices and mentor many Native Ameri- school this fall, hadn’t been born yet! Over the just happens to be green! What every graduate this to put together a panel of speakers on campus in Institute as professor and department head of on a warm, sunny Wednesday and two days later can students. My husband, Jonathan Alvord, is a years, I’ve had the pleasure of collaborating with year needs to know is that before their first day at the spring called “Post Great Issues Scholars: civil and environmental engineering. His teach- had a bluebird ski day in the Sierra Mountains physician assistant, pilot, and world-class com- three gracious and talented classmates: Paul El- Dartmouth they may have thought of themselves Perspectives and Pathways.” This event is sup- ing interests focus on geochemistry, solar energy, at Lake Tahoe! petitive trimaran sailor. Together we have two mlinger, Rob Daisley, and Wade Herring. And best as being from a state, a country, a religion, a race, a ported by the Class of 1982 Fund for Great Issues and semiconductor electrochemistry, surface Paul Meijer moved to California in 1989 and wonderful children who I fully expect to eclipse of all, the role has kept me in contact with many socio-economic group. But once they chose Dart- Innovation, where we are partnering with the and interface chemistry, and thermodynamics. loves all the outdoor activities, including road- any of my work. Our son, “Kodi” (Kodiak), is a Yale of you. Thank you for the privilege. We will close mouth, and Dartmouth chose them, they would, class of 1957. According to Rick, as we approach the problem cycling, camping, hiking, and skiing. Paul’s worked graduate now in his third year at Brown Medical with a final tribute, presented in limerick form. and will, forever bleed green.” Come express your As we enter a new decade, what is the most of climate adaptation, we face nothing less than at Apple, security startups and nonprofits, and School. My youngest, Arviso (“Vi”) Alvord ’20, is There are so many stories to tell green genes and join your kindred spirits in the interesting place that you visited this past decade the redesign and reconstruction of the global has worked with really talented people, all of a double major in Native American studies and Cause our lives are a bottomless well classes of 1979, ’80, and ’81 June 18-21! and why? Please email me! infrastructure for new energy, transportation, whom were also drawn to California. Paul still studio art currently interning at the Hood Mu- Filled with consummate meaning —Emil Miskovsky, 520 Seneca St., Suite 312, Utica, —David Eichman, 9004 Wonderland Ave., Los An- food, water, and environmental systems—with a sees his freshman roomie, Glen French, and their seum. I hope to meet more of you at Dartmouth There is nothing worth screening! NY 13502; (802) 345-9861; emilmiskovsky@gmail. geles, CA 90046; [email protected]; Jenny leading role for a new generation of civil, archi- kids worked together during a summer. club events in Washington.” One truth and two lies. Ain’t that swell? com; Veronica Wessels, 224 Buena Vista Road, Chandler Hauge, 3506 Idaho Ave., NW, Washington, tectural, and environmental engineers able to Peter Murphy and his wife have been in L.A. —Stanley Weil, 15 Peck Road, Mt. Kisco, NY 10549; —Frank Fesnak, 242 River Road, Gladwyne, PA Rockcliffe, ON K1M0V7, Canada; (613) 864-4491; DC 20016; [email protected] work with novel materials, smart world design, for 32 years. Peter serves on public and private (917) 428-0852; [email protected]; John Cur- 19035; (408) 859-9652; [email protected];Wade [email protected] systems thinking, and data science. boards and manages his portfolio of early stage rier, 82 Carpenter St., Norwich, VT 05055; (802) Herring, P.O. Box 9848, Savannah, GA 31412; (912) David Ellis organized a hugely suc- —Elliot Stultz, 421 West Melrose St., #8A, Chicago, tech and media investments. Outside of work 649-2577; [email protected] 944-1639; [email protected]; Rob By the time you read this column, cessful class weekend in N.Y.C. in IL 60657; [email protected]; Shanta Sullivan, Peter maintains an amazing garden at his 1909 Daisley, 3201 W. Knights Ave., Tampa, FL 33611; many classmates will be heading to November. Forty-six classmates 1541 North Sierra Bonita Ave., Los Angeles, CA house in Pasadena, where he’s busy pruning roses, Ten: The math is easy for alums in (813) 300-7954; [email protected] Santa Fe, New Mexico, for our 60th 83converged on the city with significant others and 90046; [email protected] citrus, vegetables, and natives. 82 Juliet Aires Giglio classes that are multiples of 10. “How birthday reunion at the Hotel La Posada de Santa family members—a total of 96 people—to partake — , 4915 Bentbrook Drive, Man- long since you graduated?” is a no- The U.S. presidential primary touched Fe. It will take place May 1-3 and include a variety in multiple activities, including a football game All the leaves are brown…And the lius, NY 13104; [email protected]; Eric Grub- 80 man brainer for us ’80s. And when we ran around down on the Hanover Plain yet again of activities, such as hiking, golf, art walks, visits to between Dartmouth and Princeton at Yankee Sta- sky is gray…California dreamin’…on , 2 Fox Den Way, Woodbridge, CT 06525; (203) the bonfire at Homecoming, we didn’t bear the 81this year, just like when we were un- museums, biking, and time to just relax and catch dium commemorating the 150th anniversary of 84such a winter’s day. On a gray day 710-7933; [email protected] weight of wearing prime numbers on our class dergrads. Remember the stump speeches on fra- up with classmates or make new friends. Thanks the first college game, delicious meals at assorted in upstate New York I reached out to our class- shirts like last spring’s graduating class. Ten is a ternity row and throughout the campus in 1980? to Sue Elliott for organizing such a fun event to venues, and a Tony Award-winning musical. On mates in the great state of California to see what I just finished reading ourShades of strong and elegant number. As a kid growing up From all accounts, the present students were in celebrate such a birthday milestone for many of Friday night classmates attended Hadestown, they’re doing. Green Winter 2020 class newsletter. in New York, I admired Walt Frazier, the strong the thick of things, getting that upfront view of us. Stay tuned for a full report of the fun weekend. a Broadway musical and winner of eight Tony After living, working, and traveling in nearly Coeditors Lisa Sweeney Herrington and Bill Best Anne Arquit Niederberger 85Margaret Warram Marder and elegant future Hall of Fame guard for the New democracy in action. As we all reflect on our time Thanks to our daily birthday emails, Awards that was developed during the New York 100 countries, finally made a bold ask: Would York Knicks. “Clyde” wore No. 10 on his uniform on campus, this was a special subplot. and Colin McNay discovered that they shared a Theater Workshop’s 2014 summer residency at found the place she feels at home: Healdsburg, those classmates who have faced serious per- and was known for his style and fashion sense. In terms of giving long-lasting and wise ad- birthday. They were high school classmates and Dartmouth. Jessica Rosenberg Brown writes that California. Anne, who began her career as a sonal journeys around health challenges share But Clyde’s trademark sideburns were easily sur- vice to others, several of our classmates respond- never knew that. And Ben Tongue and Laura Morrell the play was worth every penny. Having down- climate scientist, laments that our existence is their story? Answer: Yes! They curated (and, in passed by the muttonchops worn by classmates ed to one of our “Big Questions,” this one relating Hicks not only share a birthday, but they were born loaded the original Broadway cast recording, she existentially threatened by climate change. She Lisa’s case, contributed) a powerful collection James Escher and James Fillmore. When I saw my to recommendations one might give to graduating in the same hospital. It is a small world! is continuing to enjoy the experience. Following encourages classmates to visit and join her in a of individual accounts conveying resilience and face positioned next to theirs in our yearbook, I seniors. Rahn Fleming highlighted compassion, the As I write this column, the Iowa caucuses the performance, Amber Grey, a star of the show glorious bike ride through the vineyards and kick courage, each one serving as a reminder of our felt naked. concept of team, and inclusivity. “Who is included just took place. Mark Weinhardt is a lawyer in Des and friend of actor Jim Sterling, treated classmates, back with an exquisite glass of Sonoma wine—be- shared humanity. If you have not yet done so, this Twenty: We had front row seats at the 1980 when you use the pronoun ‘we’?” he queried. In Moines. His firm specializes in white collar crimi- including Gail Marcus, Patty Shepherd Green, and fore it’s too late! is a must-read (www.dartmouth85.com). presidential election, and going into New Hamp- his role of head football coach at Champlain nal defense and complex business litigation. Mark Wade Welch, to a backstage tour. Saturday’s ac- Marian Ziske Baldauf and her husband live in In the category of classmate updates, Marga- shire’s first-in-the-nation primary, there were Valley Union High School in Vermont, he em- is listed by Super Lawyers as one of the top 10 tivities commenced with a morning book event San Francisco and love the weather and easy ac- ret shared the following news on her and husband, 20 active candidates. Back then, nobody cared phasizes personal accountability and communal attorneys in Iowa and he is the only Iowan among with Jamie Bernstein, daughter of composer/ cess to the out-of-doors—swimming in the ocean David Marder: “Our son got engaged at Thanksgiv- about Iowa except Chuck Blades, Dave Kollmorgen, trust to optimize team effectiveness. In his role the International Academy of Trial Lawyers 500 conductor Leonard Bernstein and author of Fa- at Thanksgiving, skiing in the winter. They re- ing and we absolutely love her. Tommy is finishing and Todd Pellett. Every presidential hopeful made as a co-advisor of the gender sexuality alliance attorneys under 70 years of age. mous Father Girl. On Saturday afternoon class- cently bought electric bikes, which makes cruis- his M.B.A. in Wharton’s healthcare program this multiple visits to Dartmouth and I made a point group, he says students are allowed to explore Tom French is celebrating his retirement by mates traveled to Yankee Stadium for the historic ing around the city really fun, with no need to fear spring and Tara starts her M.B.A. in same program of meeting all of them—even surrogates such as “self-discovery and self-expression, a place where listening to the mother abbess in The Sound of game. Jessica Rosenberg Brown writes that by steep hills. Marian loves the diversity of California this fall. Wedding is set for June 2021. Our middle serial-presidential-impersonator Martin Sheen. they get to try on new identities (literally!) until Music who advised Maria to “Climb Ev’ry Moun- Hanover standards, the weather wasn’t all that and the openness to difference. daughter, Becky, is a first-grade teacher in Red Times were simpler. The politicians weren’t sur- they find their own. Names change. Preferred tain.” Last year Tom and his son, Will, climbed frigid. Rick Baker flew in from Madison, Wiscon- Nora Bianchi says she “has had the joy of solv- Hook, Brooklyn—exhausted as you can imagine, rounded by handlers and the media. You could pronouns change. Gender identities change—or Mount Vinson in Antarctica. Tom traveled to sin, for the game, as did Lynn Johnson Kidder, from ing epic challenges in Silicon Valley while living but in a great charter school and happily living in walk right up to them. When their speeches ended, don’t.” He has had some heartwarming results. Argentina in January to climb a route on Acon- Palo Alto, California. As coach Buddy Teevens compassionately among the great unwashed in the Lower East Side with her boyfriend, cat, and they had nowhere else to go. Jerry Brown and I “One highlight moment came at a recent alliance cagua and in March Tom is scheduled to head to ’79 was quoted in The Dartmouth, “Dartmouth Santa Cruz. This is a republic with unparalleled snake. Our youngest, Hannah, lives in L.A. and was sat for more than 30 minutes in Alumni Hall after meeting, when one of our members said, ‘Thank Nepal to climb Mount Everest. Above the girdled people, they’ll travel anywhere to watch. It was natural beauty and brainpower, trying its best to just hired as a writer for Buzzfeed, for which she is the other three attendees left. I was tempted to you. The football players this year are so friendly, earth they roam! fun to see, to look at the sea of green.” Following bring solutions to the world. How do I spend my over the moon! David and I are both working and

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counting the months to retirement—26 to go!” By Importance of Being Earnest a few years back. I fund is one way I can help to further that cause with many classmates, including Deana (Moody) the time of this publication, Margaret and David was born to play that role!) Also, I’m still writing and those ideals.” and Tom McLaughlin and Ellen (Bober) Moynihan, will be down to 21. screenplays and plays, working on a gay romantic Another way many of us can help others going with whom Heike gets together a couple of times Speaking of family expansions, Katie (Har- comedy set here in Laramie and a couple of other through difficult times is by joining the ’87 Com- a year, including around May 22 to remember Amy ris) and Kris Robbins are preparing for the August projects, and I’m having fun as a volunteer alumni passion Network. Led by Stacey (Wolff) Savas, the Smith, who passed away in 2014, on what would nuptials of their oldest daughter, Heidi, at their ambassador, interviewing kids applying to Dart- Compassion Network is a group of ’87 volunteers have been her birthday. home in Lyme, New Hampshire. Heidi is in medi- mouth! I’ve talked with a couple of bright young on call to provide support for classmates or their Congratulations to Pauline Garris Brown, who cal school at Dartmouth, which is helping to fade people who are inspirations. Life is good!” Pamela immediate family members experiencing chal- joins the ranks of our classmates who have writ- the orange and black tiger stripes she donned as Taylor shares exciting news: “I just found out I’m lenging life events. Stacey herself suffered the ten well-reviewed and engaging books. She has an undergraduate. Allison Shutz Moskow welcomed going to become a grandmother. My eldest (a ’12) devastating loss of her daughter in February, so is published Aesthetic Intelligence, which presents her first grandchild, Charlotte Lane Moskow, on is due in late September! So exciting! In other living through just such a horrific experience. My a groundbreaking approach to business that uses June 1 – July 11, 2020 February 1, born to her oldest son, Zac, and his news, I’m now working in development with the heart goes out to Stacey, and you can assist in her aesthetics to enhance success and value. I can wife, Becca. Zac is a U.S. Marine Corps officer Cincinnati Youth Choir and playing cello with the efforts by visiting the class website to learn how attest to the fact that it’s a really interesting read. stationed in Japan. Grandma Allison is hoping to Cincinnati Civic Orchestra, one of the oldest com- you can help classmates or how the Compassion Pauline has also taught a course at Harvard Busi- Fighting cancer together, even when we’re apart! plan a visit overseas to meet sweet baby Charlotte munity orchestras in the country.” Steven Stichter Network might be able to help you. ness School on “The Business of Aesthetics,” is a in person, closely monitoring the global travel writes, “After dozen years of tracking hurricanes Unfortunately, I will close with more crush- frequent speaker and commentator in the media, concerns and restrictions. around the globe and providing real-time hur- ing news: the passing of Mary (McArtor) Reynolds and hosts a radio show. In fact, she recently had I am sure there are many who recall sightings ricane hazard and impact information through a on January 7, after a five-year battle with cancer. our very own Ed Gray as a guest on her radio show. of Sally Crane Goggin dashing across the Green, startup that I cofounded in 2006, I hired a replace- Mary was a Kappa Alpha Theta sister of mine, and All the best. field hockey stick in hand, to face another chal- ment for my role as CEO early in 2019 to get back I remember her as a woman of few words with a —Tory Woodin Chavey, 128 Steele Road, West lenging opponent on the field. Sally currently to questions of how we can reduce risk and vul- strong, steady presence; when Mary spoke, you Hartford, CT 06119; dartmouth88classnotes@ serves as national development director for USA nerability to current and future natural hazards. listened. “This news broke my heart,” friend and gmail.com Field Hockey. Ordinarily, I would not know this And, as of January, I’m excited to be doing just that fellow Theta Colette (Bourquin) Nygren said. “Mary detail. But, in the category of small-world inter- as director of the Resilient America program at was an absolute gem.” As her obituary eloquently Apologies for the shortness of the col- Tracy Onega, PhD, actions, turns out that I have a friend who is the the National Academies of Science, Engineering states, “Mary’s quiet leadership, grace, and com- umn; more to come next issue. But president of one of the largest manufacturers of and Medicine. I’ve been in D.C. for more than 20 passion impacted all who were fortunate enough 89give a rouse! Adam Lehman was named Guarini ’97 (right) field hockey equipment and (obviously) a huge years now, the last 15 with my husband, Mark to know and work with her.” Mary is survived by president and CEO of Hillel International! He had sponsor of USA Field Hockey. Seems Sally’s and Ewert. My sister-in-law lives in a group home in her husband, Tim Reynolds ’86, and two children. been the chief operating officer for four years. Prouty-ed virtually my friend’s paths have crossed multiple times— Hanover for adults with disabilities, so we get to Donations in Mary’s honor can be made to the Next column: Sophomore Summer—what and did so on February 1, just as word spread of New Hampshire a couple of times a year. In the Mary Durstine McArtor Reynolds Memorial Giv- two words best describe it for you? in 2019 at the the Moskow grandchild birth in Japan. Since my past year we’ve seen Liz McClintock here in D.C. ing Fund, 295 River Drive, Tequesta, FL 33469. —Ned Ward, 2104 Graham Ave., #B, Redondo Great Wall of friend has also met Allison through me, that news, and Chris Hubble (plus Julie Park Hubble ’87) in —Laura Gasser, 746 17th Ave., San Francisco, CA Beach, CA 90278; [email protected] in turn, resulted in Sally making the connection Chapel Hill, North Carolina.” 94121; [email protected] China with Jenn back to me and a round of “do you know” got un- —Mae Drake Hueston, 624 Poppy Ave., Corona Del With our 30th reunion just around derway. What do you know? Mar, CA 92625; [email protected] Greetings, ’88s! In my role as class the corner (June 18-21—go register Alford-Teaster Or rather, who do you know? Do tell us—and secretary for almost two years now, now at d90reunion.org!), I asked ’90s Emil Chynn 90 send news. All the best to all of you! In December got together it has been great fun to catch up with to contemplate the following question: “What’s Leslie A. Davis Dahl 88 — , 83 Pecksland Road Green- with his fellow tripmates from their so many of you, to hear what’s new (or holding something on your bucket list that you’re at least wich, CT 06831; (203) 552-0070; dahlleslie@ German language study abroad in steady) in your lives, and to learn about the class- 50 percent committed to achieving or experienc- Join us as we bike, walk, row, golf or do John MacManus 87Clyde Haig, Quinn Paek, Erik Schmidt yahoo.com; , 188 Ringwood Road, Mainz: , and mates you see and keep in touch with. For those ing or what’s a challenging goal you’re currently Rosemont, PA 19010; (610) 525-4541; slampong@ Ward Watson. Emil reports that Clyde is an at- of you who want to share news, please shoot me pursuing?” Here are your responses. Jennifer anything, anywhere to benefit cancer research aol.com torney in Connecticut following his service in an email any time. For the rest of you, please keep (Huska) Merriman: “At age 50 I decided to embark and patient supportive services at Dartmouth and the U.S. Navy Judge Advocate General’s Corps. an eye out for my emails asking for your updates on a new career in wildlife medicine! I am back Dartmouth-Hitchcock’s Norris Cotton Cancer Center. I was very happy to hear from Rich- A former resident of the Upper Valley, Ward is about how and what you are doing. in school studying to be a veterinary technician ard Morell, who writes: “I’ve been in a now in Greenville, South Carolina, and had not Let’s talk first aboutCari Jackson Lewis. Many and at the same time volunteering and doing in- loving relationship with my partner, been in touch with much of the gang for the past of us were privileged to hear Cari’s “Ted Talk” at ternships caring for native wildlife in northern TM 86Simcha Pollard, for 18 months now. Simcha has 20 years! Quinn has worked as a cinematographer our 30th reunion and still remember her well- California.” Lauren Kehoe: “I’m committing to TheProuty.org taught economics at the university level off and on a number of independent films (as listed in the told story of son Jackson’s birth (on the bedroom travel more, but less for ‘enrichment’ than just Register today at on and has been an administrator with Trident online entertainment database IMDb). Erik is an floor). Cari reports that Jackson, her youngest, stuff that makes me happy. In October I went to University, among other things. He hails from in-house counsel at Capitol One in Chicago and is now a freshman in college, pursuing theater Las Vegas to see ’s show at the Palms, ride San Francisco. We bought a house together in is “enjoying the whitewater of parenting three studies in New York, and her older two children the roller coaster around the New York New York Laramie, Montana. (For those who don’t know, I boys.” An eye surgeon located in N.Y.C. and a one- are in or about to begin graduate school. With hotel, and eat soufflé in the bar at the Paris hotel ended up in Laramie seven years ago at the tail- time featured bachelor on the television show the three of them at schools across the country, while watching the fountain show at the Bellagio end of a spiritual odyssey that included living in The Millionaire Matchmaker, Emil is both the Cari stays busy with her extended family in L.A. out its windows. My next planned bit of happiness a couple of intentional communities in the South godfather to Erik’s children and his doctor: He and her job as a senior development officer at travel is to see the Stanley Cup at the Hockey Call nan and attending the Rainbow Gathering in Montana performed Erik’s LASEK eye surgery. What else the California Community Foundation. She also Hall of Fame in Toronto!” Michael Keller: “Sky- TO REDISCOVER WHAT YOU LOVED that year. Someone I met in Montana said I should are friends for? found time to publish an article in the Society of diving. Have been on the tarmac when a flight got have an open mind, despite Laramie’s history as Fellow ophthalmologist Abdhish Bhavsar and Trust and Estates Practitioners Journal on the canceled for weather, so hoping to get back to it ABOUT THE UPPER VALLEY the site of a hate crime, and I’m glad I did. It’s his wife, Mary, have established an endowed fund importance of gift acceptance policies. before I start daisy-pushing!” Robin Plager Lapre: my ‘Big Eden.’) Simcha and I also have two dogs, at the Wayne State University School of Medi- Heike Milhench has had a wonderfully interest- “My major ambition is to reduce animal shelter Junior and Bowser, and a cat named Baxter we cine to support medical students’ international ing year, one that many of us (yes, that includes overcrowding by improving access to low-cost NAN CARROLL, REALTOR inherited from the previous owner. We just love travel experiences. Abdhish’s father grew up in me) would love to emulate. For the last 20 years spay and neuter surgery in Tennessee. Having it here in Laramie. I’ve been doing local theater, a 10-by-10-foot apartment in a poor, inner-city Heike has been the president of Milhench Sup- spent two years volunteering in rural shelters, I C: 802.356.3560 O: 603.643.6406 still keep my hand in acting. I was most recently neighborhood in India but eventually came to the ply Co. in New Bedford, Massachusetts, but last reached the conclusion that the solution to the [email protected] Torvald in a reading of Lucas Hnath’s A Doll’s United States to practice psychiatry. “My father fall she took her two children to Germany for a surplus animal population requires education, House Part 2 and also played a polar bear in an embraced Gandhi’s ideals in his life and work and, three-month sabbatical. They lived in a small incentives, and affordable access to low-cost ster- environmentally conscious Christmas play per- in turn, taught me to embrace them as guiding town, reconnected with Heike’s family there, and ilization. Please consider adopting your next pet. formed in nearby Centennial, Wyoming. (Nothing principles—to help those who are unable to help enjoyed traveling, biking, soccer, and so many And if you want to save 1,000 future dogs or cats, TheCBLife.com compares though to playing Lady Bracknell in The themselves or are oppressed,” Abdhish said. “This cultural experiences. Heike keeps in regular touch just spay or neuter the ones you have!” Paul Hill: “I

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am somewhat more than 50 percent committed to me.” Morgan also sees Kathryn McKenna D’Amico it helped me enjoy writing. I often use my story Turner—has outdone itself designing an amazing We look forward to seeing everyone!” my dental degree from Tufts dental school in hiking 50 separate peaks with 50 different people in Westport, Connecticut, where they live, “on a as an example when encouraging my students at schedule to mark our 25th reunion. Natalie Herring Have you browsed our 25th reunion class 2000, opened my own dental private practice in in my 50s. I’ve done eight so far. Todd Thayer and I regular basis, made more frequent lately by our Case Western Reserve University to explore ca- will relive her admissions office days and take us book yet? Here are a few highlights from some Las Vegas, and participated in volunteer dental did Hunter Mountain to the fire tower last Octo- new puppies, who need exercise and socializa- reer paths both inside and outside the classroom. on a tour of “Dartmouth Then and Now.” If a walk of our early contributors. trips to both Guatemala and Sri Lanka. My pas- ber. The best part (besides the obvious of getting tion as much as we do.” Kathryn also connected “I study foreign politics, so initially I spent in the woods is more your style, join Dan Foster Kenji Sugahara is the chief pilot and co-own- sion for travel has led me to exotic places, from outside) is catching up with friends and family recently with Molly Higgins Aube and Rich Aube a lot of time living and interviewing people in for a hike up Velvet Rocks. Trustee Erica Ruliffson er of a drone company that films for major car Easter Island to Tibet and even climbing Mount from different parts of my life, often in a place I’ve at Yale in New Haven, Connecticut. They were Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Russia to examine Schultz will update us on current campus topics. companies, Netflix, and other studios. He writes: Kilimanjaro in 2017.” Aseem recently visited his never been!” David Greenberg: “For many years I’ve attending a squash tournament to see Molly and democratic activism and corruption. More re- And bring your family to check out the newly “I’ve been fortunate enough to be a delegate to 70th country, Belize, and plans to climb his second wanted to compete at the World Masters (over Rich’s daughter, Haley, play for Stanford, where cently, my research has taken a global turn, and renovated Hood Museum of Art and create your Japan with the 2018 Oregon governor’s trade mis- of the seven summits, Mount Elbrus in Russia, age 40) Track and Field Championship, but never she is a freshman. Their other twin daughter, I have been fortunate to visit many parts of the own work of art to take home. sion to Asia. I’m also excited as we’ve been a key this summer. have. Wearing a Team USA uniform and compet- Claire, is a freshman at Dartmouth, also playing world to speak about my work to academics and “In the true spirit of our theme—“Oh, the player in securing and funding the 2021 Inter- Is your interest piqued? If you need help get- ing against the world’s best has a strong appeal to on the squash team. democracy practitioners. At home in Cleveland, Stories We’ll Share!”—many classmates have national Amateur Athletic Federation Track and ting access to the book, contact me anytime. Keep me. But for years the meet has been in faraway As summer approaches I thought it might be my husband, Greg York, and I are busy with our two offered to recount significant moments of their Field World Championships in Eugene, Oregon.” your news coming and see you in Hanover! places, so I’ve had to skip it. This year the meet fun to ask you all to share a memory from Sopho- children, Marie and Henry, both avid swimmers postgraduation journeys. Panelists and modera- From Len Lantz: “After my wife, Krista David, —Kaja (Schuppert) Fickes, 2 Bishops Lane, Hing- is in Toronto, and I’m more than likely going to more Summer! The summer of 1989 was the sum- and engaged, curious teenagers. After working tors include Brian Bajari, Nadia Bowers, Susan Boyd, and I completed our medical training in psychia- ham, MA 02043; [email protected] compete. Just to make my ‘challenging goal’ even mer of Milli Vanilli, Paula Abdul, and Fine Young as a senior scientist at a company, Greg made a Teru Clavel, Jaha Cummings, Kaja (Schuppert) Fickes, try, we moved to Helena, Montana. We have a more challenging, I’m doubling down by learning Cannibals, movies such as Dead Poet’s Society career switch, attending law school and becoming Chris Foley, Shara Frase, Dave Jones, Jeremy Katz, 14-year-old daughter, Lucy, and she is wonderful. From new family members to awards a new event: the 3,000-meter steeplechase. The and Batman (the one with Michael Keaton), and a patent attorney. We regularly see Todd Gorman, Ann Marshall, Allison Markin Powell, Daneen Ransaw, Also, I recently started a blog (kungfupsychiatry. to announcement of new ventures— final is August 1.”Bernadine Wu: “I have a ton of events such as Gen. Colin Powell’s nomination now based in Quebec, and Scott Miller, in Boston, Sally Rosenthal, Joe Santos, Lou Spelios, Kenji Suga- com) that is kind of cool.” our class continues to amaze with hara, Louis Tucker, Ray Wadlow Diana Whitney Rose (Hughes) Mitchell posted a beautiful pho- 96 bucket list items that involve family and travel to chair the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Nolan Ryan and their families.” , and . notable accomplishments across many facets of and selling my company and living a meaningful, becoming the first pitcher in history to get 5,000 Krista Klein, arts editor, wrote: “My two bound “Registration is open. Visit alumni.dart- to from her 2018 marriage to Jeffrey Mitchell. “He our personal and professional lives. powerful, extraordinary life, but the one real goal strikeouts. What do you remember about that volumes of The D proudly sit in a prominent place mouth.edu/engage/reunions to find out more and retired from the Air Force as a master sergeant With respect to new arrivals, Michael Roberts I’m out for is this: simplifying!” Jonathan Sullivan: summer? Email me at the address below. with a typewriter (one of my many) on top! I think register. Housing is separate; on-campus housing after 20-plus years and now works as a helicopter and wife Alisha Davis announced the birth of their “I am 100 percent committed to drastically reduc- Meanwhile, on May 2 the College invites my favorite story, written when I first started (not is limited and preference will be given to those mechanic. I am a pediatric optometrist. One of daughter, Sylvia Davis Roberts. “Little Sylvie was ing my consumption of meat, poultry, and fish this alumni to participate in its “Day of Service.” I when I was an editor) was on ‘basement shoes.’ who register early for reunion. the first things that we connected on is our love born January 8 at 5:15 a.m. Mom, dad, and big year in an effort to live more sustainably. So far, would love to hear from members of the class It was silly and probably not terribly journalistic, “Thanks to the ongoing generosity of of Germany! I was a German major at Dartmouth sister Alice are all over the moon with joy!” Also, I’m making good progress. I’m less committed, but of 1991 to learn how any of you volunteered in but the topic was intriguing to me and everyone our classmates, we have been able to keep re- and he was stationed in Germany for eight years, Elizabeth Meyer Kelley (who in her “spare time” is still trying, to simultaneously reduce my sugar your communities on that day! More information seemed to read it. One of my other fantastic expe- union registration costs low. However, if you so we both speak the language. We have taken two director of class activities of the College) celebrat- intake, just because. I’ve been less successful on can be found at alumni.dartmouth.edu/serve/ riences with The D was interviewing John Updike need financial assistance, please email us at trips there together so far to visit friends.” ed “Rennie Day” on January 17—the day when her that front.” Julie Urda: “I am pursuing a lifelong alumni-day-service. when he was in Hanover for a reading. In high [email protected]. We want as many For Aseem Chawla, travel and adventure have daughter legally became a Kelley (though Rennie acting dream. I’m taking classes and doing improv. —Deb Karazin Owens, 166 Colonial Drive, Fairfield, school I had loved his books, and so it was a thrill— classmates as possible to come to our reunion. been a huge part of the past 25 years. “I finished was truly theirs at 2 weeks old). The family now I’ve been in two local children’s plays and I just CT 06824; [email protected] I remember being absurdly nervous to interview recorded a voiceover demo. Hoping to turn the lat- him at the Hanover Inn, but it went smoothly and ter into an avocation. Stay tuned.” Baeth Davis: “A This Homecoming Weekend (Octo- then I called my dad to discuss afterward.” goal we’re striving for here at our company is 200 ber 2-3) we will have a classwide 50th —Kelly Shriver Kolln, 3900 Cottage Grove Ave. SE, new people in our business mentoring program 92birthday party in Hanover! Watch Cedar Rapids, IA 52403; (920) 306-2192; dart- in 2020 with a percentage of the proceeds going your email and class newsletters for details. [email protected] to the charities we support.” I just received my copy of The Dartmouth’s —Rob Crawford, 22 Black Oak Road, Weston, MA new book, which draws on its archives to celebrate At this stage in life, many of us are 02493; [email protected] its 220th anniversary. Randomly opening it, I moving beyond the weekend jetset- landed on a “vintage” ad—from our era—for D sub- ter persona or sticky-hands phase Barbara Fiacco Bill Scott Alan Zarembo 94 , a partner at Foley Hoag scriptions. It featured and , of life and settling into a more permanent place STEPS FROM LLP, has been named president of the who appear naked except for newspapers they and reclaiming-space-from-plastic-toys phase. American Intellectual Property Law are perusing on the Green. Another student (I’m Luckily, beautiful magazines and Pinterest boards 91Association (AIPLA), a national bar association pretty sure it’s Suzanne Spencer ’93) looks on with provide easy inspiration for home projects. Fellow DARTMOUTH of approximately 14,000 members. In this role, a shocked expression. The headline: “We cover classmates also provide vision, with their experi- Barbara will be responsible for representing U.S. everything that matters.” It was dated January ences and professional work. Jill Porter recently intellectual property interests throughout the 1991, but I believe it first appeared in the issue renovated the Adirondack home of classmate world and guiding AIPLA’s domestic intellectual mailed to incoming first-year students, which Catherine Ross Haskins. Catherine and husband property policy. Barbara majored in government we edited during Sophomore Summer, because it Taylor Haskins own a beautiful home on pictur- at Dartmouth and graduated from Harvard Law also says, “Join the ranks of the wise and wordly esque Lake Champlain. CONTEMPORARY School in 1996. upperclassmen. Subscribe to The Dartmouth.” After graduating from Dartmouth Jill went Tracie Gunion is living in Atlanta and sees Doris I think Bill and Alan were just wise enough to on to earn a master’s in architecture at Harvard ACCOMMODATIONS Lee from time to time. She wrote to me about a fun avoid standing out on the Green barely clothed University in 2000. She also studied at the New get-together in New York around Thanksgiving in January (I may be wrong about that, but there York Studio School of Drawing, Painting & Sculp- ATTENTIVE SERVICE last year. A group of classmates who lived in New are also leaves on the trees in the photo). ture. Jill’s works run the gamut from modern resi- York during the 1990s and early 2000s used to After I reached out to my fellow D editors and dential to large-scale urban planning projects. have a pre-Thanksgiving party every year. This had such a great response, it occurred to me that I See Catherine’s home and Jill’s finished product year Heather Rosbe Vrattos and Bill Vrattos opened should tell you, dear classmates, that I’d be happy featured on Dwell.com. their home to classmates in the area. Some of the to do this for any of you! If you have a certain group That’s all I have. Want more news and up- ’91s in attendance were Elizabeth Kellogg Winter- you’d love to catch up with, please let me know. dates? Then, send me yours! bottom, Kiwon Choi, Joanna Stevenson Garrett, Josie Our news editor Kelly McMann wrote: “I think —Laura Hardegree Davis, 520 Meadowlark Lane, Sandler, Robin Bryson Reynolds, Vicky Sadock Gregg, about The D often because without the experi- Brentwood, TN 37027; [email protected] Linda Chung, and Morgan Schmauder Mermagen. ence as a reporter and managing editor I would According to Morgan, “It was lovely to see that no not be on my current career path. I am a political Reunion is right around the corner! one had changed even the slightest bit. Heather scientist and have written two books and nu- Here’s a note from our reunion chairs, sixsouth.com/dartmouth-lodging · 603.643.0600 · 6 South Street, Hanover, NH and Bill could be picked up and transplanted into merous journal articles and grant proposals. My Rebecca Slisz and Candice Jimerson: 95 Lisa McGill, Steve Hanover and you would think we were still cele- experience at The D enabled me to write more “Our programming committee— brating TubeStock. The whole crew reinvigorated quickly and confidently and, most importantly, Tseng, Kent Dahn, Howie Rumjahn, Julie Kanarowski

90 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE 19-SSS-7908 Dartmouth Alumni Magazine Update FNL.indd 1 MAY/JUNE10/28/19 202012:37 PM 91

SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION CLASS NOTES 1997-2000 WHERE TO STAY

THE TRUMBULL HOUSE MOUNTAIN VIEW B&B THE LYME INN It may be 2020, but it feels like 1997 press release the biggest task ahead is ensur- Hello, ’99s. BED & BREAKFAST In Norwich, Vermont; 4 miles to Hanover. The Lyme Inn has welcomed travelers to the fever is in the air. At the VOX con- ing the 20,000 or so DoD personnel involved in I am finding that my memories Hanover’s first and finest B&B, just four miles east Cozy, 150 acres, pond, trails, private bathrooms, Upper Valley for over 200 years. Just minutes from 97ference in Hanover in September, security cooperation work get certified in that 99of our college days, in a time before of campus. Luxurious country lodgings with six Wi-Fi/AC/TV, 4 bedrooms, $125-$300/night/BR. Dartmouth College, our 9 guest rooms and 5 suites the class of ’97 was named Class of the Year 25 work. “That’s an extremely ambitious goal,” she cell phone pictures were so prevalent, come in spacious rooms and sumptuous breakfasts. Free (603) 667-7791, reflect a careful harmony between historic elegance Years Out and Younger, the first time our class said. “A lot of it will hinge on making sure all the small and sometimes random moments. For ex- high-speed wireless Internet plus a business center. [email protected]. and contemporary luxury. Our restaurant tantalizes earned this honor. I was so proud to accept curriculum is fully developed. But our goal is ample, on a sweltering early summer morning I Sixteen acres with swimming pond, trails and your palate, while our warmth and hospitality the award with Lindsey Noecker, Blaire Bernard, making sure we get them certified at the basic will sometimes remember our graduation day and gardens. 40 Etna Road, Hanover, NH 03755. DOWDS’ COUNTRY INN invite you to return. 1 Market Street, Lyme NH; Tony Field, Rebecca Siegel Baron, and Heidi Con- level by 2022.” how much water I drank on the walk down East (603) 643-2370; (800) 651-5141; Historic New England home with modern comforts. (603) 795-4824; www.thelymeinn.com. ner. Big congratulations also go out to Natasha Take care and keep sending your news. Wheelock Street. I also remember how early my [email protected]; Family owned and operated, the Inn has served (Lam) O’Rourke, Ben Sweetser, and Heidi Conner —Jason Casell, 10106 Balmforth Lane, Houston, parents had arrived on the Green to save their www.trumbullhouse.com. the Upper Valley for 30 years. Our 1780s home was COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT for earning Newsletter of the Year 25 Years Out TX 77096; [email protected] seats. At the time I thought it was ridiculous they carefully renovated to host 20 guest rooms and a HANOVER/LEBANON and Younger honors. Go, ’97 sweep! And kudos had waited so long sitting in a chair, but now, as BREAKFAST ON THE CONNECTICUT 200-seat banquet facility. A full country breakfast is Located just minutes from Dartmouth College. to our class for winning the Outstanding Mini- Hello, ’98s. I have a couple wonder- a parent, I get it. You do ridiculous things when Sits on 23 acres in Lyme, just 12 miles from served with every stay. We also host weddings and Shuttle service, high-speed Internet, fitness center, Reunion Program 25 Years Out and Younger, in ful updates to share. The first is from you’re proud of your kid. Do you have any small Dartmouth and overlooking the tranquil Connecti- events of all sizes. Only 10 miles north of Hanover. breakfast café and dinner menu. recognition of successful mini-reunions around Scott Listfield, who went a decade be- memories to share of our times at Dartmouth? Home of the Latham House Tavern. Enjoy the 98 cut River. Completed in 1997, we have 15 spacious 10 Morgan Drive, Lebanon, NH; the country organized by Rebecca Siegel Baron, tween mentions in these notes. Scott gave me Something that would have been captured with bedrooms replete with amenities, each with private comforts of home while you explore the best that (603) 643-5600; Natasha (Lam) O’Rourke, Cai (Boldt) Pandolfino, the rundown on his path from Dartmouth to be- a phone camera these days? bath, TV/VCR and thoughtfully appointed. Some the Upper Valley has to offer. www.courtyard-hanoverlebanon.com. Jessica Russo Revand, Karin (Kelley) Sloan, Danielle coming a full-time painter in Los Angeles. You And now on to some classmates who make bedrooms have gas fireplaces, skylights, romantic “The Place to Gather, for Business or Pleasure.” (Benware) Thompson, and Jennifer Tudder Walus. may remember Scott at Dartmouth as the guy the ’99s proud. Jacuzzi tubs and a stunning view of the river. 9 Main Street, Lyme, NH 03768; THE SUNSET MOTOR INN Oscar Yang, president of the Dartmouth Club of perpetually at the Hopkins Center, majoring in Seth Pevnick was recently appointed curator Bicycles, canoes and kayaks are complimentary, as (603) 795-4712; Serene. Most rooms have river view. Cable, Wi-Fi, Western Washington, and Michele Lamberti, vice art and eating Hop fries. When he graduated he of Greek and Roman art at the Cleveland Museum is the 8-person Jacuzzi spa. Open year-round. For www.dowdscountryinn.com. a/c, free local calls, continental breakfast. AAA. chair of Women of Dartmouth, were also at the moved to Boston to start a career as a designer. of Art. According to Cleveland Art (March/April a virtual tour, see our website. Our gracious B&B is Two miles south on Main Street (Route 10); conference, which brought together for the first He also continued to paint, and four years ago he 2019, www.clevelandart.org), Seth will “oversee the perfect place to escape for a weekend, a vaca- WOODSTOCK INN & RESORT (603) 298-8721. time in one gathering volunteers from classes, left his day job to pursue painting full-time. One the care and development of the collection of art tion, a retreat or reunion. A hearty New England Located in idyllic Woodstock, Vermont, the clubs, and groups. Looking forward to the next year ago Scott and wife Joanna moved to L.A. of the ancient Mediterranean, including the art breakfast with house specialties and real maple Woodstock Inn & Resort defines country sophistica- ENFIELD SHAKER MUSEUM VOX conference in October! Around this time Scott connected with fellow art- of Egypt and the Ancient Near East.” He is “an syrup makes getting up each morning a treat. tion in one of New England’s most charming and Stay in an 1841 Shaker dwelling house, 20 minutes We had a great ’97 turnout for Dartmouth’s ist Mark Brosseau, who was in L.A. exhibiting his active scholar and prolific writer,” has “extensive 651 River Road, Lyme, NH 03768; (603) 353-4444; popular year-round vacation destinations. The from Hanover. Included: private bath, free WiFi, “Big Green in the Big Apple” weekend in Novem- work. Scott now shows his work in local galleries archaeological fieldwork experience,” and “was (888) 353-4440; www.breakfastonthect.com. 142-room, AAA Four Diamond Resort and member Museum admission. ber in honor of Dartmouth’s 250th anniversary. and many other places worldwide. Recently he awarded a fellowship at the American Academy in of Preferred Hotels & Resorts, offers award-winning (603) 632-4346; [email protected]. On November 8, Phil Lord and Chris Miller dis- published his first book,Astronaut: Paintings by Rome for 2019.” Seth says, “I look forward to get- THE JACKSON HOUSE INN dining in two restaurants, a Robert Trent Jones Sr. cussed their experiences making the Oscar-win- Scott Listfield. If you would like to connect with ting to know both the collection and the cultural Located on the edge of one of Vermont’s most 18-hole golf course, Suicide Six Family Ski Resort, 506 ON THE RIVER INN ning Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. Mary Lou Scott about painting or anything else, he is eager community of northeast Ohio and to drawing beautiful villages, the Inn offers refined lodging Athletic Club and a LEED-certified Spa, creating a Minutes from Woodstock Village, this award- Aleskie, director of the Hopkins Center for the to talk and is easy to find online. Drop him a note exciting new connections between antiquity and with luxurious touches, and is the perfect setting luxury resort getaway. (844) 545-4178; winning boutique is recognized for its beautiful Performing Arts, moderated the lively discussion. and check out astronautdinosaur.com. the present day.” for a romantic getaway, get-together with friends, or www.woodstockinn.com. balance of casual elegance and rustic charm. The Chris and Phil took questions from the audience, Lara Hoffman provided my second update. Nick Levin has been working in the appel- intimate wedding or reunion. Set in lush perennial 45-room & suite hotel offers a country breakfast, followed by a screening of the film. On a beauti- Lara works with the federal public defender’s late section of the antitrust division of the U.S. gardens, the Inn offers the service and amenities of RESIDENCE INN BY MARRIOTT indoor pool, hot tub & sauna, game rooms, spa- ful but chilly November 9, Big Green football office, where she began doing trial work for home- Department of Justice for around 11 and a half a boutique hotel, including Frette linens, Anichini The preferred all-suite hotel in the Upper cious grounds, as well as the 506 Bistro & Bar, fans gathered at Billy’s Sports Bar in the Bronx less and indigent clients. She now focuses on the years, arguing antitrust cases in the federal courts. bedcoverings, turndown service, free WiFi, and Valley. Easy access off I-89 and just 3 miles from serving a locally inspired & seasonal menu, and before making their way to cheer Dartmouth post-conviction defense of wrongly convicted In his free time he plays a lot of baseball and at- gourmet breakfasts. Our floor-to-ceiling fieldstone Dartmouth College with shuttle service to campus. selection of microbrews and crafted cocktails. onto a huge 27-10 win over Princeton in Yankee clients. Lara finds the work challenging, but feels tends Washington Nationals games with his son. fireplace is a delight in winter. Complimentary breakfast buffet. 1653 West Woodstock Road, Woodstock, VT; Stadium to essentially clinch a share of the Ivy lucky and grateful for the opportunity to practice He also has fun playing in squash leagues and (802) 457-2065, (800) 448-1890, A pet-friendly hotel. (603) 643-4511; (802) 457-5000; League championship. I have never seen so many this type of law. During the holidays Lara and her tournaments. jacksonhouse.com. www.residenceinn.com/lebri. www.ontheriverwoodstock.com. Dartmouth alums together outside of Hanover. family (husband Nishad Chande ’97 and their two Thank you for sending me your news. Keep it Class of ’97s spotted throughout the weekend kids) celebrated with the family of Anna (Moran) coming! Also, if anyone has any ideas for ways to include Rebecca Siegel Baron, Blaire Bernard, Anderson. reach out to other classmates, or if you are inter- features “three kiddos within 33 months of each sion 73 for 20 years. When son Jackson was born Holy Moly Carry Me—a work Brad describes as Chris Butler, Erica Chong, Jon Curreri, Jeff Cutshall, Last summer Lara and Anna, and their ested in planning or attending a mini-reunion, let other” and Elizabeth proclaimed the experience in early 2019, Corby started composing music “totally worth a read if you enjoy deeply human Ryan deFord, Francesca De Simone, Henry Deter- families, spent the Fourth of July weekend at us know. As always, you can update your contact as being “like the Iron Man of parenting.” And and creating “Tunesy Time” jam sessions with poems that grapple with everything from parent- ing, Laura du Pont, Jennifer (Pollina) Echlov, Russell the ranch of Lee Kuhn in Sonoma County, Cali- information and email/contact preferences as lastly, Melinda Holl Young and fiancé Greg White his family. He will release additional singles in ing to race relations to religious identity”—was Echlov, Traci Entel, Lloyd Fass, Jon Feldman, Sascha fornia. They were joined by the families of Kath- well as access other great alumni resources at were engaged on December 24! Welcome to the 2020 with the goal of “inspiring young imagina- nominated for the poetry prize at the ceremony. Goldsmith, Jonathan Hunnicutt, Misong Kim, Shane leen (Dunleavey) Walsh, Stacey Sheriff, and Kristin alumni.dartmouth.edu/connect/find-alumni. ’96 family, Sylvie, Rennie, and Greg! tions and invoking a spirit of both curiosity and Erika has been traveling the country conducting Leahey, Steve Lisowski, Gina (Henry) Lubin, Emilio Dwyer, all former roommates at Dartmouth. Also Until next time. Jami Papa brought news of an exciting change collaboration.” After a Kickstarter campaign, he readings at universities, bookstores, bars, and Mena, Joel Montgomery, Lindsey Noecker, Anna in attendance were old friends from Barcelona, —Jackie Rioux Gladstone, 21 Westwood Circle, Do- in her life and career. Jami, a foreign service of- headed to the studio to record his new compo- lecture halls for the better part of the past year. Ochoa, Cai (Boldt) Pandolfino, Nevin Patton, Drew whom Lara and Lee met on their language study ver, NH; (603) 834-0517; jackie.dartmouth99@ ficer for the U.S. Department of State, announced, sitions and worked with animators to produce Probably the most amazing endorsement of her Payne, Cameron Potts, Josh Pristaw, Chris Rhodes, abroad in spring 1996. I inquired further, and Lara gmail.com “After two crazy years, I am leaving Kabul today accompanying music videos. literary prowess came from our own Kerry (Fiacco) Kate Fowler Rizzo, Amy Schneeberger, Amy Semet, wrote that she and Lee introduced the friends to for the last time! Next stop will be Nairobi—visi- Congrats to Brandon del Pozo (the former White, whose son, Thomas, needed a book of con- Matt Shafer, Scott Simon, Pete Sisitsky, Alejandro each other, too. And six months after returning to Hello, ’00s. tors are welcome!” This change comes after 15 chief of police of Burlington, Vermont). In Janu- temporary poetry for his AP English course—for Soto, Cindy (Bellefeuille) Stanton, Katherine Taylor, Hanover, Lara and Lee got a call that the friends I got a note from Lifan Shen, who years of service in six countries and across three ary Brandon successfully defended his doctoral which Kerry wholeheartedly recommended an Jeremy Turk, and Tracy (Rosen) Williams. were a couple. Nearly 25 years later, these friends shared, “For the last two years I have Cara 00 administrations. Matt Little also had a major dissertation at the City University of New York. autographed copy of a certain ’96 author’s Holy On a different note, congratulations to are married with kids and still staying in touch been deeply involved in starting a nonprofit change of his own. After five years as executive One of Brandon’s mentors paid his defense the Moly Carry Me. Abercrombie, recently named the first president of with and visiting their Dartmouth matchmakers. middle school called Brooklyn Independent. director of the Cascade Forest Conservancy in highest compliment when he said, “We’d be in Not to be outdone, Brad had amazing news the Defense Security Cooperation University, the What a great story! Our mission is to build an intentionally diverse Washington State, Matt announced that he would a better place in the nation if the police gave as of his own, announcing that his The Last Act had new U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) center of I recently connected with Dartmouth by student body through a unique sliding scale tu- run as an independent for the Clark County coun- much careful thought to how we should serve been optioned by SkyDance Media—the com- excellence for security cooperating training, with writing a recommendation for a cousin who is ition that allows families of all socioeconomic cil—check out his website at mattlittle4clark- citizens as was laid out in the dissertation.” pany behind Mission: Impossible, Jack Ryan, Jack campuses in Arlington, Virginia, and Wright- applying for the class of 2024. Through talking backgrounds to access a rigorous private school county.org. Lastly comes news of several class authors Reacher—for development as a television series. Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. According to the to him and putting pen to paper, I saw Dartmouth education. Located in Fort Greene, we opened Corby Thomas was gearing up for release of (from each other no less!). Brad Parks, one of our He said, “We’re still a long way from a green light, DoD, security cooperation is the effort to advance through the eyes of a potentially pea-green fresh- our doors to our inaugural sixth-grade class this his first children’s music single, “Fun in the Yard,” class literati, was presenting at the Library of Vir- but this is an exciting step for a story I truly love.” U.S. national security and foreign policy interests man—an illuminating experience indeed. past fall and are currently enrolling two sixth- in December. He has been the owner-operator of ginia Literary Awards, where he ran into another —Garrett Gil de Rubio, 1062 Middlebrooke Drive, by building the capacity of foreign security forces —Gabe Galletti, 4000 Utah Ave., Nashville, TN grade classes for 2020-21. I now serve as board New York live music venue and restaurant Ses- of our prized writers, Erika Meitner. Erika’s work, Canton, GA 30115; [email protected] to respond to shared challenges. Cara said in a 37209; [email protected] treasurer.” In his professional life he’s a senior

92 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 93 SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION CLASS NOTES 2001-2007 WHERE TO DINE vice president and wealth management advisor Hi, ’02s. he resides with his wife, Annie, and their two tendance were Bartow Elmore, Kristian Lau, Joe Lis Smith has been featured in numerous at Merrill Lynch in New York City. In January he This is the year many of us turn children, Henry and Paige. Congrats on the new Thistle, and Kyle Hatridge. My understanding from publications of late, including the previous is- THE WOODSTOCK INN & RESORT had a great trip skiing at Alta, Utah, with Ronald 40, so I expect there will be many gig, Frank! Hemant and his wife, Tracy, is that the wedding sue of DAM as its cover story, for her work as Pete Farm-fresh cuisine, carefully harvested ingre- Kim, Rishi Sahay, Mark Kim, Mike White, Nick Beck- 02 Jennifer Casler-Gonclaves trips and celebrations with old friends from col- I also heard from , was a blast and the Dartmouth alums represented Buttigieg’s senior communications advisor in his dients and regional recipes inspire the seasonal man, and Matt Schlough. lege—send me your best adventure stories and who began a new job with Cornell University in the school well on the dance floor. Hemant and bid to secure the 2020 Democratic presidential menus at the Woodstock Inn & Resort’s distinct The Big Green is representing well in Lark- heartwarming moments. February. After taking the N.Y. State Bar last year, Tracy are now alternating between living in nomination. Make sure to read the piece and keep restaurants. The talented culinary team prepares spur, California, just north of San Francisco. “Many of the ladies who spent senior year Jen joins Cornell as associate university counsel. Boston, where Hemant is an anesthesiologist an eye on Lis and “Mayor Pete” throughout 2020. creative entrées and innovative cocktails, resulting Laura (Adams) Young writes: “Within our pre- together at 7 Maple Street celebrated our 40th Good luck, Jen! and critical care intensivist and Tracy is a nurse —Matt Nicholson, 5308 Yorktown Road, Bethesda, in exceptional Northeastern cuisine that showcases school class of 14, I’m proud to report there are birthdays in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, at the end Melissa Moody checked in from Alaska with practitioner, and in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, MD 20816; [email protected] the essence of Vermont. Call (844) 545-4178 three mini-greens and five Dartmouth parents. of January. J.T. (Leaird) Schiltz, Tucker (Ballard) the news that she took on the role of president of which they escape to as much as they can. A little or visit www.woodstockinn.com. Our daughter, Caroline (3), joins Ned Braun, son Mahoney, Elizabeth Badger, Kate (Murphy) Voltz, the Dartmouth Club of Alaska at the end of 2019. birdie told me they would welcome a visit from Hi, ’06s. of Lucas Braun and Kate (Dallmeyer) Braun ’01, Kate (Knowles) Frankel, Liz (Balanda) Baldwin, and She reports that the group is laidback, super-fun, any alums passing through the area! Thanks to all of you who reached LATHAM HOUSE TAVERN AT DOWDS’ as well as Daphne Hale, daughter of Rob ’07 and Rebecca (Eley) Weeks rented a villa up in the hills and multigenerational and she looks forward to Maaza and Reggie Martin are happy to report out to share updates. COUNTRY INN 06Erik Lambert Jeff Woodward Catherine (Haldeman) Hale ’08. On the work over Mislamoya beach and spent four days real- building momentum with the club and making a that Maaza has started a new job at a pharma and have opened The Tavern hosts a rustic atmosphere with a front, I’ve loved intersecting lately with multiple izing how little (thankfully) has changed since we statewide connection in 2020. The group recently startup company, Tarsus Pharmaceuticals, as Bluebird Backcountry at Peak Ranch in Krem- seasonal menu featuring local ingredients, Dartmouth folk at Google San Francisco, includ- met in 1998, despite having 16 kids between us started up an Instagram account that you can fol- its director of marketing. As she moves into this mling, Colorado. Bluebird Backcountry is a hu- tavern-inspired cocktails, and 18 draft beers on tap ing Laura (Delaney) Nichol ’04, Craig Rubens ’06, (who stayed home with amazing grandparents) low at www.instagram.com/dartmouthclubofak. new role, she would welcome any advice from man-powered backcountry ski area. Guests use featuring the best craft beer from NH and abroad. and Tori Miner ’02, who just joined the company and no longer spending our time at crew practice. Jean Bredeche tells me that he, his wife, Sa- other alums who have worked in pharma start- backcountry touring equipment to hike and ski Just minutes north of Hanover on Route 10. Visit in the new year. Last but not least, I’m happy to We can still talk for hours, count on each other brina Singh ’05, and their two boys moved from ups. Reggie also recently received a promotion uphill before transitioning to ski or snowboard our website for full menu and hours. (belatedly!) share news that my husband, Dave, to show up whenever one of us needs the others, Boston to Columbus, Ohio, to be closer to Sa- at Amazon and is now managing a team working back down. The area is open for test season runs “Good Food. Good Beer. Good Times.” and I welcomed a son, James, in August 2018 and and find time for pong tournaments, but now brina’s family. They are both working remotely on new Alexa products. The happy couple is also through March 15 and welcomes all experience remain quite smitten with him.” those happen overlooking the ocean. Five of the for their jobs in Boston and end up traveling quite excited to report that their second child turned levels. 9 Main Street, Lyme, NH 03768. (603) 795-9995. Thanks for the updates, Lifan and Laura. I seven husbands with us were also Dartmouth a bit and would love to hear from anyone com- 5 years old in March. How time flies! Joy Huntington, president and owner of Uqa- www.lathamhousetavern.com. hope everyone is having an excellent summer— grads: Dan Mahoney ’01, John Nichols ’01, Matt ing through Columbus. Glad to hear the move Ashley McCaughan is excited to share that qti Consulting, was named to the Alaska Journal www.dowdscountryinn.com. drop a note to tell me about your adventures! Frankel, Chris Baldwin, and Christian Weeks ’05.” went well! her startup veterinary hospital turned 2 at the of Commerce “Top 40 Under 40.” RAMUNTO’S BRICK & BREW —Kate (Ryan) Stowe, 91 Waterman Place, St. Louis, In February I traveled to Playa del Carmen News reached me that Dr. Lindsay Orchowski end of February. In baby news, Ryan Fuselier and his wife, Lara, Hanover’s only real New York pizza, featuring MO, 63112; [email protected] with Allison (Stuntz) Schulte, Kristin (Shigley) Liv- received the 2019 Bruce M. Selya Award for ex- Tate LeFevre and Chris Plehal are pleased to welcomed Ryan Allenbay Fuselier II (a.k.a. “Raf”) traditional, Sicilian and brick-oven specialty ingston, Mara Buchbinder, and Molly Johnson for a cellence in research from Rhode Island Hospital, announce the birth of their first child, Oberon to the world on December 26. Raf was born at Hello, ’01 family. I hope you are all 40th birthday year celebration. We snorkeled in where she is a staff psychologist. Her current “Obie” Bennett LeFevre-Plehal who was born 2:04 p.m., weighed in at 8 pounds, 5 ounces, and pizzas, salads, subs, calzones, the biggest enjoying a wonderful spring. A lot of cenotes, dined on delicious local cuisine, floated research focuses on sexual assault prevention. on February 11. Tate and Chris currently live in measured 53 centimeters long. Momma and baby beer in town and much more. goings-on in California this winter. Be- around in the ocean waves, and generally spent Lindsay also serves as an associate professor of Philadelphia, where Tate is a professor of anthro- are doing amazing. Casual atmosphere, deliveries. 01 Evelyn Chen Erin Emery Open ’til midnight 7 days. fore the weather turned warm spent four days talking nonstop. One evening was spent research in the department of psychiatry and pology at Franklin & Marshall College and Chris and her husband, Neil Hartz ’07, a week skiing at Lake Tahoe, where she met up reminiscing with digitized photos from our time human behavior at Brown University Medical is a group creative director at the advertising welcomed son Andrew Grey on November 23. 9 East South Street, Hanover; with Bernette Tsai, Andy Kim, Masashi Kiyomine, at Dartmouth and we realized how glad we are School. Further, she recently published the book, agency RTO+P. He joins big sister Violet Margaret (3). The fam- (603) 643-9500. and Wendy Yu ’02. The snow was not great but the that smartphones and social media didn’t exist Sexual Assault Risk Reduction and Resistance: Eleanor and Matt Kemp are thrilled to share ily lives in San Francisco, where Erin and Neil SIMON PEARCE RESTAURANT company made it well worth the trip. Matt Kuhn, back then! Theory Research and Practice. Congratulations that they welcomed their third child, Ewen, into both work. his wife, Alecia, and their lovely daughter, Edie, 3, Time with old friends is always a treat, so on your professional achievements, Lindsay! the world in January. Jenna Harris and Omar Mosley welcomed & NEW BAR welcomed little brother Albert “Albie” Milo to the everyone mark your calendars for our 20th re- In November Dartmouth played the 250th Congratulations are also in order for Jennie daughter Jemma-Michelle at 9:15 p.m. on New Award-winning, farm-to-table restaurant world in January. Albie arrived at an opportune union in Hanover on June 18-20, 2021—a bit anniversary game in Yankee Stadium against Savoca, who was married to Mitch Braverman Year’s Eve December 31. She weighed in at 9 overlooking the Ottauquechee River. Sip a hand- time, as Matt recently wrapped the sixth and final more than a year away. Planning officially begins Princeton. I headed up to New York and met up in September 2019. There were a number of our pounds, 8 ounces and measured 21.25 inches crafted cocktail, watch our master glassblowers season of Fresh Off the Boat, a network comedy this July, but we are starting to get the word out with Meredith (Schwartz) Beuchaw, Sonja (Ton- classmates in attendance, including Eleanor (Al- long. Jemma-Michelle has her father’s button and find the perfect gift. Open daily. series that he was co-showrunning for the last and asking around about who may be interested nesen) Davies, Lindsay (Hirschfeld) Guzowski, exander) Kemp, David Eckles, James Klaas, Philip nose and her mother’s flare for drama. (802) 295-1470; SimonPearce.com. two seasons. Also in Los Angeles, Jenny Alden in helping plan. We’d like to have a 20th reunion and Sarah (Murray) Sliva to watch the game. We Taber, and Lauren Hendrickson. It was great to hear from everyone. As al- and Kirk Spahn ’99 welcomed their second son, planning committee in place by July. Please email brought assorted husbands and kids and a great There are obviously a lot of exciting develop- ways, you can view Class Notes online at 2006. Axton Ellis. On hand to greet little Axton were big [email protected] if you are time was had by all. I also noted that Frank Webb ments happening with ’04s, so please keep those dartmouth.org/classnotes. On our class website brother Alden Charles, 3, and new puppy Flash. interested. and Rebecca and Ethan Levine (along with their updates coming! But for now, as the cartoons used you can also pay class dues, learn more about Not everyone is in L.A., though. Shazia Omar —Anne Cloudman, 315 West 99th St., Apt. 2D, New children) were in attendance. Did anyone else to say, that’s all folks! class efforts, and read about other ’06s who have is running yoga retreats around the world; Spain York, NY 10025; [email protected] attend? —Johanna Thomas, 14 Logan Circle, NW, Wash- been featured in the news. I look forward to hear- in March and Thailand in October. Her first novel, That’s it for this edition. As always, send any ington, DC 20005; [email protected] ing from you for future columns! Like a Diamond in the Sky, was recently rere- Happy spring, ’03s! news to the email below. —Cindy Tsai, Synchrony Financial, 222 W Adams leased for its 10th anniversary. Abraham Mahshie Hard to believe that it has been —Megan (Riley) Kenney, 3408 Quebec St. NW, Happy spring, everyone! Light on St., 27th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606; cindaaay@ is on the move again. When we last heard from 03almost a year since our 15th reunion, Washington, DC 20016; dartmouth2003notes@ news this winter, so please send on gmail.com Abraham, he was in a cabin in North Carolina putting us that much closer to our next reunion. gmail.com an update when you can. 05Joshua Clause Charlie and Lisa Kircher writing about Spanish bullfighters. He has since Happily, we have some early volunteers to help recently helped his client, moved more spent four months following plan our 20th; thanks to Dan Chang and Jill Pow- Hi, ’04s! Spring showers have re- the Little Shell Tribe of Chippewa Indians, gain into the suburbs of Cincinnati and around Mar-a-Lago as a political reporter and is ers for their commitment on that front. The end sulted not only in beautiful flowers, federal recognition as part of the defense bill Charlie is now an attending physi- now in Washington, D.C., covering the Pentagon of the fiscal year is around the corner, so if you but also a bouquet of class updates. passed in December 2019. Members will now 07cian at University of Cincinnati in emergency dam 04 Oliver Caplan and trying to figure out how it all fits together. haven’t yet, please make a gift to the Dartmouth First up, was recently selected have access to funding and programs such as the medicine and neurocritical care! Marcella Gift shifted from her career in finance College Fund. As one of our class head agents, as an honored artist of the American Prize Na- Indian Health Services, plus a tract of their own Dave Faherty is happy to share that he and his dam to start a business, a footwear line called Emme I’d love to see us continue our momentum from tional Nonprofit Competitions in the Performing land—a reservation in a yet-to-be determined wife moved back to Chicago in September. He is Cadeau. Her goal was to create a shoe line that last year’s success. Forty-five-percent participa- Arts along with eight musicians and ensembles. place—with the potential for amenities such as a working at the National Immigrant Justice Cen- ONLINE was comfortable, colorful, and had lots of cha- tion this year would add another $100,000 to our The American Prize is the nation’s most compre- tribal college. Joshua worked on the tribe’s behalf ter as a staff attorney on the Detention Project, risma. Her shoes were used by Andy Hilfiger in endowed scholarship fund, allowing us to assist hensive series of nonprofit competitions in the for more than a decade, starting this important representing immigrants in U.S. Immigration ONLINE his New York Fashion Week show last September more undergrads in financing their Dartmouth performing arts, unique in scope and structure, work as a summer associate in law school. and Customs Enforcement detention. and have been worn by Wendy Williams on her educations. designed to recognize and reward the best per- Lindsey (Horton) de Beer and husband Marc Eric Ma started a new job as a proposal man- www.DartmouthAlumniMagazine.com show many times. Frank Webb reports that he started a new forming artists, ensembles, and composers in the welcomed their third child, Marc “Siya” de Beer, ager at Sikorsky, a Lockheed Martin Co., back in www.DartmouthAlumniMagazine.com —Rachel Milstein Sondheimer, 143 Branchville job in January as an assistant commonwealth United States based on submitted recordings. in December 2019. Big sisters Mila and Keira are his home state of Connecticut! He says, “My job Road, Ridgefield, CT 06877; (203) 645-693; rachel. attorney for criminal justice reformer Parisa I am also pleased to announce that Hemant enjoying baby brother time along with mom and primarily consists of writing sales proposals for [email protected] Dehghani-Tafti in Arlington, Virginia, where Joshi got married in September 2019. In at- dad. Congratulations, de Beer family! the Black Hawk helicopter, so I spend most of my

94 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 95 CLASS NOTES 2008-2013

days looking at pictures of helicopters, talking year. Jon recently started a new role at Google but I’ve said that before.” world. Zoe was born on January 7, weighing 7 improved, I couldn’t hope for a better crew to M.B.A. program at Copenhagen Business School. about helicopters, and writing about helicopters. in New York. He was thrilled that one of the first Congratulations to all! pounds, 7 ounces.” post up in a cozy pub with. He has also joined a startup there called Amodo My life has not changed much from when I was people to welcome him was fellow ’08 Elise (Wax- —Chris Barth, 315 14th Ave. NE, Minneapolis, MN Jeff Friedman: “I am living in Boston with my Let’s start this off with a baby alert! Thrilled Associates, which provides human resource 5, except now I get paid to do that stuff.” They do enberg) Callery. 55413; (609) 405-9153; [email protected] fiancée (we are getting married this summer) and to be able to share this news. Natalie (Obermeyer) analytics and people strategy consulting. If that say growing up is a trap. Erika Schneider moved from Alaska to the Up- continue to work at GMO. Outside of work and and Matt Hunter welcomed their first child, Wil- sounds like something that could benefit your Sarah (Uhl) Smith and her husband welcomed per Valley. And Laura Young and Phillip Bracikowski Hello, ’09s! As you’re reading this, wedding planning, I’m lucky to see Dartmouth liam, in January: “If other ’12s come visit New organization, reach out to him on LinkedIn! Ben their second son, Tuckerman, in February! An moved to Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, for Laura’s first you may be getting ready to head to friends almost every week, especially as I play Hampshire we would love to connect and intro- Southworth received a Nicholas C. Metropolis early celebration brought together Caitlin Po- job after training as a minimally invasive gyneco- Hanover for our 10-year reunion. tennis with former Dartmouth tennis teammates duce you to him!” Liz Doe Stone and her husband, Postdoc Fellowship at Los Alamos National Lab tratz Laura Glickman 09 , , and Kate Schuerman ’06. logic surgeon at Northwest Specialty Hospital. If It’s hard to believe it’s been 11 years since we every weekend here in enemy territory (near Zach, welcomed to the world in November baby and will be moving to Los Alamos, New Mexico, Sarah says, “We hope Tuckerman will become you have pelvic pain (ladies only) or are passing graduated. Until we can all catch up in person, Harvard). Look forward to seeing folks at the Charlie, who is now taking on snowy Montreal. this summer. If you are in the area, please reach a skier! And, as always, those passing through through the area, give them a shout! here are some updates. Udit Banerjea and Alaina 10-year reunion!” Finally, Bianca Zlatea and hubby Donnie Surdoval out! Svati Kirsten Narula and her dog, Cabot, are Portsmouth, New Hampshire, are encouraged to Idan Ariel has published his book, Addiction: Smith married back in November 2019. Andrew After six years in China-related nonprof- ’10 were joined by cutie Don in January—a New continuing to settle in as Upper Valley communi- visit!” A baby on skis? Ya, I think you’ll get a few Is It Right for You?, which is available on Kindle. Han got engaged to Harmony Barker. Katie Herman its, Pete Matthews began working in technology York City baby! ty members living in Lyme, New Hampshire, and visitors to see that adorable sight! He also moved to Portugal, where he hopes to married Patrick Murphy in Atlanta on January management in Shanghai. He then partnered Alfonso Villegas writes in, “I recently cel- working at DAM’s office in downtown Hanover. Sara Studebaker-Hall started a new job in Feb- dodge World War III. 25. Lindsay Maitland Hunt’s new book came out on with fellow ’10 Brendan Scully to serve as chief ebrated two and a half years as a Washington When they’re not in one of those two places, they ruary. She left the coaching and program man- After living abroad in Singapore and London April 28, Help Yourself: A Guide to Gut Health for operating officer of Scully Creative Labs, an aug- County deputy state’s attorney in Vermont. I are training for a 50k trail race that Svati plans to agement role at Soldier Hollow Nordic Center for more than six years, Alix Toothman and her People Who Love Delicious Food (Houghton Mif- mented reality tech startup. Pete is graduating at represent the state in our adult drug treatment run in Stowe, Vermont, in June or hanging out at in Midway, Utah, to become the new director husband moved back to New York City in March flin Harcourt). Like her first cookbook,Healthy - the top of his class from an M.B.A. program at the court, which is one of three in Vermont. Our drug Still North Books in Hanover. of operations for the U.S. Biathlon Association! of 2018. In January of last year she joined adver- ish, Help Yourself has more than 125 recipes, but University of Washington Foster School of Busi- court is the largest it has ever been in terms of Danny Freeman began hosting Politically She’ll be staying in Utah, working remotely. She tising agency Wieden + Kennedy to lead creative this book also covers her personal story, the sci- ness. Starting this summer he will be working as a the number of participants we currently serve. Speaking, a weekly politics show for NBC San says, “I’m really looking forward to my new role strategy on Ford. Most excitingly, Alix and her ence of gut health, and a new way to think about product manager at Western Digital in San Jose. And I recently won a suppression motion in a Diego. “June” Yuan Shangguan writes in that she and working alongside some other Dartmouth husband welcomed their first child, a little girl, eating with all this in mind. In June Sarah Lawson Zachary Gottlieb and his wife, Valerie ’04, wel- conspiracy fentanyl trafficking case. Also, I am is still working on speech recognition research, alums already in the organization!” at the end of October 2019. will be graduating from Northwestern University comed a son, Graham Sterling Gottlieb, on June running for a seat on the Vermont Bar Associa- pushing the boundaries of on-device artificial Sam Routhier and his wife, Katy, welcomed We have a few other babies to announce as with an M.S. in speech, language, and learning 27, 2019. He joined their 3-year-old daughter, tion board of managers.” Cheers to Alfonso! intelligence. She’d also like to give special shout- their daughter, Kirin, on November 18! How ador- well. Diane Ellis Scalisi and her husband, Paul Scal- and beginning a career in speech language pa- Remi. Zach is now working in New York at Ari- Rohan Chaudhary is currently working to- outs to ’13 ladies Rachel Wang and Annie Chen, who able is this? Her first ’07 meet-up came whenNate isi, welcomed their son and future Dartmouth ’41, thology. Johannes Lohmann has moved to London anna Huffington’s latest venture, Thrive Global, ward his M.B.A. at Duke and loving life. He wel- are working hard to build amazing careers in Raines visited on February 17, although she loves Benjamin Paul Scalisi, to the family in August. with his wife and is now the head of employment which combines content and technology to ad- comes any outreach from those visiting Durham, STEM and who consistently inspire her. Callista facetiming with Charlie Guthrie and his new baby In February Benjamin really hit it off with Cat and organizational behavior at the Behavioural dress employee stress and burnout. North Carolina, between now and May 2021 (or Womick appeared on the cover of the catalog for girl, Rae, born in August. Shellito, the daughter of Haley Bolin Shellito and Insights Team, where he works on solutions to Karli (Beitel) Erickson and Anfin Erickson will in Washington, D.C., this summer when he’s in- watercolorist Wendy Artin’s latest show, Révèle, Yuki Kondo-Shah is still a public affairs of- John Bolin Shellito ’07, at a mini reunion in San social challenges based on behavioral econom- celebrate their 10th wedding anniversary on July terning there). and achieved her highest FICO score yet: 817! So- ficer at the U.S. consulate in Fukuoka, Japan! Francisco. ics. Let him know if you are in London or happen 10. The couple currently lives in Cooperstown, David Rogg is striking out on his own, hav- phia Schwartz is still living in Jackson, Wyoming. She shares, “We’re gearing up for the summer Adria Buchanan gave birth to a baby boy to come through. Ray Padgett and his wife are New York, with their two daughters, Astri, 6, and ing recently founded a new venture capital firm, This winter season she worked on a ski project Olympics! My husband, Philip, will serve in the named Otto in August. Lena Martinez-Wolfinger having their first kid, a daughter, in early June Inge, 4. Reformation Partners. that entailed landing a double backflip and skiing U.S. embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan, for a year and Abe Holland have already visited. Adria is (she might be the youngest reunion attendee) Nick Dawe moved to Auckland, New Zealand. Jenny Thapa has wed Max Zimmerman, a the Grand Teton and Cody Peak’s Central Couloir. starting this summer, so we’re hanging in there as happy to connect with other alumni in the Ta- and his second book, about tribute and Steve Schiraldi is living in Arlington, Virgin- Boston College ’12. The couple moved to Los We also have many peers graduating from a geographically separated family. My daughters, coma, Washington, area, where she has been Leonard Cohen, is out in September. Diana Punko ia, and working at a tech startup. You may have Angeles last summer and plan to celebrate their different grad school programs!Emily Fletcher, Sayuri (3.5) and Aya (1.5), are having a blast at the executive director at the Fair Housing Center is finishing her psychiatry residency in New York seen him competing on Jeopardy! In January! nuptials with a traditional Nepalese ceremony James Lee, and Angie Yang graduated with an Japanese daycare they attend! Let me know if of Washington since April of 2019. City in June and will be moving to Boston for a Steve: “I didn’t win, but I got to meet Alex Trebek, in Jenny’s hometown of Kathmandu in early M.B.A. from the Ross School of Business. Emily you want to visit Kyushu, Japan (where Fukuoka John Manning and his wife, Erin ’11, would fellowship in consultation-liaison psychiatry which was amazing.” He’s also getting married December. also earned an M.P.A. from the Ford School of is located), which was in CNN’s 2020 Top 20 like to announce the arrival of their son and at Massachusetts General Hospital in July. She on March 14. Dan Rozenfeld is engaged to Carolyn Sims, Public Policy. Lexi Kellison and Elizabeth Fleming destinations!” first child, John “Jack” Forrest Manning. Jack is would love to reconnect with any ’09s in the area. I’ll conclude with a Jake Routhier joke update a Stanford ’13. The couple met in investment graduated with their M.B.A.s from the Wharton Sahiba (Sarna) Krieger and her husband, Keith happy and healthy and enjoyed a sunny southern Molly Roy has been traveling in Europe for the about Sam Welch: “Our friend and classmate Sam banking at Goldman Sachs and attended Harvard School of Business and Elise Smith graduated with (Duke ’07), welcomed their second son, Connor, California winter while his dad completed his last year with her boyfriend and plans to come is tired of e-cigarette companies targeting teen- Business School together thereafter. Carolyn her M.B.A. and master’s in education from Stan- on December 7! He joins his 3-year-old brother, last year of orthopedic surgery training at USC. back to the United States in May. Then her plan agers with their advertising, and so he’s starting popped the question to Dan during Valentine’s ford. Maia Matsushita graduated from NYU with Thomas. Congrats! Elsewhere, Dexter Mackie is still in D.C. run- is to head out West to either Arizona or Colorado his own e-cig company to target toddlers. His Day Weekend. her master’s in education and is staying in New Ali Husain wed Lauren Gambier at the Bronx ning his tutoring business—this January made to work on a campaign through the November first product is a line of fruit-flavored e-liquids Alannah Phelan married Michael DiBene- York City to teach. Robbie Hoffman, Shea Smith, Zoo in August. Dartmouth alumni attending the seven successful years. On the other hand, he election. By the time this is published she should with colorful packaging and fun names under his detto ’10 in October in Newport, Rhode Island. and Aly Perez also all graduated from the Darden wedding included Will Bashelor, Connie Rankins, says, “I’m still single and looking. So there’s that.” (she hopes) know which campaign (national/ brand, Welch’s Vape Juice.” Both are residents at UMass, Alannah in plastic School of Business. Chloe Teeter graduated from Courtland Smith, Chris Wilt, Allison Wilson, Gabe Joe Malchow announced the second Hanover state level, etc.). Federico Sequeda and his wife —Jennifer Chong, 7A Marine View, 19 Middle Lane, surgery and Michael in orthopedic surgery. law school in May and has headed to Brownsville, Holiway, Meaghan Ferrick, Jessica Rawlins, Davida technology investment fund and was elected to moved to Washington, D.C. from Boston. Work Discovery Bay, Lantau, Hong Kong; jenniferash- Bill Lehmann, Michael Schwartz, Max Pillsbury, Texas, to clerk for a judge for a year. If anyone is in Kornreich, and Angela Libby ’08. What a crowd! the board of Enphase, a NASDAQ-traded energy took him there so he can be more in touch with [email protected] Henry Hutcheson, Greg Certo, and Paul Jarvis visited the area (or knows anyone in the area), please let Frances Cha’s first novel,If I Had Your Face, technology company in Silicon Valley. And Khadi- international economics and policy spheres. He Ryan Milligan in Houston in January for the crew’s her know! Congratulations to everyone and best will be published on April 21 by Random House, jah Enoh has been accepted into medical school! is super looking forward to seeing more of the No specific classmate updates this time, annual meetup. They’re looking forward to get- of luck in the next step of your journeys! and follows the lives of four young women in She lives in Wisconsin, loving on her family and Washington, D.C., Dartmouth crowd. Peter Shellito but more reunion planning is under- ting everyone back together for Max’s wedding Finally, we have multiple friends with big life modern Korea! She shares, “It was inspired by “getting prepared for academic war” in June. has moved a lot in the last four years but is now way, and we will know the next Alumni to Annie McDonough in June and Bill’s wedding changes! Chelsea Hassett married John Brunda, Jenna Sherman 11 Lina Monsalve, topics I covered for CNN as an editor in Seoul.” shares that she and the 13 in Seattle, where he and his partner plan to stay. Council representative for the class of 2011 by to Christina Danford in August. Tu’14, in February with many ’13s ( —Jaime Padgett, 1837 W. Patterson Ave, #109, Chi- School Street girls (Laura Rodriguez Assis, Sheila —Liz (Doolittle) Kahane, 7 Chatmoss Road, time this is published! We thank Delfina Gonzalez See these updates and more by following @ Elizabeth Fleming, Angie Yang, Dimpy Desai, cago, IL 60613; (574) 303-6944; dartmouth2007s@ Dunning, Yasmin Mandviwala Kothari, Stephanie Henderson, NV 89052; (617) 909-7669; for her wonderful and dedicated service to our dartmouth2012 on Instagram—thanks to Claire and Aly Perez) in attendance. Karoline Walter gmail.com Zamorano, Alexandra Mesa Wentzell) had a much- [email protected] class during the last three years. Monagan and Dana Brisbane. And if you’re moving, got engaged to her partner, Lucia Martino, in a needed reunion in Miami in December. —Hillary S. Cheng, 26611 La Roda, Mission Viejo, don’t forget to update your mailing address with treehouse in the woods in December. Though Thanks, as always, to everyone who David O. Smith is currently plugging away John Lane and his wife, Tabisa (George CA 92691; (603) 546-8452; hillary.s.cheng@dart- the College. Until next time! Lucia didn’t go to Dartmouth, she fit right in at responded to the call for updates. For at artwork as a career. His new website, Dav- Washington University ’11), had their mouth.edu —Liz Sullivan, 1811 Wyoming Ave. NW, #44, Wash- reunions and we are so happy to welcome her anyone who didn’t but wants to know idOSmithArtist.com, has a huge collection of his second child, James, on November 6. ington, DC 20009; [email protected] to the Dartmouth family! Delanyo Kpo ’14 and 08 Michael Milone Richard Asala the punchline, the difference between a hippo and work, including some sketchbooks from his time 10 is finishing up his hand sur- Hello, ’12 fam! I’m writing this dis- got married in December 2019 in zippo is that one is really heavy and the other is at Dartmouth. David lives and works in Seattle. gery fellowship at Duke in August and then mov- patch from gloomy London, where I’ve Hello, ’13s, and happy summer! We Accra, Ghana. Delanyo is a Ph.D. candidate at a little lighter. Onto the updates! “It’s exciting to finally be pursuing what I’m most ing to New Jersey with his wife, Jackie, and baby been thrilled to spend time with the have many updates this edition, so Princeton University, while Richard is an as- Jon 12 Rachel Moncton Matt Oatway The former author of this very column, passionate about to make a living,” he says. “And girl Pippa. newly engaged and , as let’s get to it. sociate at Morgan Stanley. Last but certainly not Hopper Ethan Benjamin 13Matt Nichols Shannon Draucker , finally popped the question to Dominic I also can’t seem to quit rowing just yet. This is : “My wife, Sarah, and I re- well as soon-to-be graduate of London Business moved to Copenhagen, Den- least, as of mid-January and Pepper and they are set to be married later this my final go at training toward an ambitious goal, cently welcomed a sweet little baby girl into the School Erica Serpico. While the climate could be mark, in September to enroll in the one-year Matthew Boyas have a new addition to their family:

96 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 97 CLASS NOTES 2015-Clubs & Groups

a mini Australian labradoodle named Hazel! She’s a suspicious past), and other Dartmouth folks and Mantadia national parks. Nature Dave truly orations and film I made with Mikiko and Ashley Kate Domin, who is working in the Dart- December. The club packed the Roof Top Din- already met a bunch of Dartmouth alumni and attended. Kelsey graduates from Yale Law School had a wild time in Madagascar. He was shooting Kekona. It really felt like Camp Dartmouth!” mouth admissions office, offered her insight, ing Room at the Yale Club for the DCNY’s 250th you can follow her adventures and her Dartmouth this May and is moving to Boston to clerk at the giant slingshots and lines up to 100 feet in the Gricelda Ramos interned with the U.S. State writing, “As so often happens with advice, I will charter day and holiday celebration on Decem- leash on Instagram at @ladyhazel_thedood. federal courthouse. trees so he could climb the canopies and observe Department Bureau of Western Hemisphere pass on the best advice I got last year. First of all, ber 13, 2019. This was also the same date as the —Aly Perez, 104 Ivy Drive, Apt. 8, Charlottesville, —Samantha Webster, 665 Washington St., Apt. 711, the frogs each night. When he wasn’t climbing Affairs in 2019. She wrote, “This experience al- celebrate your accomplishment. You’re graduat- conclusion of 250th anniversary festivities in VA 22903; [email protected] Boston, MA 02111; (484) 356-3678; samwweb15@ the trees in the rainforest, Nature Dave spent lowed me to engage with leaders, see foreign ing. That’s incredible! Second, it’s okay to not Hanover. Some 220 alums and guests enjoyed gmail.com time in Madagascar’s capital, Antananarivo, and policy designed and enacted on a first-hand have everything figured out when you graduate. the camaraderie, cocktails, three customized This is our final issue ofDartmouth communicated with the Malagasy locals with basis, and help with many events happening at Your job after college does not have to dictate 250th cakes, and songs by the Brovertones. Alumni Magazine before our five-year Hi, ’16s! his limited knowledge of French. Now he’s back the State Department.” Gricelda received a cer- your career path. Third, success is not defined DCNY president Charles Allison ’78 reviewed the reunion in June. When you receive this issue, it on campus in Gainesville, where he enjoys the tificate of appreciation for her performance. She by salary. Consider what makes you feel happy, yearlong celebration of Dartmouth’s 250th on 15 has also joined a band and will be performing at Enjoy the updates and don’t forget to mark will be just about four years since we community because it’s inclusive and every- fulfilled, challenged, motivated. Finally, remem- campus and around the world. Charles thanked 16 the Cherry Blossom Ball at the National Museum Katie Christ ’11 Evan Az- your calendars for our five-year reunion June graduated and left the College on the Hill! Time one values the outdoors. As much as he loves ber that there is a network of support here for vice president , treasurer 19-21 in Hanover for some in-person updates really does fly! Within the next year our class Florida right now, he looks forward to returning of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C. This you whenever you need it. Congratulations!” riliant ’87, Barry Weeks, and key volunteer Chris- from classmates! council will be getting things ready for our five- to Madagascar in June to continue his research. fall she will be starting with the Foreign Service. In terms of the class of 2019 life updates, tine Min ’09 for making this December 13 cel- Josh Wang and Diksha Gautham got married year reunion, so feel free to reach out to any of Another world traveler making a global im- Jessie Colin provided a touching memoir on exciting things are happening. I’m so excited ebration such a success. To everyone’s delight, November 9, 2019 in Houston! The couple had the class council members to be involved in the pact is Maieda Janjua. After being selected as a her summer memories with Chris Vale: “No one to report what I believe are our first classmate Charles introduced WW II Marine veteran Col. a fusion Indian-Chinese wedding and now live planning process. delegate for the Telenor Youth Forum to tackle was a better adventure partner that summer than engagements! Jonathan de Sola Mendes ’42, who was wearing his in San Francisco. Here are a few updates from our classmates. global health inequalities using technology. Ma- Chris Vale. He’d text me as the light was getting Congratulations to Kasia Rozalski and Jimmy freshman beanie underneath his class of ’42 cap! Since her last update, Meghan Hassett won At the end of February Shreya Indukuri, Caro- ieda attended the 2018 Award that afternoon glow to go on a ‘run,’ which was McHugh on their engagement, as well as to Kayla On October 20 the Dartmouth Club of East- the state senate campaign she managed (it was line Estill, Meg Parson, and Sophie Hoffman took a Ceremony in , Norway. Just this past fall she equal parts bushwhacking, obstacle course, and Lieuw and Nick Flores on their engagement! Both ern New York (DCENY) celebrated the College’s too close to call for weeks after election night!), trip to New Orleans. The group all lived in Cohen was in Egypt for the World Youth Forum hosted running. I remember sprinting down the train engagements occurred in late 2019. 250th anniversary with a Big Green affair and then started working with the Union of Con- during their freshman year and enjoyed having by President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. The confer- tracks with Chris feeling incredibly alive, full In addition, Juli Montoya shared that she is “Call to Service” volunteer project at the North- cerned Scientists and became certified to teach a dorm reunion! ence connects people of all ages from around the of adrenaline, thinking anything felt possible. moving across the country to the Bay Area! She east Regional Food Bank near Albany, New York. yoga. After living in five states since graduation, Penelope Williams had her first crossword world to talk about technology, entrepreneur- It was a summer of his encouragement on the has accepted a job at the University of California, Event organizer Nathan Bruschi ’10—along with she’s loved calling Chicago home and is thrilled puzzle published in The Boston Globe and has ship, the economy, and climate change in the rock, laughing while aqua-jogging in the river, San Francisco’s children’s hospital in Oakland. Bob Conway ’73, Ryan Wheeler ’06, Th’07, Jean that pals such as Emily Reeves live there now too! been brainstorming themes for her firstNew York Middle East and North Africa. She met a lot of and feeling like a part of something inexplicably Meanwhile, Charlie Levy is still at Dart- Nelson ’74, Roanna Wang ’13, and Stephen Muller Meghan got engaged last June to Max, a Chica- Times crossword with Andrew Kingsley. Penelope cool people, including the founder and CEO of bigger, surrounded by friends. Summer with mouth, and he says (I think jokingly!) that he was ’71—sorted and boxed 4,500 pounds of frozen goan who she originally met in North Carolina was also promoted at work and will be shifting Orcas, an ed-tech firm that connects parents in Chris was summer on the edge, and I wouldn’t able to “actually insert granite into [his] blood meats, fish, pizzas, entrees, and desserts do- getting out the vote in 2016. After doing long from human-centered design to growth strategy Egypt to local trusted tutors and sitters. She be- want it any other way.” and [his] brain.” Thanks for the laughs, Charlie! nated by local commercial food suppliers. The distance for the first three years of his Ph.D. at consulting at Accenture. came Orcas’ first product manager and continues Maya Moten wrote, “Life is going great in Dal- If you haven’t already, follow the Dart- food boxes were later picked up by local soup Notre Dame, Meghan, Max, and their ridiculous Felipe Jaramillo and Ashley See are getting to work on projects with the team from her new las! I’ve recently switched roles in my company mouth 2019 alumni Instagram account, @2019. kitchens, homeless shelters, women’s shelters, kitty YoYo (he has a lot of extra toes) are finally married at the Fairmont in San Francisco on home in Boston. After returning from Egypt and to join the communications team. Since then dartmouth, for more frequent updates. Also, and other social service institutions. On No- moving in together this month! June 6 surrounded by family, friends, and many moving to Boston, Maieda began a new job as a I’ve run a few social media campaigns for Inter- please continue to share your class updates, vember 9, 17 DCENY and Princeton alumni and Last summer they took their first big trip of their Dartmouth classmates. product manager at TripAdvisor. As you can tell, national Women’s Day and during the holiday either through social media, my email, or the guests bused from Albany to Yankee Stadium in together gallivanting around the Swiss and Ital- Thanks for reading. Feel free to email me Maieda loves opportunities to work in product season. I’m also taking the lead on planning the class notes email: dartmouth2019classnotes@ the Bronx for the 100th Dartmouth-Princeton ian Alps with Laura Bergsten. Meghan can’t wait with any and all updates! management because it is at the intersection of launch of our company website.” gmail.com. football game. Charlie Buchanan ’53 coordinated for reunions to introduce Max to her favorite —Feyaad Allie, 212 Pine Hill Court, Apt. 103, Stan- technology and business. When she is not work- Johnny Sanchez has been an active part of —Morgan Lee, 417 Grand St., Apt. D1705, New the event for the group, which included Mary Dartmouth spots: the lodge, the river, and the ford, CA 94305; [email protected] ing or attending hackathons, Maieda spends time the “No Coal No Gas” campaign since September York, NY 10002; [email protected] Frances Sabo ’86, Bob Conway, Douglas Buchanan Theta basement. hanging out with her friends in Boston, includ- 2019, working to close the Merrimack Generat- ’81, Clare Buchanan Lowery ’83, Bruce Barach ’78, Aaron Pellowski and Sean Schultz ’12, who Congratulations to Alexandra (Woodruff) ing fellow ’17 Yifan “Yvonne” Fang, who is at the ing Station in Bow, New Hampshire, which is and Jean Nelson. A gourmet tailgate lunch was originally met at a Dartmouth student event and Josh Lange, who tied the knot last Harvard University Graduate School of Design, one of the last coal-fired power plants in New enjoyed before joining more than 21,000 fans to about cyberbullying, have moved in together July! Alexandra and Josh won the trips and many other Dartmouth alums. England. The campaign has organized several Clubs & watch the Green defeat the Tigers. 17 Dorian J. Allen marches and successful blockades of coal trains Caroline M. Wayner ’88 Dart- and are living in the Govalle district of Austin, lottery: Not only did they get to do the flatwa- — , 93 15th St., Apt. 3F, Brooklyn, , president of the Texas, where Aaron works as a high school Latin ter kayaking trip, but they also met their future NY 11215; [email protected] in which Johnny has personally taken part. The Groups mouth Club of Maryland, reported that the club is teacher and Sean is enjoying an exciting career spouses! After a terrific trip to the Grant, the two campaign will continue until there is a closing holding its spring Big Green affair on March 22 in e-commerce. They wish their best to all their began dating during freshman fall and the rest Hey, ’18s! This issue, I asked you to date issued for the plant. Dartmouth clubs and groups have been busy, as at the Guinness Brewery in Halethorpe, Mary- friends in their respective classes. was history! Alexandra and Josh got married at share your favorite summer memo- In February Northern Stage staged the usual, with new activities and fun gatherings. land. The visit to Guinness’ only brewery in Grant Sparling got engaged to Kaylin Lindsay Rollins Chapel right on campus last summer and ries and did my best to include them world premiere of Citrus, a choreopoem writ- Amanda Rosenblum ’07, co-vice president North America will include a tour and tasting. 18 ten by Celeste Jennings. The press release reads, Dartmouth LGBTQIA+ Alum Association Alexis Lim ’11 Smith in December 2019. They are planning to be had their reception at the beautiful Woodstock all! of the Thanks to , the club’s young alumni married in Canada during the summer of 2021. Inn. There were a number of ’17s in attendance, Fiona Bowen has always loved biking in the “With music, dance, and spoken-word poetry… (DGALA), reported that DGALA and the Dart- chair, for organizing. Please wish them well! including James Howe, who was a groomsman. summer, saying, “There’s nothing like it!” She Citrus intricately weaves together stories of mouth Asian Pacific American Alumni Association Tara Gulla ’95 wrote in with information Eli Derrow is currently in his first year at the Now Alexandra and Josh are each finishing up recently moved into a new apartment. black women throughout American history to (DAPAAA) hosted a dim sum gathering at Nom about the Dartmouth Club of Suburban New Jer- Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern year three of their respective Ph.D. programs at Rocco Di Leo shared, “One of my favorite create a portrait of resilience and humanity.” Wah Tea Parlor in New York City to celebrate sey’s recent event. Jon Rabinowitz ’74 organized University and will be in Boston at Bain & Co. this the University of California, San Diego. Alexan- memories from Sophomore Summer was a BBQ Along with writing the choreopoem, Celeste Lunar New Year. The event was cosponsored by the club’s annual seminar on the campus of summer for an internship. dra is earning her Ph.D. in political science and cookout on the Fourth of July, mixed with a few also designed its costumes. the Native American Alumni Association of Dart- Princeton University in early February titled “Is Elena Karis would like to announce that Adria has enjoyed her recent opportunities to lead games of pong that ultimately led to a group of As always, thanks to everyone who shared mouth (NAAAD), the Black Alumni of Dartmouth Dartmouth a Religion?” Dartmouth professor of Brown, her former roommate and current pla- teaching sessions. Josh is studying cancer biol- guys going down to spend the day at the river.” stories and updates for this column. I look for- Association (BADA), and Women of Dartmouth religion Susan Ackerman ’80 led the seminar and tonic wife, will graduate with an M.S.W. from ogy and is excited to finally see results in the lab. Currently, Rocco is a student at Durham Uni- ward to staying in touch in the next column! and had nearly 30 people in attendance span- based the discussion on her own research and Washington University in St. Louis this spring. We seem to have lots of ’17s who are con- versity Business School with Jack Anderson and —Emily Choate, 172 Commonwealth Ave., Apt. 3, ning 50 class years. a recent course for Dartmouth’s 250th anniver- Adria awaits news of summer internship place- tinuing their studies in fun and warm places! Kyran McKinney-Crudden. They are enjoying play- Boston, MA 02116; (603) 305-5346; eschoate@ Stephanie Yu ’97 shared that in January the sary. The event had more than 50 attendees from ment but hopes to return to New England to be David Klinges, a.k.a. “Nature Dave,” is pursuing ing and teaching American football to the stu- gmail.com DAPAAA board elected Sharon Cho ’17 and Sonia the Dartmouth Club of Suburban New Jersey, closer to Elena. The two celebrated their eighth his Ph.D. at the University of Florida Gainesville. dents. They will be in Europe throughout most Qin ’19 co-chairs and Sarah Gupta ’19 as co-chair- the Dartmouth Club of Princeton, the Dartmouth “friendiversary” (and ninth “Galentine’s Day”) It’s no surprise that the guy who kept poison dart of the summer. You can follow their Instagram Greetings, ’19s! elect for the 2020-22 term. Ariel Xue ’08 is im- Club of Philadelphia, and Women of Dartmouth. in February. frogs in his Russell Sage dorm ended up studying at @passports_n_jansports. I can’t believe that it has been mediate past co-chair. Stephanie Yu has stepped I hope everyone is having a fun spring and This year Kelsey Stimson hosted her annual tropical ecology and biological conservation in Deana Chou remembered, “A group of us had 19 about a year since we graduated! off the DAPAAA board after nearly four years of summer. Please remember to send me updates home-written murder mystery party, which Ab- graduate school. He began the program last Au- gone to see the sunset. After dark, the area lit up Commencement seems like it was only yester- service in the co-chair position. about the great events that your club, associa- bey Schmitt (starring as Hannah Solo, a smuggler gust and was quickly shipped out to Madagascar, with fireflies, and Mikiko Takato’s face lit up seeing day. For this issue, I asked for your advice for Barry Weeks ’72, executive director of the tion, or affiliated group has organized. of illegally pirated movies), Maria Sperduto ’14 where he analyzed how climate change affects them for the first time. I also loved late nights the ’20s as they prepare to enter the “real world” Dartmouth Club of New York (DCNY), wrote in to —Stina Brock ’01, P.O. Box 9274, Jackson, WY (starring as Bonnie Blue Booty, an heiress with the amphibian community in the Ranomafana baking with Josue Guerrero and the Tanabata dec- and life after Dartmouth. share information about the DCNY’s events in 83002; [email protected]

98 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 99 THE FRONT LINES (continued from page 45) CLASS NOTES Alumni Council-Deaths

sleeves and doing what they can.” argues against. Since “students are learners residents, for instance, automatically get two task forces to examine the composition and Daniel P. Ernst ’53 • Dec. 27, 2019 There has been personal risk. For a few more than doers” and because they could one, but there are few guarantees for anyone committee structure of the council. William C. Gitt ’53 • June 8, 2018 Alumni As council president, I have been leading the Leonard I. Gochman ’53 • Feb. 6 days in March, Skiest thought he might have tie up vital gear, McKinney prefers they else. “We’re really hamstrung by a lack of representation task force. We have focused on Carlisle C. Lewis Jr. ’54 • Dec. 30, 2019 contracted Covid-19: After seeing about provide backup help instead: running day tests,” Filler told DAM in mid-April, though whether the current composition of the council Frederick W. Page ’54 • Jan. 28 a half-dozen patients, and despite gloves care for children of doctors and nurses, the testing situation improved by the end of Council is optimal and if there are changes that should H. Ogden Morse Jr. ’55 • Jan. 20 and protective gear, he developed a cold delivering meals to healthcare workers, and the month and he was able to get results for Greetings from the Dartmouth Alumni Council! be made to make alumni representation more William B. Rollins ’55 • Feb. 7 and low-grade fever, prompting a weeklong checking on patients in isolation by phone. hospitalized patients within a few hours. effective while maintaining the current size of Peter K. Terplan ’55 We are the 125 councilors who represent your • Jan. 14 self-quarantine before he received negative McKinney’s next challenge will be to “You sign up for situations like this.” the council. Council president-elect Rachel Bog- Walter G. Van Dorn ’55 classes, clubs, and affiliated groups. We gather • Feb. 1 ardus Drew ’98 has been leading the committees Steve G. Chontos ’56 test results that enabled him to return to train “contact tracers” to interview Co- in Hanover twice a year to serve as your eyes, • Dec. 26, 2019 task force. It is examining whether the current David H. Dolben ’56 work. After fear-fi lled days, Skiest is cau- vid-19 victims to fi gure out who has been DANIEL B. KLEIN ’69 ears, and, most importantly, your voices to se- • Dec. 7, 2019 committees are maximizing councilor engage- Roger B. Griffin ’56 tiously optimistic. Testing has become within 6 feet of them in the past three Former Chief of Infectious Diseases nior leadership of the College. We solicit your • Dec. 23, 2019 ment while providing benefit to Dartmouth and Allan E. Klein ’56 • May 14, 2018 Kaiser Permanente San Leandro questions and sentiment before every meeting easier. Whereas the hospital used to have days. “We’re going to need a small army whether updates are needed to the committees David E. Klein ’56 • Dec. 31, 2019 Medical Center and let you know what we have learned. Our to send out tests and wait up to seven days, of contact tracers,” he says, which might and their missions. The recommendations of Dean E. Sheldon Jr. ’56 • July 19, 2019 San Leandro, California mission is to keep all 83,000 alumni connected it now has in-house results in less than a be drawn from the ranks of the recently these task forces will be presented for approval John L. Wanamaker Jr. ’56 • Jan. 29 with our alma mater. day. Social distancing appears to be working There’s little mincing of words when Klein, at the 220th meeting in May. Gordon C. Hally ’57 • Feb. 7 unemployed. “It is such a crisis, such a tsu- For the first half of our Alumni Council As the end of my term approaches in June, I Xavier March ’57 • Jan. 10 to reduce pressure on hospitals. In March, nami, you are grasping at anything to keep who spent his career battling the HIV/ year, we continued the worldwide celebration am honored to pass the president’s gavel (yes, it’s Timothy B. Robinson ’57 • Jan. 16 nearly 60 Covid patients were in intensive yourself afl oat.” AIDS crisis, weighs the federal govern- of Dartmouth’s 250th anniversary. I hope you a real thing!) to Rachel. It has been a privilege to David C. Thompson ’57 • Jan. 11 care, but by mid-April, when Skiest spoke ment’s response to the current pandemic. were able to celebrate this huge milestone in serve you. In the meantime, share your thoughts Frank H. Blatz ’58 • Feb. 1 with DAM, that number had dropped in SCOTT FILLER ’79 Although o™ cials were slow to realize the some Big Green way, whether by attending a at [email protected]. John J. Conklin ’58 • Dec. 16, 2019 half: “Everything is becoming a little more Chief, Division of Infectious Diseases danger posed by HIV, Klein fi nds the fed- Dartmouth250! event, contributing to the more —C. Alec Casey ’88, president, 6068 Blunt Alum- Phillip A. Ranney ’58 • Dec. 25, 2019 manageable,” he says. Harbor-UCLA Medical Center eral response to Covid-19 even worse. “It’s than 250,000 hours of alumni volunteer ser- ni Center, Hanover, NH 03755; alumni.council. Don M. Shagrin ’58 • Jan. 17 Professor, David Ge en School of Medicine been a clusterf***,” he says. “I don’t know vice, connecting through symposia, open online [email protected] Stuart L. Fuld ’59 • Nov. 1, 2019 Torrance, California courses or TEDx series, or by contributing to the Alan W. Hurlbut ’59 • Jan. 7 ROSS E. MCKINNEY JR. ’75 if you can use that word, but it’s really how Call to Lead campaign. Personally, my highlights Jeffrey J. Wenger ’59 • Sept. 18, 2019 Chief Scientifi c O cer Often overlooked in discussions of those I feel.” were our first global summit in London (that Deaths Frank J. Killilea Jr. ’60 • Nov. 20, 2019 Association of American Medical Colleges at risk of infection from the coronavirus Klein, who retired last year but hopes drew more than 500 people from 36 different Lester R. McCracken ’60 • Jan. 4 Washington, D.C. are the homeless, who may live in cramped to return to work at his old hospital, is countries) and gathering with so many of you The following is a list of deaths reported to us Donald H. McGreevy ’60 • Dec. 20, 2019 For coronavirus testing to ever meet de- conditions where self-quarantining is not more sparing with his criticism of mem- at Yankee Stadium to watch the football team since the previous issue. Full obituaries, usually Guy H. Piltz ’60 • Jan. 19 mand, academic hospital labs must fully possible. Many have underlying diseases, bers of the president’s coronavirus task beat Princeton. written by the class secretaries, may appear on the John W. Benepe ’61 • Oct. 20, 2019 At our fall council meeting, we fulfilled one DAM website at dartmouthalumnimagazine.com, Ronald J. McDougald ’61 • Jan. 16 engage, McKinney says, noting that the two too. With one of the largest homeless popu- force: Anthony Fauci, the chief resident at of our most important responsibilities by nomi- where friends and classmates may post their own John G. Wilkins ’61 • Jan. 9 major private chains in the United States— lations in the country, Los Angeles has been Cornell in the early 1970s when Klein was nating three outstanding alumni to serve on the remembrances of the deceased. Please contact Gary L. Crellin ’62 • Sept. 27, 2019 Quest Diagnostics and LabCorp—can joint- trying to get people o› Skid Row and into there studying medicine, once memorably board of trustees. I’m pleased to announce they alumni records at (603) 646-2253 to report an John T. Edwards ’62 • Nov. 6, 2019 ly handle only 85,000 tests a day. A former shelters. By mid-April, the city’s 20 tem- drilled Klein about the correct antibiotic to are Susan M. Finegan ’85, parent of a ’22 and pro alumnus death. Richard G. Maynard ’62 • Dec. 28, 2019 division chief of pediatric infectious dis- porary shelters were full—but not every be used for staph infections. Klein gave the bono partner at Mintz; Odette A. Harris ’91, pro- Henry W. Merrill Jr. ’39 • unknown Harold J. Ousby III ’62 • Feb. 3 eases at Duke, McKinney now advocates homeless person was o› the street. wrong answer. (Correct response: methi- fessor of neurosurgery at Stanford University James David McGaughey III ’41 • Jan. 12 Sherman R. Bendalin ’63 • Jan. 27 School of Medicine; and Gregg R. Lemkau ’91, Oliver Lazare ’43 • Dec. 12, 2019 Harry Michael Clements ’63 • Feb. 6 for medical schools by nudging o™ cials Filler’s hospital, a public institu- cillin.) “I never forgot that again,” he says. co-head of the investment banking division at Robert E. Cummins ’44 • Dec. 9, 2019 Joseph J. Connors ’63 • Jan. 27 to round up the equipment necessary for tion that often attracts indigent patients Completing his training in San Fran- Goldman Sachs. Our candidates for these po- Paul J. Muller ’45 • Jan. 27 William J. Hubbard ’63 • Feb. 6 widespread tests in the schools’ labs. thanks to subsidized care, has seen an infl ux cisco in 1981 as unusual pneumonia was sitions come from your recommendations, so Michael F. Steffenson ’45 • Dec. 14, 2019 Melvin M. Shiramizu ’63 • Jan. 22 It hasn’t been easy. As widely reported, of homeless patients since the pandemic turning up among gay men, Klein found please keep suggesting fellow alumni. Nelson S. Bryant Jr. ’46 • Jan. 11 C. Dean Razzano ’64 • Dec. 19, 2019 special nose swabs needed for tests—with exploded, though the rate has been lower himself working with patients whose The meeting featured a robust agenda, in- James D. Kennedy Jr. ’46 • Feb. 4 Timothy C. Bryant ’65 • Dec. 8, 2019 nylon tips, preferably, since cotton can than expected. “We’re wondering, are they level of contagiousness was not initially cluding a conversation about admissions with Charles K. Barton ’47 • Jan. 5 James H. Beardsley Jr. ’66 • Jan. 31 dying on the street?” Filler says. “We’re Lee Coffin, vice provost for enrollment and dean Frederick T. Comstock Jr. ’48 • Dec. 16, 2019 Jeremy H. Reitman ’66 • Dec. 28, 2019 contaminate—have been in drastically understood. But the current crisis is worse. of admissions and financial aid; a glimpse into Jeremy Copleston ’48 • Dec. 11, 2019 Larry L. Simms ’66 • Jan. 11 short supply, he says, in part because one waiting to see what happens.” Meanwhile, “Dedicated people weren’t fearful for their the future of Dartmouth’s libraries with dean Robert D. Eckerson ’48 • Jan. 27 Peter Muilenburg ’67 • Aug. 25, 2019 of the few companies to make them, Ca- the more marked surge of patients has been lives while working in hospitals, afraid to of libraries Sue Mehrer; and a joyous student- Foxhall A. Parker ’48 • Dec. 28, 2019 Kirby L. Nickels ’68 • Sept. 29, 2019 pon Diagnostics, is in northern Italy. After from well-to-do communities such as San- come home and infect their families, or faculty panel titled On the Road with the Stretch: Kenneth D. Saunders ’48 • Feb. 4 William L. Paschke ’68 • Dec. 11, 2019 McKinney and others called attention to ta Monica that are served by the hospital. putting their wills in order,” he says. Learning How the Earth Works. We honored Robert J. Amirault ’49 • Oct. 8, 2019 Phillip L. Morris ’69 • Dec. 23, 2019 the problem, the U.S. Air Force in March “Wealthier people tend to travel interna- Despite the economic toll from quaran- James Wooster III ’59, Th’60, Tu’60; Russell Wolff A. Clarke Church ’49 • March 2, 2019 Darrel R. Gavle ’71 • Jan. 23 airlifted 1 million swabs from Capon to tionally and bring Covid-19 back,” he says. ’89, Tu’94; and Veree Hawkins Brown ’93 with the Loomis G. Dana ’49 • Oct. 8, 2019 John D. Pfeifle ’71 • Jan. 16 tines that have immobilized entire cities, Alumni Award; and Kyle Polite ’05 and Nathan Carl V. Granger ’49 • Dec. 29, 2019 Paul A. Frangos ’73 • Jan. 24 the United States, an e› ort that contin- Regardless, the health crisis has hit the Klein feels the shutdowns were, in terms of Bruschi ’10 with the Young Alumni Distinguished Frank W. Munson ’49 • Feb. 5 Nicholas J. Lazos ’75 • Nov. 8, 2019 ued through April. “It still is not enough,” hospital hard. Under normal circumstanc- public health, warranted. As some leaders Service Award. Hugh K. Brower ’50 • Dec. 25, 2019 Jeffrey S. Shiffrin ’76 • Feb. 2 McKinney says. In part he blames the FDA es Harbor-UCLA would have one medical called for a May reopening of “nonessen- We also spent time with President Phil Han- John C. Harned ’50 • Feb. 8 Linda Peppard Hart-Buuck ’77 • Jan. 9, 2019 for dragging its feet in authorizing alternate intensive care team—now it has three. An tial” businesses, Klein favored a more con- lon ’77 and board chair Laurel Richie ’81. We asked Richard F. Ledyard Jr. ’50 • Dec. 25, 2019 David A. Philhower ’79 • Jan. 27 sources: “They screwed up.” emergency room has been turned into an servative approach, even though doubtful some tough questions about what the College is William S. Friedlander ’51 • Feb. 1 Charles S. C. Clement ’80 • Feb. 1 Supplies including plastic tubes, ICU to deal with Covid-19 cases. the powers that be will do the right thing. doing and where it is going. Like any institution, Woody Klein ’51 • Feb. 11 Gregory Henderson ’80 • Sept. 25, 2019 Dartmouth continues to evolve, and both reit- T.N. Trolle ’51 • Feb. 10 Craig S. Seligman ’81 • Nov. 23, 2019 protective gear, and RNA extraction kits The hospital, where a couple of doctors “If it costs trillions of dollars to keep people erated Dartmouth’s commitment to academic John W. Barto ’52 • Feb. 2 Brian S. Fitzpatrick ’82 • Dec. 4, 2018 (the fi rst diagnostic step in sampling the were infected with the virus, has carved alive, then we should do it,” he told DAM in excellence, a safe, inclusive campus, and, above George A. Davis ’52 • Jan. 27 Douglas M. Geehan ’85 • Jan. 28 mucus gathered by a swab) are not the only itself into two camps: one for coronavirus April. “A rush to return to normalcy could all, being the best liberal arts college possible. Buck (Zuckerman) Henry ’52 • Jan. 8 Richard C. Hermann ’85 • Jan. 16 things missing. Many hospitals are short cases, the other for everything else. Ideally, be a grievous error.” In a similar vein, we strive to keep the coun- Richard S. Little ’52 • Oct. 23, 2019 Mary D. McArtor Reynolds ’87 • Jan. 7 on sta› , which has led to calls to enlist everyone who walks through the door would cil and its committees impactful, engaging, and Joseph H. Lyon ’52 • Nov. 25, 2019 Damon E. Santos ’93 • Aug. 2018 medical students to bail out overtaxed get a Covid test, but due to a drastic short- LISA FURLONG and C.J. HUGHES are con- helpful to Dartmouth. As part of this effort, the Brewster Sturtevant ’52 • Jan. 14 Yuan Zhang ’97 • Jan. 18 Alumni Council executive committee convened John L. Suter ’52 • Oct. 18, 2019 Raymond H.R. Dums ’01 • Dec. 30, 2019 emergency rooms, something McKinney age, tests have to be rationed. Nursing home tributing editors.

100 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE 100 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 101 DICK PATRICK (continued from page 49) CLASSIFIEDS HAVE A DAM REUNION! REAL ESTATE WINERY FOR SALE means as much as winning the Stanley Cup. REAL ESTATE SALES AND SERVICE CENTRAL VIRGINIA. Unique opportunity. After multiple playoff appearances without in Hanover since 1975. (603) 643-6004; Turnkey boutique. Outstanding reputation, NOVEMBER | DECEMBER 2018 winning it all, the Capitals busted through [email protected]. Roger Clarkson ’75 experienced staff, beautiful vineyards/facilities, Hello to defeat the Las Vegas Golden Knights and well-maintained equipment. Transition assistance take the cup in 2018. Patrick recalls floating, BEAUTIFUL VIEWS available. Positive cash fow. Solid ROI. Growth #perksofmembership dreamlike, onto the ice to lift the trophy and FROM OAK HILL! opportunities. [email protected]. Summer getting doused with champagne spray and euphoria in the locker rom. 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102 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE 102 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE MAY/JUNE 2020 103 Dartmouth FP Wedding Spring 2019 New font.qxp_Layout 1 3/12/19 3:40 PM Page 1

CONTINUING ED what i’ve learned since graduation

Lea DeFrancisci Lis ’98 A child psychiatrist on sex ed and self-esteem for kids

Interview by LISA FURLONG

“I knew I wanted to be in the mental health field at the age of 14 or 15,when I started working at a psychiatric hospital. My aunt, a social worker, took me, wide-eyed, into the psych wards. She later said I was too young, but it shaped my life.” “At Dartmouth I studied biological psychology with Michael Gazzaniga ’61—a great mentor. The scandal in the psychological and brain sciences depart- ment wasn’t my experience. Mine was one of absolute wonder and doing amazing research.” “A lot of children are growing up in homes where parents are dating. Introduc- tion of your new dating partner into your child’s life should be done on neutral territory. The child should be given ownership over the process rather than told how to handle it. The other parent has to accept the new person as a parental figure and try to see the positives.” “It’s conflict that damages children, not a stepparent taking them to Mc- Donald’s, not different rules at different houses.” “I tell parents, ‘Don’t pass down intergenerational trauma. Pass down inter- generational wisdom.’ If you were hurt, abused, injured in any way, you don’t need to pass down scary messages. Instead, pass down what your children can do to protect themselves. What do you wish you had known? Pass that down.” “When it comes to discussing coronavirus, correct any misinformation your kids may have. They will worry most about themselves and their family. Reassure them that social-distancing mea- sures are keeping families safe and that most people who get the virus will recover.”

“Parents should constantly monitor their kids’ phones, their y h social media, their internet use. Early exposure to pornography a p

is a huge problem now. It causes a lot of h o t g r damage for both girls and boys in terms h u e P

of self-esteem and sexual aggression.” n o

“When you rescue your kids from challeng- m y D o

ing situations, you create more anxiety in the © A long run. If they’re at summer camp, cry- ing they want to come home, you say, ‘I’ll send you a care package of all your The Perfect Setting for an Exquisite Wedding favorite things, but you’ve got to stick it out. You’re committed to this.’ ” is Vermont’s Most Beautiful Address. “Sex education should be early and ongoing, starting with teaching your HER STORY child the correct names of body parts and showing where those parts are The Woodstock Inn & Resort, one of New England’s most scenic, romantic, and luxurious destinations Notable: Known as “The Shame-less Psychiatrist” with a focus as soon as your child starts to talk. Then you teach the basics of biology for a Vermont wedding, is ready to make your celebration perfect in every way. Our experienced staff will and hygiene. Next you explain boundaries and consent. Studies show on raising children to be comfortable with their sexuality; board member of American Psychiatric Association; contributor to Psy- that children who can name their body parts correctly are less likely to assist you with every detail — from room reservations to dinner menus, wedding cakes to rehearsal dinners. chology Today blog; author of Shame-Less: Talking to Your Kids be sexually abused, more likely to report abuse, and more likely to be About Sexuality, Self-Confidence, and Healthy Relationships (2020) • • believed if they do.” Career: Established private practice in 2009; assistant clinical pro- Personal Wedding Coordinator Full Wedding Venue Services Exquisite Wedding Cakes “If you wait to have a ‘sex talk’ with kids entering puberty, it’s too late.” fessor and former fellow, New York University School of Medicine; Customized Wedding Menus • Bridal Packages at The Spa • Year-round Recreational Activities • Exclusive Room Rates residency at St. Vincent’s Hospital, New York City “Both parents should be involved in the sex education of their children. Moth- Education: A.B., psychology; M.D., New York Medical College, 2003 ers, perhaps even more than fathers, can be sure their sons understand Personal: Lives with husband Alexander and two young daughters The World’s Best Hotels ~ Travel + Leisure consent, that every step requires new consent.” in Southampton, New York Woodstock, Vermont | 802.457.6647 | www.woodstockinn.com 104 DARTMOUTH ALUMNI MAGAZINE illustration by JOHN CUNEO Success lies in the details.

As the premier asset management firm in the region, we know this to be true. That’s why we focus on more than just financial solutions. Because when it comes to building a better future, no detail is too small. Schedule a personal consultation by contacting John O’Dowd, CTFA, Senior Vice President, at 603.526.5614 or [email protected].

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