Colby Magazine vol. 86, no. 3

Page 1

Summer 1997


Charle W. Ba ett, Ph.D. Lee Family Prufe sor ()f Ameri an

'

wdies and of English

olblJ i a pecial plac

me and for tudent . My

for

a

ife

Carol, taught here for

tit enty year . My kid

n

orked ummer on the Hill.

Colby people take care

Participating in generations of Colby life.

of Colby people.

Colby people feed me

write to me buoy me up.

Colby ha made my life fun.

The Colby Participation Challenge makes every gift worth even more.

$100 for endowment, and reaching 46 .5% participation generates a total of $117 ,500 for endowment. Be part of the picture: call l �800�311 �3678 to make your gift.

Each new donor mean an additional


8

Natural Leader

Combinin° tatesman hip, genero i ty and a relentle work ethic , Bill Mayaka '73 care for Kenya's environment and the people who co-exist with i t. 14

The Bright Side

Although rain forced Commencement indoors, the word of an lri h poet and ome poignant moments on stage made the Class of '97's farewell party a warm affair. 19

www.colby.edu

Tens of thousands of people are vi it ing Colby's award-winning Web ite expand their knowledge and read Dilbert. 22

to

talk to each other,

Lasting Impressions

The enior cholars Program provides a place for high achie\'ers to invest their pa ion for tudy.

2

readers write

An is ue worthy of response. 7

periscope

Gleaned from Earl Smith' weekly new letter, F.Y.I 4

from the hill

tudent Center renamed; Colby' new integrated semester pull together disparate di c ipl ine ; honorary degree recipients. 24

faculty file

Program- outside of c las brino students and profe ¡or even closer; faculty retirees; reading M i l ton. 26

books and authors

A memoir from Don J. nyder '72, The Cliff Walk; Gerry Boyle '7 's latest Mc Morrow my tery. 28

student life

A field hou e c l imbing wall help tudent reach new he ight ; working through adversity on The Rivals. 30

mules on the move

pring brings two national championship to Colby; ba eball' trongest sh wing in year . 32

gifts and grants

Keeping Colby competit ive; a new challenoe. 64

final period

A mu eum full of friend .

33

reunion '97

profiles

A brief wrap-up of Reunion Weekend.

Morri "Mike" C hen '35 William Lo\' eda '67 52 Doug Smith '70 56 Beth chwartz-Kenney' 6

35

classnotes

63

obituaries

36 46


readers write I Sue

Sharing Colby's Legacy I '1mpl\' ln\'l. : re;iding ,1hPut

rhL' ,1c 11111-

1�l1•J1111cnr"1t 'olh 'tudl'lll,, hcult\ ,gradu­

<1t1:•,, triend, <llld hllmd 111cmher'. Suff1u: it

'111/1,, L'\·er · w,1 ' . RL'ad1ni.:

to '<1\' rh;it the 111\ht rC<..L'IH "'ue uf wa' 11·nnderful in

rhniugh the 111aga:1ne \\''1' .i grL'tll \\'.1y to he re\'l\·ed ufter ;1 day111 the Il l rlLI of ne.i.:n11.11ini.: ,dHJL1l ho;1rd ;tnd ll111·n 1�olit1L', en,ur­ ing my okle,l 'llll h,1d hi m.Hh hllmewurk ;H le,1-,r p;1rr1nI I\' cnmp leted, wnrry 1ng .1 hllll l t,1mily health and wel(ML', w;HLhmi.: tlw garden gn1w ;rnd hu111hl1 re,d1:1ni.: I h;1d m;1Je ,l >m l' mi,rah'' rpd;1y.

'1 hh '"LIL' 'n

deftly prove,, rhe'e .ire rhe he.,r d.1\' nf m\ 11lhy\ leg,1 1 "fnr

life and I can -,ee th,lt

all of u. rn ,hare: l<> enJ"\ the lll�' .tnLl dmn1-, gracdull

·

·''

we pruudh n::,·el 111

each other' 'trug!!Jc, ;rnd 'llLu:,,e,. Thank.. fnr 1�rint1ng '>ll m,m\ 'tlirte th,u 'end ::.1111 Je, nf in,p1r,H11111 haLk l<l li' ,ill. I .im prnud tll be a pan l Lill of th<..·ch;1Jlengeqhat olhy offer,, hllth nn L,1111pu' ,tnd m<lll\

year, heyond. �,illy Lmegren 1erch,1nt 1nunr D<..',l'rt. i'vLune

y,,, 1c J J,idkr '7) g,1\'L'

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Lune I lum.111

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Be1'1 1\erL' ,1J1, e toJ.iy \\ 11h hl-r ll'onJl'rful 'Plrtt, hl'r 'tl'd-nmml'J gl.1 'l' ,mll hL'r ll11e nf tL'.tlll, ,Jie 11·,1tdd hL ·"proud nl thl' llLLL''

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111 ll'umen' h11<..i,e\ ,,, .ire ,111

p.in1u1l.1r) 11 h1> 111 <>nL' 1\ ,1

or .rnllthL·r up­

purteJ thl' rr,1g1«llll <ll "' J,ing .1i.:11 1n Lu, .\ngeJe,, I , 1\ .m L"\h1h1t ll'.l[Urtng l\'lllllt'n II ihl m,1JL· .1 d1ffer­ l'lll.l?. :\m11ng thl'm 11','' Eli:.1heth Bl,1tk11 t•l1

(I 21- 1910), the fir t \n1111,111 ,111 ,1rcll'd ,111 Rl,tLkwell m f,1Lr, hut ,he mu't '-llf<..!\ h,ne

n111g 'nib\

uinu nul' tn re.1p 'll<..<..t''-'ful enLlmg,.

Fr,rnk. 01a1,

r. 'tephelNlll

mom to 111y one-and-a­ ha If-year-old daughter

,1l1f.

I rl'<ld \'l1ur piece nn J<hh \X'uoJfork in the ,1Jumn1 maga:mc ll'llh rear' 111 my ey

'·

For tll'll rea.,nn,. Fir,r, tt 11·;1' ,1 m1wing trib­

a "higher" purpo e. I'm

I will ,d\\'ay' think nfj1l h <h the on who gl1t ;1\\'ay. I tried hare!."' did ,e,·er;1l mher� at

about their kid , ton. K er up the great work.

Den1!'.on [Un1\'er,it�], ro get him to come

here, <ind in the end it \\'a a ph lto fini h. I really he!ie,·e h right un .

Thank you for reporting on the 25th anniver

tru gl J with the deci t0n.

It', ,·er, ohviou , no\\, that he mad the

That Pioneer Spirit

ry of women' ice hockey at Colby.

Women' ice hockey will be an Olympic

port in 1998, and

olby should be con-

olby pnwided an environment

in which hi�exrraordinary4ualit1e�could be te ted and where he would grow anJ thrive. Thar might not ha,·e

MMER

1997

he ppened in quire the

ame way at an )ther college.

[Award in Woodfork] rhe Condon Medal

gratulated for it �art in making it h ppen.

C 0 LB Y

mem<irte' of

thL' rime l had work111g ll'Hh

jl>,h. A \Cf\ 11dl-de,1:n·ed '>tnr\ for a \'ery Ill r1r,\tllll1dl 111J1\'1dual. �1.1m Lh,mk'.

Bryan Raffetro '95

'' '" e-m,1d

Not in Harmony

Fa e of

'h,111gc" b\ ',11!1 B.1ker ,mJ am. �idd ned and ,mgered regardmg rwn" ue 1nt:ntic n J.

11 ,h Lhe t,1Lt that "

ne

nlhy '1, nm rea Jy'" for olby 1

"too

m1r there yet"1, ad.lf notm11',when?lf n t

ute to <1 mn.,r Je,en 111g 111d1\'lJual. �econd,

4

t11 'nlby.

Your fr:ature h rnu gh r ha k verv fond

there, \\'here� The,e are �upposed to be the

One Who Got Away

and hrl\'e felt guilty for

Marie (Joyce) Fletcher '

lll1clfnrk ;tnJ the nrnny conmbu-

tlllll he hc1 made

under,rand the " ue_ ll'ell enough ... we're

not "u>ing" 111\ degree for

via e-mail

l rhnmughh en1oyeJ read111gynur amcle

11n J11,h

J1l'ldl'J .1 C\1mmun1rr raciall-, and we don't

olby grad care '>< much

glad to see Llther

A Worthy Tribute

muluudtur.il hnu 111g. Thm

'6_

I ha,·e felt left uut until now! I am a 'ray-at-home

Lorrnmr \X'ale1 1 1h.: [firmer J1rectm ()f the \wdrn1 [ 'nrnn. rnmp111 acut•me� and culiural ranville, ajfwr' ai D.:1mcm L'nr n.'r ii)' m ()/11r1 -EJwm

I h,1\ e JU r (1111 heJ reddmg ''Th

1.iy their ,innu.d hei,:111-

,, \\\lll1en\ hn<..ke\ .

mom m \'l ur l,1te't "'ue.

Lurr;1111L· Wale \ ldl'-m.111

1\.1.D. I don't knm' 11 Ret \ 11.h rd.HL'd t<> l r.

nur L'nd,." '"lhy 1'.1 tL''t,1lllL'lll to rh,11 tnnh. ,,1

Mom Thanks

fur \llll

Iler �LILL<..''' 11 ,i- hitt<..·r,11·el't1 1t L.ime ,H

-,1 1me L'llHlllllll,1'

T.:. El1u1 ,,11J, '\1urheg111ntn!!' ne\ erkn<m

Thank ·nu hir fe;Hunng

11 .i' t hL' perku w,i\ tu 'end h11n off to what 1\·tllu:r1;nnl� he.1Ll1'ttn�u1 hed utur .Good

'

hecn uinne<..ted 111 'J11r11.

\3

the 'ray-nr-home

IL It'- heg111ning;

,111othl'r \Hll\1.tl1 i.:,1\ e il f''ll)L'Ll.

2

be't nd rhe bnghte t 1f our ynuno tuden . It i e\'1denr that

olby neeJ to teach its

rudenr' ro unJer,tand and e\'en c lebrate

I am on the faculty of a �tare Uni­ ''ersiry ofN<::w York ·ampu· and many of u· acri,·el · mcorpnrate thi into l ur reachin . I di\ er iry.

11·a· angered "·hen I read that a po ter of

Jo hua Wc)<klfork, an outstanding •oung man, "·a· d f ced with that abhorrent, a e-old epi­ thet. A· a ·tudent ar

olby in the '60 darin°

a mint rity tudenr,l und nood th di crimi­ nation at that time. I do not under·rnnd it n1 w.

olbyfaculry mu·t eff: ct hange o rhat

all w rudent , e·pecially]

hua Woodfork,

and indeed,all people are accorded the intel­ li ence and dignity they de erve. Linda Wakefi ld-LaRou '65 Poughkeep-ie,N.Y.


Colby Volume

plague. There must be members of the Colby

Worthwhi l e Reading

86

umber 3

Colby

taff:

l was excited to se the article "Recom­

community whose lives ha"e been as touched

mended Reading' in your April 1997 edi ­

as mine by thi di ease, yet we read nothing of

exewci1•e editor

tlOn. As an avid reader and a frequent

it, except for reading between the lines in the bituary section about the alumni in the age

Ke,•in Cool managing editor

busine· tra\'eler. l !way take a good book where\'er l oo. l would like to see reading list become a re ular addition to Colby maga:ine. Perhaps an abridcred list f what rnJenr are readino in cla e , or a thi article in April ugoe red, a Ii t of favorites by faculty, raff and .rndent . Colby foster a community

( learning

that continue even after raduarion. Di-cu mm::.

amoncr my fellow Colby alumni ften

group to have been affected by the disease. l n't it rim that our alumni publication should ackn wledge and explore these i sues. Or is Mayflower Hill somehow im­ mune from AID , till under the delusion that the disease only affects certain people who are s mehow not our kind? corr R. opho ' via e-mail

center on "what are you read mg'" The maga­ :me coulJ pro,·iJe

olby graduare· a way t

connect with the current curriculum and many varied department on campus today. J nnifer Mil op lillard '9 Hoffman E rare , lll.

Why the Change?

Congratulations on a \'ery readable is­ ·ue1 A for the [addition of'40 J columns in Alumni at Lar e, ! wonder if the member of the Fifty-Plus Club were con ulred before

n excellent idea and one that u·e have dis­ cus.1ed m rhe pa r. \V'e will explore making a

readmg 11 ·t a reg11lar feature.-Edirors

the' were lumped under a label "Early Year C rre_pondent." I- it pos ible that because

Thank y u for th article "Li,·in With ·

·ears rhi change was introduced!

Maybe the cutoff hould be after 5 5 year .

Hits Close to Home

:me. A impr

f Colb)' maga­

ed a I am by the ·rudent in

Pepper and at Colby, l am di·rurhed by the fact rhat until Uody) Hartley' "i it, many at Colby rill aw A ID a a 11 rant dt ·ea e. I am baffled that srnJenr· at Colby are till learn in , or wor e, had no know I dge of, the emotional i ue of the di ea e. When l graduated from Colby in 19 2, we were ju t beginnin to hear nd read the vaoue

Marjorie Gould (Murphy) Shuman '37 \'ia e-mail Although we did not consult all members of the

clas e affected b)' the change, we had heard from manv 194 s al11mni who wanted indii•idual clrus c011;spondents. Also, because of the larcre num­ ber of alumni (almost 2 ,00 ) being served in the "Fifty-Plus" categOT)' by a single comspondent, we rhoughr it best ro shonen the rime period in which multiple de ades are represented. The Early Years was selected to refer to these collec­ cii•e classes since the)• no longer are boimd b)' a pecific cut-off year.-Edirors

We welcome letters from readers. We ma 1 edir for length and clarit . Conwcc u.s at: Managing Editor

olby Magazine

and HI

mentioned in Colh)' magazine.

Durmg that time,

I uffer d the I

41 I Ma)•flower Hill Waterville, ME 4901-8841, or via e-mail: mag@colby.edu

·

f

two clo e friend to rhe di ease and the diagno­ .

of many other , I

Brian peer Karen Oh '9 designers Robert Gillespie Alumni ar Large editor rephen Collins siaff writer

'74

Jenna Klein '97 Alicia emiccolo '97 swdern conrribtaors corr Perry Jeff Earick on Karen Oh '93 Brian peer Earl mith Marc Gia Mary chwalm '99 Ali Teder '99 Cover Photo: Earl mith concribucing photographers

ome cla e like to keep their identity be­ yond 5

HI " in the April ed1ti n

ally Baker

ften wondered what

Administration: William R. Corter, president; Peyton R. Helm, vice presidenr for development and alumni relations; Earl H. Smith. dean of che College ; Maroarer iens '77, director of alumni relations Alumni Council Executive Committee : Joanne Wedd II Magyar '71, chatr; John Devine '7 , 11ice chair; David Beroquisr '61; James Bourne' 1; Arthur Brennan '6 ; Lisa A. Hallee ' l; Diana Herrmann' ; Gail Glickman Horwood' 6; Anne Hu ey' 0; rephen Lanoloi ' 5; Barbara Bone Leavitt '52; Lou Richard on McGiniry '67; u-an Jacobson esrer' ; M. Jane Power ' 6; Johnston Whitman '59 Colb)' i published four rimes yearly for the alumni, friends, parent of rudenrs, enior , faculty anJ taff of Colby College. Addre - corre pondence to: Managing Editor. Colby 41 I Mayflower Hill Waterville, ME 04901- 41 or e-mail to: mag@colby.edu

effect HIV wa h, vingon my fellowcla ·mate

and the students of Colby. urely, Colb h

on the inrerner: hnp://www.colby.edu/colby.rnag/

not remained unrouched by the rava e of the

Alumni Office

207- 72-319

3


from the hill

I A_ A More Perfect Union Lauding Bill Cotter, trustees make an honorable decision By Sally Baker

"A '

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Cc1lh1 \ ::.chcdul1n[.! and J;icilt­

l1nn 111 L.1111t.1I 11nj'r11\ L'll1L'llt,,

m-l.11\

tic' man;1,!.!l'I', ,mcl hidcll'n until

111clucl1nc: 11111.: nL'\\ huilcl111c:-.

,111,lfr1,·11d,

, 2)

mil111111 t•' . .I

1mh hl'c.w,e11·efclt1t\\',1'a'·en·

,,11d, "ht'llll'l,111' \\ill Ll'rl,llnh

tc:-· r111111rn· rn h1, 111,·alu;1ble lead­

'<I\' th,H ,11111>11'.'. the lll•''l 11111•1\l'­

'urpri,ec· l-rl1.1t\ .m undcr,t;Hc­

t'r::-h1p \\'hile he and Linda are

Lllll (h. lll[!L'' ,j LI rl 11!,! \I )LI I' [L'n Lll'e'

mc11t-I .1m L'Xrrcmcl\' 111c1\'cd

'till arnuncl 1'-.la,·tlrn·er Hill tl1

Smith frettccl th<H Cc1nn 11'c1uld "'"the \';111.

J'l'e',lcknt \\ ;h thL' (l'l'<l[l1111 I1(

;incl Lillcl,1 C11rrcr ll 'L're L''Ct1rtccl

,I'

fn1111

nc\\· '11•1'• )nun iric, f11r 'rudenr'."

l

l1

1 l' ' CL'J'ti11n in thl' S11,1 rn <i

I. I\ 1

, l .\t .\I I I(

I " " �

t 1111k rhi'

111.1.111,IS11l l lurn·ll:

"fiut .di 11l 1h1, ,1,1ek," l 'ul!h

,t

"\\'"

111l11l1e'l1t t1) n,11l1l' rh1 huilclin[.!

r '01 .111cl i-.::.1rl'11 ,rn,I Ll'11n :-\!kn I' '�6. hL' ,,11d. "I ,1111 nnr 1mh·

th.: c erl'mt1n1· hl'!.!<111. E,·en thL'll

Rut d1l' '"crl't 11 ;· i- ke11t. R ill

.1' L1r111ric' .lllcl l'cre·r Smith,

thi::- Lk.:1,11111 pf the hnard.

Thi, '' .m cxtr;111rJ111:ir\' !.!l'�ture

t.:1111d 1dc;1

fnr Bill t11 rccc1n• rht>

l'l1J1'\' 1t," !'ugh '<11cl. "Sn don't 'ell \"1ur CPlh\' ,t11ck." +


For All They've Done

wit and wisdom

Colb ·award d honorar · degrees in May to three persons for their conmbmi n in literature, hist ry and public service.

a memoir, Ob1ect L?s�ons· The Life of a Woman Poet in Our Time.

i n a blue space suit is taking your temperature, you can

A

probably assume that you have

graduate of Triniry College Dublin, he ha challen ed the idea of

a problem."

"Mother Ireland" a pre ented by Irish writers such as Yeacs, Joyce, O'Caser and

you wake up and somebody

"If

Ea,·an Boland, the preeminent woman p et of lreland, is the author

of ·e\'eral volume of poerry, most recently An Origin Like Wmer, and of

-Col. Jerry Jaax, Ebola virus

)TI0e. The Irish Times has called her "a remarkably

courageou woman wh

researcher featured i n The Hot

toad up to a powerful and con en·ath·e literary

Zone. describing the room

e tabli hment, ·uffered the con equences, survi\·ed the politic- and earned a kmd ofhero tatus." heser\'ed as theCommencement speaker

�:!

25 (see Paae 14). Alan Taylor '77 i the author f \.Vi llia m Cooper's Town: Power and Per uasion on the Frontier of the Earl)' American Republic ( 1996), 11·hich

at graduation cerem nie

n May

the USAMllD laboratory for the study of biohazardous materials.

"We drive to total extinction twenty-seven thousand species each

Bancroft Pri:e. He also i the author of Liberty Men and Great Prop1iewrs

year. That is killing off one species every twenty minutes. To me.

(1990), which examines the cruog!e of the early Maine settler

this seems like a particularly poor idea."

again t powerful land barons who owned much of the land by royal

-Associate Professor of Biology and Senior Class Teaching

nd a Ph.D. from

Award recipient Paul Greenwood. describing the implications of

Brandei Uni\'er ity. A nati\'e of Buxton, Maine, he i a profe or of

humans' lack of respect for

hi·tory at the Univer­

biodiversity. at his year-end

·iry ofCalifomia-Da,·i .

Spotlight lecture.

At a dinner during Commencement Week­

"I

e nd, Taylor ·aid, "[

had to change all of my jokes." -Greenwood. also at the Spot­

would not have become

light lecture, after being surpris­

a hi torian without [ meriti

deadly viruses are quarantined at

::: "

�on the "hi torian' daily double ": the Pulit:er Pri:e in History and the

charter. He eameJ a B.A. in hi tory from Colb ·

where persons infected with

"

ed by his parents, who traveled

profe- or of

from their home in Illinois to hear

hi rory] Hal Ra 'mond's

his speech.

example and his en­

u

'-------==='---1

c uraoemenr... . The

"

fact that l ha\'e enjoyed ome ucces i largely because

Gavel to Gavel

I had the best

At the Trustee Meeting on May 24, outgoing

of mentors and be t of

Jame

A. John on i chairman

Dean of the College Earl

wa a tuden t and when

Clockwise from upper left: Larry Pugh, Bill Cotter. James Johnson, Alan Taylor and Eavan Boland.

I came back [in

19 4-

mith was

elected Person of the Year by vote of SGA member .Woodfork presented

5] a· a teacher."

Smith with an in cribed wall clock

f the board and chief executive

GA. Al o

officer of Fannie Mae in Wa hington, D.C. Prior to joining Fannie

featuring a photo of the

Mae he erved as mana ino Jirector in corp rate finance at Lehman

at the meeting, Woodfork thanked

Brother and a pre·id nt of Public

Pre ident Bill Cotter on behalf of

trateoie , a consulting firm he

the

ounJed to adv1�e c rporati n on trategic i ue .He wa executive as 1�tant to Vice Pre·ident Walter Mondale from

197 7 to 19 l, a

"

U. . enate taff member and a faculty member at Princeton Univer1ty. He i chairman of the John F.Kennedy

I-

rudent Govern-

ment A sociation President Josh Woodfork '97 announced rhat

example� here, when I

ing

.\.

and chairman of the board

tudent organization. "One of

the hardest things for me a [ tudent A sociarion] president ha been at-

1c.....-"'-_....,uumi.�---_JJ" tending Facu Ity Meeting,'' Woodfork

enter for the Perform­

Earl Smith

f tru tee of the Brooking

aid, "and Mr.Cotter has been a big

In t1tution.He earned a B.A.in p Iitic l cience from the Univer ity

help to me there." But, Woodfork aid,"[ noticed that he u e this

of Mmne·ora and an M.P.A. in public affair from the Woodrow

really mall ga,·el, o

Wt! on chool at Princeton.John ( n aid he was deeply hon red b

Woodfork gave Cotter a gavel the size of a ba eball bar-also

the hon ora ry degree be rowed on him by the College but joked that "naming it John on P nd wa g ing too far." +

in cribed with thanks from the SGA. "That ought to get their

I thought he hould ha,·e omething bigoer."

attention," one of the tru tee aid.

5

U MMER

1997

COLBY


Putting It All Together I n tegrated Semester bridges dispa rate discipl i nes

E

ri c S a n d k r ' 0 0 o f Sugar

L.md.

anJ the EL �u.1sv lo prnh: th.: idea ( lf thl' <1rl t,t1 "(Jnd-dm en p<lWl'r." " udden l \ , " K idd reL.11 1,, " I under,tnt.J t h1: C\ lll(t: t n tht' Ren.11 ...,,inLe, .ind the idea of m t1:rd 1 u p l lll. 11'\ 'l udy exploded lll lll ) hr. n n ."

At:<lll )

T e x i l'" '\,., iti ldn 't ha\'l' wuc hed

phy, 1c-, \\ 1 r l1 . 1 tl'n·l( h >l j'Uk." W. 1rren

Nl'\\'herry '00 1 1f Vernnn,

( < Hl ll . ,

n d m 1 t ted he h a d n,1 hac kgniund 1 1 1

m u � 1 c , a n d " I dn:;1ded t l1 1 ' l!ll1 t1g 111." [ )e,p1te �uch m i , 0 1 \' l l l f.!', h n t h f1 N - l' ; i r

K 1J,I\ f.1 m i l ) foundil t l \ lll gr.;im a

' r u d e n t ' ' igned up f11r 'ulhy\ ne\\

1 11.IJ < ir t r \ nl 11

I n t egrat ed ,'eme,ter ,'t ml il', l'l'P!.!r, 1 111

pl 1 11 1 ry rmi..:ct' t ha t encuurage a n

l a ·;r 'rn rn:: . ;md ne 1 t hl'r h<t,I .111

1 11!1\l\ , J l l \ l' r i n r I ll h i gher

regret .

pinnl'l'nng rwl!ram

educat ion.

" T h e ,m,d l , l 1 be r. 1 I art uil lege are

I n t egra t ed Seme,tl'r S t ud 11:' 1' ;1 ed ue<H n1n de, 1 g n ed

re u ll'Le' I l l mre rd "c 1 -

m l 1 heral ,irt e ' plo re ,t

1 . 1 k mi,: . i l1:.1d 1 11g rnl e 111 th1,," ,he ,,11d The fn u nJa t 1tm lu funded

en

<>

cpncepr 1 1 r a nH1111e11 tnu' era in \\'lirkl

,t.111d-.1 lnne i n t erd h 1 p l t n ..1ry cour e'

C I V i l i:;l ( l l )Jl th rough t he rer'pL'c t l \ l' pf

,tl

th rl'e or four academ i c d hu p l i n e .

t h e r c11l lcce', K idd -,,iy,, hut

C

'nl h \ m u l r 1 -u1u r..,e L lu,ter "" "

''l' , l ll' l i t 1

pi lot c l tl'tcr r hat r;1 n la,r ,pr111g

lll1 11.JLIL

exam ined the ye; 1 r' hem een Wmld

hethl \ c .md d u n . i n d

1 ,1ml l l t h rough l n er,i t u re , mu,1c. plw,ic' a n d h 1 ,t<lr\ . Amung

War,

the integrated em

<

En l igh t ­

1 11 l, 1,t pnnc\ in.111gur.1I c ltNer. J 1,h Hard) '91 . the 1 m l y

h 1 wry, llllL I C l ll LI m m h rrnfe,,or,, ;rnd -'l'xu,1 l 1 t 1e' E.1't .md

L'll h 'r, . 1 1 d lw H!n1:d u p l:>.:c.iu'L' he h a d completed h t ' maior

Wc,t, which gmup' l i te ra t u re , h 1 , 1 u r\ .ind re l 1g111n u n1 r,e-..

R,1',L' l l hdore he l!radu<He,I.

Scme'rl'r :rudtL'' pi lnt du,ter left "1me "\\'nnk le' tll 1\ a h our,"

emc:-.ter 1 -, de 1gned to make conneL t ton' am11ng ,·ar1< 1u..,

1 1 .ir ly ,,1 1 I , "Jr\ d e t m 1 t c h

di;;cipl 1 ne, and rn give a brn<ider ontexr l1> the material nffered

1 t<l cre<He

" 'h,1 r l 1 e

>:. ; Ouliioi� Batt/I!,

ta ught John

_

tei nbec k ' novel Jn

h;1,J

emrh<hi:mc

onn\'er' -

< 1

an

to

l ,, 1 1

1 i lat l' the matem1l " m

\'acuum

e\\'herr) bmh o;aid rhey \\'Ou ld re ommend

t he i ntegra ted eme't r 1f t hey had a younger i b l i ng enr 1 l l 1 11g at

nlby. �'andler aid he \\'a cxci ted a

onn a he -aw the

program de, nptt m. "Thi wa JU t ab,o l u te l ' the k md of

harles Cono\'er ccwcred Holocau t refu..,ce' and ho\\'

t heir idea · h e l ped the U . . develop atom ic and hydrogen bnmh .

c,)ur'e and the t i me pennd I \\'anted to · t udy , " h :aid, "and I 'd heard fabulou th mg <1bout Ba · ett and

The in tegrated eme-ter program is funded by an endow­ h r i t ian A . J oh nson Endea\'or Fund of

, 1 1,,1,·cr Ll td an , m e,ume i n b , a n d t hat wa t he

� andl r and

uthrie and ahnut pol i t ic, a r i re and prott��t rnu-i · ; and

men t from the

educ.w 1m. I ' m part u ( 1 r . "

mg;m i.mal bit log\' u ur'c he t1h k earl ier i n ll'h1ch he fel t he

'hml ie Ra''l.'tt

the American labor mm·em n t ; Paul Mac h l in rn lked <lb1 ut phy ici t

w

rh 'IL. cllur'c made 'l.'n'e 1 11 the conte x t of the era, u n l i k e

how "the phalanx" and "the herd menta l i ty" were pl<lved nu t 1 11 Woody

fre h apprnach

I 1\ '" ,L,lrL'd 11(," I l a rdy "-ud, addtnl! th•lt

da

Thi- pring, h i torian Rob Wei,hrnt talked ahrn 1 1 the group lynam ic that made the Holo au t p n il1 l c

a

re, 1 l h e x u ted Jhout 1 t .md glad co h,l\'e been a

.1

\\·eh o knowledge t h, 1 t re, u l t, in a richer under,tand mg nf ,1 p t or epoc h .

nur'e from Thl>m�h he fdt t he l megrared

r.:q u t rl.' ment .rnd he \\ .m ted t l l r a ke n1w ni .1 re

nnce1 ,·l'd \\' 1 t h (1r,r- ·ear , rudent' i n m i nd, thL· i megr<lted

part i c u l a r con

1 rher prncr;1m .

EleH·n t i r,t - y l'. 1 r 'tudent.., .ind nn1 uprcrcl,b,men enrol led

e n ment and Rl'vn l u n 1 m : l 7 7 ) . [ , 00, . i u 1 l l .i hor . 1 t 1<111 h y Frl'm h ,

in stand-alone departmental cnur e,. The gnal

,1 hrnader

u 1 0 1 m H m ·nt hy foLL i i t\ and ,rud1:nr'

stcr

rh.111

inur i n tegrated -,eme,l e r c l tNer' nffered ne'l(l y l'ar .ire

llllll'l u1mpre­

e i bro t . "

Together they reeled o f f c o n n e t ion t hl.'y had m a d e d u r i n o

ew

York . Wei brot, who coord i nate the program, gl\·e J u l ie J .

the term, uch a; how t he de pair of W rid W a r l wa- r fleeted

K idd, d i rector o f t h e foundat ion, < large m a u re of cred i t .

in l i ter< tur

" T h i s i · a ca e," he -aid, "wher a lonor' i n t lie tual co nt r i b u ­

th

prap,ed rh

t i o n wa a formidal le a- her fi nanc ial con tribu t io n . "

l1 L Fl Y

.., U M �I E R

he reached for I rving

I 99 I

very we l l , "

aid. " I hate to ay we bonded becau e that o u nd

undergraduate experience. After r ading about M i h lan gel n in

Hist01')' of An

tru t u re and tyle of

mall c l a � � . top profe .or- and camaraderie that

de\'eloped. "I got to k now t w e l \'e peopl

K idd trace h e r intere�t in inrerdi c i p l i nary - rudy tc her own J ant:en'-

and lyric:. and e\'en in th

B l u e�. In add i t ion to the i n tegration of di c ip l mes, they

but. . . . "-Sie/>hen Collin ' 74

tone' novel The

6

andler o chee y,

1

1


,4P"

I periscope

By Earl Smith

Best Wired

T i m e l ess

reports that Colby 1 ranked among the nat ion'. rop 2 5 "b ·t \\' ired" CL l l eges

The rece n t rec onstruc tion of

USA Today

anJ uni\'ersities accord i n g to the May i sue of )'ahoo! Internet Life. M lT, orth11·e-t­

ern U n 1 l'er iry and Emerson Ct lie e rank at the Yery top of chool · mak i ng the best u e of

the

1 i l l er L i hrnrv

promp red l i bra ry arc h i l' isr

ancy Reinhardt r ) search

for early

i te ms on the

t i me p iece.

l 9 5 3 , i t em

A J anu ary 1 6,

l 9 ) 9,

b u i l t , hut rhat i rs hands were

,1nly

mor i<)nl e�· for sel'en v ::irs

top 2 5 . Other� include Dartmouth, R P l , Carnegie Mellon, Pnnc r n, ase We·rern, Pomona UC­

in

twice before writing them off. A new study has found that tudents ll'ho use rank ings are more l ike ly than their peers to earn top grade

all' a 1 t i ng the a 1T i 1·al of the opera t i n g mechan ism .

Dick S ewe l l 's play The Poec's Nocebook w i l l have its world premiere at The F untain Theatre in Lo Angele during the

Many Medalists

When George Taught Geo

'93

peer and Karen Oh

each hal'e 11·on l 997 bron:e

upcoming ea on. Set in Florence i n

rec enrly l(Ot an e - ma i l mes.;; age

ll'ork from the Coun c i l for the

frl m a former s tudent , Su e

Adl'ancemenr and

Turner

'66,

c t ted for h1 de i<>n of th

Ge rg

f Colb:· ( the

pnng 1 997 cover

and Karen'· medal

I l -0 _

in 1 96 3 -64.

and

managed b · Carole Fuller, a s 1 h·er.

got

f

tudenrs' affe c t ion

nearly

enior Class Teach ing Award

hanged her major. � he

tuck with

pani�h and i no\\'

teac h mg at the

"1

l

l leg

l ay

real i : LI," she

wld e1·eryone e l:e ho11· much

r rhe

c hoice was m u c h in ev idence

of

aid in her note, "that I had

i re,

D ist i n gu i shed I ndeed

ion , \\'as

"huuked" nn rocks and 1·en·

h, rleston.

the Blue

Light alumni new

, when the

1997

rec i p ient , Paul Greenwood, gaye the trad i t ional Spo t l ight

1

lect u re. A laroe a u d i ence of

lol'ed your c l a �. b ut I nel'er

.tudents and fac u l ty ( and

told )' )LI .

Pau l' parents, as surprise

"

gue t · ) heard the popu lar teacher exhort the commun i ty

National Schol ars

m e tabl ish a studenr honor

The tring of Colby ·tud n t w i n n i n g natit nal c hola rsh i p · oec

code and a lso to raise

longer nd L noer w i th t h i year' nota� I · i n c l u d i ng twn Fulbrig ht , two Ud al l , a Goldwater anJ a Wat on. Ful brights for re::iching

a

·i rant h i p have be n

1 99 l )

Literature Fellow from each state.

<he ll'a. "mad" when 'he haLI m 1�read the Cacalog11e b ut ,

bron:e medal,

"Pemaquid Point" ( from Emorional Traffic, David G dine,

t o the anthology, wh ich w i l l include work by n e former N EA

entered rhe cour.e bec au e �he w i t h m tll't �e

McGlauflin and other , Colby'· Weh i re rec e i 1· d a

grant from The University Professors Program a t

ment for the Arts. The NEA a ked Ira to contribute h is poem

-he a i d

the spnn

mag :ine. To the er dit f Ane te Fotiade ' 9, Keith

7,00

. . . Ira Sadoff ( Engli h ) w i l l repre ent Maine i n an anthology

from

wa for h r editorial d e ign i n

l 996 i su of the

the play is directed by

t itled W1iring Ame1ica, to be published by the Nat ional Endo\\"­

whn remembered

hal' l llg taken Geo

1 849,

Boston University to upport his work on its Pacific R im Project.

medals for th ir Colby d e ign upport if

a

lagni ficent t-- 1 u·rachc

Education ( CA E). Brian 11·a�

.

Deborah Lawlor . . . Suisheng Zhao (government) ha received

Regi ,t rar George Coleman of the

.

To Name a F ew

t-- le:rnll' h i l e , the hands ll'ere fi xed at c o'c loc k , the r i me when d< i l y c l a s · began .

Echo cm·er ) ,

M a i ners . . . . The Chronicle of Higher EdiKarion say that col lege that d isda i n magazi n e ran k i ngs m ight want to t h i n k

"·hen rhe l i brar · 11·as

Bcrkele\ , Reed and Cal Tech.

Brian

popu lation that makes on l , 1 2 percent of the tota l . Better t i l l , four of even freshmen w i th these lofry average are

1 11 the Waterl" i l le

Senrind rec a l l � that the c loc k face· and hands were in ta! led

computer a nd� the I n ternet. t-.1 1ddlebury join- Colb · as the

E CAC col lege i n t he

M oosecel l an e o u s Adam Elboim '97 a n d East Quad raised nearly 1 , 20 w i th their i l e n t auct ion , a l l to benefit W a terv i l l e H igh youngster headed to c o l l ege . . . . M a i ne ists w i l l wan t to k now that, of the 44 Colby tudents who earned better t h n 4.0 averages in the first term, 1 2 are from M a i n e . That 's 2 7 perc e n t of a

loc k

ll"arded m H un J u ng

con c i ou ness on u nderstand­ ing the i mporta nce of

'97,

preserving the world's

w h o w i l l teach i n Korea, and Morgan Pecel l i ' 9 7 . to teach in Germany. Mnrri· K . U d a l l cholar h i p· ( 70 award· frt m a fi e l d of more th n 3 50 appl icant· ) have gone to Heather David on '99

ecologi ca l system. Pau l i- the fourth Teach ing Award w inner, named each year by

an I A m y Lyon '9

. A Barry M. Ge l dwater hnlar h i p ( 2 2 award' from fie l d of 1 , 1 64 ) ha· b e n granted to W i l l iam Polkinghorn '99, and a Thoma J. War·on Fe l low-h i p (60 all'ards

the gradu a ti n g c las .

Students H o n o r Staff Srndent Assoc iation pre-ident Josh Woodfork ' 9 7 and v ic e pr e i d e n t Graham Nelson

'98

p a id spec ial tr i b u te to Thelma

P l usquellic at the year-ending All College Recogn i tion Luncheon in May. Thelma, 11·ho plans ro retire soon , has arranged this annual l uncheon for many years. She wa c i ted for her del'Otion ro all rndenr and, e pecially, for her beh ind­ the-scenes help to student leader . She's been -ecretary and rec eptionist and friend of Colby students s ince 19 7 2 .

V i e n s I s Al u m n i D i rector Margaret Felton Viens ' 7 7 h a s accepted t h e pos i tion of d i rector of a l u m n i re l a t ions, effec ti ve J u ly

a field of l 2 fi n a l i t ) ha· gone to Zahid C haud hary '9 7. Tll' Colby tu d e n t , J e n n ifer Mason '97 and Kate White '97, have heen ad m i t ted in t o the G e r m a n Parl iament ( Bu nde t a g )

from

c hoi c e .

1.

A splendid

h e replace Sue

Conant Cook

'75,

who ha

moved on to become assoc i a te

lntcrn hip Pr gram anJ w i l l ·tudy at the Un ivers i t y of Bonn in the fal l hefore pend in a eme rer a r<u l i a m e n rary int rn .

d i rector of planned g i v i n o .

7

'.:" U �I M E R

l 9 9 7

C 0 L B Y





Lin .J une l . 1 96 ) , 0. L l l l !.!l l H d1 S c h , ,, , [ .un 'h1 11 , h l l n rcCL"'"mcl B i l [

ne,ir

,,1 1 ,I , c re d 1 r 1 n !.!

)\ L11·ak . 1 .

'- ' J'L'L· 1 . t l h- L' lllLT l t 1 1'r,1fe,­

" ' r' Y 1·1 m 1w R 1 c h 1 rn m d 1': 11 1 !.! h l ' -) -) , l llcl

17 n'ar'

,1lcL 11 a> < H l w m c 11·1rh h 1 , f.urnh·

in f...: 1 , 1 1

Lin r h 1 , cl.11 . ,1frcr /ll 1-ear, , 1[

r 1 11c' r t l' Z u k , l\\ '"I ' ) I ,l' f 111'<..'l' \\ h, l l l l'!.!L'\I

Rnn,h ru l e , 1':et11'.t hL'!_!,111 rn l m !.! 1 r"c l f--.1

h i m 1 , 1 k.1rn .1nJ fl\ f r. 1 i n " ' h'-· '-° ' ' u kl

\ . 111,[111

irl l l c \\\'

,,

h , c · J ' \ · \ ' ,I

[l t) - H 1 ' t,i thc:r, Z.tL h,11"-..

. l ' J\Lllh r , i \-: , 1

re r u rn ,m,I hdp h 1 ' \ 1 \Ull!.! C < 'Llilrr\ . "t.._l t

:-\n!_!11 '-·rn·1 ( h·

t h'-' >IX t'-· 1 1 , m· h 1 d1 ,c h' '"I , r uJ e n f ' 11 h"

tr,tJ 1 L ll HI , i\ 1.11 ;1k.1\ ;:r.m,lfothLT g.11·e h 1 1n

11·cn t f1' f h <" l ' n 1 rL' J Sr.H'-' ' f< ' ' f tkh . ,1 1 1 h i t

h 1 , 1 1.1rne \ , 11 ,1 , the 'L' ll l , 1 r c hief cit 1( 1 , u · ,

, Hit' re t u rne'-1

K 1 t 1 1 r u l1 1c.u 1 c l!"l ,1ncl \\';\' .im, in!.! d1c1'<" 1 11

1 m 1'1 1rr;1 1 1 f n 1 [e, 1 1 1 r ht• ,1d 1-.1 1Kt'llh'IH , ,t . 1--.: e'lll',l, . he ,,1 i cl . "I ,llll r'r'1Uc1 , ,t t h e m . "

ch.trge 111 the cel<:hr;1 t 1c111,. :-\ l r h c \ U!.!h the Ile'\\

freL•,lcl lll hrllll !.! h f ,) fre ,h ruch 1 l f

[ , ' Kern ; 1 . i n d ,1 1 1 .m: 1' ! .1 1 I ll !.!

The 1·c'<H .1fter h t ' !.!r.h l u . 1 f 1 1 1 11 fr,1111 sons Rober

l'· t l r i, 1 r 1 ,m , J\ L1 1 . 1 l . 1 h .1 L l k n 1 111 1 1 . ] , , n !.!

C 1 1 l h 1- . 11 · h i l e , , n . 1 1 · 1 , 1 t (11 I--.: e n 1·.H r . 1 l . n 1 -

hdnrt'. t h H h e 11-. i u l cl '1L· n 1 te t h e 11 c 1 rk , 1f h 1 , l i tl' t c i 1--.: l'm a

1 · '-'r' i (I , he lllL'f :-\ l i c e' 1'e rn u n t 1 1 0, f ,,b,!_! i , .i h r i ;: h t . i ncl ,i t t r.K t 1 1·'-·

In tlw '-"nh I 96l'' · Ill c i n t tl.° I J'•H I< 111 ,,f cm.inc 1 11;H 1 1 1n . ,in c l 1>c]Ut'nr

\'l l u 11!.! h l ,!.!h ,c h ,,,,[ 'L i e n c c re,1c her. T h c 1· \\'t'IT m ; 1 1- r 1 c d r h .H '·' me

\ 1 1ung Kem .in < [,HC , m,m . Tcim i\ !h 11·;1, ''r!.!.m l : L'c1 ",t uckrn . 1 1 r l 1 fr , _ "

\ L'<lr. S in c e 1 9::-6 , h e h , , , ll ' n rk e cl t-clr the I--.: e n 1·;1 l n ,- r 1 t u r e ,,f

fmll i ll !:! ruhl t c .1 11,l 1'ri \ ,\tt' tun,], t1 \ brin(! , , 1me ,,f l--.: t 'n1·,1\ bri !.!h(6[

E,1 uc .I ( ll1 n , II' h er e , h e I l e)\\' he;lcb a ll <l t i c1n;1 [ c h L' lll 1 ' ( 1'\' c u rr 1 c u ! u m

\ tlun;:,Ler' ( t \ 't uch in t h e L'n 1 rc,l _' u r e " J\ ! h, 11·; 1 \ p l .i n rt'c e 1 1·t'1..l

d c 1 · c l c'J'l11t'IH (t'<lm

<UJ'l'< 'ft ,-fl \ l l l rre,1clen r J , ih n 1'cnnech- .mcl fr, ,m

dw

hc,1clc , ,(

T h e c c1 u p l l· h a , r h rL·c " lib : C h r i , tcirher, ;1

,1

FrL· n c h Jll,l j l \ r ll' h l) rc r u 1·n, ( ( ) C, 1 [ h· ; l e " j u n 1< 1 r r h 1 , fa l l : R, ih=n

n umhl'r (it l'.S. ( t \ l l e'!.!t'', 111cl ucl t n ;: Ct '"'\' 11rc'<Jck nt R 1 \l1crt E . L .

( na mccl fur 5 t r i cl e r ) , >1 \t ltl (l) !_!r,1clu ,Ht:' frrnn r h e l n re rn . i n c i n , 1 1

�rnder. O n e , , f the'l' pr1 1 ll l l , 1 11!.! ,., , L ill!.! ' [ L kk n r ' \\';l< Ch.irk' r

B,i c c ,1 Ll u rL'<ltC rrngr,1 m ;If r h L' r'rl' > t i e!h\ll< 5 r . 0. h r1 " , S c h c h 1 l 1 11

:-\ngWLTI\ I,

1 96-f.

I

b1 c1k.1\ C tlU<in . .-\11!_!\\'c'll\'1 gr. 1clll<HL'd tn)Jll Ct1lh1· i n

a 1 rn h 1 : <1llcl s .1 m u e l . 1 5 . <lt r c n J 1 rn ! r h c Lcn;m ;1 ,eu mcbn· h i,i r,1 1 11 !.! ' '-° h c 1n l . ,1 bl \ 1 11 \! ,1 1 rn h .

Ct)Jl t l l l l l<'.1..I h 1 , ecl uc, H l t 'll , l ( 'he l ' n 1 1·cr, 1 r1· , ,f )\ f . 1 , ,,i c h u ,c r r ' .

cl!lcl rhen ret urnee! ( \ '

K e rn

l.

F�, l 90L1

� L 1 1·;1L1

hL· h; 1cl hc:en .1p111 1 1 11red

hc\!<111 h 1 , C l rt'er in p u h l t c 't'rl' tCe 1n 1 9 7 6 "' < l " l't,lll t

cha1 rm,m ,,f rhc N .1 r 1<1n,d B, m k , it f..: c·n1· c 1 . ,1 kn l'' "t frtim 11·h 1 c h ht'

'L' C re r,1 r1· in rhe J\ ! i n i <t n· c it" F i n < m c e . 11·herc he 11-.1, re'l'' ' n ' i h l c t11r

J'[,l)'L'LI . i c e nrr;1 [ rc1lc 1 11 rhe Llc1 L' l t 'J'mt'nt , if f..: e ny;1 ,1, ,1n cct \lit 1m1c

c t 1,11 cl m m in!.! 1'n1gr.1111> ft)r l' i l mernl ,[,111 , , r, fn 1 m c 1 1 u n t r i e ' m c l u ,l -

J'!111·er I ll E.hr :-\ (nc,1. C, i l h· g;11·c h 1 1n ,m h , , n ,1r,1r1· clc 1c rc 'r,1rc tn

tn !.! r h e

t h ree \ ear, hefort' h 1 ' u n u m L•h

1 90 0 ,

ck'<Hh , 1f .i hL'.lrt < l [ (,JC k . Ch,1 rk' ,m,I

U S. ,mcl fnr the \V,wlJ B . m k a n d U n 1 tL'cl N anc 11b <l>!etK 1 e , .

I n 1 9 /9 h e 11-;1-; ;icceprecl 1 11 tc' ,1 1·e,1r- l , m !.! pc \:,(gr,1cluarc l'n1gr<lll1

:Lhml :-\rnr11 l'n1· 1 \ ,, 111 Perer e n r, i l l ecl L hr f,1 1 1 a ncl 11 .i' n.imecl C, 1 [ h1·"

1 11 1« 1! i nc 1 l ,m,I e c , m , 1111 11.° Je1·e[, ,1,m e n r at rhe \V,1,,drc)11· \\ l i l " m

\lUl'rnncl 1 n g fre,hman m.lll 1 1 1 rhl' C l . 1 " , ,f � L'L10 1 1 1 I he 'l'f l l 1 !.! .

:(h,)c l l ,1f r u b l i c and l nt e r n a r i 1 1 n a l :-\ ft;1 i rc a t rri ncerc1n U n 1 1·er-

� Li1-. 1 l.1 (1\

, l ( [L'l1Li Ct)lh·. " H e

:,. 1 t y . Thert' he \\'<l" befrienllecl b1· t l l l C , 1 ( t h e l l n I \'erc i [ I", In tl'[

hcl 1 e\'\�J :,.trnngh- in t lw J't HI L'r ,,f ccl u c , m t , n , " )\ f;11·,1 k a rec.i l lecl .

J'IT>m 1 11 e n r ,ch,,]ms, t h e ! a r e .-\ r r h u r Le11·i;, 11·h,1m he c reJ i r ' ll' l ( h

Charlcc .-\ng11 L'n\'l C l 1 C l lllf,)!.!Cd

"e,pe c 1 .i l h- a l 1hc·ral ,1rr' educ,1 r 1 1 , n . ,-\ nd he cll'<trh-

de1·e[,,p i n g m u c h ,1f the p h i [ ,,:;,1phy r h a t guidc:; h 1 '

lt11'ed 'nl b y . " I n 1 969. )\, L11·;1 k.1 fol l t 111 e e l h i - c c ' u ' 1 n t, 1

1n1rk rc1clay. Fnl \,,11· 1 n g a year 1nrh h i , fom i h· ar rri n c e t u n . he rcrurne1..I r,1 K e n y a "' :-ern,1r a " i , r . 1 n r

J\, [ ayfloll' r H i l l .

1 ay,1 L1 11-<h then . a ' !ll l\\ . ,1 ,en11u' ,r uclcnr 11" 1 f h an

<ecrer,ir1· i n rhe fi nance m i11 1 , t ry ,111 J . , 1 1·er t h e n e x r

l lbar iahle <1ppl' t 1 te t u r 1 n (urm.1 t 1l\n, , , cc1m p u l , 1 c m f o r

se1·eral years. ,en·eL1 "" depur\ 'ecre rn ry in the m 1 n 1 ' -

prec 1-,1on a nJ a n u n ca n l l\ a b t l 1 t 1· w remembcr f,1c t , ,

t ries , , f l o c a l gt11·e rn m e n t ( 1 98 7 ) , a[.!ric u l tu re ( l 9c'9 ) .

Jare ·

em· i rl1n rn e n r a n d n a t u ra l rest)LJ rce, ( 1 99 1 ) and Jah,r

and ocher de t < 1 1 k ( H t > u n Ll e r , ta n Ll tn t!

nf U . 5 .

and m a n �,,111·er de 1·el npme n r ( 1 99 ) ) .

h 1 wry :rnd pnl 1 t ic� ll'<l u l d n 1· a l r h a r nt any A m e ri c a n . H 1 fan m te h"ok is Dav id l--1;1 l he r,r;1111 '� a n d h i ,; 1 d l l l a r e R o h e r r K e n nedy and

Tht! Bt!s! and che Bright<!S! .

I n r h e J\ ! i n i , t ry e l f Er1 1' iwnmenr ;-rnd

)\ lamn L u r h e r K i ng J r. )

Enlenng Colhy i n the r urhu k n t V i etnc1m \Var era .

o f a \Xlorld Ban k -spc,nsnred fore s t ry ,l e 1·e l o1,m e n t pn.,j e c r and 11·,1s

layaka

a k e y p l aye r i n r h e p l a n n i ng of the 1 99 �

found rhe experience "fo,c i n , H l n g . " A n d , nn d o u b r , my�rify i n g . H e W<t<,

nrher

. N . Conference

<Wl

Em· i rn n m e n r and De1·el c1pmenr h e l d i n Ril' de J an e iro . .-\ nd i n the

reccd l , an ''obsen·er" of both t h e \\'ar prnre,rers and

black tud nt

l a r urn l R e�c1urce,, he

ll'Orked ro res,1h-e prnblems t h a t ha,i impeded the 1 m �' l e me n t a tic1n

lv l i n is r ry of Lahc1r a n1..i J\ hnpnll'er De1·e l11pm e n r . h e a"i,red i n

demon-.,t rator,, l1t'ren u n a b le to fa t h<1m t h e p<bsion

Kenya's i m 1, J emenrar ion of t h e l nr ernar 1 o n a l rr,1gram for r h e

hur a l ll'ay� e a ,er ro u nd e rstanJ t h e 1 ,� u e"

E l i m i n a t ion

" l f o u n d all k i nd� 11f en n u ra ge m e n t and 'uppnrt < H Cn l by , " he

II

,1f C h i ld Labor and wordi nared the ::. l \I \I E R

m i n is t ry ' s prer,1-

I q q �

c '-' L B )



tht' l 'N S \X 'orlJ S u m m i t for

ft,r

rat1,1n

11·here he excels-hur ab\1 on <.!l'n<.!r,1rhy.

� lK t a l Dt>n� !,,pm t' n t , in c,111enhagen.

\X

t>. layab'� 3ppl 1 i ntment by Pre,1d,·nr LJ.1n1L I

1 d1 the >LI Pf'Llrt nf h is mm istr\'. he

s11ent the

<imp

1 99 5 - 9 6 <l C dcl t> m i c 1·ear at

t-\; Hl'<lrd\ J 11hn

Gui cmmen t.

F.

ti lni

in the srring nf 1 996 \\ '1' \\

llkh

pniiseLi <imong the 1 . 2 m t ! l inn 11enple

Kenned) Sc h1,11! ,,f

t h e K i s i i ,li;,rric t , ll'ht'rt'

e<1m 1ng a m<btL'r', clegrt't' in

1if

ti byab\ 1�( 1pu l.ir­

itY <ilsn arises in no s m a l l mea<ure

fr,1111

h1,

11 uhl ic ad mm 1�trat1< in 11 hde h 1:i :iun Chn:,­

<1h i l i ry to blend old rra d 1n,1n::. a n d c u l t u ra l

topher 11 a:i J fre,hman at C11lbY. The \\'eek

ohl igminns ll' ith the Jemancl, , ,f mu,lem

before h1, H<ln ard cummencement , he

otatesmansh ip . On the same day rhat he

rece1Yed 11urd that he had been n<tmed

began 1'repararions

renmmenr .;ecrernry 1·1wnmenr and

n( the t'I, l i 11 1,trY uf En-

for an Afr1e<111

m i n t n!l

i n1·estment sympos i u m to be held in Den-

atural Re,11urce,.

A street market i n M o m basa

1·er, for insrnnce, he <i lso arranged the

" Hal" l ng heen ,1 ! ln\\'ecl the rn1·i lcge uf a t t e n d i n g sume of the

purchase of four I i 1·e goa ts to appease a fam i l y that had refused to bury

" [ ha1·e

rhe body of an estranged 11·ife in the yard of her m<ttrimon1<tl hnme.

hest educational m- nr u uons in t h t' U n i ted � tares." he s<tid.

ah1·ay fe l t 1 t 11·as Jn obl 1gannn tu make u_ e ,1f \\'hat l ha1·e learned

I n N a i robi he is a me mher of <tn internat ional l y recogni:ed

m gol'ernment serl" l ce.

gm·ernmen t ; i n Kisii he must a lso be a fac i l i tator for cons t i tuents

H i , resron, 1 b d i t 1es in fi l l i n!l r h 1 , ubl ig<t t 1 , 1n are cfau n r 111g. The m 1 11 1 try is l<trge- 1 2 .OC10 em11loyee, anJ an annual hudget

\\'ho seek j obs, school placement for the ir c h i ldren and a myriad of

,1f S 1 3(1

ocher favors. N o day pas:ies 11· i r hout Jo:ens of spe c i a l apreal s from

m d l wn-and rife 1nrh rnl 1 t i c a l anJ p h i kN1rh 1cal confl i c t ,11·er lw11·

con s t i t uent;, for fund d ri 1· e · for needy c auses. At t h e i r h1m1e in

to encourage de1·e lopmenr ll'hde presen· i n g thc e1w irnnment .

N a i ro b i , the M<tyakas ha1·e a ste<tdy floll' of 1· i s i tors frrnn K i s i i, nfren

"Keny;1's grearesr prc>hlem 1s po1·erty ,"

t'I, hirnka

explains. "and \\'e

unexpec ted but a l ll'ays rec e i 1·ed grac iously and 11·e l c o med

struggle m fmd ll ' a \' ' w gr,111· ancl expand the ec,1n,1nw 11·h i l e at the 'am [ lnl pre:ien·e our n,1 r u ral rt',uur•e'."

:\

t<1l I urder for a ncl t l L l il

uf2 m i l l ion that ha' the ll'nrlJ\ ll1l''t r<1111dll- gr,111·111!l p,1rulatinn

3

for

meals. Mm·ak a' s unfa i l i ng \\'armth and good h u mor i m part no sense L l f h i s hec nc , seem i ng l y imrns s i h le sched u l e . And here, behind the

(m

loc k ed gates of the c ompo und. he a lso finds t i m e tn heir tend

percent r!u,, annua l l y ) , but t-. \.1yaL1 . 11·1',1 r,1u t 1 11eh· \\'llrb fr,,m 5

garLlen::. of m<tg n i ficent tloll'er,.

a.m. u n t i l m1dn1ghr, seem, equ,1! r,1 the r,1,k.

" U n c l e B i l l i s a :ih i n i ng example of true patr i1)( is m and decl ie<1-

K ny.1' leader, h 1 r ha., affi rmed rh,1r the 1ntc�rau,1n uf de1·e!,1r­

t1on w g\lod causes and rn the you t h ll'ho knoll' h i m , like myself. " Peter :.\ng11·enyi s a i d .

ment anJ enl"lrnnmental rr,1tccn, 1n 1 , the unll- r,1th tu a su:itamnhle

t-. by<1L1\

The pn11ularity he h c 1 ::. e a rn e d from h i s careful bal anc ing of

m 1 n 1. try ha preprtred a cnmprehe n , 1 1·e lt>ghl,m 1·e p;icbge rh,it he

J u t ie::. ha, prompted many tu encn urage h i m to r u n (,1r a seat in

future, and, in an efforr tn turn th1, 1 ·1,1 1 1n 1 n r 1 i < Kt 111n ,

helieve

ll'd ! '>trike .i rea>Lm,1hle h1 lanc<:'. H e i ., Cl lnf1Jcnt rh,H

P.n l i,1men t . Bu t Mavak.1 says he i o not i n r e rested in elec r i 1·e

nf

ru l i t 1cs . "I ha1·e other respons i b i l i t ies. " he s a i d . "espec i a l l y w t he

Parliament 11·dl ad 1pt the rlan. 11·hich i n c l uJe, a c,1mh1nar inn

pe,)ple of my d is t r ict ll'ho re ly upon m e . "

educar1onal program� anJ firm <:' 11\' i rnnml'.nrn l l,111·,.

Beside;,, rnl 1 t 1c s is a r isky business in Kenya. One

In h i wle a permanent 'ec retan' , t-. la yak,1 ()\'er­ see., ac t 1 v 1 n e mm

P l an (

EA P ) ,

the

forth b y

a n n n a l E n 1· 1 ronmen t<l l .'\ c -

parry. the Kenya A frican N a t ional U n io n , ha;, ruleJ

de� 1gned t u <K h i e1·e goa l ' ' e t

s i nce 1 96 3 , ll'h n Keny<t bec a me a repub l i c . fir;,t

of the

n 1 t ed

a t inns Confe renc e nn

ronment and De1·e l o p m e n t .

oun try ha1·e

Wmbhor

E1w 1 -

under founding rre,, ident J nmo Kenyatta and. after Kenyatta's death in

aro u n d rhe

1 97

, under M L) i . Today, there

are i nc reas ing c h a l lenges from the oppos i t ion parties

l ll l'c l veJ t he p u b l i c and p ri 1·<1te sec­

( there are

tor , inc l ud i n g ac a d e m i cs a n d c om m u n i ty l eaders , to

1 ) , and a conti n u i ng bartle over consr i r u ­

J agreemen t with a nd part i c 1 ra r i,1n i n reac h i ng N EA P

t i onal reform threatens general elec t ions to be h e l d t h is fa l l . Th is

obj ective . "Th mg a r e vet t i n g h e t t e r , " he -;C1 i d , " b u t ll'e h a1·e a

J u ne, on the e 1· e of the nat ional Madaraka D ay obsen· a r i o n ,

en

u re hro

very

!1

g

Many h 1gh e t

work

wa y

t

go .

t horn

"

in K i i 1 h a d an t ic ipated h i

of govern m e n t

and hi

except1 na l l y

gol'ernment sec u r i ty forces c lashed w i t h oppos i t ion demonstra­

;,erv 1 e po i t iun -his

tors, spar k in g protests and loot in g i n central

promotion t o t h i s

i . able to g i 1·e such conn i c t s a wide berth. "] t is my o b l igation, as

extraordinary educat ional background made h i m

wel l

1

see i t , to ret u rn as m u c h as I c a n to my own country," he said. " ] c a n

qual ified. But 1 1 1 Kenya ·uc h arpoinrments are

1gned not only on the bas1

airob i .

Mayaka is nel'er d i s t a n t from the fray, but as a c i l ' i l ser1·ant he

ready del'ot ion to

do that best r ight where l a m . "

of qual ifi cat ion and experience-

13

�1 �1 E R

I 9 9 I

C LI L B Y



The d e C L ' >I m h J n 1 be madc hv 5 a . m . . -o \ h n K t' 1 th S r 1 - fur1.. I l1f the Ph vs 1 a l P lan t

-+ . ' O \ n

D ·p

ru n n t ca l led Pr � 1 ..knr B i l l

mmencem n r mornt nl! , nJ

ra uw , ' I \\·e n t

ur anJ

k 1,1ke I . "

ouer

1 bs · n•e-d , ' I r I lk

>r te r at 'ILlrt llf

i I . ; m d u r en ui::: h . . .

'\ , 5 : 1 5 a . m . . th 1..l U l k l \' drie l and trcn'port d b\' Ph) 1c I Ph n t 1\'< rk r- to

ymna.ium. D\' L the fi Id hllu�e h LL m m J w i th ac n n t f r t!-w fir<t ind )r

01T1m · n em nr � tn e

cm n J th m

·

t h rong

1 9( 5 .

r � i n,... I d l)U t ::1 grad w1

rl l�ard., and h u,,.,... 1..I eo c h , th�r a the · bu.r l J t ' t h e i r r lac ·,

p,1 ked tht' r II''> b e h i nd th e m and j m m e d

rhe I nchers n I

th id ' ·

1J 1-. l rrha

, m.ine I a

per du r," .h

n ar unJ

, id, "i t L al o r h


Below G a l l a n d l la n

'97).

n m: \\'ht 1 kl'1..' J'' 1 he 11n 11.. L'" a l 1 ''L: I l l 1 he nbL' l \ l''>-mayhl' . i ' . i rl'.tder,

opposite B r r a n D ow l i n g

n t i r ; 1 \\T i t e r, 1 t 1 ; 1 y hL' . i ' < 1 l 1 '> L L' ne r . n o t ; 1 u im pu�er . . . . Th\l,L' Jll' t i p l e

Hadan1

'70

( M r ka

recovered from a severe leg i n 1 u ry to walk across the stage Below Chrrs C h u n g (left) and Brran Chung (rrg h t ) . c o u s i n s of H y u n Jung

'97.

had a l l t h e

rrght equipment.

,,. ht 1 k eL' p t h ; 1 1 d re;1m , \\'h l 1 .l rL' hu-,1•i L < 1h l c 1 1 i r h l ' 1•rPLl''' of c re, J l t \ 1 1 y

1h pruduu . t h l') k e er t he

L'\'L'll 1 huugh t h L·y m . 1 y llL'\ l'r <K h 1 t' \ ' L'

Lkmnc r;l(\ , if L re. t l l \' l t )' ; 1 1 1 \'L'. . . . I h t m 1 1r .mJ r.1y my l"l''>JlL'L t fu l 1 r i hu 1 L' t t 1 \ 1 lh\

(1 ir 1 h l' p.irt 1 1 p l . 1 ) '

. . . in l hl' n -. h 1 n g , mJ -. hl' l t l' r t ng

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" l l'J'" f 1't 1m t h L· g\ m fl\ l\ lr !ti reCL' I \ L' h 1 d 1 pl nm . 1 ,

\\'d' t h L· fi r ... r , if r he [!r.1du . t t L'' l \ l JL'ml l ll , t a t e " r h e C1 1 l h\

J.! r< t h , ...h a k e

a nd fl i p . "

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e x p b 1 neJ the

r rt i c e "

t u t he 'l' n 1 < 1r... : \\ , i l k up 1 1n r 1 1 t hl' ,t.ll�l', e x t end

your lef t h . 1 nJ f or t hL' J 1 plunu, gr,1b t h L' J 1 r l \ lm,1, L' X t L'nJ the right hand t t 1 ,h , 1 k e h.mJ, " n h t hl' prl''IJL' n r , . 1 11J t h en ,1' y1 1 u ' rl' cn 1 , , 1 n g t he ,1 ,1gc tl 1r t h e ta 'L'I \\' 1 t h r h e r1chc h.inJ f ro m right , 1Jl' nf t h L· m o r t , 1 rh, i ; ud ln l h l' ldr ,1Je. And m i ll', �\, ,,, ;1JdeJ. :he .md

u i - f au i l l ) m,1r h a l Thum.i' L1ll1J.!' t,1ff, Cr; m f, i rJ F<1111 1 h Pn1-

fe..,.. o r l lf R e l 1 g 1 u u ' �·r ud1c ... , JL'lllllll tr.HL'd r h 1 -. r n iceJu rl' l,1-.r year f or r llL' f 1 r-.r t i me , /\ In" .1 11..I,

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t h 1nJ.!. The\ . t l l ,ee med to L'nJuy 1 r . Thl' Cul b v gral , ,h,1kl' . m d f1 1 r g1 1t h 1 g .1rrl.iti... e . " A n t H hL'r h r i g h t

11.. l e , ,,,1J nc,\ll 1 1f �· rudcnr ... J , m l CL' K a ..... man ,

\\'<l' r h<ll Rrian D1l\d 1 ng \\'( H i l d get h 1-. d 1 r k 1 m , 1 .ifrcr , 1 1 l "bel. lll'-e �u m m L' n cl'mL' n t \\'a-. h e ! J indutir , \\ 1 t h ,1 b a n 11 1 , r c r . " A fe\\'

week.. bL'fme Cum menLc m c n r , L\ 11\ l i ng wa-. k nocked from h i b i c y c le h y a c a r a n J , u ffe rcJ . 1 -.c m 1 u l e g l llJ Ur\ . "We

found o u r that

he \\ a' guing 'ur and tn·cr'-th 1 , vcar', term for che llldoor cer­ c m n ny , " , 1 1J Ka , ,m, 111-" w h c n h e ''"' the ban11 1,tcr. l e wa:. a goal of

h1:. r h y , 1 c a l t hcr. 1ry. " Pnippcd ( m c rutche, w1rh J irloma i n hand,

Duw l mg waveJ hack tu h i, cla!>,mate< � r a nd mg ovation before hnrp1ng Jown the :.rer' from t h e ' r a ge . e x t tu Dowl i n g 1 11 t h e front fll\\' uf t uJents ar Molly Mcle llan,

whu haJ twi teJ her ankle at the

enim Bal l the n ight before and,

un fam i l iar w 1 rh h r c rutch, couldn't make i t up anJ o\·er. A · Mcle l lan h a i red at t h e �tep ,

otter swept aero :. the �tage and hand­

dcl i \'cred her d i p lo m a . Cynthia Pomerleau, who dreamed of following in the Colby foot t p of her br xhcr, Brian ' 9, and ·i ter, Pamela '9 1 , acrificed much of en ior Week a ·he pur-ueJ a econd dream. On Thur·day in LaCro ·se, W i- . , that one c ame t rue when he won the heptathlon, becomi ng

CAA

olby' fir ·t woman NCAA c hampi n . When

Corter announced her ach ievement to thunderou cheer from her cla smates during the

aturday Baccalaureate

erv ice, Pomerleau

was st i l l en route back to Mayflower H i l l . "Wh n I recei"ed my dipl ma," he a i d later, " l j u t remember thinkino how Pre idenr

C O L B Y

-. u M M E R

1 9 9 7

16 J


Eava n B o l a n d

" . . . [As a young a d u lt a n d begi n n ing writer 1 n D u b l i n , I re la n d ] I a d m i re d t h e p o e t s a n d t h e p e o p l e who felt f r e e to e x p r e s s t h e m s e lves i n t h a t p r i v i l e g e d a n d powerful environment. B u t what a bout th e people w h o d i d not? . . . What about all those m e n a n d women w h o nearly wrote poems. who were a l m o st fiction writers. wh o never q u ite became dramatists ? M e n a n d wo m e n , n ev e rt h e less. i n whom t h e f i re of creativity b u rned b u t who for some c i rc u msta nce or some reason o r some a b­ sence of good fort u n e or ed ucation never wrote those boo k s . H ow did we assess t h e m 7 " For you as the graduating class at t h i s wonderful co l l eg e ,

I

b e l i eve th is w i l l be a q uestion

that will c o m e to have i m portance 1 n y our l ives . You a r e g oing to go from t hi s place with all y o u r g i fts i nto a n exceptio n a l ly d e m a n d i n g and fra ught world . Whatever you do, a l most more w i l l b e d e m a n d e d of you t h a n you c a n g ive. i n a n d out of your p l a c e s of work. 1 n a nd out of yo u r h o m e s . The g reat cor­ n e rston e s of o u r age a n d o u r t i m e . t h e i n st1tut1ons of c o m m e rce a n d knowledge a nd i n formation, w i l l a l l l a y t h e i r c l a i m s o n v o u r e n ergy. A t t h o s e times y o u w i l l t h i n k bac k . I ' m s u re, to t h i s p l a c e , w h e re perhaps in some c lass or some proiect of study or some a l l- n i g h t co nversation with your f r i e n d s , you to u c h e d o n that deep w e l l s p r i n g of 1nvent1on a nd belief which we call creativity and which really is c re­ ativity And i n those m o m e nts, free of eve ry other d e m a n d , you k n ew i n some recess of your m i n d and your s p i rit that at this moment you w e r e u n i q u e ly yourself. " [ H ] ow a r e we to honor those moments foreve r ? O n e way i s by g o i n g o n . to conti n u e to write the books, to a c h ieve t h e exce l le n c e . to compose the m u si c . And then, of cou rse, t h e re is some­ t h i n g to s h ow for c reativity ta n g i b l e a n d v 1 s 1 b l e . B ut j u st take a l ittl e bit further t h e a rg u m e n t that I a m m a k i n g . I ma g i n e that it 1 s n o t o n l y yourself b u t some c h e rished f ri e nd w h o h a s g iven y o u that evi­ dence of that creativity. You have seen it i n this college i n their conversations. maybe i n somet h i n g they a c h ieved o r spoke a bout. Ten y e a r s f r o m now-a n d , g i v e n how i m p o rtant a n d h o w powerfu l a re th e f r i e nd s h i p s you m a ke in C o l by , ten years from now that friend w i l l o nl y be more che ri s hed-sup­ pose te n yea rs from now that friend ha s not written the book, ha s not perfo rmed the m u s i c, has not created th e s c i e ntific p a ra d i g m you know they a re capa b le of. Will that make you t h i n k less of the powe rf u l , precious g ift i n them which you once saw a n d which we ca l l creativity? N o , of cou rs e you won 't t h i n k less of them . I f a nyth i n g you may feel closer to t he strug g l e and isolation and press u re th ey have g o n e through w h i c h m i g ht have d i stracted them from t h e i r g ifts . . . . " B u t we s h o u l d a l s o r e m e m b e r that the dream of creativity l ives i n far more people t ha n ever get to write a poem o r design a n airplane or evolve a mathe matica l a n swer. Those people who keep that d r e a m . who a r e hospitable to the process of creativity even t ho u g h t hey may never a c h i eve its product, they keep t h e democracy of creativity a l ive . . . . "

17

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C 0 LBY


C1 1t t cr h . 1ll rl'u 1g1 1 1 :l·ll 11w t hl· d . t \ hd 1 1rl· . i n d hrn1 l'll ll lll I \l . t' I l l he , h , 1 k 1 rn.! h 1 ' h : 1 n l l , 1 1 1-.1 , 1 , I l l \ hn 1t l w r . 1 111l ' 1 ' 1 L·r h . 1d t>. 1 i d rL . t m l 1I C1 1 l h \ h.1ll u 1mL' t rul' "

A l . 1 1 1 rl'I \\TL'< l l h u1 n\ 1 1 L'1I

l q;. in l'irL1 rn . t n

"Th. m k Y l l l t "

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A' L 1 \Xl , 1 u 1 1 ( 'urry L . t l l l L' t u\\ . t l\I t h l'

L . l rl·cr.

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9 7 ," .md

l ' h 1 nL· L ' L h. 1 r. 1 l t l·r, un t l w l'. 1 L k l ll A 1 11l rL'\1

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the f i n a l diploma t o Craig

.\n I .ll k·.1,t 1 1nl L h. 1 11111.1 !.!nl'

11i.1kc l d t ncd 1l1 n1 11 t hL· n 111·, 1, C1 1 t t c r rL'­

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top·

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Ch ristie (Sarah

'97)

m 1 111k·d l hl' !,!r. tll u.HL'' l li t lw -l1 u 1p "p.1 'L'' 1 1HP 1 1 iur h . 1 1 1Lk "

Pi t1l l l L'' 1 11 " 1 1 . 1 1 1 . l \ 1 l h . I l . 1 1 1 . " md lllllrl' mi 1rt,1rh1,irll' \\ Lilt up, ) l l l l1L'LI h1 . 1 h.t l l 1 l\ lll t h . i t hl 1Ul1LL'1l . 1 11lllll!.! t hL· llL'\\ l!rt J u alL''· E1 c r t hc dL·<m i ii ' ' udcn t , , K . 1 " 111.111 L ,lui.;h t rhc h.t l l d u r i n g r h c rcL c " 1 1 m .1 l .

Lundsten, iniured 1n an autc accident. Left,

" I p u t 1 t unJL' r 1 1 1 1 .t rill ,1, 1 f I 11 uc g1 1 1 n!..! t n

r 1 H td1ll1 11\ n I ,l 1LI !..! 1 1 c i t h.ll k . tlwu[.!h . ThL· , r u J L'llt

l1H c l

embroiders a Colby seal middle Cyrus Stahlberg s vanity plate said 1t a l l

k 1 1 L'd 1 t , "

,,1 1,l K . 1',m.1 1 1 , \ I hn . 1Jded t h . 1 1 ,he 11 ,1' 'i I m i n u t l'' reading t h e n . t m L'' uf l h L · gr.11lu.ltL'' "I 11 .1 ,1, m 1 11 thl' f1r'r h , 1 l t-rn enn - n t n l' lll llllltl'<' K a"nuu1 [ W t l l 1 ;1 1 1 1 R. K e n < 1 n J r. rwtc

l lr , ,f (.)1 11 e rnllll'll t ]

_',mLh

l a 1 :-e l t t 1 I J me I m .1dl' .1 Cl lllll'h< K k i n rhe 'ec1 H1LI h . i l f. I r \ ,1 [,mge r d 1 -.ra11cc <lC l'll ' ' r il l' i nllnor 'Lt!,!e t h.m uurd\1\ lr'. 'l ' I had rn r, 1 r c hc r up."

The r i m(' 1 t t l lok r11 get ru r h e fi n a l name (1f C1 1mmcncemenr 1 99 7 mm t n

focr h a 1·e 'el a !lL'\I' record . ..\ r 4 : �0 r h c next J.1y, <1

-,unny anJ wnrm Memor i a l LJ.11 afrem1 1on , f..: a ,,m. m anll

\ltte r

J n ll'e ro the T h a y e r u n i r , i f r h e t- l 1 d - t>. ti i ne :-V l c d 1 c 1 ! , e nt er tn pre5ent

ra 1 g Lund,ten ll' i t h h 1 , d i p l o m a . l n i ured in an autumn­

h i le rol lover the p re1·1nu� Friday, Lund ten, flankt'd by h1, pare n t�

in t h e i r � un day hc.,t , heheld t h e Jean Llf �t u llent ' and the president of t h e

n l lcgc mri1·ing in h i ., hmp i rn l mom in ful l

academ i c rega l i ;1 . " M r . President , " Ka �man i n toned , "I am p lea�ed to pre ent to y o u for r h e degree of hachelur of art�.

raig Andrew LunJ�tcn,

c u m l aud c . " Even though Lund�ten couldn't go up and over, " i t w <1 a w on d e rfu l th i ng f o r B i l l to h a v e Jone,"

K a m a n aid larer.

" I t worked our we l l . " She m ig h t h ave been ra l k i ng ahout the e n t i re h i n i ng Commencement .

C L"l L !I Y

L! �\ M E R

I 9 9 r

18

Jeanne


� � w . c o l by . du by Kevi n C o o \

TH E C O L L E G E' S PO PU L A R W E B S I TE I S A P L AYG R O U N D . A N EW S STA N D , A C A FE , A M U S E U M A N D A R E A L LY B I G S ET O F E N CYC L O P E D I A S

'.


O n t h e eve o f t h e b i rt h o f h i s F i rst c h i l d , C h ri st o p h e r To m p k i n s ' 8 9 wa s , n a t u ra lly , e x c i t e d a b o ut t h e p ro s p e c t o f i m p e n d i n g Fat h e r­ h o o d a n d wa n t e d to s h a re t h e m o m e n t w i t h h i s F r i e n d s a n d c 1 a s s m a t es . S o h e sto p p e d wh at h e wa s d o i n g a n d s e nt a m e s s a g e . "To m o r r o w at 6 a . m . Kate a n d I w i l l c h e c k i n to t h e h o s p i t a l t o b r i n g o u r F i rst b a by i n t o t h i s c ra zy wo r1 d . K a t e i s h a v i n g c o nt ra c t i o n s a n d i s d i l a t e d t h re e c e n t i m et e rs a n d I a m a n e rv o u s w re c k . I 'l l p o st t h e b a by' s s t a t s to m o rrow. ' hr, 1 1 1 'l'i' i n I L) c )4 , 1 1 1,I \\ 0L'I' ' I l l'' l'L l!. 1 1 1 J'r"l i t c:r. 1 r 1 110, l h L· � 1 1 l k·l!L' rl'u >!,!1 1 1:,·,I r h. 1 1 1 h,· 1 nl'll 1 1 1 1 11 11 ,1, !.!t l l ll!.! ltl

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: me ,md hn 111·,L· u 1•dare,- i nc l ud 1 n !.! phmn�-al•,)ul

page 11· i r h r h rl'e l i nb, t me , ,f ll' h i c h 11·;b :m , 1 c n a l

thl' 1w11· rc' 1 Lk n c c h . i l l unclcr cnn::.tru t 1un . :\nLI a

phot l ) ( 1f the c a m r u , , " /\ kG l .i ufl in o;a i d . "\'f../ c rcc e i 1wl

!.!rt l11· i n.!.! n u m l•er t)t i nd 1 1· 1 d u n l c las' page�. l i ke the

one thnu,and h i b in rhe fir't mm1 t h . We ).!L'l nwr<:'

\ lnl' Tnm1• k i n ' u�ed tll ;rnnuunce h i� daugh ter's

rhan that in nnc afrernot m no\\' . "

h i r t h , k eep c l,1,,matc' cnrrc,pond ing.

I n M a y , r he m , r r r e c e n t m o n t h f or ll' h i c h ,mfr.­

"A lumrn Re l a t inns mes w bring a l u m n i rogerh e r

6 3 ,000 peop l e 1· i�i rec1 the � i re. The ad m issions s i te rec e i 1·ed more than 1 0.000 1· i s i r ­ d u ring the app l i c a t ion cycle for t h e Clas· of 2 00 1 betll'een J une 1 996 an d J a n uary 1 99 7 . And ll' h i le 2 5 perc e n t of a l l a c t i 1 · i ty i · due to c a mpu usage , o n l y 3

i n one spm, and the Web prl)\' ide� many 11·ays to do

t i c s are a 1·ai l a b l e ,

t h a t , " Furiade, � a i d . fot i ade · ays The B l ue L i g h t is as oood as i t i s because a l u m n i more or less run i t t h msell'es. "To me, the most i mportant t h i ng about The Blue L ig h t

percent of the pe o p l e who v i s i t the s i te are on

i s not the n umber of people using i t but i t c apac i ty

Mayflower H i l l . T h a r 's a h uge L)U treach to a ll'orld­

to become a l ' i rt u a l com m u n i t y , " he a i d .

w i d e aud ience that m i gh t not otherw ise h a ve lea med

The C l a s of ' 9 p a o e , for e x a m p l e , he s a i d ,

about Colby, say A nestes Fot iades '89, who is

become a h a b i t , a p l a c e to go to "meet" people; a

Ir h inges roger h e r a c o m m u ni ty

respon s i b l e for c rea t i n g and m a i n t a i n i ng much of

·ort of v i rt u a l cafe.

what appears on Col by's Web s i t e .

of people who c e l ebrate each other's successes, com­ m iserate fa i lu res, even share secrets.

S o o n after N e r-cape i n t roduced i ts N av igat or

C 0 L El )

·,

l'l'L0'l0 l 1 L l' , " he· -. 1 1.I

S U �l M E R

I 4 9 7

20


I•

" l t U'L'cl

rn ht:' thm II' h e n y t )LI

perhaps e1·en d, 111T1 l n<id rhe1 r r ransc r i f't:,. "There are

left C c ) I kge yuu made

a Llec 1 , i , )n rh"r ' t h ese are my frienLb. these

arc

lot� nf rlace� 11·here 11 · c arc ,h u ffl i n � 1•aper

the

incred ihle

pcup l e l \1· i l l keep i n m u c h ll' i th ' bcca u::,e i t \; i m 1•lb­

' i b l t:'

r, 1

nate

ll' ritc all thu,c letter� �lnll make all tl w::,c

or

rn t c ,

"

t-. l c G b utl i n �a i ll . "We

cm

at an

elimi­

at ka�r m i n i m i : e th�1t p<lpt:'r ,huffl ing 11· i r h

e le c t ro n i c �)"item,."

r1hl 1nt' c;1 l b. " Fl 1 t i aLk, ::.<l id. " B u t the Weh makes i t 1•c1,s 1 h k t' > k e e p i n w u c h ll' i t h many mnrc r ' eoplc,

The C o l l e g e , 11· h i c h t h i s summer i<. rer>lac i n� l tS

m ig h t n,1t hal'e knull'n 11l1 i le at

Wd-, ::,L'rl't'r ll' i r h a fastt:: r , more poll'e1i'u l un i t , <1 1 " > i�

C l , ] l cgc. l t i , b u i kl m g < lll nld rel a t ions h i p � and estah­

exre r i men t i ng 11· ith i n m-1net sy�tem::, that pm1·ide \Veb- l i ke sen· i c es for s1•ec ific a u d i ences. "F,>r e x ­

mc l ud m!.! 'l 'nlC

\\ 'LI

[ i ,h i n g ne\1· ''ne::..

a m p l e . our cmeer sen· 1 c es nffi cc 11·i l l h;1 1·e a j n h ­

"In slime '"'1 )·s the \V'eb is chang ing 11·har i t means tt 1

;.!l'acl ume, " he said. ' ' !' resident Cl )tter al 11·<1\'::, ralb <it

l isting se n·ice t h a t ll' i l l bt> a1·a i l a b l e u n l y

tn

our

studems and a l u m n i , " t-. !cGbutl i n s ei i d .

the Baccalaureme serYice ahuut the fact that Cc•lby is n<1r the end , i{ l)ne's educH i,)n, thar it has equiprell us

Where 11· i l l a l l nf t h i s lead ' Fut i adcs concelles he

fur CLmti nuell kaming. Using the Web, 11·c can make

has nu idea. "The technn logy is e1·oh· i n g �u q u i c k l y

part uf the C l ll1t i n u in'2 r1ruces::. nf educat ion

nnhody can ['re d i c t 11·here i t 11· i l l b e i n fi 1·c l ) r e1·en

afrt>r pt>t>ple leal't:' Culby." TL)11·ard tl·w t end, Col l'y is

t h ree years , " he said. " I r's hard tll h a 1·e a 1·ision for

!'Janning W r'Ut -;e l ec ted fac u l t\' JectureS llll ] ine, ll'hcre

the fut u re of our \Xleb site because ll'e j ust don 't

they Cl1uLI he heard u�in,.; Rea LA. udin, anll . ::, i m i larly. w

k no11· 11·har ll' i l l be 1•oss i H e . T h i ngs are g,)ing

Cl )]h\·

<l

rn

make <l1«1 ilahle c lasses ti-um the Alumni Cl>llege held

happen that ll'e Cl>uldn ' t pred i c t . and the re's no 11·ay

e1 cry �urrnner on cam1'us.

rn

plan for t ha t . "

make

Regard less o f \1·ha t the technl) logr makes pos­

regi ,tr<H i,1n pn�si h l e nn l i n e , e nd i ng the age-nld

s i b l e , Fl1tiades says, h e does not e x ['ect the Web to

n 1 �h t m<ue a::.�< K iated 11· ith s ignmg u 1• for CL•urses.

surplant trad it ional teach ing methods. "The \Veb is

l\ l c G butl i n says pbns are underll'ay c J,1,,

A l u mrn ll' i l l one day be a b le

w

rn

a great too l . but i t's no subst i t u te for Charlie Bass e t t

acc ess t h e i r records

stand i ng i n a c l assroo m . " he said .

and u1•date t h e m . Studems 11· i l l he ahle tll read and

TU N ED I N , TU R N ED O N Colby was recognized recently by

Magazine as one

Yahoo! Internet Life

of the 2 5 most "wired" campuses in

the country. What the magazine said, essentially, was that a lot of Colby people use computer networks on campus and off to enrich themselves and their work in a variety of ways. Webmaster Anestes Fotiades '89 says the College's virtual campus already has become an indispensable companion to the real one. "What we're seeing is that the Web is a great means of building community and a great means of enhancing the classroom experience," he said. For example:

Fa c ulty po st syllab.'• cou rs e m ate rials, h om ework · n me assig and even nts . cla ss notes. For i nstan ce stu dents ' in Ken Gan za ' s E ast course g A sia n art o to Ganz a 's home pa ge an d downloa d im ages on th e tr · co m pute than ch e r rath er cking o u t a sli de carous . . e I' setti ng up a pro1ect or and ff' . g th PPin ' ro ugh slid Severa / ac es. ade m1c de partments pro vide lin ks to oth er Intern et res . ources • u sin · g the site as a p Colby . /atf,orm ior • exp/on ng th e We b in g en era/.

age B Langu \h e C B ea\ Aud'io uses R m u . ti ams" Consor ch " stre \ab. gy-wh..1 nguage technolo ate a la ul m s1 to g an d in ar he audi oce r- act1. ts can nr th e)' are Stude n nguage la e th speaking · g on1me. studyi n

21

M em b ers of the Cl ass of 2 have a pa 00 1 ge a b o ut wh t t o brin . g to C wha t to expect on olby, e they ar an d C o . e on c a or trips, mp us a m ong other thin Th e pag e gs also has an · e-m ail fo allo ws th ru m tha· em to " t me et · " th Ir y e b erspace befo � classm ates in M re th ey arrive o n ayf/o wer Hill.

:

5 U �I �I E R

I 9 9 7

C 0 L B Y


LAST I N G I M P R E S S I O N S I

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l' lt'(t' llf l l l l Ll e rg r;1 J U ; l t l' rL' ' l' < l rC h , hut l ll \ l l"l' l ll l l'l l r l i l l l f , ,,\ \ t h L

L 1 t c·r.d ( \ ,Jh J'e1 1rk 1 1 n thL' lither h.mJ, had tl1 l i 1·e w i t h d1e

fac u l ty ll' h \ l a J l' l ,C t h e m , t h e y clelll ; l t l J 'l' l f-cJ t,L 1 p l 1 !1 L' , L r l t l L , 1 1

. l lln111 . 1 11LL nf u '1 11!.! c l l lnrll <l\' ,tnJ cle1·,m1r, t1> get 11 he re rhe1

t h 1 t1 k mg a n J r rn h l e m

'l\" tng.

T h l'\ <ll" l' e x L c l l e n t L · I J' ' f l llll'',

11 ere [!1 ll11!.!.

Thl' � 6 'uhiec t ' 111 h1' ll!dy were J 11·tLk·J her\\'een the rwn

t he y -. a y , tn h i gh a c h r el'er,' c 1 1 1 l el!e c .i reer'. A-.�oc i a t e Prnfe"1 1 r ,,,-

c l llll'L l t e r ,'c t L'IKe B. i r y , 1 FneJ m , 1 1 1

m irld, ,md g1\'t:n r he '<111le 'et nf n me

> a y ' t h e rrngra m n:q u 1 re,, , 1 h1 n·e a l l , < l

'97.

11 h tc h '' .l' de1·elnpeLI to te'r <1

d rol'C the rnic e,, \\' I t h ,e J f­

i n i t i a t h·e and - m 1 1 t 1 1·; J t 1 u n , 'he

'·'Y' ·

ra,b-f,1r examrle,

l 1 ic,mng an nhJect m a budd1 11g�ach of

pas� i n n f u r ' t uJ " Her nLh- 1 -.ee . W 1 1ndy

Po l l ack

a

c n m p u t e r 1'1 1 l l . 1 L k -ru11 'e1 er.t l 11 ec k , m . 1 k m l! t:r, 1 r h 1 '- n:pre,en­

karure

d1fferen r

of rhe 1· 1 rt u a l world. " l w a ' look mg a t

rhe'e f\\ 11 wurkb w figure o u t w h i c h 11 �b mme

"He

conc e 1 1·eJ t h e rrnjec t anLI d i d t h e 1n 1rk .

effic ient and more accurate," Pollack

Woody Pol lack '97 with his senior scholar advisers. Batya Friedman and Dale Skrren.

�aid.

E


Sen ior Scho lars' research p rod uces a l egacy of h i g h ach i evement FneJm,rn ::.ay::. the pro1 e c t aJJr6 ed p h i l oso p h i c a l as \\' e l l ,1, L e c hn ,1 k 111: 1 ca l 1 -;::.uc,. " W h a ( J,1e:, l t m e a n w c re a t e a n

De Sherb i n i n 11·a impre,:.ed ll'ith Sprang\ ab i l i ty rn put t he a r r i t uJe::. and expec rnt inn::. nf R us,1a' ynu(h i n to cnnr e x r .

art 1fiual rea l i t ) ' J , i ( rea l , 1 r J LN d i ffere n t ! " , h e ::. a id . "What

" A manda\ c h ief oh -erl'atl<m-and o n e s h e i s i n a plN(ion to

Cl'i1 ' t 1 r u te::. rea l t ty ?"

JefenJ after p a r r ic tp ar i ng 111 the d a i l y l i1·es of young Ru

Pnl laLk, \\"ho cnmple (ed h 1 , requ m: men t s for grad u a t i,1n after

is rhat for the fir::.r r i me 11"1 Ru s 1 a n h i,wry a ge n e ra t i on

1an -

uf

lw. 1 u n 1<1r year hut h<1Ll to fu l fi l l Cnlh·\ mandated e i ght

inJ i 1·iJuab can dream (heir oll'n J ream:, and a t tempt w

'e l l le.,te r' nt \tudy, ay::. he ne eded a c h a l l e nge J u n ng h i s ::.en 1 or 1·em. "I \\ ' a n ted tn J,1 a l:- 1g m depen J e nr pmJec t , a nJ a t the ( i m e

de term i ne the i r Oll'n

1·irrual rea l i ty 'eemed l ike tht> exc i t ing area that Colby ha:,n't

are no( look in g for rhe ncx( r i cke( n u ( of r h e ir country: they are

rnuLheJ < m , " he said.

h i ghly i111·es[eJ in their Oll'n arr i�t ic and i n tel lec rual trad 1 ( lnns."

_

i m t larl) , A manda Spr a n g en·ered her 't' n i nr year 1rorrit:d

(hat 1t m ight be " n fl mg" after her " \\" i !J , ad1·enrurnu:," i u n inr year 111

Cll l h\ ', r.

Peter -burg, R u s - 1 1 , program. Her ::.eru n r

scholar rmiect, a c o l lec non of I 2 e ::.ciy' ahnut R u ' i<1 t i t leLI

" Be1·nnd the Thre:.h,1ld: L i fe 111 the 111.g a n J rewarJmg,

wanted-

prang a y , _

e11 R Lh > i a , " 11·a::. ::. t t m u l a ( -

"I g n t r , 1 Jo t: xac r ly \\'h<lt I

pe n d a lot of n m e ll"nrk i ng <ln ::.nme thmg I careJ "

ahout and relh·e the t i me t ha t I 'pent in R u ::.-. ia . "The

en1m

c hl1lar P rn!! ram prnl"lded (he ideal 1·e h i c l e for

A manda\ \\' r t t 1ng, \\" h i c h

he long "

ro a genre of iourn al is ( i c prose

grmmJeJ 111 c 1 1 l tural commenrnr) ," 'a1J .:: r rang\ aLlv i-er,

fa ( e � . "

she �aid. "Perhap� rhe mo::.t

i mponant message of A ma nda \ project is (ha( young Ru�:,ian�

" l wan(ed to bring closure rn my Colby experience, now ynonymou ll' ith m y Ru�sian experience," (he Seni,1r

\\"hich 1

prang aid, "and

cholar Program a l lo\\"ed me w Jo (ha(. l can't imagine

holl" my Colby experience ll 'ould ha1·e been complete 11·1thout t t . " � a id Pol l ac k : " W i thnu( the e111or cholar proj ec r . I m ight ha1·e left Co l b y less than happy \\"i(h my experience he re . l needed it ro rnp off my four years." Facu l ty are equally emhu · iast ic . Friedman says a 'ophl)more \\'hom - he is adv isin g a lre ad y i preparing a senior scholar propo a l , a n d h e expects t h a t trend to continue. "Compu[er cience i'

idea l l y sui[eJ to (he enior �cholar Prngram,

As Mant Prufe::.s\ lr of Russ t a n J u l 1e Je • h e rh mm . "Her mod e l i n c l u ded e( hnngra­ ph1e of grnup. in co nte mp orary Ru ,ian .oLieq. <1' ll' e l l as uch ll"ork a. Hedrick m 1 th'. Rus ·ians "

bec ause

tr t' prn1ecr

oriented," she said. "Woody may hal'e staneJ

-ometh mg here. I

think we're gomg w h a1 ·e

more and more -rudenrs interested in doing senior scholar work. I t wt uld be grea( if we

could h ave one e1·ery year."-Ket·in Cool

Amanda Sprang '97 with her senior scholar adviser. J u l ie de Sherbi nin.


faculty file I (t

Let' s Do Lunch I nformal l u n ches, book disc ussions bri ng faculty to students By Stephen Col l ins '74

G

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\ 11·u

J()J /1

" / R,·/1£!1"11

('ltlwr' WL'rl' , 1 , 1 1 1u 1ngruc11r ,1

fL' . t tn .ind

T"m L 1ne,t.1ft ( rl' l t i.: 1 1 1u, 'rud 1l', )

h i • l.!l' t ' t hl' l . 1 , 1 '" " 'I'

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1 1 1 1 1 1 . "T, 1 k l' . 1 rrnk"••r t n lund1"

t.11·1 1 r t rt· hm1k ,

m 1 t.d 1 1 fmd .1 't uclc n t 'r l 1 m 1 1 !! .i

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uf

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Bot·or;.·,

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\\ t t h

,1rtn 1 .m

c i f (l' r t h l' foc u l t\'\ "gre,He't h 1t , . "

\ 1 u r r 1 11 t h l ' S1'a , m d l , 1 u g h m L! . l t

H L ' 'ate! h l' r1hed thl' quc,t 1 1 m [\)

E 1 1 l.! l "h p n 1k"ur E l 1 ,, 1

faetd t\', "I ( t he ll'nrld were co

C h � l U C l' r \ 11 d ll !.(h l \ J' l l n ' <'I' l 1 ' ­

rhl'

l l' l1 l l1g r u " rt r l'r J , 1 ml'' F 1 1 1 ne1·

end nr \'LlU \\'l'rl' t 1 1 re t i re ar t h e

R11d,1 1 1 l'Lmdl'r ll ' h y a nrn d hl'

end

classroom."

h . 1 d 11 ' t fi n 1 ,hl'd \'l't had hl'cnml'

11\1u Id y11u teac h ?"

of t h 1 '

'e me,ter, w h a t honk

The rc,1Jence ha ll r rn gra m

h u t J'fl1J'l'rly 1 11 H n l l y ll'nnd.

wa' '' folh1w-up to "Take ,1

T h nl' m 1 1 m e n c -, , > 1 t1 g u l a r

Prnfev

,,)r ro Lunch," ll'hich al low' ,tu­

t hnu,g h thq m a y he, are r y r 1 c a l of

111 terrm

of

tu­

the h 11 1k d 1 ,(u,,11m .mJ l u nc h with a prnfe"' ir rro,£.,iram, rush the Col­ b.!l' further ahead, according to the LaFleur . wh11 did an mformal ,urye1· nf L AC ,ch:x1I- and 1)ther cnllege,.

"IX'hen 1 LaFleur ,aid, a'ked mn.,t

admi-. ions," "the LJUe tton I was wa,, 'What 1 the

wa' 111

re l a t t nn, h 1 r between

tudenr

and the fac u l ty here ?' Our goal i

Colhy t h e be t plac e in hip ou tside t h e c l a �·ron m . " Respon'e to the inaugural re i­ den c e hall reading pro gram chi spnng was extremely favorable, ex r re ed bo t h m the eageme of facu l ry and rudent to take part and in their e1· a l u a r ion , � u .a n Lafleur aid. Plans are un­ der way for another round next w m a ke

r h e C1)l111try for relat ion

t he ,wdenr -fac u l ty t n tl'rac t in n

denr� to arrange meeting. 1nth

fall with only m inor change -

t n, t e red by the tll'n program> l''­

faculty member� a t meal ttme .

rab l hhl'd by Robert LaFleur, ll' h n

u an LaFleur, who inheri ted re­

menu are being refined subject matter expanded to other media. Rob L af l eu r ' idea of "the greate t h its" get a boo t, roo--amongorher offering in the work , Profe or of Mu-ic Paul Mach l i n w i l l -pend i x night playing and t alki ng about rhe music of The Beatie . +

j, rl'turnmg to teach i ng hi ,tory

s po n s i bi l i t y for a d m i n i tering

full t i me afrerorga n 1 : 1 11gprngram'

both program as a SIStant dean

of >tud e 11r ' rare

of r u de nt> when Rob returned to fu l l - t t me teach ing, a id students were r a k i ng 25 to 30 profes ors to

.l> as,nctare dean t t ml' la r year.

The re,idence h a l l reading

l u nch eac h week la t spring.

program could be ad\'erti eJ a a eries

I 9 9 i

thl' rl' 't d l' n n , 1 1 Cnmmom put C11lh1 <H the i1 1refrn n t among 11' c le n t - fal l 1 l r \ mter.lc t tnn, and

outside the

:. L: �I ,'-1 E R

<llld 44

to nne of

.\/>/'• 1111011,·111 111 \,m1,1m1 .111d an­

l \1 1 1 d 1 1:L'l1 'l l L k \ ' ( lllkn l ' , l l l.!ll·

C Ll L E\ \

1 1!hl'r' 11 Hh fpm1al rtl''

t hri •J'• '" 'l! l ' t kft r1:1 An,ln" in, .m ' , 1 1 1 \ l' ..\ m1:rtc ;1n,,

pro­

ml'mhl'r' a11J the t r rarrner lt" 111g

In

1 1 f P.,·11 �

relationships

[i, l i e ,., l.i-t 'rrtl1l.! \l'l'rL'

.i-

rant' ha\'e

H a 1 · 1 n !,! 'en•n faculty

t hl' l 1 r-r . 1 1 1 1 1 u 1u l c l t 1 1 1d h 1 1 1l1 > l.!\

l'l'lll.!l'.1 1 \ \ l 1 1rm . i l 1 , 1 1 1 1 , k . 1 d i n l.! .

country for

L

h 1 11 e dl'm,md, hJ1·e 111 c re a ed

m (1 11!'1 re, 1 de ncl' hall

I I ) . d i ' " '"" " '11'.

d l' l 1 c l' I i . i l l rl . 1 ,l 1 1 1 L: i n 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 1 L· 1 1r .1

1 1 1 , k 1 1 1 ' l.!l' I 1 > l1l 11c 1 n ­

l.!r.1dl'll ll'l',l l l i t 1 he1 rar1 1up.1ll'

c l \ LT ,j l l l l1 L I

T 1 1 " d i l' l i hl·r l . 1 - 1

t hl' "T 1 k l·

'en I L L''

l 1 ' 1 l r 1 ! 11 1 1

L ' 1 l l f' ' L l lf i'f1 1 •

1'1< ifc''" 1r\ h r. 1 1 1 1 . 1 1 l 1 1 11c h 1 1 1 1 \L' , 1r

i n the

the

t rend 111 h 1i:_:hl'r eJucamm char ha�

rl' ' 1d1:n l t' h . d l l"t me1:,, d l ll 11 l' r'

I l l " l "L'l l I

best place

f. 1 u i l 1 1 rl'la r 1 nn,h1r'· huckmg

. i rt ,kl 11

l' \ l I

Colby the

lllL'l'I 1 1 1

hc·, 1 1 h 1 nl.!' ·"'"l l l i i ll l l f . 1 t 1 f \ l' . 1 1'' I ll \\ ',J l l'fl i l k·

is to make

"( ' i . l"l''"

l 1 f 1 l i l' L i . l "fl >t \ 1 1 1 , . I ' 1 11 1 l' n f t i l l

l.! r . 1 1 1 1 ' . 1 rl 111 , 1 k 1 1 1l.!

"Our goal

i . t 1 1 1 r l l l' h"" k '

of informal c hat

Rob

o\'er din-

24

LaFleur, who c a me

from

d inner and


Three Faculty Retire

pu ndits & plaudits

Three fac u l ty members who erved generation of Colby student for more than 90 year retired this spring. Profe or ofGeology Harold Pe tana, who began his career at Colby

Not Pre,ordained

in 1 959, taught all of the Geology Department s " oft rock" cour e oceanography, paleontologv, tation and

tratigraph

·.

A Boston Globe story about African-American women ministers

edimen­

quotes John D. MacArthur Associate Professor of Sociology and

A mong h i

African-American Studies Cheryl Townsend G i l kes . An

publication are hi 1 9 7 2 Bibliography of

associate minister at Union Baptist Church in Boston, Gilkes said

Congressional Geology , an index to all

she, like many women, wasn't considered clergy material as a

geological documents publi hed by Con­ gress from 1 1

child. "Had

to 1 90 7 . In 19 l he

initiated Colby s

emester program in

so no one even thought about it." Gilkes was ordained in 1 986.

tation for Re earch.

Venus and Mars, the Early Years

He donated an ex ten ive research c o l l c t i on to the C o l l ege- 3 , 0 0 books, 4 0 magazi ne , more t h a n 400

been a boy exhibiting the same behavior I did at

ministry," she told reporter Diego Ribadeneira. " But I was a girl,

Bermuda, u ing the fac i l i t ies of the Ber­ muda Biol gical

1

twelve, thirteen or fourteen, I would have been pushed into the

Teen magazine's

Harold Pestana

article "The Truth About Girls and Boys"

tries to clue adolescent girls in to the behavior of boys and vice versa. Writer Bob Makela asked an expert-Assistant

poetr books and l ,000 works of fiction on World War I-a well as the collec t i n of fi l m put together by his late wife, Betty, who

Professor of Education Lyn M i kel Brown-to explain how

taught in the Eng l i h Department for a number of year . Pestana's

girls' play patterns differ from boys'. Boys , the article says,

cast lead toy sold ier model

" don't really interact. They might sit side by side watching TV

have earned him an internat ional

or building a model. They do it for hours, happy to be in each

reputation among c o l lector .

other's company. " Girls need to communicate, according to

Profe or of Art Abbott Meader recei ed Colby'- first tudio art app intment in 1 96 1 . ln 1 974 he left the

Brown . "Very often they talk about the way things are unfair,

College and worked for a time in Italy

who gets the attention. etc .. " she said .

before returning to Maine and a career a

Monopoly Money

painter and filmmaker. After rejoining

For an article about '·merger mania" the Oregonian caught up

the Art Department in 19 3, Meader

with Herbert E. Wadsworth Professor of Economics Jim Meehan ,

taught design, beginning- to advanced­ level painting cour 0

� � Artis

that some mergers have become monopolies? Meehan said

erved as department chair.

regulators have scrapped the belief that "market concentration

Meader' work has been exhibited in

automatically leads to the power to control price."

hows in

Maine galleries, including Maine Coast

Twelve Hours in Paradise

Gallery, the Harlow Gallery, The Maine Art Gallery and the

Fnck Gallery. Hi Is

staying out of controversies in Portland that have led to charges

uch a Wa There a Van Gogh? He al o

many group and one-per on

Abbott Meader

who helped answer the question: why are federal regulators

and topic cour es

hon films appeared on WCBB tele i ion, and My Life

ot This Steeply Sloping Hour was hown at Portland Live. He ha made

drawing for books and been a juror for high school art competition . A ociate Profe or of German Hubert Kueter, who came to the United

tares in 1 94 7 and received hi Ph.D. from the U niver ity of

Michigan, taught elementary, intermediate and advanced German as well as Introduction to German H istory and Culture and advanced course such as The Medieval Epic , Masterpiece of German Litera­ ture and pec ial topic in the h istory of German l i terature. After a pair of succe ful Jan Plan in Germany he developed and headed the fir t Colby in Lubeck emester in 1 986. He also taught ki ing at Sugarloaf(U A for 10 year and from 1 974 to 1 9 76 wa Colby' varsity ski coach. H is German madrigal s inging group per­ forme d at the Fe ti val of Carol and L ight for year . He will continue to operate Johann

eba t ian B, the re taurant he ha managed from

his Oakland home for more than 20 year . Meader i

currently on a one-year pre-retirement sabbatical.

Keuter and Pe tana have been awarded emeritus tatus.

+

25

Students who were hanging

President W. A rnold Yasinski

out in the S m i t h Lounge of

were among those who p i tched

Runnals Un ion on April 19 ex­

in during the marathon.

perienced Hea en, endured Hell,

Sagaser says the readers took

truggled through Chaos and u l ­

turns reading 25 to 45 lines each,

t i mately reached Paradise. They

munched on muffins and j e l ly

were there for the marathon read­

beans and "bit into apples and

ing of M i l ton's Paradise Lost or­

hissed at the appropriate times in

ganized by A s i tant Profes or of

book nine," in which Satan se­

English Elizabeth Harris Sagaser.

duces Eve. One student who at­

About two dozen readers,

tempted to complete the reading

many from Sagaser's Renaissance

despite suffering from a high fever

Poetry 11 c lass, began the poem

and ymptoms of mononucleosis

at 1 0 a . m . , and several stayed

dragged her beanbag chair into

until the epic was completed at

the lounge and brought her own

1 0: 4 5 p . m . English professors

tea kettle and herbs but fell a leep

L a u r i e Osborne and J ames

about the time the reader reached

Boylan and Administrative Vice

Heaven, Sagaser say .

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

+

C O L B Y


books & authors I �J��l

It' s a Long Way Down Don J. S nyder '72 looks for fi rm footing in his memoir, The

Cliff Walk

B y Kevin Cool lw f i nd I L' t l l l'"' " "' 1n 1rk " ' l i1 >!,I

l' l l' f l , 1 , t l n l.! L fl'd i t , 1 1 L. . n < l l hL ', h

h 1 1 1 1 1 l\ lT , . 1 1 1 ' 1 \lhl.!11 , 1 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 11 h1 1

t h l' hl'r< > nf Thl·

1 1\\ 1 1 ' .t L IL', t n t n [! 'L' f \ I L L' 1 ll fcor, 1 1 1 1 1 1 ; 1 11 1h, �1 1 1 lb t h 1 11 k , , " I \ , l l1 11 1k

'hort h ,t l l L I hl 111' >\ l'' ' l l ' f . l l l l l h

Little Brown and Co

I

n 1 99 1 , L\ 1n ,' n \· Lk'f '/2

''"l

1 l l l l < >I h 1'

u

I \\ l'f I hl' L l l l l r'L uf ,I hr\ l l . d 1\ 1 n t

� 1 . I l l lL'

, durt l l l! \\ h 1 d 1 hL 'rL'nd,

ll

'f'L'lld,

"l ' n t t l t h t' \\ l l l' r," hl \l fl[L''• " l . t hl . l\ d l l lll!.!hf t h. l f dll'rl' would he . 1 'l"t fnr 111L' .1t d1l! " 'r·

m"nL'\ L t \ ' ' " " ,le,p1 1 e h 1, t. 1 m 1 h \

f.ir f rt 1 11 1 L!l l \ ' \1 t 1 h 1 11ud 1 1n rhL t r

- h n n k in g ,, I \ m i..: ' . 1 11ll L K k l 1f 1 1 1 -

LIL L'',

u

1nfr1 1 nf l l ll! h 1 1 1 1 , m,I , J L ' ' , 1 1 1 t

I le

LOl 11l!

Ik

L'\ -

t h 1 >lll! h t t h. 1 1 I \\ ,,, " l n t k h,·uer

c h.m d1L 'l' !.! I J \ ' ,mll l!n t l l lnl c o , 1

rL'.IL hL•ll .1 p1 >11"1! I\ hL'rl' I hL' ' t fl ll!!!k

ne ar l\' t n r e h i ' f,1 m t l y . 1p.u1 <1nd

. 1 rr; m ge ,1 n L' \\ L . l r t. ir h 1 111 fn 1111

[(l 1 1 1 , l k l' t:nd, l llL'L'l

t l"1L' rec l .i m, 1 t i11n of h , , -.1ul 1 , t he

h.:r l. 1 1 hl' r\ ; 1 1 1 t l 1 Lb 1 l e r- h 1 p.

r

, u h; e c t l l f Thl·

frum t hl ,h,m:d L'\f"l'rtence."

'li"'''k•d."

h,1, l' 'l ,1hi t hl'll h t m,t: l f ,1, 1 h P l l 'l! p.1 1 n r Lr . mJ rL· l . 1 1me d ,1 111l'<l'l l rl!

HP1 ll11l' f \\ h mer \I h11 \\ a n t ' 1 1 > L lll

of 'L·lf- re'J'l'L l . L )l!,L ft hmg h un,elf

111 I me t l 1 l!l'l , m(ldwr L h,111LL' \\'hL'n

111 ch,· l1n,1I ..: h,1pt L'f, he ,,11 ,, " I ' m

dL'tllL'd thl' l 1 fe,f) l e hL· he l tl' \ \.!' he

J ll'l .1 1 1 1 . 111 \\ h, 1 p.11 nl' hnll'L'' f11r , 1

,if

lll''efl L'' · And \ l't, 1 t l 1 1 1n.Hl·l1 , 11L'

I I \ tIH!. ,111d \\ hll p. 1 \ ' h 1 , ( 1\1 n 1 1 a \

w h i c h t n \'l1l \·e, ,ol 1 c i t tn g b u ye r '

fin,!' 1 1 1 h n mell d1l! qual 1 r 1 t h . 1 r

t h rnu!.!h t ht, w r ld, . m l l \ I h11 [.ike

nn

,,11 1 t l,1r r r1 1 l m ' c.:11ulJ fmJ '<llace

L

T1"1l' 1 11.m Sn\ dL'r lle,uthl'' ' '

eMh

l'> t:

L'nnugh

th . i t 1 1t h<:r- \\ hn h,1d !!one t h rough

H\ chL· L'tld ul t hL """k . �n\ cll'f

. Snyder

1 1 u t h e r k n nw kJ.f..!e.

ht· hone't

l

ny n( h 1 : . i rrL\

c h 1 kl 11· t t h Yl!t l!\'l'n , 1 ,

d1L h111 1k \\ ,,, ro

I( L\ L IH U.t h

,l'1f1,h ;mll 't: l f- p t t \ 1 111.!, ,1 l\1h

n rL

he ,1,u t hL'' 1 1 1 mL'n 1 1f

L .He 1 if ht, f; 1 1 11 1 h .me! fl!.ir' fnr ht

ea r l 1 l!r genl!r< tr 11111-, .1 \\' t l l mgne"

c.: h 1 klrcn \ f u r u ' . m J dnl!'n 't tn· rn

he re l a t e � h t � Jl!ge n e ra u 1 1 n t n tll

[() Jn \\'h,1r " necl!",trY t11 keLl ! 1 1,

hecnmL' " 1mL't hmg d,l!and d1)l!,n°t

a m1 a

fom t l y . mll kL'ep 1r t11gether.

j udge 1 11 h e r, , anJ whll l.1\' Jnll'n

' 1 t \' nOvhi me at Farmmgton and

h t ' l <l X mnnL'Y 1l' 1 i l 1 11L!ly hecalN�

c o n t m ue, rn \\'nrk "' a hou e

� nr ro h

p 1 c hed, Snyder\ re­

He l!. l t n ' a

fu � a l rn m a k e exc.:u'l!' t«1r h " he­

i

l 1 n l e t r; i c r i 1 1 n fi r L

h::n·inr g i 1 · e� the hook H ' m n rn l

hy t a k m g <l l''h "' ;1 g11lf c n u r 'e

he 1.an afford [() h e r re11ple

grnundmg. If reJ e m r t i n n '' to hi.!

g r1 1 un J , k e e p e r . hut 11 1 , 11·1fe, �1 l l ­

..:.m ' t finJ their 1 l\1'n w a y . "

,ec u red , he 'eem' tu be '< 1ytn g,

lcl! n , fi n .i l l y pu, he, ,' n yder tll

t

\l' h1 1

nyder ha, accerteJ a ran­

t t m e [each mg ;nh at the U n i \·er­

ramrer anll con rruc t w n \\'orker.

" I f I 'lray grnunJed in thar way .

nvJer 'a\'' he h;iJ n\l i n te n ­

hopefu l l y t h e le ,on · I h a ve

m u · t he we l l dC1c u men teJ.

unde r , t . m d h "

l cmJ

m m of ll'ritmg a h o 1 ) k e 1 · e n after

learned won' t he lo t. l ll' i l l never

nyJer fiN he l iel'e' h t , d 1,-

Cl1111l' to rerm' 11· 1 t h h t ' ' n(1hhery.

he p u l 1 -.h d an a rt t c l e ahllut hi-.

think of my.,e l f the \\'ay that I J1d

111 i ,, a l fn1m Co l g a t e ,, a 111 1�take

" I t h tn k you look Jo\\'n on re"rle

e x pe r i e n c e ' 1 11 Har{>l'r' s maga:me

before," he a i d .

anJ [hen J elu d e, h i m�elf inro be­

\\'ho j u

l ieving tha[ hi' d e p a rt u re merely

c a n pay their

Ill

�ignal an opportunity f ora better,

l Jn

n\\'n de n 1 ,

h e

reg u l a r jnh >O they

\\'ay,"

in 1 99 5 . "I thought then anJ l , n i l think i t \ a very 'ma l l r o ry , "

,he ><lY' ·

Perhar t h e greate�t le on he ha learned, he says,

i that a

l tfe

Throughmt[ the hoo k , Col­

he �<1 iJ. "When you cnn�ider that

hould not be measured by one's wnrk but by "the ·mal l , rnvare

more pre t i g iou, job ar another

l een ,en·e, a� a counter\\'e ight ro

"' many pe o pl e in t h 1 country

,chool. When reiectinn not ice,

L

nyJer, exhibit ing a ,toic Jeter­

have gone through much harder

moment " [hat go i nto making a

begin arriving by t h e dn:en, he

m ina [ i o n to ra i�e her fam i ly w i th

t i me than what we wen t through,

home. "When my l ife came

d ign i t y regarJ le

l ' m m i l ama:ed that the book ha

dead

gorten so much a[tennon.

t h e r r e ent ten·e, which i ex·

hold

on to hi

arrogance with

anger. He . niffs a t sugge,tions that

C 0 L fl )

o.; U M �1 E R

I 9 9 i

e

of t h i r c i r ­

c u m ranee,. A n d to

n yder\

26

Jt: 11

J'r< 1f t 1 tnl! from h1' 'tc 1n· 1 "mexc.:u­

.1 11,I I h.1J t'l'. t l h , i l \1 ,1 \ ,

L \ n t L . t l h l' \ r l l l t t ' r.1 t

h1 lJ'lll;..! c h, l l . 1 f',1rn1L·r - r u de n L . m

for h i, \\' t fe\ u n bnrn

J)

('L'l lJ'k

\1 1 1r k 1 1w

gence a n J ,e J f-llecert 1 P n r h . n

\

lh.>

1 h u 1 1 1 h, h t ' n"''' .l l t l 1L' , 1 1 1 1 .l l 1 1 •n

lnr

life t h. I ! \\ ,1, lll1 •fl L l!IL'hr.Hl'cl ; 111J

ratheuc a c t i o n , , t h e \\ ' l f' (

11\'llt:r ,,11J.

p l . 1L 1:, I h 1 - L Pn t L·mrr

C: il , l l' f , .I l t flo t h

t\

1 h h, my ''"" 111: \ <: r \\'oulJ haw

hn n 1 1 1IJ,"

peL l , , d 1 -hl'itl'\ 1n i..: h1, f . t tl'. '-ny, k r

111.1k1:, , 1 ,urrl!J't 1 t 11 1u' t n r t 1 1 C> h 1 1 1

rn

r or

.m l' kL I nu,1 1 1 \\ h o \\'t:nr t h rough

,, 11 1<:" \\ 1 1 hc •lll a tnta l h h on L'' t J<:­

'cL' n t i n l l l , 1 hl· l l 1 1 f m , tn t l 1 1 1d u l ­

i � it' grue'<lll"1L' h n n e ,

hook

J'IL l t1 1n. "T11L c in h w 1 y tc > reJe1:m

\\ , I \ 1 n t 1 1 t t n . tLh L'rt t e d J1 1h, ,1 11,I

confc,,e� r n ,, l 1

hi.:

l 1 >nl! Ll . i \ J'l'f1C lrtllll1L! l l lL' l ) / , t l )Oh,,

frt l· n d'h i J ' ' i l l tr\ t 1 1 \\ hL'L·dk h i '

l1fI\'Callc A ,\f.:m­ uf a Jnb L11�1 and l l L1fi: Fu1md The J'P\\'er llf Thl' Cl1JJ \'Clllk

rl um

l 1L' f l llll, t h, l l , td 1 l1 J f. l l l t 1l1 h,t, rL ·

l 'oif..! , t t L'

oir

a

do,l'r C l l rL· l . t t I\ l''· Fk'fL' i l "' r1" , _ _

U n t \' L' r' t t \' . H 1 - ' l i h'L'ljllL'11l lle ­

h 1 , tL'; ic.: h 1 11l! j \ l h , I t

lx:L .llhL' t i I h.1J lx:t:n

l',K k 1 < 1 tl l . 1 1 n L' , 11 hu,· t h ,· 1 , t rL·

l'f\ rL'l k k" 1 m p u l ,,·

265 pages

I 1 1 1 . t l h . '-111 ,kr ,n,111

·

"Thl' t ru t h ' ' I fl' l t t1:m hlyi.:m­ h01rr,1"l'J ,1b. >ul \\ rtl tng t ht'

hL' l p \\ t t 1 1 '111lf'k L • l fJ'l"nt fl , t hL'll

ThL' ,l111\ 1 1 11 . 1 rd 'f' 1 r , 1 I hl·i..: 1 1 1,

Job L os t and a Life Found

/11J \'Calk.

f u n k . I IL' , , l u rnl h ,1 u >n t r.1L J 1 1 r t 1 1

l t k l' .1 1 . 1 n 1 1 1 1r, I'·" '"

The Cliff Walk: A Memoir of a

l

to a

top I wa forced to l ive t n

A


hil­

into a c lo ·e t he not ices expen­

dren J i ,•e e\·ery day. A l l of the

acrly where my four ·ma l l

si,·e tennis and golf equipment

rend r moments in the book be­

owned by the wealthy owner of

tween the h i l d ren and me \\·ou ld

the home. Sn yd er, who accepted

Elections in Cyberspace: Toward A New Era in American Politics

ha,·e gnne right over my h ad if I

the j ob at the half-rate of

7.50

Anthony Corrado (government) and Charles Firestone, eds.

had been cru1 ing alono," he said.

per h o u r because the fam i ly

In The Cliff Walk.

nyder

roint out where human worth i ­ ne

n ·der' son , J ac k , ,·isits a

�um mer cottage where

Elcc1fo113 in Cyben.-pace: Toward a N� Era in American Politics

"Do you w i · h l were l i 1 n ." "

ope," the boy rep l ies, "but

I w ish I ' as you.

nyder i

"

"Why ?" ask

laying an attic floor. When Ja k looks do\\'n throuoh the c e i l ing

The Aspen I n stitute, 1 997

needed the money, ask the boy,

r e i d e . N ear t h e nd e>f the

hLmk,

fresh p rints

participants i n a conference on the topic , whose findings are summarized

n der.

and analyzed by Associate Professor

"Becau- e you\·e got blood a l l o,·er your face . "

The I nternet has great potential for affecting the political process, say the

of Government Anthony Corrado.

+

Possible benefits include "greater access to candidates and the electoral process; better information on

A Very Good ' S hot'

candidates, ballot issues and

Gerry Bo ·le ' 7 ' Jack McMor­

harde t of hard time , he doe n't

row books-Deadline, Bloodline,

go alone but rake his friend Clair,

faster candidate access to voters; potentially greater access for

Potshot-ha,·e

an ex-Marine. Even h is dim\\ it

minor party candidates; electronic voting for referendums and

placed him among an elite group

mo e are plau ible, as when, near

political candidates; enhanced civic networking; and the

tery writer· able to nurture

the end of the book, he al lows

creation of new communities of interest within the e lectorate to

both . hnrt-term plot and lono­

impatien e to lead him into dan­

address issues of regional importance," the conference

term character . And th 1 fourth

oer again ·t hi better j udgmen t.

concluded . But, Corrado warns. with citizens and voters able to

Lifeline and, now, of m

·

ln tallment m the

Reader offictionabout Maine

lcMorrow e­

rie may be Boyle' be t yet.

government services; cheaper and

communicate with legislators and candidates via e-mail . chat

can't help bur be impres ed with

groups, teleconferencing and other methods, governing could become a matter of taking the daily pulse of constituents and

a biu-ci t y new -

rhe gra p Boyle ha on the place.

paperman mm planted to rural

There are no quaint, Murder- he­

acting in response to it. That, he says, would leave out Ameri­

Mame, i reali:ed ful ly i n Potshot.

Wrore v il lage· here, populated by

cans who have no access to the I nternet and could stifle the

rd! a cynic, t i l l fla h i ng h i York Times i . d . when he

d e "th other Maine" de cribed

McMrnTow,

He' eu•

need to impre

the yokel , ·rill

makmg wi ecrack

.

Bur he ha

Down Ea·t "character ."

either

mi nority under an avalanche of majority opinion. If the Internet is used to expand debate and increase voter awareness and

by \\TiterCarolyn Chute bear down

participation, he says, " p u b l ic life will be carried out through the

on you 111 Boyle'

type of dialogue and interaction that our nation's founders

hands, though

turned into a uy you'd l ike to

Boyle i unsentimental abom rn­

ha"e l ivin up the road, omeone

ral pm•erty. Thi� i· Maine as een

who re rect you until you give

by omeone who came from ome­

The Wisdom of Love

him a rea on not to and on whom

whcre e l e but rayed and kept his

Alain Finkiel kraut

you can depend. H e i' emotion­

eye · open. l t ha pro and con ,

David Suchoff ( English) and Kevin O'Neill, translators,

real wan and wonder .

with an introduction by Suchoff

ally

vulnerable when it come

to

his trlfnend, Roxanne. A nd he reac� to 1tuat10

in way that

make ·en e. After omeone 1

he learn that

talking Roxanne,

Boyle' clever title play b

envisioned as the essence of democratic governance "

th

University of Nebraska Press, 1 997

on one of the major plot drivers ( the movement t

This book, part of the U n iversity of Nebraska's "Texts and

legali:e mari­

j uana) and on a hooting earl

Contexts" series, is the second Alain Finkielkraut text translated by David Suchoff and Kevin O'Neill (the first, The Imaginary

in

M Morrow initially

the st ry. lt i a ig­

threaten to go after

nal of thing tocome

the talker. In con­

in thi smoorh, en-

that love i s "a word that signifies both charity and greed ,

tra t ta legions ffic­

agino, wel l -crafted

generosity and avarice, the act of giving and of taking."

leuth

Jew,

was recently published in paperback).

F i nkielkraut. a controversial European intellectual , writes

he

bo k. And, though

allow the police to

i t is impossible to

love-the apparently disparate notions of universalism and

talk him i n to let-

predict how man

"otherness. " He concludes that they are, i n fact, i nseparable.

1 ing them h a ndl e

M c Morrow bo k

"Rather than view multicultural diversity as antithetical to

the prnbl m. When

Boyle will write, he

Western ideals or as a destructive challenge to cultural

rn iou

,

Finkielkraut tackles i n this volume-and under the rubric of

to foll w a lead mto a Ma a­ chu·en mdu trial

i gaining the k i nd

tradition." Suchoff writes in the introduction, " Finkielkraut sees

Potshot

of ma tery of rhe

cultural difference as the rightful claim that the Other makes to

G . P Putnam's Sons

fie l d that make

be included , as different, within the tradition of u niversal rights. "

rny fal len on the

294 pages

reader ' ant more.

he ha

27

U M

t E R

1 9 9 7

COLBY


student lifel ��

Getting High A c l i m b i ng wal l helps students with lofty ambitions B y J e n na K l e i n ' 9 7

A

t 'l'\Tn 11 ' c l nck l ln 'nme

L i l l l l hl'r' . l l ( '1 1 1 1'\ , " , , 1 1 d

fr. m ale ' t udcnh. C l 1 mhmg ne< -

lllL' lllhl'r ] ] . E k l un c l

( 'l\f( ' ' l) ( " l l\I

u 1 rrl'n t h h,1\ L' . I L L L'" [ 1 1 , l L l 1 1 n h­

\\' e e k n 1 g h t , , c l u , t l' r ' , , ,·

l l 1l! l 1 hr. 11 1 . L 1 111 l p k t c· 11 > 1 h g u id e

phyt i: � ar, 1 h D 1 M are ' 97 ;m e nded

I 1 111 hn, L . 1 11 m 1'L' t . i n d p l . 1 11

h1 ll 1k '. 1 1 1 , lg,t:tnL'' , l f l d lll'lrtiL l 11 111, l l

oni: of th t: 'cm 1 n a r' i:ar l 1 e r 111 the

\ 1dl'"' l 1 1r . 1 r. 1 1 1gl' 1 1 1

)'l'.lr. " I 11 <J., m t 1 m 1d;ncJ

l l i by ,t udcnt gat hcr nc,ir a 11 , t l l

t

T h ; 1 t '' . 1 , re.i i h

n e :-. t t u th e 1 1 1 d1 H i r t r; K k 1 11 t h l'

l . 1 r l!c r r r q''

field h11u,e. I t \ n1 > l lrd 1 1 1 , i ry \\ a l l .

L 1 1 t 1 1..d 1 1 1 1 dP hd1 >rL' t h 1 , l . i rgc·r

.1hi l 1 1 1L''· The

u1 try a

L J 1 1 h ; i J ,, 1 t 1\l l l' . i \ ,lrlt: t \ l lf t:lJl l l J'·

'P1 >rt t h.u 'eem to atrn=1ct d group

n e rn 1 irk 11 , ,... (1 1rml'd " T h n n 1 l! h

l l ll'l1f ' l ldl

h.lnl L'"e' <llld 'hill''

l lf rcork fur whnm I[ I' a J rea J y a

l 1 1r hl't.: 1 1 1 1 lL'r t l 1 1 n l'l'r" \Vet· k h

'cric1u' r, 1 u ml', hut l fe lt com­

pcnd;tgt'' 1 11 \ ' <H t 1 1u' ' l :e' .rncl

( ' l"v 1 ( ' , L l 1 m h L· r , h . 1 \ L ' he· u 1 1 11l' . 11.: q u . 1 1 n t t• 1.I , ,Ji.>rL·cl l'\ J't' ·

'l' l l 1 1 11.lr" i l k r Ill )\ ! L t: ' h,l ,I L L l t mh·

f or1 ;1hk . h k mg 4ue non

,hape,, " n i c k -" t h a t offer hand .

r 1 l' I1 L L' ' . i n d p l .1 n n l',I l . i ri..: L· r

1 11l!

t L'L h n 1ql lL'' 1 1 1 .dc t \ l ''l il''·

l lar h , 1 : , ud l l' ,c,l t t e rcd ,1hnu1 it' face , i re 1111 1 l d e d , t cx rn red .1p

L hl'

,I,

ml< irm.>t 11 111,

from ht· l,1\ l ll l!

a hn u l

ti:c h 111que ;mJ t i: rm mo lngy. It\

a n d f1 l\1thnJJ, f nr t h e ' l uclc n t '

l' \ f't:d l l i l l l l ' [ l l ' i l L h l' \ O [ IL 1 1 1 ·

d a rn . d 1 11 g fr1 1m t h c Co l lcgl'\ 1w11

L . i l e , , 1 , T . 1 11 : . 1 11 1 , 1 .

1' L' ll \ . 1 .

In . 1 11 l'i f 1 1n 1 1 1 m . 1 kl' i h t 1\ . 1 1 1

2 7 - f onr c l 1 m h 1 11 g r i t c h . S t ude n t ,

E q u. 1 d 1 1r, A rl!L' l 1 t 1 1 1,1 , P" 1 l 1 1 1 ; 1 ,

L 1 1 1 11ft 1 r 1 . 1 b k . m d .IL (t.: " 1 h k l t 1 r

\\'h1l a r r i n: , l [ t he c l 1 m h 1 11 g 11 , d l

( 'h 1 k �1 1u 1 h A l r i L . 1 , t h L· ( '. 1 n . 1 -

l' \ t: f \ < lllL'

,1

Thl' muJd,fl lr the l\!C were

t en'e a n d up t i g h t a r c rl' Ltxl'd ,mcl

d 1 . 1 1 1 A rL I I L . l l l d A l . h k , 1 .

11 < l l llt'n\ 1 1 1 du . 1 1fkrinc ,i: m m , 1 r'

t h i: l1IJL'r ,md larger mountam­

1 . 1 1 1 ghr hy 11 nml'n m ' t ru L 1 1 1r, f1 1r

ei:n11g c l u b,. "Place ... l ike Hal'·arJ

u r ht' a r afr e r dang l i n g "" t h l' l r

The

llll' l llhe r' . it

the

t :l\1C

t h t•

( '�1( • lrt.:, l l L'd

,1 f.!l' l' < H l >ppnrr u n i ty r 11 g e t m­

n 1 hTd I n < I rort that I' t n u g h to ,1rpr11, 1 c h , " ,he a1 J .

finger::. for ; 1 cnu 1,le 1 >fh1 1 u r' . 1h1 l \ L'

<mcl D.mm11uth have huge club

t h e fie l d hm1'e t11 111r.

,md le<Jcl h 1 g m p. nutdom,, and u l n m.Ht: h , c l 1 mbmg on rock 1>

C l i m h 1 n g ha, hL·cn p1 1 p u l a r amnng

1\ h,H c l 1m hmg I' all about," .aiJ

11l hy 'tudcn t ' f l l r m . m y

1 pre idem, Limay '91. "We are such a

y e a r , b u t u n t i l nn\\' n1l (urmal

u 1 rrenr C

group brought thl'm toget her. Fnr

CoLhran

year , t h e Ou t 1 n,g C l u b t ried t l l

wung duh, I think we have ac­

�pon or c l i m b rn g e 1 T n t ' hut \\'a'

c,implt heJ a great deal m two

h a m pe r ed b y l ia h i l i r y prob l e m '

\'ear,." � ma l l budget and in·ur·

and a l a c k of !> urpmr. Th a n b 1 11

ance problem< make leading for­

part w the c l 1 m b 1 11g \\'a l l , t he

mal nutdl1or trip. difficult forthe

·port ha hec ome a fa\'nrite ra'­

CM

t i me of a grnw 1 11 g n u m be r of

aJ d re" m future year..

, an 1 ·sue the c lub hL pe to •f

A wrJ rng ro Cnchran, Coll:>y

peop l e a t t he C l 11 l e ge and ha,

'pawned o n e of t h e l a rger c l ub,

ha' an e J ge O\'er mountaineer­

on campus, the Colby Moun­

ing c l ul:is at Ulll\' CNtie becau e the Cdl l ege 1

t a i neering C l u b (CMC ) .

c lo e ro

ome of

the be,t cl 1 mbi ng ,·enues in

De\'elopment a n d con,truc­

ew

a ton of

t io n of the c l i m b i n g wall ll'a

England. "

l a rg e l y a st u de nc en t e rp r i e. Plan

c l 1 m b 1 11g potential due to it lo­

olhy ha

were developed by N ic k Lambert

cation. There are o many place

'96 and M ike J ewe l l , a c l i m b e r

around here to c l imb-Camden,

from North Conway, N . H . I t

C l i fton, the Wh i te Mountain-.

con t ru c t i o n was the 1 99 5 J a n

We are really l u c k y to be in an

P l a n project o f Lambert,

area l i ke thi , " he ·aid.

oren

tephen Measelle

I nvolvement i n the CMC

'9 . The CMC wa e tab l i hed

does not end at Colby. 'The spirit

shortly thereafter.

of the CMC go

Peters '97 and

what i

In add i t ion to const r u c t i ng

hope that people w i l l take a l l the

and overse e i ng the wa l l , t he CMC ha

provided a needed t r u c t u re fo r

O L B Y

thing

he lped b u i l d a c o m ­

m u n i ty of c l i m bers. " T h e c lu b

' U M

1 E R

1 9 9 7

o far beyond

going on at Col b y . We

that they learned from

the CMC and u e them after

Mike Payne · 97 gets a lift.

they graduate," aid Cochran. +

28

re


graffiti Ballot Proof A record voter turnout for Student Government Association elections resulted in a runott when neither of the presidential tickets received the 50 percent required for victory. According to The Colby Echo, the tandem of Shannon Baker '98 and J i l l Marshal l ' 9 8 defeated J o h n Doyle ' 9 9 a n d R o b Chisholm ' 9 9 b y w i n n i n g t h e runoff election by j ust f o u r votes, 382-378. Baker and Marshall received 39 percent of the vote i n the origi nal election , while Doyle/Chisholm got 32 percent. The 72

Rivals' Rebecca Zacher '98 and Shelley Wollert ' 98.

percent turnout was the highest ever.

Crowning Achievement

Scene Saver The Perform i ng Arrs De­ parrment' pr duction of the ! 8th-century English farce The Rn·als, which The Colb)• Echo called "one of the mo t ucces·­ ful pla ,. of the year," had to m·ercome unu ual chal len e . Leading lady helley Wollert '9 wa· call d to A u·rralia be­ cau e of a death in the fam i ly and flew b ck only two day be­ fore the play opened on Apri l dents returned from prin vaca­ tion. Director Richard wel l a y he ne,·er frerred ab ut the vacation interm i i on before opening mght-"[the play] felt ready before prin break ," he aid-but Wollert's r und-theworld trip in the mid t of a diffi­ cult emotional period hawed the d1 c1plme of a profe ional. " I t w a ju t an amazino p iece of elf­ control," aid ewell, an adjunct a oc1ate profe o r who has di­ re red p l ay at Colby ince 1 97 2 .

A social event described by the Echo as "a celebration of

ereran performing arts ma­ jor· in the ca t b l tered ewell' confidence-" l inch pin ·," he called Wollert, Bryan Carr '97, rephen K idd '97 and Dougla L •ons '97. Even r okie casr mem­ ber · "learned very fa·r, learned the trick of projection and m­ eal viYidne ,'' he aid. Vi itinogue·tarti tJuliaCarey, a irector \\'ho works in Land n and . ew York, taught a prino sem­ ester cla on projection, diction and Enoli h accents, gi ing pro­ fe- ional poli'h to the player ' per­ fom1ance . ome of the ca t had tudied in the Colby in L ndon Theater Program or m the Colby in Cork pro!!Tam, ewell aid, and "oot a leg up" on the dialect . Perform ing Ans' London and vi itino art i t prooram , a well a 1 3 year a an independent department, "are beginning to pay off," ewell a id. "It' excit­ ing to have trong and oifted colleague t work with." +

everything that makes Colby great," the first Mr. Colby College competition parodied beauty pageants for a delighted packed house in the Page Commons Room. Junior Jon Foster was crowned Mr. Colby on the strength of his "hysterical" Colby-ized rendition of Adam Sandler's "The Hannukah Song," the Echo said. Eleven contestants competed in beachwear, talent and evening wear categories and used the opportunity to display their creativity. Runner-up Jason Flesh '99 wore a complete scuba outfit during the beachwear competition and later, in the talent portion, stood on his head and played a kazoo while dressed in a ballerina costume. Flesh told the Echo, as if such a declaration were necessary, "we're definitely not taking it too seriously." The Mr. Colby pageant was so popular that organizers say i t may become an annual event.

Food For Thought M id night Munchies, the study break snack opportunity provided by volunteers for students beginning exam crams, appears to be on its way to earning the mantle of Tradition. This year's event attracted nearly 500 students to Foss Dining Hal l , where College employees served food and beverages from 9:30 p.m. until midnight. A burger grill was set u p i n the Foss courtyard, whi le i nside, nachos, salads and desserts were devou red. Joanne Lafreniere, one of the volunteers, said students were g racious and appreciative. "They came looking pretty tired and left very upbeat," she sai d .

H ear T h i s?

Colby' radio tation, W M H B , p l a • s a l l kind of m u i c , but it play li't eature many alternative rock

arti t . How many

can you name usmo the clue below? Potent pain killer.

The only firework your parents let

A baby T-Rex.

Concrete urface.

you use.

What you get in hockey

One of whar Crick and

Worldwide

di a ter relief agency,

spelled funny.

Watson studied. 4 Le t tuce with an attitude.

if

the gloves come off.

10 Bond.

Meh-ille' story ll'ithour the "-Dick."

29

U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


mules on the move I �

H i story Repeats Itself Colby athl etes earn o n e, t h e n two, national championsh ips By K e v i n Cool

H

eading into the Final e,·cnt of the

'Tlunal l l 1 ' an

l'

heptat h l o n , the L 00-metcr run,

m i l er, a n J w e k n e w he wnu kl he a r

tween A l l - A m erica n

A i tken 'a i d . " S o we -,,1t Jn\\'11

Pomerleau ' 9 7 a n d a champion­

and fi gured l l l l l h 111· rn ud1 lee­ wa

1 d h\

"1 11 lcg ·\ I 1 r'r f e m . t i c nc1 l l1 ma! Lh imp 1on 1 11 ;111

i n d \' 1 n t h a t c 1· e n t , "

. h ip. Kristen Donato of �� pri ni.;­

·

y n t h 1 , 1 P n m <.' r l c .1 u ,

1..e l l e n 1 l rn l f ­

o n l y one compct i wr rnnJ be­ ynth1a

half 'e 1 >11d' fle h 1 n d her 1.. <11111:

A i tken huJJlcJ tn plot ,l l"< l l ci.; y .

A A L l i v i , it'n 1 1 1

at h l e t e t ( l \I 1 1 1

.i

'l:' e r.i i

'purr .

o( h e r be-,1 a t h letL ,

n k c n ,,1y , t h 1 , year'

P( lmerll',\U I t he f 1 r't

'lJu<1J

'o i l )

m ig h t h.1vc c.. h a l l c ngeJ peren­

n,n 111n,il 1.. h.1 111-

n 1 . i I pt i11•erh1iu-,e W 1 I I 1.im" for the

P ' ' n h ip ' l lK ' TnJJ

'rnd ' had ui lo,c t he c 1 ch t

tha1 could have hel'n e1·cn hct­ l l'r." I l.1J kc) i n J urte' not fc l ltJ

:1 11(111 '" 3

'E�

A ' u t le .

h u n d re d <rnd , t i l l 11 1 11 l t h L·

\\'lln t he 'I l'eplcd1,1'e 1 11 1 9 3

h y a few po int� and figured t l l

h c p t a t h l n n l . S h e h ;1d t l > hl'

, hl' 11 ,i- 1 . i t e r J ( l l l1eJ h)

1 1 l h)

i nL l uJ in g on1.: t hat forced llllt

p l ac

ll' l t h in fi\"L' 'Cllllld, l lf l l 011.l l \ l ] . "

l re,hm.111 J . 1 11 1 1 e Brcll ,t Lr, \\ hn

A l l - A mer 1c,1 J h t < m e runner

T h e race heg;in a n d L \ m.11n

11 1 in t he h , 1 11 1 11 1 e r t h r1 111 , l l thc

1'.ir,1 r.i t ter,, m '97, rhe Mub

( A A ll)l'Ct l l'l' bel1 111 ) .

('l<Kcd t h i rd l 1l t hL confcrenct

fielJ

nil ge trailed Pome r l..: a u h igher i n t he fi nal c1·ent .

Pomerleau and he<lLI

rn1c h Deh

ll'ent t i u t f,1 t , r u n n i n Q 1 hc t 1 r't 40

,, l l llC

l 1l , l 1 g h t l v mnrc r h , rn ,1

A 1 1 ken '·" ' l'nmerk, 1 u , \I hn'e

m i nute. rl 11l1erleau 11 ;1' '1:1. '>Cl

,111J lnurt h a t the E 'A

meet

poi n t t nt.11 ,1t t hl' n.ll t1 in.1l 111l'1.:t

"Elll) htiJ) whn 11 c h;1d for tht

,11 I t he

,h,i r t L reJ t hL 'd1pul 1K· p 1 . 1 1 h l 1 m

e n u re -.e,i -un h;1J m c re J 1 hlt:

olhy ,en1nr dwn 1 1 m mnned . 1 1 l

reuirJ. ranb,1' t he hl' l J'Cr111rmer

flre, 1 k t h rnugh rerl"mm,rnce' .lt

o f t lie Je,1re a n d ,t.1111 1 na -, h e h . 1d

'hl' h,1, u l,K heJ ' 1 11Le U l ll1 111!.! (\)

,hnwn m·cr her e x t raord mMy

'olh) I 2 ye,1r' .l!!ll. "'\' h.11 -et

t md, heh 1nd.

n kcn

. E ' · -\ '

,rnJ t h e f o l l o\\'m!!

11 eek .u t hc DI\ i..mn I l l 1e\\ En­

f our-yc<1r career anJ we n t , 1 frer

'1 11d\ ap.trl lm111 nd1cr <1th ll're' I'

!!lanJ,, 11 here \\'C fm1,heJ fifth,"

Donaw. " he pi keLI 1 1ut a l m e

rhe ct111'1,t ent up11 <1r I 'r1ral tif

A lCken ''11J. " ..\rid then w come

on t he r r;1 k a n d when l nn,lt\1

1 m prnn�ment ,he h,i.

pa eJ t he l in e ,

l llLh hegan

A 1 t kt'n ,,uJ. " I c.. ,in'r peak h 1 g h l \

.111�1 fin 1,h fourth at E A

cou n t i ng, 'one thnu,anJ one, l l lll'

cm n1i.:h 1 1( ' rn d \ ,1 , 1 per,,m . •' he

rremendl u effort."

h1 111 n,"

hc11.. k 111 th i u- t 'e' en teen penplc ·

11 a' 1

th )U anJ two . . . "' A n ken 'a 1 J .

11mb 1 11 c reLl 1hh h,1rJ anLI he ''

"\.\/c're lo'-tn!.! u h a �rwn!!

Pomerleau dtheJ t h e J 1 t ,ince

one uf t h e k mJe t pet1ple I 've

group n -ernor,-b1g potnt 'C1lr·

hetween her ar1LI Don<1tl1 ll' h t l e ,

e1 er k nnwn. She rea l l y J1 e'

,ire

er,-that 1 r \ gnmg tn be rcalll

i n r h e '>tam". A i t k e n ,

n her

a huu t l'\ Cr) hnd\ on t he team a nJ

rough tt> replace them ," A i tken

( ! by cnache, anJ a r h let , and

1, ll'i l l mg ro Jn Jnyr h 1 11 c to hdp

,aiJ . "

the team."

l ike

a clu ter of a l um n i

heered her

hen you lo e omebo1.h

' m J y . who

oulJ

c re

rwen t\' w forty pomr: 111 a meet

itk n "a i d , " not to

LcJ fly Pomerleau, . 1rken

be t o o o b n o x 1 o u . " [ o n a tn

'a 1 J , rh women\ t ra k anJ field

b

fi n i hed in 2 : 2 1 . 9 . T\\'o anJ ,

team had "a ''en· gnod 'ea on

11 · ro our ream ." +

o n , tryi ng, Cynthia Pomerleau '97

U c r t t e rh.: r . 1 h of 111)llrlC,,

·

her,elf, that' a trem nJou

He Threw the Title comp t t tor there wa J a m ie , two ·oph more and all the re't

Capping a e a o n that included breaking the c h o l r c rd i n h i third meet a a collegiate perfonner, fir t-year tud nt J a m ie Brew ter won the NCAA Di\'i ion l i l hammer throw, joining

ynt h ia

Pomerleau '97 as Colby's fir t nati nal champions ince 1 9 3 . Based on h i

regular- e a o n performance, Brew ter' winn i ng a· the premier hammer thrower in Divi ion I l l . H won the

throw of I 6 feet , three inches was n t unexpected, ay men' track and field h ad G ach Barrett

m i t h '93. "Jamie wenr into the meet

ranked fir t , o we knew he had a chance to win,"

of Maine me t and pla ahead ofh i cl

"J amie' future I ok very prom i i ng," C mann a id.

meet in that J a m ie wa t he on ly fre h m a n there. Of the fifteen

U �t M E R

I 9 9 7

e t rival. He act ua l ly w n the n t i n l ti t l with h 1

f i r t throw i n th pre l i m im1rie but topped i t 1 11 t h e finals.

Th r w i ng c ach Dan Camann agreed. "lt was a very exc i t i ng

tate

ew England Champion­

hip . He arrived at th nat ional meet ·eeded fir t, about two fe t

mith aid. "But

to go out there a a fre hman and do it, that wa amazing."

0 L A Y

d first at th

30


Long-time C oach Dies

sports shorts

On J une l l , le - d1an two month after the Colby C C\ ub honored hun \\"ith i t.., highe t awarJ, Lee W i l l i m , men' ba ketball coach for 2 year anJ the fou nJing director of the Ba-ketball Hall of Fame, died at Pike Peak Ho p ice m Colorado prings, Colo. He was 7 d l i<tm.., won 2 53 game and 1 0 Maine I ndependent A thletic A -oc 1ation chamri nsh ip , including eioht in a row, at Colby ben\'ecn 1 946 and 1 96 5 . Afterward he became the first executive J1rectorn f the ati nal Ba ketball Hall f Fame in pringfield, Ma- . He wa� indu ted into the laine port Hall of Fame in 1 99 1 . pril 2 at the C Club' annual banquet, h e receh·ed the Carl ebon port Achie\'ement A ward, pre ented annually to honor a member of the Colby community for d istingui hed achievement in the field of athletic . He i· urvi\'ed by hi \\'ife, Ruth; a on, Gregor · a daughter, Mar Jo larte ll; rwo ners and � ur orandc hi ldren. +

After the best start in its 27-year h istory, m e n ' s l a c rosse finished with a 9-4 record and reached the q uarterfinals of the ECAC tournament. The team won nine of its first 1 O matches, including seven i n a row to match its longest winning streak ever , and defeated 1 3th-ranked Amherst. Senior Seth B l u m enthal

finished his career as one of Colby's top 10 all­

time scorers with 1 05 points. and junior goalie B r i a n Fra n k broke t h e school mark for career saves with 600. Sophomore Matt W i l l ia m s

led the team in scoring with 21 goals and 29

assists . . . . The softba l l team. led by second team Al l-ECAC performer A n n Morte n s o n

'98 .

had one of its best seasons ever at 1 8-8. The team won the C B B . defeating Bates and Bowdoin three times each. Mortenson led the

'Back On the Map'

team i n almost every h itting category, batting . 452 with

prmgwascolJ, windy and rain • on Mayflower Hill: good for keeping the black flie down, terrible for ba eball. everthele , Colby head Cl ach Tom Dexter' �quad compiled 1 best record -ince 1 9 - 3 , earning a herth in th ECA tournament m the proce . Their 1 - 1 2 mark al·o ga\'e the team i� econd con ecutive winn ino -ea n, the first time that ha hJpreneJ ince 1 9 2- 3 . "Thi -e 11n put Colby basebal l back on the map," Dexter aid, adding that the weather may actual I · have helped. "'\ e talk a lot about mental muohne- · being ready to play regardles of the weather," h aid. "We u e the weather to our ad\·antage because we kn w that mo t team we rlay won't be u ed to playino in it." The quaJ won a ch ol-record e\·en game on its ourhem trip and 11 a-. ranked a high venth in ew En land. One of the bioge t wins laine at the Black Bears' home ballpark. Colby defeated the Oivt i n I team 1 4- and "had everybody in New En­ gland baseball talkino," Dexter aid. Ir was the fir t time Colb had beaten Maine ince 1 97 5 .

17 extra-base hits. Becky

Rasmu ssen '00

the Year along with catcher

batted .398

i and was voted co-Rookie of L i s a G o o d m a n ' 00 .

Ann Mortenson '98

J o a n Giblin

top pitcher, winning 12 games.

.

Junior

was the team's

M e n ' s a n d women's crew

had the best season in the program's short history, accord ing to head coach Mark Davis. Colby boats won the President's Cup race. defeating Bates and Bowdoin , both of which had beaten Colby crew teams last fall . Both the men's and women's eights finished i n the top 10 at the New England Championships. while the novice men's eight won its event. The same novice crew later placed third at the Dad Vai l Regatta in Philadelphia. losing only to Division I schools Drexel and St. Joseph's. .

. Two New England champions

and an NCAA Division I l l national champion (see related story) highlighted the m e n ' s track and field season. E m i l T h o m a n n '00

t ru g o l e d

won the 400-meter dash at the New Englan d

Championships i n a t i m e o f 49 .3 1 . a n d senior Steve S u o m i fin ished first i n the 400-meter hurdles in 54. 7 1 . Both were school records . . . . I n what head coach Heidi Godomsky

Kris Keelty '99

conceded was a rebuilding season , a young women's

m re experience, went twelve and ixteen. La t year, a j un­ iors, they aw a chance to es­ tabl i h ometh ing. We had a

lacrosse

team was 7-8 Fifteen of the s q uad's 18 players

were first-year or sophomore students. Seniors J.J. E k l u nd and Kara Marchant broke school records for. respectively, most assists i n a game (8) and a season (24) and most

\1 111nm g ea on and that gave u- ometh i ng to build on for thi year. I rhmk rhey fdt thar rhi wa the year to really olid ify the program." P1r her Galen Carr ' 9 7 (Walpole, . H . ) , Brian DiBello '99 (Cumbe rland, R.1 . ), cart Welch '9 ( Lewi ton, Maine) and Kri Keelry '99 ( Port mouth, R. I . ) anchored a taff rhat was b th talented and deep.

g round balls/interceptions i n a season (83) . . . . The m e n ' s ten n i s

team went 2-8 1 n a " d i sappointing" season , said head

coach Fred B russe l . Despite high expectations. the team did not recover from a d ifficult season-opening loss to Hobart. Brussel returns six p layers from this year's team and antici­

Outfielder P<1t McBride '97 ( . 3 0, I RBI ) and Todd McGovern '97 ( 4 1 3, 1 4 real }, third ba e man H arold Grave '97 ( . 9 1 , l R B I ) and Gregg For er '97 ( . 3 4 4 , 32 RBI ) paced the offen e. +

pates a turnaround next season.

31

, U �! M E R

I 9 9 I

C 0 L B

Y


gifts & grants I i

The Demands of More Supply As student pool grows, so does need for fi nancial aid By Sally Baker

C

co c o nv e n t ion a l

at ion, u'e

la

-

Meehan J r . . whll ha, hccn fl>l ­

compared tt your comperitor ,"

In\ J e b of upply anJ Jem, nJ

lowmg the W i l l 1am'> r rl JC t anJ

he 'a i d , "rhe up 1de 1

Time m a g a z i n e c o v e r

tc make pred ict ion· about the

1t fal lnur. The Je ire w attraLt

wi dom-a

rec e n t

ic of l--li�her EJu

, pre· eJ in a

on t ra ry

·mur

of e l i te col lege;. A� the

pool of

ror -.tude n t ., ,

co l l eg -ht unJ tu<lent' , rhe r uJ • a

i ncrea

, t he �up­

pl y of ta lenr ed . tu<lt:n r ' w i l l m re:r propomonat l y , a n d rho e

he. t .

are th

rwc m

c

.

Profe t r

Col lege Project on th Econom-

t n( a

mean y u h ave

co

hargmg helo" what the

larger, 'o col­

Fm,rnual aid 1 c,1u e i r meam

Lritl al be­

olh

Lan kt'ep

ac1.. e ptmg \'er\ good -ru<lenb \\ho

aJ<worrh

f Economic

t

hargmg le

appl icant pool 1

1 r 1rnporranr m ­

," , id Herbert E.

c u<lent bo<ly remain the ame,

le ' r han the auual c

lege' an be mnre ,eleL t l \ e."

gredienr in t h e educ a t i onal prn­

r n , co-<l i recror f th W i l l i rn �

\'er 1 t 1 e t\'p 1 c a l l � charge m uc h

cc"Jem;inJ," kehan .,,uJ. "The

the qua l it y of the ' ru<lent ho<ly . Wm­

f W i l l iam .' Bur if you

ut your pn e and the . i:e of the

market would hear cre.ite' e -

"The qua l 1 ty f reachmg and

rdon

m te, d

onc rca>< m why u)l lege an<l u n 1 -

"

ven more t rnngly toward

college rh, t enroll th

ayo,, 1

that a

y, ' I ' l l go ro Colby

tudent ' eJuc,1 t 1 m .

w ho are mmr ralenred w i l l gra\' 1 -

rare

1 echan

tudem may

J ame'

re "more en 1 n \·c rn price than nther , " t\.1cehan ,1 1J. I( 'oll->y

aJmm..:J on! · rh0.,e

Largest Individual Gift Ever A

6 . 2 5 - m i l l ion gra n t from a fam i l y foundat ion of

w i l l dramac ically advan e

nib · parenr­

olby' glob I empha i by hnnging more

1 l . 2 - m i l l icm g 1 fr rom

for the ·rudy of internat ion, I human nghr . It 1 rhe large t md1 n<lu Oak

hair in Biolo ical

ole. idenr Bil l

The grant fr m the Oak Foundation i

of t h e student h,

J

·

reduced-and, therefore, fewer r e n J in th

What' l l leg

furure.

about ·eventy three percent O\'er

more, J\1eehan ·av-.

what one wou ld earn without

need the exrra fundmg

Coner say the foundat ion ha

oil: y march rhe eff: re.

r i pu lated char rwo

Helm,

1t a l low them to hire t p-qual i ty

d vel pment and alumni rela­

fa ulry and 1)ff r amen1 tie., l ike

ti n . 'That tran lat

,

a ce.

olby' v ice pre idem for into a ub-

tanrial m rea·e in rax revenue

ro Cl mpurer and fir. r-rate ath­

from rho e mdividual for oc1 -

letic fa i i irie .

e r y over a l tf time, which ben­

'' I f you charge a lower price

f the I 0 ·tudent

uch an educar1on," aid Randy

that enJowmen� prlWide becau

ur-r -dare re,idence hall

IO international tudent , n the condi r i n char

qua i t t \

w oul J be

gm1J 'tu<lent wnu !J want w ar ­

i n ternat iona l rudenr ro Mayflower H i l l anJ e tab l i hm an m ti rut g ifr to Colby in ir hi tory and fol low the 1 993

who d1m't

need f i nanc i a l help, th

efit ever •body.''

+

must be from Denmark, rwo mu r be from Z imbabwe, and rwo mu t be di advantaged a a re u l r ofrorture and/or pol i t i c a l ppre

ion uffered

Two More C hai rs

by them or the ir fam i l ie . He aid Colby w i l l work w i th The Reha b i l i ­ tation and Re earch Cen ter for Torture V i c t i m

in C penhagen,

Denmark, with A mne ty I nternational and wirh ocher gr up con­

Gerald and Myra Dorro (P '93, '96, '9 ) f Milwaukee, WLS., and A.

an

H. Bernhard '57 ( P ' 7, '93 ) of We tport, Conn., have e tabli hed endowed

cerned w ith internat ional human righr to identify and elect rudent

profe or hip at Colby.

from the l a t categ ry. A l o, Colby mu t fund 10 addi tional interna­

The fir�t holder of r.he Arnold Bernhard Profe-sor hip in Arts and Humanitie 1

t ional cholar hip in order to receive the Oak grant , for a total of 20

Profe or of Mu 1c Paul Machlin, who ha

c holar h i p arising from thi gift .

The remaining $ 1 .25 m i l l ion w i l l establish the Oak I n t i rure fo r the

taught at the College ince 1 974. The

Study of I n ternational Human Rights. The program would annually

Dorro· Chair in Life ciences will be filled

bring practitioner to Colby for a seme ter in residence to write and

by eptember 1 99 .

speak about their work and to co-teach c l asse dea l ing w i th human

The profe ors hip- are the 2 7 rh and 2 th receh-ed by Colby, up from four

rights issues. In add i t ion, the grant will underwrite the Oak Symposium in Human Rights, a biennial ses ion featuring n teworrhy persons who are deali ng w i th human rights abu es throughout the world. +

C O LB Y

U M M E R

1 9 9 i

32

Paul Machlin

in 1 99 .


Reunion

1 99 7

Reunion Weekend was

smothered i n sunshine and warm feelings, a s more than

1 ,300 alumn i , spouses and

7

1 . G eorge Batt ( h u s b a n d of Dorris H ea ney Batt '42) a n d M rc h a l i n e C h o m i cz M a n n o '57 share a

children gathered on Mayflower Hill in early June.

Photos bg Scott Perry

s m i le 2. Chris F roth i n g h a m ( l eft) a n d Paul Arg i ro d e m o n strate the old Class of 1 992 s p r n t .

3)

Scott

La r n e r ( l eft), Jeff Lasher ( h u s band of H e i d i Sch maltz L a s h e r ) , Peter M u rphy and B i l l Cast e l l i ( r i g ht). C l a s s of '87, e nioy the s u n , track-s ide, with c h i ld re n i n t h e catbirds' seats. 4) C o l by Brick Award w i n n e rs Chris M e rri l l Wysor '42, John Dolan

'36,

W i l l i a m Timken ' 57 , J u d ith Prophett

Timken '57, E rnest Fortin ' 5 1 , B e n j a m i n Sears ' 5 2 , Na ncy R i c k e r S e a r s ' 5 0 . 5 . The Parade of Cla sses heads down Mayflower H i l l Drrve wrth t h e 50- P l u s C l u b i n t h e lead.

6.

L u c k y the C lown w a s o n h a n d

to d e l i g ht t h e C o l by k i d s . 7 . G e rry Boyle ' 7 8 ( f a r right). R i c h a rd R u ss o ( c e n t e r right) and Anestes Fotiades ' 8 9 ( back nght) signed copies of t h e i r b o o k s under a canopy a t Roberts U n i o n .

33

- u M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


4

5

1 . The Colby E ig ht celebrated its 50th a n n iversary d u ring

R e u n i o n . The Eig ht, i ncluding some m e mbers of the original ensem ble. sang at the Class of ' 57 d i n ner. D u ma s ¡47 greets a frie n d . Class of

1 992

3.

2.

Charlotte H a n ks

F ive years out a nd proud. the

gathers. 4 The Class of

'87

whiffle ball game

on the Foss-Woodman lawn. 5 A perfect day for a p1cn1c, a s seen fr o m Love1oy. 6. Le e Professor of English and American Studies Charlie Bassett gives ' e m his best i n the Al u m n i College Preview w i t h a lecture o n Americans i n Pans:

1 930. 7.

1 900-

Ba l loons and m e mories h i g h light the classes parade

for Peter Carey

'79

and Patty Stoll

'77. 8.

M a rriner Distin­

guished Service Award winner Richard Schmaltz '62, Robert G e lbard '64, w i n n e r of the Distinguis hed Al u m n i Award. and Charlie Bassett, who received t h e Facu lty Award for Service to the Alu m n i .

C O L B Y

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

34


· 8Early Years Correspond ent Fletch er Eaton '39 42 Perry Drive Needham. MA 02 1 92 6 1 7-449- 1 6 1 4

Geraldine B. Hannay '2 1 d ied m Bingham, Maine, on Aug. 22, 1 996, at the age of 97. Mr . Hannay was a teacher of English , Latin and U.S. and world h i tory in the public schools of Bingham, while continuing her lifelong inrer­ e t m mu 1c. he played comet in the Colby College women's orchestra and a lso m the MacDowell Club m Boston. In 1 99 5 she pub­ lished a book of poem ,]use for Fun . A n excerpt from the book appeared in the ovember 1 996 column. . . E. Evelyn Kellett '26 died on Sept. l , 1996, at the age of92. M iss Kellett wa the ecretary of her cla , a member of the Alumni Council, and the recipient in 1 969 of a Colby Bnck for her devoted service to the College . . . . N. Charland Letourneau '2 7 d ied October 1 2 , 1 996, at M id - Maine Medical Cen­ ter· econ Unit in Waterv i lle. He was an ac­ countant for the U. . Department of Agnculture before remmg to Cl inton, Ky., where he over­ saw hi farmpropeny. He was a ummer re idem of Belgrade for more than 40 year·. . . In a letter dated April 7, 1 994( ! ) , Nell ie Dear om '28 tell of a lady she knew ( ca l l her Roberta) m a emor hou ing group who in tructed her s;m (Robert) to throw a parry if anychmg of a fa tal nature should happen to her. Roberta died and Roberr iu c happened to win a m1ll 1on dollars m a lottery about then. True to his mother's m­ crucuon , "he threw a party that turned out to be a cheerful occas10n with a full-course d i nner and bnght red floral arrangements." . . . Mabel Dolliff Craig 'JO report that when she and her husband, Andrew, turned 90 this pnng in Claremont, Calif., her daughter and husband came from Colorado to help celebrate. Punch and cookies were enjoyed by all, and the flower in church were beautiful. . . . Harry 0. Ashmore '30, USNR ( Ret ) , reports that the most memo­ rable thing ever to occur m h is life was when he wasmade a lieucenantcommander m the United States Naval Reserve . . . . Ethel MacDougall Alemian '3 1 lives alone on Cape Cod and stilt dnve co the tores, the post office and che dump. She reads wich d ifficu l ty buc keeps up with the news on PBS radio. She extends her love to all of her classmates. . . . Dorris Moore Cox '33 has been on three world trips and 70 cruises and is graceful thac she can crave! a exrensively as she does . . . . Ja per Foster '3 1 died Augu t 29, 1 996, m Maninsville, Va. Ac Colby he was a member of Kappa Delta Rho and Phi Beta Kappa. He was a former resident of Rumford, Maine, and throughout his career was a principal at high schools in Maine . . . . Riding on an elephant is the most memorable activiry Myrtle Paine Barker 'J l ever indulged in . . . . Dr John B. Curti 'J2 spend h i winters in

Palm Harbor, Fla., and summers in We cbrook, Conn. Local endea,·ors m both places and tra\•d keep him and his wife occupied. Spare t ime is pent m makmg useful wooden articles . . . . Malcolm Wilson ' 3 J , a long-time advocate for the mentally ill in Mame, has resigned from the Kennebec-So mer-et Mental Health Qual i ty Improvemen t Council on the grounds that che council cannot get anything done. Mr. Wilson, the father of a mentally ill woman, has been urged co cay on . . . . Ellis Anderson '33 takes pleasure in the facr he 1 alive at 85 and master­ ing the word processor. It pleased him co get John P u lien ' J S 's autograph m the latter's book The Tv.•enriech Maine . . . . Charlotte Blom field Auger '33 recalls tell ing her son, "A college educatlon won't keep a i ob for you, but it cer­ tainly will open door for you. You keep the job by hard work, but being a college graduate helps you get the iob." She thanks Colby for the help her Colby education has gi,·en her through l ife . . . . Sybil Wolman Smith Berman '34 writes that the most memorable thing thac ever hap­ pened to her \\'as the "bmh of my great-grand­ son, M ichael mith, grandson of my beloved late on Michael." Mrs. Berman i proud co note how Colby ha moved up a notch on the 25 Best Liberal Am Colleges list . . . . M u riel Walker Dubuc ' J 4 \\'as the senior alumna present at a mini-reunion and fund-rai er luncheon held in Winter Park, Fla., tht pa t spring. M uch en­ thus1a m for Colby's campaign was generated rhanks co an outstanding team from the College headed by President and Mrs. Cotter. Says Mr . Dubuc, "Colby's present tatus among liberal arts colleges m the country fills me wich pride and awe at the vision and accompli hments of our College leaders." . . . Mike Cohen '3S \Hites, "l wa recently invited to spend some time in the Lincoln Bedroom of the Whire House in appre­ ciauon of my campaign contribution. ince the duration of these visit i proportional to the si:e of one's gift, I got a pass entitling me to four and a half minutes starting at 2 : 3 7 a.m. I was sur­ pn ed to find other people already there. Jane Fonda wa domg pushups over in a comer. Arnold Schwarzenegger, the muscle man of the movies, wa hogging the bed, and I resented che need co pend part of my four and a half minutes j ust getting him moved over." . . . Mary Small Copithorne '3S says that good things are always happening to her. For instance, he is only now coming down with macular degeneration. l n her 8 5 years, this i s her first disability . . . . A t the time o f writing, Harold Brown ' 3 S was headed for California to visit a son, followed by a crip to Hawaii for a tour of four islands. Norman R. Brown 'JS writes courageously that he is coming down with Alzheimer's dis­ ease. (I am sure I speak for all of us in admiring Norman's candor and in wishing him wel l . ) . . . Avis Merritt Churchill '3S keeps abreast of today's world by listening co report from her grandchildren. Letters from former students are a source of j oy to Mrs. Churchill. . . . Lau rance E. Dow '3 S , accompanied by h is wife, flew

35

lalumni at large

around che world in 80 days courtesy of Pan American Airways. They left from Florida and returned da N .Y.C. They both report char it was a wonderful way to travel. They were conc ience stricken, however, to learn that their patronage wa the d irect cau e of the airline's financial collapse . . . . Beth Pendleton Clark ' J S has recuperated from the operation m which she donated a kidney to her daughter, Beverly. Beth wa 82 at the t ime. Meanwhile, Be,·erly is doing well as a busy member of the Maine legislature. Mame's governor has appointed Beverly to co-chair a committee to re-shape the gm·emment. Beth is very proud of her daughter ( and l think i t nor our of !me to suggest char all 50-plu sers should be burmng with pnde about both) . . . . Jeanette Benn Beebe ' 3 6 happened upon a gathering in a San Franci co store, Nordstrom's, where she discovered 76-year-old Esther Williams busily promoting her line of wim wear. Said Jeanette, 8 3 , in The San Fran­ cisco Chronicle, "this is j ust a wonderful mo­ ment. I saw her perform in the 1 939 World's Fair and I've loved her ever smce. She still inspires me-I do aqua-calisthenics twice a week, and l always think about Esther Williams." . . John Dolan 'J6 sent a picture of his abode in Des Moines. It is cylindrical and 12 stones high. John is on the top floor where the po' folks live . . . . Evelyn Wyman Caverly ' 3 6 calls most memorable the words spoken by her doctor­ "l t 's a g irl"-when her fourth c h i ld was born . . . . Sara Cowan ' J 7 remembers vividly her participation on the team thac brought about equal pay for women teacher in Maine. "The day 'our bill' passed the Maine House of Representatives, my niece Joanna was born," she writes. " It's a joy to meet former students wherever I go in this area ( Portland, Maine)­ and they still remember me." . . . Commander Frederick G. Demers 'J 7 , U N ( Rec . ) , feels that his most memorable experience wa j oin­ ing the U . . N avy. He retired on J uly 1 , 1 994. Since then, he has been traveling in Central America . . . . P a u l Landry ' 3 7 and Edward Birdsey '48 agree, in che pages of the Central Maine Morning Senrinel, that che fee ling of unity among students and faculty at Colby is, and always has been, unmatched . . . . Ever since she moved to the Boothbay Harbor region 1 5 years ago, R u th Yeaton McKee 'J7 has worked con­ stantly as a member of the Boothbay Region Land Trust "to pre erve for the public enjoy­ ment hundreds of acres, including several is­ lands, in this beautiful part of the world." . . . Pauline Walker Deans ' J 7 calls her recent trip to the Galapagos Islands the most memorable event m her recent experience . . . . A detailed account of the career of Dr. Hammond Bender '38 ha appeared in the Fall R iver, Mass., Herald News. Throughout his 5 6-year ca re er as a pod ia­ trist, Dr. Bender was known for h i concern for the unfortunate, often providing treatment at a reduced charge or no charge at all. In his cown, he was a man known to, and known by, every­ body. However, heart trouble has forced him to

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


Hasn't Lost H is Voice

Morns " M i ke" Cohen '35. 85 this month, 1s a writer H i s witty. soc ially conscious. pointedly political remarks appear 1 n the Ocala Fla . Star-Banner's "Other Voices" column and 1 n another column 1n a local weekly ·something comes u p I want to say .

I say 1 t . " said

Cohen. who also 1s look ing for a publisher for his second novel As a Colby student. Cohen wrote for the Echo and en)Oyed English courses 1 n writing I n the early 1 950s he pu blished stories 1n

Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine. and 1 n 1 966 he published a novel. The Bnght Young Man Cohen says he probably would have had a career as a writer 1f not for the Depression ' I d work for nothing

Morris " M i ke" C o h e n and his wife, K i tty.

1ust to get the atmosphere . " he said he told Boston newspapers

open a n office Th ree years later he ioined Burli ngton I nd u stries

during his high school and college summers "There was absolutely

where he was vice president of the i n dustrial fabrics d 1v1s1on

nothing available "

After 15 years i n Los Angeles. he moved back East when he was

After g raduation. Cohen and his four-year roommate

Ray

a p po i nted national sales manager He retired 1 n 1 97 7

Goldstein '35. knocked around Cal ifornia for two years. prospect­

C o h e n wrote h i s fi rst n o v e l 1 n l o n g h a n d on t r a i n trips to and

ing for gold for 13 months and "Just barely m1ss1 n g getting rich

from work 1 n New York City The book made maybe $ 1 0 000, and

every day " His m 1 n 1 n g experience with powder and dynamite

the p u b l i sher L i p pincott. advi sed him not to g•ve u p h i s 1ob He's

came 1n handy 1 n World War

g l a d he stayed with B u r l i ngton Cohen says 11 o n ly because 1 t

I I . Cohen says when h e led an Army

platoon of combat eng ineers Multiple wounds in Germany brought

g a v e h i m mater i a l f o r h i s s e c o n d n o v e l

him the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star with oak-leaf cl uster and

mystery written 10 years ago

a wife, Kitty, an Army nurse he met during h i s 1 3 months recovering

11 came to l i fe . " he said

1n hospita l s . They have two c h i l d ren

Killer of Presidents. a

I reread 1 1 . worked

11 over again so

' b u t 1 t d i d n ' t really get born until last yea r . "

Cohen says he reads a lot goes t o clubs a n d meetings and

Cohen re1 o i ned L . W G u i ld Co . , a textile manufacturer he d

generally writes his newspaper column about something stirring­

hooked up with in the l a te '30s, who sent h i m to Los Angeles to

abort1on the nature of patriotism. the religious right " It's a constant war People are trying to make you live according to their rules . " he sai d ·· 11 you don't like them. you have to work against them. I 'm not a zealot. Something that builds up. I have to say something about 1t

··

A q uadruple bypass a n d a new valve a couple of years ago "feel l i ke a new engine 1 n my chass i s . " Cohen said He t a l ks like a writer and he walks l i k e a writer (wel l , he says apologeti c a l l y , a m i l e a day to the grocery) a n d he types at a desk Sounds like a writer. -Robert Gillespie

36


A L L' �I './ I

A T

L A R G E

Dr. Charles R. "Moose" retire from rracr1ce eye on Dll'ight, Ell1nt i;; a genealogy hobbyist and, and a t t e m r r ro ge r an a m c l e r u h l i h e d . Dolan '38 feel, rh<H j\) i n i ng Lamhda Chi Alrha to this enJ, has obtained Root> V, a genealogy . . . M u riel Flagg DeShon '43 a n d h e r husband. and marryino h 1' 11·1ie, Jeanette Fl) nn, 5 3 years ,ofrware rackage. Among the Dnsko forehears Howard, have heen tra1·el111.g all Ol'er-lraly, ago are the t\\'O memories stuck mli<t t"irmly in were some nam.:d Crowley, whereupon Mary eattle, San Franc1 co, the Can,1d 1an Rock ies. Crowley Lafleur '39 stepped forward ro help out his mind. tdoose rerorts that for the past - i x Through Muriel, l accidentally discovered that on thi· one and nailed down tl\IO Crowleys for years, four Cl1uple,, the men all member· of the her husband had heen a close friend of mine Cl;iss of l 9 1 8 anJ member> L,f Lamhda Ch i , Ell iot. E l l iot has two lovely, lively granddaugh­ some 46 years agn. . . Leonard Caust ' 4 3 . h.1 1·c gathered, w1d1 t h e i r 11·1 \·es, in Flc1nda for a ters, age" 6 and 2 - 1 /2 . whose anncs keer him bemg 7 5 vear� old, c l a i m that hi- m m J 1 · so full reun10n. They are Bunny .md Cliff Nelson, young a t hean. . . Eleanor Thomas Curtis '40 of memories that he can't get them properly H i lda anJ Ken Holbrook. Bunny and Ralph stay. 111 rrett\ go,1d shape, heired partly hy water sorted. He reache ches ar two local e lemen­ "Bus" B r o w n anll J eanette and " 1' 1 oose" aerobic::.. She recently bought a sewing machine tary schools in an effort to keer his mind sharp. DL1lan . . . . Bob Anthony '38 is pend ing much that Joe e1·eryth ing, and she has dedicated the . . . Mary Rou n d y B e bee '46 i deeply rhanktul rime trymg to rersuade the Fin ance Accounting rest of her life to learning holV to use ir. She for the pleasure given her by her three chi ldren Standards Board rn rense 1r' '>tandarJ \)11 non­ figures that if she stays busy and involl'ed 111 and three grandchildren. prnfit accountmg. -a\'' Bl>h. "It\ iun."' H e re­ enLlugh project , she will li1·e fore1·er . . . . Bob -Fl.etcher Eaton ce11·ed a d 1stmgu1shed sernce a11 arJ for educarcm• Bruce '40's memory ( ne1·er to he forgot) i of his issued by the In mute of 1' 1 anagemem Accoun­ late night arm·al 1 11 Serrember 1 9 3 6 on a Grey­ As noted elsewhere in t h is issue ofColb), rnnts . . . . A l a rge man i l a e 1w e lure from hound bus at the Waterl'ille RR Station: "We the Class of 1 940 is now going to have i ts own Gardiner Gregory '39. postmarked N lwemher (Ed Lake an,l I) were lookmg for Roberts Hall column in the Alumni at Large sect ion rather l 996, wa- ucked mto the black hl)le thar make, and took a taxi j u'r to go m·er the RR tracks. It than being grouped w i th the younger clas es of great suck111g 'ounlls dn\\'n a t rhe end of my wa the start of wonderful Colby memorie and rhe '40-. I have been confirmed a- c lass corre­ J.:,k. Bur now the em·elore h,i, been d 1,g,ngeJ rewards. " . . . Almost all rhe memorable things srondent-bur the deadl i ne for the column was (a miracle, surel) ) and we learn that the Gre­ in the l ife of Richard Chasse '40 occurred in only a few days after I was recrui ted. so I col­ gory Earth � c1ence /\ [useum i n H 1cbnlle. L ! . , December 1 94 3 : he married, got hi· M . O. degree, lected no news from classmates during rhar N .Y., celebrated i t' 30th ann 11·ersar\ L'n April !!Ot h is medical commission in the Na1·y, cel­ r ime. The Alumni Office ·enc a questionnaire 21 l 993 Hou·ed and nurrured at liN h Anne ebrated Chri ·rma·. . Ruth Moore Co r k ran to some of you 11l early summer. [ hope vou a l l andGardmerGregl1f\' m their home, hal'e responded to i t . . . . M y new t.he museum i now in rhe r lwn hall, volunteer job is national treasurer where its d1 pla\'- and dlu rrat 1 om of the Funeral and Memorial Soc i N EWS MAKERS c1f rock , butterfl1e" w i ldflower,, eties of America. I cake care of the S. Peter Mills '34 was awarded an honorary doctor of humane rree , fo.stl , wild animals and b i rd, financial act1virie , including re­ lener< by the Un1ver·ity of Mame at Farmington. M ills, a local anract counsr the year around. . . ceipts, d 1sbur emenr- and payro l l , resident, has been a generou · benefactor to the community. Leah Bartlett Daggett ' 3 9 want-; tn accou n t i ng, reporrmg, im·e t i ng, know if I know anyth i ng ahc.iut rhe ere . Ir's a small operation-two famou anJ well-known ]L1hn Dolan employee and a budget of less than '36 who h\'e- m a roundhou-. e 111 Des Momes '40 has mL11·eJ to Bradenton. Fla. 1 knew the $ 1 00,000 a year . . . . Please write. I'll hare (>ee above) . "He med to \' 1'1t u' 1n W ,nernlle," �1oore in Warern lle and am deerly saddened to your news. :;ays Leah. (Your ·ecrerarv pre u me' that Leah learn rhar Ruth'> husband, Davi·, died May 2 9 , -Emesc C . Marriner refers to the large and numerou;; Daggett c lan. If 1 996 . . . . J i m Bunting '40 1s a retired ( l 980) you, Leah, made It to Colby m early J une, you cryptanalyst lmguist in the N ational Security Gree t i ngs! Once again l am to be your Agency. On a mp to rhe Bahamas last ll'inter on found J oh n Dolan rhere m rer-tin . ) At 3. Leah c lass correspondent for a r ime, and I'm looking 1 hanng the time of her lite, 'urwunded 1-- y a 2 , 300-pa enger cruise ship, Jim and his wife forward to hearing from many of you, soon. were assigned rermanent seats at a table for l 0 for numerous family and wntmg a ficttlmal account You'll he receivmg a questionnaire from the each meal throughout the crui.e. The man next Alumni Office ro encourage you to respond. (e,·erv word rrue) of her l ife. he l i 1·e.; 111 a to Jim rnke nnr a word of English, only French, And do respond, for we'd all like to know what hamlet, Baileyn lle, I l l . , cons1,,t ing of fi ve grain o J im made do with ll'hat he had retained as a you are doing to occupy your enior years. What elevator) and a po. t office. " I r \ r lea,ant anJ French major at Colby . . . . Sid Brick '4 1 has a trips have you taken? What ones do you plan to quiet here," she reports. iolet Hamilton hnef me' age: "Just want ro say H i ! ' . . . J ane take ? What are you involved i n for your loca­ Christensen '39 wa not wnh us for rhe J une t ion ? Whar have you read recenrly? . . . l 've i u t Ru sell Abbott '4 1 shares a memory (from Yero buv1t1e at Colby because she and Arnold Beach) with us: "The bioluminescence, acti­ fini hed Louis Auchincloss' The Recror of Jus­ have a grandson who wanreJ them to be pre ent tin. Excellent, enjoyable reading! M y husband, vated by our swimmmg, was spectacular, far more ar his graduation from high :,chool. V iolet is Hank, whom many of you know, is still flying memorable for me than any Fourth of J u ly dis­ " till trying to wme" bur the hour:, are long and h is plane and has student , and he' about ro play. Each swunmer appeared to be wired with the money 1s :ero. he th mks maybe he houlJ tum 80. I'm sttll somewhat busy, still encourag­ many colorful lash mg, streaking lights, making it tf) somcth mg el e . . . . Lillian Healy Orr '39 ing people, in various ways, ro care for this fun to w1m with the others both on the surface liv e m Re ton, Va., a town et aside for the planer of our . Oh, did any of you have the and diving." . . . Harry Cohen '42 provides the purpose nf spying on Washingron, O.C. From opportunity to watch rhe TV program in three question all of us want to ask: "Society has changed her townhou e { lots of rair ) L i l l i a n derives a parts, "Mysteries of Deep pace" 1 Ir was fabu­ drastically from Colby days. WHAT OLD WE refreshmgly negative v iew of gomg -on in D.C. lous. What is out there i n that B l ue Space DO WRONG?" Harry practices law in New "Dcrre smg," he ay , and ha about topped beyond us is awesome. Ir has always mrrigued reading the \Vashmgron Post. he v1 its Ver­ M ilford, Conn., and loves ir. . . . Emanuel Fruman me and my family . . . . Now I a m looking for­ '42 was quite ill the last r i me I poke to him, and mont rwo month· a year and w 1 he he could ward eagerly to hearing from you ! an old letter from him that I have j u t unearthed stay up there more- he doesn't like the county -Bonnie Roberts Hathaway highlighted the ufferingarisingfrom carastrophic form of government i n V i rg i n i a and misses the d ines , parrirnlarly w i th respect to the bills Medi­ old to11n meetmg . . . . Elliot Dri ko '39 keeps Received a very intere ting letter from in touch mice a year with Dwight argent ' 3 9 care does not pick up. I t wa Manny's intention to A l den Wagner. He is selling h is shopping cenresearch the subject of health care financing in Pelham Manor, N.Y. A i d e from keepmg a n

40

41

44

37

U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


t\ L U M N I

·\ T

L A R lJ E

ter. m Texa<, and run 111g th e

money

1 11 to 'ccu­

hn< l ll1 1 ng anJ 1 ' m <1 k i n g <1 new l i n e ,,f ' h 1 r r .,

-\/n•itm Ma �udl /3rnti n

r 1 t 1es, which i a new ;rnJ interc t 1 ng hw.i m'"

to part i c i pate 1 11 t h e By ru n May. A l l proceeJ, c v e n r ( 3.8 m i l l 1 , m ) arc 1 1,eJ tn ope r ­

for him. He p l a n neJ

N e l on Golf Tuurnament m fr L)m this

45 En i ny mg t h e ' u m mer ntl\1' ;ind ,t !,< l ['ll'r­

hars , r ;i rti n g ro t h m k ,1hm11 ,1 w m r u get.rn <ly 1

We h1 1pe 1 <1 h o l d

cite

mem hc r' oi t he cla

t n l enJ cJ ['lart lCU larly for ,,i 1 95 5 and hc fn rc .

'e'

-Na1Jm1 Collect Paganelli

47 Lm 'um mer, Dorothy Briggs Aron on

rhe AMC A ugu.,c camr 111 Banff. Again 'he w i l l he J 1 rc c t i n g the camr which c h i ldren and parenr are >erved . . . . Naomi Dick " d i he held 111 G l i1 c 1 c r arnmal Park. he lvl . i u m.. e h.i-. re rn mJcd frL1m Dice bec ame a >i lver 1ster m Chi Chc1rtcr ,if c on u n u e as c uraror of the MeJfield, Mass., me uf t he m 1 J - M , 1 � '11011·\t l >rm our 'e n 1 1 1 r Yl'<H A lpha De l t a Kappa, a n 1 n tcrnauonal honnrar� H 1 , t or 1 c a l t ic 1 er) , teache<t German at n igh t that k i l led the ent ire .1 r p l e L rop ( h1 1 1 d 1 J rh ith sorority for women educators, and recc 1 v c J ;1 -.chn<ll ,mJ >mg' v. nh the G e r ma n c horus . : . mg rn Jerer o u r fin a l e x . i m , ) MauriLe, w ho h , 1 , 2 5 - year p m from Lockport Co l l ege WL)mtn\ Roberta Marden A lden ees Dorie Meyer had 1 mrre,-, i vc \q 1 rl J w 1d e t r. I \ e l -; , tuld me ,1hout Club. he keep> bu5y a c t i n !! a'i -.ecruary for Ha" kc, '>en:ral u m e a year. he pends t1mt their m p l.1't year tu Nc11 t o unJ I J n J , 11 here hL· \J\' y11u go llLl t ltir mu,eum' hut tor 'llllll 1:re,1t these organ i:at 1ons and un rhe boarJ of trLNec' v u l u n r ec n n q , rrc1vclmg and enioymg her fama t her church. She and her husband h,ipeJ to 1 h , "' h ie h cum1 t' of r hre e marned chi ldren anJ -.c e n ery ( m the 'ummer, r h .u 1-.) Wh i l e m v i M t her fa m i l y i n FLixhL)ftl, M a s, . , 111 J une-;md f1 \l' grandchildren rang111g in age from h igh Flund<1 l,1't ye.1r, r h e W h 1 r t L n ' <l l l c nde,I J Cnlh1 Col b y , tOL). . . . Louis Deraney "' rot e m M a r c h 'ch m i l g r ad u a t e en a ye a r old. Thi 1 her SOth al u m n i meermg 111 �.1r,h1 >t,1 ,mJ .1 1 '<l eniuveJ , 1 that he and Leonora planneJ tn 'pend the Jnn1\ er-;ary year, and '>he and her hu.,hand w i ll lu ncheon m S a fe t y H arhur wnh � ' h 1 rley ( M ar· month of March m F l m i da v 1 1 t 1 ng h 1 , hrother. lelchrJtl' hy c rut'>tng arounJ the H a w a 1 1 an I tin '46 ) <1 n d Chuck Dudley Thl' D ud l l'\ ' Ml.' On April 1 3 he wrote aga i n , t h l 5 t 1 1ne from tht' land,, "'here her you n ge ' c grandchild lives w i th pro h ah l y i l re,1Jy t h m k mg ah11u1 t h e i r .mnu.d VA ho pnal where he was recuperh" " ai lor ra ren t ." . . . Elizabeth a t i n g from double bypass heart sur­ Wade D r u m 1 a retired elementary H arry L e v i n '44 reports t h at a h i p rep l a c e m e n t gery. He expec ted to he J i .ch a rg ed \Chnol teacher who I rrubab(� a5 w n h i n a few d a y s . H 1 home address hu .,y as when he "Wl)rked." he t5 he had s i x years ago h as worked fi n e , except i n is 57 W h i tforJ Street, Ro> l md a l e , acm e m the Coll:-1ana and udbury MA 02 1 3 1 . LoU i e , I h o p e yuu are women\c luh,, direct two handbell o n e airport i n M e x i c o w h e n i t kept b l o w i n g off well on the road to recovery by t he choir' and volunteers m her local t h e m etal d etector. ti m e this issue of Colby reache� you library and food p a nt ry . La t year i n t h e summer. . . . Harry Levin she tra\·eled to Washington tate sen t a n ice long letter from h 1 home and Colomh1a. In January, one of her t h ree ,,m_ \\ <IS married to a p a th o log t c from in Franconia, N . H . ( e,·eral c l assmates a t our winter mLwe w : a fe r y Harhnr. Over t h e WJr,, 50th reunion said they had een h11n, a l t hough Chm.i G,1lf, tre1vcl, volunteering and read­ they have c n ,;,cro' ed r he c 11 u nr ry many r i mes, he was o n l y there for t wo hours ! ) A hip replace­ i ng are ,omtt of the ways Donald Butcher pe nds v i . 1 t mg t he i r f1,·e c h i ldren and ,c,·cn ( ,u pre,ent ment he had 1 x years ago ha worked fine, h 1 , r i me m reti re me nt from a 1stant vice pre ·1· count ) gr,md c h i lJ rc n . Ju r <l' 'huck ''nu� 11·a•., except in one a i rport i n M e x ico when 1 t k ert Jent nf t he AnJrn er C0mpanie (a property and their son , Jllh n , 11·a,, unt i l re ce n r h . m t he A i r blow i ng off the metal detector. S t i l l w or k i n g, casualty m urance c o m pany ) and captain m the Fnrce. He' mm a U n 1 teJ A i rl i ne' p i l < ll . U ' MC R . H 1 . wife 1 a volunteer and home· H arry creates c l i n ics for fu l l -·erv1ce contracep­ Laura Tapia Aitken ;md her h u ,hand , H ugh, maker. anJ thetr three chi ldren are a commu­ t ion and family planning, i n c l ud i ng abomon· , are both professors e me ri t i , \Xl d l t a m P<1ter,,m nity development director, an architect and a i n Third World countries. He c re a ted t he fi rst College, New Jersey. T ra \• e l 1, o n e nf th e i r free - s t an d i n g out-pa t i e n t abortion >erv ice m loan officer for at1om Bank m F lor i d a and pleasure . A mp w T urkev was In their r l a n ' f or Wash i ngton , D.C., m 1 970, and after Roe t'. m ,1t h e r of rhe1r only grandchild . . . . When la5t M a y. . . I 've haJ recent catch-up rhone David \ e be r wrote, he and h1· wife were JUSt Wade in 1 97 3 , he helped create other c l i n ic m v 1 s1 ts with bmh Frannie Dow Wells and Bobbe ba ck from their 1 0th Elderho tel, thi one co Holt achs. Bobbe a nd Don J i ,·e m e a t t l e, a number of U . S . c i t ies before turn i ng h i s atten­ Apache Lake 111 the mountains of An:ona. t i on to w o rki ng internationally . . . . Pauline where they had a reunion la t .. pnng w i t h her There they -aw a wide vanery of bird , amon� Tatham Stanley wrote i n February that her ister, Bev e r l y H o l t W i e gan d ' 5 0 , a n J her them a green-tailed towhee, which they had husband was home after an emergency mp to brother, Ros Holt ' 5 3 . he ' al,o had a recent never.een before . . . . Eileen Lanouette Hughe the hospital. No further news from her, but we ge t - toge t h e r with Dot Allen Goettman, who all are p ray i n g for the be t. . . . I 'm sorry to s t a rt ed i n the Co l by Cla'� of '46, ro a m ed one of ha· two daughter l tv mg m Caltfornia wtth their familie and ay , "To see my three darlmg report that Priscilla Gould Brock pa sed away "our" Air Corp cadet anJ thereupon left col­ in January after a short i l l nes . . . . Thought you lege. Bobbe accompanies Don (another one o f grandchildren, I have to fly t0 Cahfomta or they to the Ea t Coa t." he cont i nue to do free lance might l i ke a l ittle news of m e . The mayor of "our" cadets) on h is frequent speaking engage­ Coming, N . Y . , has app o in t ed me chairman of a w r i t i ng for Reader's Digest Recorded M usic 01· ments. H is top i c : the history of t he B- 1 7 , which v1 i on, writing and editing notes for CD and committee for animal protection and control. he himself flew i n WWI I. . . . l 'm sure Frann ie tape album . When time permits, he read , We deal mostly with cats since Coming has an Wells devoutly hopes that the coming year' gardens and tra\•el and this year hopes to sail up overpopu lation of stray cats. I a lso volun teer at snow and ice w i l l be a !or l igh t er than they were the de to see the great Egyptian anciquine:;. the local hospital's long-term nursing home this year, when they kept her largely housebound. . J une Chipman Coalson went to Nova Scoua, twice a week. M y l i ttle dog, M itsy, and I help Good thing she's a reader big time, that she Israel, Egypt and the Mayan ruins in Guatemala my daughter in her yoga c las at the nursing enjoys handicrafts and that her daughter, who last year and to Eastern Europe the year before. l ives in North Reddingtan, Mas . , can handle home. Her "students" range i n age from 8 5 to She often swap a time-share and goe to Mame winter trip t o v isit Fra n n i e in Farmington, 1 0 1 ! They all want M itsy to sit in their laps­ but w i l l be in New Hampshire this August. he all of them are in wheelchairs . . . . A final bit Maine. Th is fa l l , Fra n n i e p l ans to v isit her son, vi i ts Colby when in Maine and friend both of news of Waterv i l l e : the newspaper, the who lives near Washington, D.C. . . . ponsored there and in Florida. Although she is retired, she by the New York Colby Club, Helen Strau Central Maine Morning Sencine!, has moved cont inues to do substitute teaching. Her family and I organized a luncheon and tour of the in ta its new b u i l d i ng on Front Street, and the consists of a daughter, son, and three gra ndsons. h istoric Abigail Adam Smith Hou e here in old b u i l d i ng has been tom down to make . . . As class agent, Tom Burke has been in Manhattan in May. T h i s event and ochers that room for a parking lot. A lso, C.F. H athaway is y ear- rou nJ camp a n d fa m i l y c e n t e r f n r emot1ona l l y d1,tu rhed c h i lJren . 1vlore than 1 ,200 a te a

C O L B Y

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

Don s their

and Mau rice W h i t t e n an:, 11 1 t h r L m '

u'ual hrc<1k 1 n S r . t h e Mame w i nt e r .

38

for

Peter,hurg, F l . 1 , .1w.1y

d i rec ted

t h 1 , \L'clr


A L U M

conracr wirh us all and hopes e\'ervonc w i l l support the A lumni F u n d on our 5 0 r h ann1\'er­ sary When nor prodding us to do our share, he \'Olunteer ar his health care fac i l i ty , 1s ecretary of Homeowners Assoc iauon, ushers at church, is awve m Manne Corps reunwn- and play,, golf. -Mar)'

48 A letter from Frances

Hall Firch

"Franny" Hyde

Stephen rel b us that her grand on Beni amm, nameJ after h i

grandfather, has bernme an

accompl1 hed piani>t. Franny met Carol S t o l l Baker m Phoenix and report "Perfect weather, perfect compan1 , al mo r parad i se . " Franny anJ IU

husband John have a lovely l ife, but believe that she ts 70.

he can't

ei ther can w e ! .

Another 1 948 c h e e r l e a d e r , R u t h

Barr on

Lunder, J U t welcomed a new granddaughter

h h

and now has six grandchildren ranging from rhe newborn to 16 years old. Ruth, lLklking fomard to our 50th, wrote, "Can you belte,·e t t ? Da\'td, mayhe we will be able ro g1\'e rhem a C." Well poss ibly, Ruthie . . . . Dand v i s t ted Aaron anciler m Sara ota, and if we could get him

r

back thar would make Hyde, Barron, _ andler

·I!

and Marzynski ( remember h i m ?) . 1 gue"' we could

till make a l i ttle noi -e . . . . From San

Franc1 co, Phil S hu lman informs us that his >On

m

:n

eu

Graves Nollman and her husband, Ed"'ard, are borh remed dnd live in G la,ronbury, Conn. She

says there i s noth ing new, i usr enjoying retire­ menr and doing an occa-;1onal Elderho rel . A u d rey H. Cox Petrovic \Hi tes from e m i nole, Fla. , rhar he and her hu,,band, Peter, mo,·ed co Florida in 1 9 7 4 , lo\'e 1 r and enioy remement. They ha,·e rwo ·on-;, three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren . . . . Peg Clark A t k i n s ,

o u r c la,s agent for m a n y years, ll'TOCe i n J anuary that he and Harold had taken a few days off in ew Hamp h i re to watch the snow pile up. ( We watched ll p i le up ,m April 1 . In Falmouth. Mas� . . we got eight inches, so much wee now chat rhe weight brl'ke one of rhe plastic windows i n our companionway dodger on our boa r . ) Peg w i l l be workin,g hard on our reunion, and we are confident chat eHryone w i l l wanr ro pi tch m . . . M u riel Howard Deacon cal led to tell u chat we had m1si ntereprered some of the infor­ mation she sent for our last column, poin t i ng nur rhac none of her chi ldren graduated from

1note, "Opposing the wishes of the

u

_ . Gm·­

Colby.

orry abL1ut the inaccuracy, Muriel. Who

1 940 R R # 1 , Box 1 8 1 5- P N o r t h M o n mouth. M E 04265 207-933-2401 1 94 1 B o n n i e Roberts H athaway 1 42 Turnpike Road New I pswich, NH 0 3 0 7 1 -3 522 603-878-454 7 1 942 M u ri e l Howe D e l a n o L i n c o l n Street P 0 Box 9 Benson. NC 27 504 9 1 9-894-3 2 1 5 1 944 Vivian Maxwe l l B rown 17 4 E 2 n d Street Corn ing. N Y 1 4830 607-962-9907 1 945 Naomi C o l l ett Paganelli 2 H o ratio Street #5J New York. N Y 1 00 1 4- 1 608 2 1 2-929-5277

knows, maybe making errors w i l l prove to be an inno,·an,·e way to increase our telephone con­

M a ry H a l l F itch

tacr

4 Canal Park #7 1 2

urpn ingly enough I attended -er\" lces

with clas,mates 1

• • •

We reported in our

lase column that we were grnng to Saint Barts

Malkin wrote that her last c h i ld ( of five) was

and that Dorothy would then be off ro Israe l. I

mamed on J u ne 30, 1 996, on E\'le'> 50rh anni­

went to F lorida ro help c e l ebrate L e n n i e

ver ary. She was lea\'lng for ydney, A u rra l 1 a ,

War ha\'er ' 4 9 ' 7 0 t h birrhday. Bob Sage '49

1 947

C a m b ridge, M A 0 2 1 4 1 6 1 7-494-4882 e-m a i l : John_Fitch@ m s n .com 1 948

m early January . . . . We recel\·ed a lengthy nore

al o attended that party, as d id Dick Abedon

from Helen L. Moore P h i ll ips and then had the

'56 . . . . We are really pleased with the respon e

good fortune to ee both Helen and her hus­

to our requests for news, bur you don't ha\'e ro

Dedham, MA 02026

band, Bud '49, at our i n i t tal 50th re un ion plan­

wait to get an offic ial questionnaire. Write when­

6 1 7-329-3970

e"er you have news . . . . There i a lor of enthu-

fax: 6 1 7-329-65 1 8

M t . Ida College m Newton Centre, Mas·. Bud 1s

1a m for our 50rh, o make your plans.

pring of

'98 1 s nor char far away.

also retired. Helen i currently a member of the

-David and Dorothy Marson

board of trustee at Mr. Ida and co-chair of Mt.

4 9 George I. Smith, 1 5 Siesta Courr, Porro la

Ida's centennial celebrauon, m 1999 Helen wnre

which rakes place

that twice a year they

Valley, CA 940 1 8- 7 4 3 6 , is a remed geologi t

meet for lunch with Avis Yatto Godbout and

whose spou-e, Teruko, i a physician as istanr.

her husband, Charlie, and Barbara Herrington

George retired from the U . . Geological Sun·ey

Keith and her husband, Bob. In August 1 996

in J 995 after 42 years and now enjoy "emeritus's

Joan Crawley

Pollock and her husband, J oe,

·tatus after completing a grant to fini h uncom­

came from Pasadena, Calif. , and J oined them at

pleted work after officially re ming." "Emeritus"

the Pumey I nn in Vermont. Barbara brought

a l lows h i m ro ha\'e office privi leges and some

her phoco album , and they had a wonderful

funding for his hobby proiecrs. George has pub­

L A R G E

E rnest C Marriner

The mo t repressive I lamic country 1 ha,·e ar rwo Jew1 h ynagogue ." . . . Evelyn Helfant

A T

1 940s Correspondents

ernmenr, I traveled through Iran for tlue, week .

ning meeting. Helen retired i n 1 99 l after 40

aJ

t tvc/Ma oni Svnagugue' and fi nanc ial ecrerary of the southeastern region of rhe U n i ted Syna­ gogue of Consen· a t 1 \'e J udaism . . . . Bertha

is a cardiac anesthe-iologi�t and h is daughter, ar

year. of teaching and adm i n 1 rrattve work a t n�

grandchildren . He recently ll'as elected a nee president of the Wnrld Cou nc i l of Consen·a­

age 42, ha become a nurse prac u r 1oner. He

vi ·ired.

a small world 1 . . . Hon i and Sanford " Sandy" Le Vine are both rerned and l i v ing in Boynton Beach, Fla. They have three children and ,e\'en

· 1

David and Dorothy Marson 4 1 Woods End Road

1 949 Robert M Tonge Sr. 5 G reylock Road Waterville, ME 0490 1 207-873-2 7 1 7 fax 207-877-9040

Colby

1s looking for a l u m n i to serve as

class correspondents for the 1 943 and 1 946 class years. I f you are interested please contact t h e Colby Alumni Rela­ tions office at 207-872-3 1 90 .

time remmiscmg. BuJ and Helen have had

l i heJ 90 geological re earch papers and taughr

ome great mps co Europe, Scand i navia, Bri r i h

a geology graduate course at the U n iversity of

ralkmg about coming to t h e 50rh. So should

Isle , Ala ka, Ireland , Hawa i i , A ustral ia/New

Nevada-Reno during the pring of '96. He was a

everyone else from the Class of '49. ("Lessons in

Zealand/FiJ t. And Helen ha met our daughter

chemistry major at Colby but discovered geol­

l i fe"-try ro find a profes ion that will become

ogy w h i le m grad chool ( Ca l Tech Ph.D. 1 9 5 6 ) .

your hobby. Thanks for your complete ques­

Teruko a n d George traveled r o Norway in '94

t ionnaire, George. M ur i e l says h e l l o . ) . . .

Marsha ( Lehigh Univer

ity

'78) and her hu -

band, EJ, who 1s contro l l e r a r M t . Ida. Ed has rhe pleasure of walking by Dorothy's picture every

and planned to vi i t London last March for a

R u s s e l l "Bud" S . P h il lips , P.O. Box 3 7 1 ,

dav because she attended Mt. Ida at one r i me

cheater and concert tour. In April they were to

Walpole, M A 0208 1 -03 7 1 , w a a medical and

and her class photograph i ust happened to be i n

rravel to Maui for a medical meeting and w i l l

nuclear detail person before retiring. H is wife,

the hallway leading to his office. How i s t h a t for

return to M a i n e c h i

Helen Louise Moore P h i llips '48, is a trustee of

s u m mer. H e already is

39

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


1\ L l

\I l\. I

1\ T

I ,\ R '' I

rJ l'cl , m d n11 1 n: m . 1 t ure t h < 1 11 t h l .1n: r. 1gL 1 7 -1 c < 1 r 1' 1 t . lda Cnl lcgc be' IJe, hcrng C D - c h . 1 1 rw1 >111;rn ( \t F,1111L . m J t he M > l t n l B.1'eh<1 l l H,1 1 1 of Fame and 1< . 1 , " memhn nf t hl' L' . Olympic Committee. 11ld r 1 g h r out , ,f h i gh 'L h(\ul l \ l· hL·u1 l1l', 1 f l ill! c h .- 1 r c.-nccnn1al Cllmm 1 t t ee. �he 'en-e' • lll rhe i "i n<1 nc e .mJ .1rL h 1 1 l'' uHlll\\ l t l L'e' . 1 1 " ' l 'ee c h c fn lln " 'm t: of 1 hl'm .111d l 1 m l . 1 grl';ll m . i J • > r H \ 1-1 h ye.tr 1 , ,p i n hcc 1H·l'n ltvmg 'IX month· each J , 1 " , , f ' 4 8 c 1 > l t 1 m n ) . R u , I . rn J H e l e n , 11 1111 h,t\ e heen tl'.1L her,. . . Donald \Ventworth 1 11 ' . 1 p l n , Fl.1 .md Wmt hrop, Mame . . , t r. 1 1·d nut nf t h e U.S.A. l rl'lllll:llt h, ll1L'et '"· l11 l\\" ret ired J rolll puhltL 'L hL>11l ,1J111 m 1 \ l r. 1 f l l ln , M a u n Rona, ne, Alex.rnd r 1 a , Yt1. , ha rec 1,1 l l 1 ll' l l h I 2 1 nhcr cnupk,-thc1 'l'l'll<I ll'ce k ­ 11- r 1 1 c' r h . 1 1 h e \ 1 m m l'r,L·d 1 n 1 1 1 t l' i1'L' l t· 1 url· 1 1 red l n 1111 32 � e.tr' m U . ..., government >trv1ce, cnd> sk 1 t n g . m d Jn ll1<1U IH < l l n c l 1 mh111g, h i 1ll'l 1 11g, l11·111g1 I l e \ ,l J l l 1 1 1 ::- 1 . 1 m f , 1 r d . ( .e > l l ll . , hut i' 1 . 1 , r l \ w 1 1 h the Dep.irttmnt of Tr<rn�porranon. d i nner .md uchcr ,1ut tnt.:'· The\' a J ,n mect Jurmg planning t l l 'el [ l c 1 11 K L nllL'h 1 1 n k . 1' 1 . 1 1 m· . I l e I I 1' 11 1 il' 1 >I 39 \e.1r' <l 1l'd m '\ pr1 I 1 996. In the rhc ye.tr ll' l t h A\'I, Y.mn l_� , 1Jhuu1 '4b .mJ .1nJ h 1 , \\ l i e , Tun , . i re t n mg I < ' ,l'l' t h <· 1n irk! h 1 t.dl of '96 he rr,wcled to Panama and Central Barb;1rn Hem ngwn Keith '4" , h 11·L· l l ,1, 11 1 t h r h c \ e.tr 2 l1L'0 ''' h.t \l heu1 pn· r t 1 h u w . A. 1 t 1L'flL i -\ ! t ic h 1 1.: h l 1 l!h t for him was teaching J na n Crc111 kl' rlll lock ' 4 8 < m d her h u,h.rnd. Ru,! . . tanley F. Choate, ,1 h 1r111cr u > l leg,· pr11fl-,. gr,1,[u,11 e llHlf'L' m '\" tem' ;mah·.,,, at the Uni­ expec t ' to get h,1 c k mrn the 8(1, \\' 1 t h h1, ne\\' 'er 'ur. 11 r1tc' tr,1111 l . . \l1 1m1 d ie, /\hi . r h.ir t l 1q \ <' ' n,1 1 \ nl "1>11rhcm c,t 1 1 f orn1c1 .md tn Wei baden, lit gulf cl u h" . . W i l b u r Ba�tien\ w 1 d1 111 , m"1·ed t nt n ,1 rer 1 re mcn 1 home " 1 11011 h.11 l 1 1 mL· ( ierm.m1 Hl r i l l ha hope' nf travel mg ro S h 1 rle\ ( KydLl ' 5 1 ), ll' i i l he pre,e n red 11 1 c h t he l l l l' n J • l\ t rd\'L' l 1 ng, g1 •l l . t h L l r 'Ulllntl'I p l . tl e I ll T.1 h 1 t 1 , ,'\ 1 N r.1 l t . 1 , Argl'nttnJ and Hungary . . Ge,1rge \XI.d eer H 1 11 c k k·y H u m . 1 1 1 1 t. m ,rn "' t hL· the h d J , l l i \\ l''t \ ' 1 rg 1 11 1 . 1 m,I r hL·1r t 1 r't :.!r.md Bob m-1 Helen Palen Roth arc tn We t Hart­ . Ye<tr �1w;irJ ar a ,pcu ;d r e,t in :\ ut.:11'1 .1 ; 1 1 t he L h i l l Th,· i r 1 r;11 c l mg fL ,irurL' t rll' 1 11 (�er tnr,J. ( 'nnn Roh 1' a ruc k hnker and Helen a m.111r-t h 1 , ye.1r( ILr111.my ,111,J -..,11 l·den. Fred B l a i n e l-l u u ' e ( r h c g 1 \ \' c rn 1 1 r \ m,rn , 1 , 1 n l . "1'rPtc" 1"n.1 l" \ 11lunteer A memnrahle h1gh­ . . . Anne Bither h ire, 1 1 1 "\ N n I\ 1.1 m St rL'et. E. A l len, ,1 ret i red 'u r et1ntl'l1dl·11 t 1 >! 'l h111 1[ , , l 1 l!IH 1 1! thLtr 42 ye.tr' together t a 1 5 -week trtp A l lenCl lll'n, rA I. 'l l l14, I' ,\ ( (\l l l lll \ i nl l \ \'1 1lun­ , \ UO ' t hl' ll IUntr)' tn d CitlTipcr With three ktcb ll' r t t l'' l ri im Denn \ ' ' t i l e . /'. l .1 1 11 l' H l ,111,] tecr anJ grant \\T i ter !llr nunrni f l r , 1 11 her l'Pn,t,lllCl, , t nur,c, h.l \ L' l<lur c h 1 kl ren ,m,I l l� ,ind . 1 J11g Thn h,l\·e 1r.11·eled rn·1ce to Au tralta ,irea. Her h mh,rnd. [),1n , 1 I J . 1, a re1 1 rL«i c1 >rp11i.:r.tndc h i ldrcn Thn 'i'L'l1'1 t h< nwn t h 1 11 Apnl .111J N L·11 Ze.1 1.md . . . Ray Reich has moved rare excc u t 1 \'l.:. They 'Pl'nJ t he i r fr,,m l l l m111' tn Reacon �rreet, Bo >Ulllmcr' tn ] lll1l''l'''rt . 1' ! . 1 1 nc . . md wn, where he I ' 'em 1-rettred a a rccenr l v tr;n- e led w EngLrncl, Ath­ ph\ '1u<1n 'rcuali:me 111 mtemal D a v e Saltzman ' 5 2, w h i l e sti l l e m p l oyed fu l l t i m e tra l i a and Ne\\' Zea Ian,[ The1 h.n e nll'JtunL' ,111J c.ard1olngy He hope> in the sciences for h ealth programs depart m e n t a ne\\' granddaughter !rnm Chm,i. w rrand exren,1,·ely m Europe, . . . Loren:o C. Rastel l i , 6 1 n 'PLndmg '' mrer 111 warm c l i mate at Santa F e C o l lege i n Gainesv i l l e , F l a., i s launchHeather Lme , Orange Cn\ . F L .m J ummcr-, L>n are Cod or m i n g a consulting group i n various aspects of 32763, I ' n o w rct in:J but cunr 111uc' Bmtlln. hirley Kydd Ba tien, to do l'n l u n ceer1 ng. Ch<Hl 1e rrm e l ' �k11\1 hcgan, Mame, rece1l'ed an n atural healing and powers of the m i nd . co V 1c cor1a. B. . , durmg the ' u m ,111 Jr d a� H uman1ranan of t h e Year, mer lllLllltlb and a l "1 'Pent a \\'eek rl'Cl>gnt:mg her 1 5 -rear mvolve­ ac an E l derhLl:.t e l 1n M a me [a,t 'ummenr with a home and _chool for mer. Ac a mee c 1 11g at che l nrerlockcn Cuu n cry 1n \ hrrle Bc.1.:.h . • .l , 1< herl' FreJ l l1 ) L'\ ' g1>lt trLHlhlcJ )"L>Uth. \ILllunteen·m, puhltc erv1Ce He al'l' -pen,[, nme un rhe l1,mpu1cr. . . Ru. �ell Club 1 11 Febru.1ry h e mer Colby pre,1dent B i l l and rer-11nal mtegnry are che comer tone oi Cmcer a n d \\'a' tmpre'·'ed 1\' lth an adJre" h y A . Ante l l . a nm reJ math re.ichcr. t' 1 1 \'lng tn Fr. ch i ' <l" ,HJ . . . . My Chmrma · and ew Year m r1erce, Fl,t l k anJ \\'tfl' b a ha1 e ( \\ \) C h 1 kl ren. T 1 11a Goudreau ' 98 d hcu>>ll1!! Cnlhy\ l 4-year \ 1enn,1 , Au,ma, <KCurred during the colde.c 1\ e,uhcr tn 3 5 year,. Hai mg experienced the k1ur grnndchdJren anJ 1111e gre,H-cr,rndLhdJ. h istory. Thanks for your nntl', h<1rlte. -Roben M Ton�e S r Be. 1Je, pl.i\' lng gu[ t he\ tn:;hllrl'r ,,f r h e c;,,IJ rr.iJ 1t 11'n Llf 'trams nf the Blue Danube waltz ronJ\ Cnme \X',n c h . R u,,c [ l . " lw 111 cJ 111 rhe welc,>mmg m the ne" vear, the tradt t tonal ew 1 eceran' apdrtmenr' 1m \ 1a\ floll'er H i l l , 11<1' Do you remember rhc gre,H encerram­ Year\ Oa1 tn the morn mg concert and the rLmnmg [ll gn [l) h i' ! 0t h Na\'\ reun lLln 111 ment we haJ at our 4 S th reu rnon by Ben. 'on of mlllt r tonal performance of Beethoven' mth O::im•er,, Ma"·· 111 May . . . . Lucien Veilleux. Ben '52 and Nancy Ricker Sears, and h ts r<m­ m the e 1·en mg, I must agree with Longfellow, l i l'tng 111 \Xlaterl' l l le, mu'c h,11·e r l1L rec,1rJ fc1r who ,,11J that "mu 1c t the untver al language ner, Brad ? They perform 'ong> of the '40s and r he mo'>t gr,mJchddren- 1 9. C.m ann1ne wp ha1·e discovered a song b\ l n·111g Ber l m chat had ol mankmd." that1 . . . l hal'e heen mformcd char H erbert A. been m i > tng for 80 year,. A h ri:.tma' >c1ng 111 -Barbara ]efferson Walker Perkins rcmed 111 Januar1 from rhe U.S. General ragt ime, it had been publ i.hed tn the unJay Service Adm11w,uat1nn m Wa,hmgcon, D.C., ed t t ion of a New York newspaper and nel'cr 1111 c, my last mm as your class corre­ after I6 years of federal '>ernce . . . . Gerald D. srondenc. Thanb for the opportuniry, and please publi hed e lsewhere. Ben and Brad introduced Baker of olt, eek, .J . , has h" 'lm WL1rkmg i c co the rublic for the fir t time last December 'end my succe · or lots of new as we tart the last for h L company, Mark of F1rnes>, as >ales mdn­ ldp to our 50ch reunion. By the t i me you read at one of their concerts tn Camhndge, M a s. th1> column, our 4 5 th wt!! be h 1 tory . . . . Janet ager. ( They make blood pres ure ktt, for home Their recent CD/tape, Keep on Smi!mg, Earl)' use. ) I t sound> l ike Jerry, although nnt remed, 1s Perrigo Brown ha-. retired a a university pro· Songs of /mng Berlm, wa the "critic' pick" by fe · or and 1 now the coordmaror of a wellne free to do some rral'elmg. I n the past year he and Sheridan Morley ofBBC Music Magazine. N ancy Peggy hm·e roured Eastern Europe, cruised the program 111 Burl i ngton, Vt. . . . Dave Saltzman and Ben must be very proud of the i r rn len ted Caribbean and now hope to v1 tC northern Ch ma, ( e- ma i l dal'id. a luman@ antafe.cc.n. u ), while son . Nancy al o reported that she enjoyed read­ Australia and New Zealand, A laska and the t t ! l employed ful l t1me in the sc iences for health ing No Ordinary Time by Doris Kearn Goodwin Panama Canal. Jerry 1 organizing a reurnon of program department at anta Fe College m '64. I recal l that Goodwin was che Commence­ the Tau Delra Phi fraternity member to be held Gaine v i l le , Fla., 1 launching a con ulting group ment speaker a c our daughter' graduation from thi summer. We'll all be anx ious ro hear how i n various a ·pee ts of narural heal ing and powe� Colby in 1 978. I wa most impre sed by a com­ many attended. of the m ind . . . . J oan tewart Wenk from e­ ment she made, that Colby tudent are so -V1rgm1a Davis Pearce vada writes that he ha retired as a nur e and ts fortunate to have profe ors who take c he t i me studymg hypnoti m. Ir ounds l ike the Clas of and personal interest in teaching their student Ted Shiro is in the sp ns t icket and tour '5 2 could put together one heck of a eminar on rather than being simply lecture r . Our day at business. l t has been reported prel'iou l y char he mamtaming health and well being. . . . Mar ' college were u n ique due ro che i nnux of veterans Sargent Swift (E H IKER@AOL. com) hare a was inducted into the Maine port Hall of rewrning from the serv ice, many of them mar-

50

52

51

C O L B Y

U M M E R

1 9 9 7

40


A L U M N I

a

.1

passion for antiques with husband Ed and says she hasn't given up the quest for " that perfect 19th-century pain ted box w i t h date and signature." . . . Herb Richardson ( herbert­ richardson@tamu.edu) continues his career as chancellor of engineering for the Texas A&M University ystem. . . . Dave Robinson, while continuing his work a \·i l l age admmistraror in Arkport, N .Y . , is p lanning retirement in the Carolinas. He advises, "Life is roo short-if you can afford ro retire, do it!" And some of us happily have done j ust that. Edie Carpenter Sweeney never imagined at Colby that she would reside for her whole life including retire­ ment in Maine. Not a tay at home, however, she will have missed the 4 5 th reunion for a trip to Turkey . . . . Norman Crook writes from Ala­ bama that he and his wife, Josette, have spent the past six years travel ing in a 36-foot RV and have covered "all the states and provinces, Newfoundland and Labrador." . . . Mo Rennie pends his wmters in southwest Florida on the Gulf of Mexico and for four months over the summer has a cabin in the Adirondacks. He reminds us that the rather ripe age of 70 will arrive for mosr of u before our next reunion in 2002. See you then?

m

-Edna Miller Mordecai

1n

Plans for the 45th reunion are in mo­ tion. I attended the first plann ing me ting in Newton, Mass. , in early April. Let's nave a sizeable group on campus i n June 1 998 . . . . Gor­ don Marquis 1 now retired from New England Elecmc System. (My dad worked for NEE for more than 40 year , and my husband was also employed by them for five or six years. ) Gordon lives in Upton, Mass., with hi wife, Paulme (Hoyt '56). His son has two children and works in Cambridge for an insurance firm, and his daughter, an honor student at Sm 1th, has gradu­ ated from Harvard School of Design. Before working for N EES, Gordon was a Russian inter­ preter for the U . S. Army a l l over Europe. He retired at 60, he says, "before they caught up with me, respon ibi lities m environmental ar­ eas, especially cultural resource management." He says he now values his peace of mind after 28 year of Hopkinton local government. He has a umque an wer ro a fitne s program--cribbage, he says, keeps his fingers supple . . . . Loretta "Tommie" Thomp on Staples wrote to me from her new address in Maryland and inc luded here-mat! address ( BetsyJane@AOL.COM) for anyone interested. She already hears from some Colby people, Pete Bel l being one. She says Colby hasgiven her lifelong friends, like Carolyn English Caci and her own late husband, Bob 'SL Hrrfavorite memories ofColby are "wakeup time" m rhe Spa, being snowbound in February, a cross-country trip to Vermont and chasing the hockey team ( and a hockey p layer )-she never did see a game, j ust a lot of snow. Tommie <loes a lot of traveling now, her latest ro Ari­ zona. he added that she has been in touch with Marty Friedlaender and that Marty continues

I!,

:e m 1e •\\

th

e-

Jn

le th

n

53

to recuperate and is mak ing gains with the help of therapy . . . . Mimi Price Patten calls herself rhe "retired house-person" and devoted wife of a "lobster-catcher." Like many others, the im­ portant part of her l ife began at Colby with many lasting friendships. She remembers the good times and the luxury of learning in a friendly atmosphere where you knew almost everybody by name and where the professors were inrere<tc!d in each student's progress. She remembers, especially, her inspiring classes with President Seelye Bixler. Mimi adds that during the winter her family enjoys a condo at Sugarloaf. Summers bring enjoyable boating on the coast. v isitors welcome, or you are welcome to write to her at Harpswe l l , Maine. Mimi connected with Shirley and N ick Sarris to toast the New Year. . . . Flo Fisher Krejci and her husband live in California and are both retired from Rocketdyne Division of Rockwell lntemational­ Boeing. Flo writes, "When we married in J une 1 994, l had been single nearly 25 years and M i lan had never before been married. (I accept congratulations on the latter ! ) I have three daughters: J udy, who with her wildlife-ecologist husband has emigrated to Canberra, Austra l ia, and has a son and daughter; Susanne, a senior software engineer for U nisys in Pennsylvania, who is married and has two sons and a daughter; and Betsy, an Episcopal priest, who is married and has a son. For those who ran our of fingers, that's six grandchildren, from 3 to 1 1 . I am a world-class creampuff, as I was in college, though I can walk for mi les if it's in a shopping mall. Milan, however, works out at a gym three days a week as he has done for many years . . . . A few months before our marriage, we l ived through the so-called North ridge Earthquake, which was almost under our townhouse. It was one of the most terrifying and humbling experiences I can imagine, a real lesson in the unreliability of 'solid ground' and of the place of possessions in our l ives, i.e., not very important compared to people and relationship ." Flo says they usually take at least one long trip annually-last year to the Czech Republic, this year driving across the U . S . to Pennsylvania and N ew England in the summer, then Christmas in Australia with the grandchildren. They also are active in their church and related organizations. Flo would l ike to ask classmates if they are as proud as she is of the kind of men and women that the Class of 1 9 53 produced. As she looked around at her 40th reunion, she l iked the people she saw, which reaffirmed her unconscious wisdom in choosing to attend Colby. She invites class­ mates to contact her by e - m a i l ( fkrej c i@ pacbell.net). -Barbara Easterbrooks Mailey

54

Charlie Windhorst and his wife live in Stamford, Conn., where he is chairman of Communispond Inc. in New York City. They have one son, one daughter- in-law, two daugh­ ters, two grandchildren, a dog and a car. Charlie spends h is spare time " trying to keep Nick

41

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L A R G E

1 950s Correspondents 1 950 Virg i n i a Davis Pearce P

0.

Box 984

G ra n t h a m . NH 03753 603-863-66 7 5 1 95 1 Barbara Jefferson Walker 39 1 5 Cabot P l ace # 1 6 R ichmond, VA 23233 804-527-0726 1 95 2 P a u l A l d ri c h PO Box 2 1 7 B risto l . M E 04539 207-563- 1 326 e-ma i l : M A PA@LI N C O L N . M I DC OAST.com 1 953 Ba rbara Easterbrooks Mailey 80 Lincoln Ave n u e S o u t h H a m i lton, M A 0 1 982 508-468-51 1 0 1 954 Bill and Penny Thresher Edson 3253 E ri n lea Ave n u e N e w b u ry P a r k , CA 9 1 320 805-498-9656 1 955 Jane M i l l ett Dornish 9 Warren Terrace Winslow, M E 0490 1 207-873-3 6 1 6 1 956 Kat h l e e n Mcconaughy Zambello 1 35 l d u na Lane A m h e rst. M A 0 1 002 4 1 3-253-3001 1 957 Sally Dixon H a rt i n 20 Dacey Drive C e nterv i l l e , M A 02632 508-862-2454 E l eanor Shorey Ha rris 10 Bow Road Wayl a n d . M A 0 1 778 508-358-7908 e-ma i l : e l l ie_harris@vos . stratus.com 1 95 8 M a rga ret Smith H e n ry 1 304 La ke Shore Drive M a ssapequa Park, N Y 1 1 762 5 1 6-54 1 -0790 1 959 Ann Segrave Lieber 7 Kingsland Court South Orange, N J 07079 2 0 1 -763-67 1 7 e-mai l : M_Lieber@co m puserve . com

U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


A L LI �I N I

A

T

l \ I\ l• I

arris out of t ro uh l e. "

Accord i ng tu Cha r l i e , " I

f o l k J.( l l l t .ir. . . . Ant hony A r t h u r Yanuchi 1 ' L h 1 ef nf m, 1 1 'u rge r ) a r S r . R .i rn a h , , , I l 1 i... p 1 1 ,d 1n Rrnn x . N . Y , .mJ h 1 ' w i fe , P,, 1 r h . i r , 1 , " reg 1 un.1 I c omd 1 n.1 1 < \r fnr the 1 m nu g r m 1o n rr< >gr. 1 m , e w York St;ite Depa r t m e n t ol H1:a l t h . Th1:\ h<ll'l' f l l'e gr,1wn c h 1 lclren ,mJ nme gr.111J(hilJren. A m h< >n} , wh11 ha, Pmk m,nn\ d 1 , c . i w , I '> p l , i n ­ n 1 1 1 g un rer 1 rmg d 1 1 ' ) l'. H , , mJ the) p l . 1 11 1 1 1 ,e l l r h l l r h11u'l' a n d 111<1\'L' l < l ( lenrc 1 < 1 T ra 1T l 1 11 g , 1· 1 ,1 t 1 11J.( c h i ldren <llld gr,111J l h i l J rcn .rnd ll'l lrk1 11 g an1und r h e hou'l' .ire r h e 1 r 'l'.tre r 1 ml' <lC t 1 v i r 1 c , . . . . Dick L e e rb u rg e r\ J ,1 u g h t c r , �l.1r1,111 ' IH , pre ,c n t cd h i m u 1 d1 ,1 gr,111d,1ughter, K. 1 1 t l 1 n J u l 1 l' Lcerhurge r-Mah l . . . Rick Berm 11T1re' fn 1m H d tun H e.id !... l and. <.., _ ( , \1 hcre h< 1' a 'illc' e x cc u t 1 1·e tur the M, 1mntt ('t irp. He and h1, w i fe , Jo,111 , a cl 1 11 1 c <1 I 'nc 1 , 1 1 w n r ke r , h<11 c rhrcc ma med 't1m, one of wh< >Tn .mt:nJ<:J Lo lh1 , and th rc<: grandd1dJrcn. ALc1nJ1 11g ru R 1 L k , hl' 'Cf\ cd 1 11 the A i r Forlc during 1 h<: K, irL'<lll W.H, t h,mb ro o l hv A FROTC. H <: rcLUrncd tn

wo nJ r r' how 'he wou ld fare ;i, a car J o hn Reisman rcmemhe: rs the frc.,hm.m-year h l 1 zza rJ when iump111g from ec­ t l l l e a rn t u 1 1 m e l d r - h: indeJ " Cha r l ie h a , , i n unJ floor w 1 11duw mto >; nowJrifr , wa'> fun to do. i d e a tn pwpl''e t < \ l l u r c bh,: "Try t l l hal'l· . 1 John a l'>< > pay' m h u t e to Dr. B i x ler. J oh n and we l c , 1 m e tn the 2 l > t c e nt u ry re u n i 1 1 n 1 11 l 999. \1 1fc J a n e ( D,1 1 h ' 5 8 ) have t a ken a wonderful Let's lef!l't' a C l <1'> ul l 954 '>chnl a r,h 1 p fu n , I . Wl' l' u > l o g y u u 1 '>e l ! l Be li : e and G u a t e ma la. could m.ike 1 t , u h, ta n t 1 , 1 l d ll't.: c t i m h i n e , l 11 1 t h Bernice White anders, who rum a fma n ­ t h e c la"e' l l f l 9'iL� - l 9 5 9 . " Cl<1" nff1l er' t . 1 k r c 1,d 'L'f\' I L e huo;111es' and live'> 111 ne ar hv C l m co n, n l l [ e . . . . Leslie Van No,trand Shaffer ha' r e ­ M.i 1 11c, remember' Perer Re, Profc<isor Cec.11 t i red after 1 9 y e , w . ,,, e x ec u t i ve 'ec r e 1 . i r v fu r t h e Rol lim <1nd C;1rl anJberg. Bernice: <hk , Nanc · J un ior League nfSt<1m lurd- llrw,d k , C1 mn S h e Perron , \\ here arc you ? A nJ 5he a b w het her anJ her h u , ba n J , nn <lLkerm.111g exec u t 1 1·e 1 11 d,1,.,n1cl t e ' , r t l l haYc bridge' anJ mo unti:l t n , New York ' 1 t y , i i l'e 1 11 N mwa l k <md 'pcnJ ,1 11J 1f '" · Mc yuu Lager to cro,, and climb' weekend> at their cut tage < 111 the o n m· c r i c u r . . Diane Reynolds Wright and Kay Hartwell R i ver. 1 11ce rcu r 1 11g, Le, l , n·e, v 1 , 1 t 1 11g gr;111d­ Tha l he i me r pent some t i me together at team­ c h 1 lclren iH for d " t a nce ' ( the) have fnur c h i l ­ hna t :,p n n g, , Ctilu. Diane 1 nv 1 ce: anyone who dren, three m a r r i e d , a n d ' I X g r a nd c h il d re n ) . ' 1 L L ' t h,n he,1 1mtul Colorado mountam area to Tenni a n d golf a r c 't i l l fa v, 1 r 1 t e 'PMC t 1 n1l' L i l l her to ki 111 wmter or hike 111 >um m er . . . act 1 1• 1 t 1 e... . <md t h 1 :. ra't Febru,iry t hey \\Crl' pl,111a n c y G re e n be r ge r c h m idt w r i te from n111g a tnr to Cm,w R i c a . She ,t i l l 1· , 1l u n 1 ee r' at Rn:\1 ' t er , Ma"· · on the Cape th a t ·he' heard the Norwa l k A q ua r i u m , where -,h,• from Barbara Hardigan McLaren, c o n d u ct tour' for l' l ' 1 t ,1 r, , 1 11cl 11d\1 ho now 1 1 \'e J U>t outside Bruru­ 1 11 g >chn,il grnur . Wi lliam w1 c k , Mame. . . Kathy ( McConN EWS MAKERS W i n g L' r e t i r e d a n d l 1 1· i n g 1 11 .1ughy ' 5 6 ) a n d Lou Zambello had a Onl tewah , Ten n . , 1v 1th hi, w 1 fl', great harge tnr 1 11 France w i t h Dave A t the Blame Holl',c 111 Augu. ta, M a me , h i rl e Kydd Ba t i e n � arah , who ll'urb d t Pr e c c r t M 1 11 1 ,­ ' 5 6 ,rnd R 1i... e m a r y C rou thamel ' 5 1 re c e i ved rhe Genrge Walrcr H mc k le} Human1ranan of rhe t ry 111 Ch a t ta nooga . Th e y h<we a � nrwr ' 5 6 anJ Jt'hn Jub m ky '56 Year aw rd for her 1 5-ycar mvoll'ement with Good W i l l - H mck ley, married son and a ncll' granddaugh­ a nd h t > \\ tk . . Ron wan on plans a home ::ind �chool for rroubled you ch . . . . John Lee ' 5 3 , a h 1stnq ter l 1 v 111g 1 11 Rdl 111g,, M nnt . A mdr­ to r e t i re r h 1 , yea r trom hi years of profe or ::it V 1 rg 1 11 1 a Commonweal r h Urn\ er l[y, wa> che open­ ried daughter l 1 l' e > 111 Lou 1 w d l e . p rac t i ce 111 raJ10logy. He would mg Jay 'peaker for A 1 an - Pa c 1 fi c. Herttage Month ar che A rm) Bill spend h i s srare t i me tral'el ing, likt.: the ,ecrer uf "how to keep Logi uc Management Col lege 111 May . . . . J ud y Levine Brod hunt111g and rlaymg gDlf. . . . Mary frnm gemng older." . . . Germaine '58, Co lby a , oc 1ate Jean ofadm1ss1ons, ha been recogm:ed by the Belden Wi l liam re c e n t ly remeJ '" Michaud Orloff say chat hu band New England A ornmnn of College Adm1 ion Coumelmg a a teacher for the deaf. �he and her Paul ha, 5old his veterinary practice College Admi >Ions Counselor of the Year m 1 a m e husband, p a ma l l y remeJ fwm form and 1s cnJoy 111g remement. They 1 11g, hal'e four grnwn chi ldren and planned a mp to Al<bka th1 um· 10 grandc hi ldren. � !ary, who 1' fi n m e c. Their son G l e n n ' 4 1 · now i ·hing her ! Orh year on t h e local 'chLJnl com­ h,Kk 1 11 R u�s i a working for Bermgs Company Colby, ma rn e J, l i ved 111 rhe l'et' arartment5 mitree, enioys r h e 1 r gra nd c hil d re n , getrdenmg, and graduated m 1 956. Ht> spdre t i me aLt11' 1 t 1 c . . . Be,t w 1. he co you all. I appreciate your jobs connected with rhe fam i ly\ d a i ry farm and 111 c l ud e tenrn , read r ng , :i a d 111g a n J garJenmg. re>ponses and note . rlay1ng Ill the church bell choir. he hoped to Rick 111nte' classmate tll call h i toll free num· -Jane Millett Domish do ome trave l rng in late w 1 11 rer or early her at work, l- 00-47 3 -6674 ext. 4 2 4 . H e ' J !m e spring. . . . Nancy Weller Brown wri tes frnm Ir was wonderful heanng from many to hear from you. Appleton, Maine, where he work at a green­ -8111 and Penny Thresher Edson new ,·oices th1 ra r w m ter. I had to g r ab my yearbook to iog rhe old memory button. Marilyn house, erl'es on the chool board anJ has been in charge of a volunteer library for 35 years. She God ey ahlberg wrote from Largo, Fla., where From you r kmd re>ron..'e to the ques­ has eight children and nine grandchildren. W i t h t ionnaire , I hal'e gleaned 5everal rem mi ·cence . he and hu band Enc have remed, a ltho ugh Barbara Kearns Younghan e t e l ls of be1 11g at what li ttle spare nme she ha , she enjoy garden­ they return to ·pend sum mer 111 Ma i n e. he would l ike to hear from Ruthann Simmond ing and "walking in my woods." . . . Bill A me s , one of Dr. and Mr . B i x ler' at -home , where Barh played the piano. When Dr. Bixler learned MacKinnon. R u tha nn, are you still m Malay ia a retired h igh chool reacher w ith five children or back in Jeffer on ? Can you plea e drop me a and stx grandchildren, lives in Northampton, that Barb and Carol Dauphinee Cooper were note? . . . Linda Power N icker on lives in leavi ng for a summer of hosteling 111 Europe, he Mass. I n h is pare time, he plays a lot of tennis, anford, Maine, with her lawyer husband, put them m touch with a friend m witzerland, has traveled ro Australia and New Zealand and Charles, and contmue to enjoy her c urre nt which was pretry spec ial for a couple of college artended Elderho tel and a Vic Braden ten11 1s occupat 1on-"happy house person ! " Her three girls . . . Woody Ty on remember now,Ome's camp. He also does volunteer work in his com­ ons have given her five grandchi ldren--one of and the library stack . . . . J oan Sandberg talks munity . . . . Marge Hill Ashman i a spec ial whom, fmal ly, wa female . . . . Roy Norcro s, education teacher in Mt. Laurel, N .J . , where she of her favorite Chappie-Profes or A l fred Chapman . . . . Selden and Sue Biven Staples who wrote from Canton Center, Conn., didn't l ives with her husband, Fred, a retired Engl ish have a p ic ture in our yearbook. I finally tracked remember four wonderful year with good courses teacher. The i r son i l iving with his fam t l y in him down in the 1 9 5 5 KOR picture. Roy, who and profe sors and lots of good times. Sue and Kenya, where he works with refugees from Sudan. transferred to Colby from the University of S e l den love t h e i r new home in u p p l y , Marge and Fred hope to visit Kenya in J u ly 1 997 Stockholm, has been an educator for 40 year N .C. . . . I n h e r reminiscences of Colby, Sylvia if their son and fam ily are still there. Marge (grades 5 - 1 2 ) . He tried retirement but 1s back enjoys biking or hiking w ith their Labrador Jennison Spike remembers Dr. Colgan. Sylvia, teaching part time, which a l low him time for retriever each weekend and volunteering for a ful l - t ime caregiver, a lso is a top-notch mem­ his five grandkids and his "never-ending refurContact Telephone M inistry. Fred has taken up bership sales person for the Portland M useum of heat N i c k i n a 40-) ar d da,h , h u t N ic k , i n r u m , hrob: m y M m i n . i n arm w re, r l 1 n g m a 1 c h I h . 1 J

A r1 -, 1 m l

,,1 k,m.1n.

56

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C O L B Y

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

42


A L U M N I

Locked into your stocks?

I f t h e prospect o f capital gain taxe has you feeling that you can't afford to sell appreciated stock, you might want to contact

those highly appreciated ecuritie while benefiting Colby

and avoiding capital gains taxes.

For more information, please contact: teve Greaves

Director of Planned Giving Colby College Waterville, Maine 04901 207-872-32 1 2 cgreave@colby.edu

43

L A R G E

b1shing" of his 1 860 farmhouse and barns . . . . Margaret Darby Persons ( 1 3 years a:; a Lutheran Church office manager) and Roger ( Lo Alamos National Lab ) have "retired" anJ traded m their home and "40 year accumulation of stuff' for a motorhome. They have h i t the road full time, tra,·eling from volunteer j ob to volunteer job. They have been in Taj ique, N . M . , at a Baptist youth camp and in Homestead, Fla., rera1ring house damaged by Hurricane Andrew. What an in pi rat ion they must be to their three chil­ dren and five grandchildren. And to us! . . . L iz Walker Sherman lost her husband m 1 99 3 , and her life wa directed back into her ma1or, "social work . " She joined Gosrel Global M issions and has been to Rumania and Panama and three times to Cuba. While at home in Dallas she volunteer at the Salvation Army rehabilita­ tion center-and somehow still finds t ime to work at her oil painting. Having sold several pictures, she can add amst to her professional li t along with teacher and nurse and grand­ mother to 1 0 . . . . Ann Stiegler Richards lives in 1msbury, Conn. he enjoys traveling ( a trip to Russia this J une ) and tennis and paddle tennis. Two of her four children attended Colby-Sally '90 and Nancy '93. She has five grandchildren. . Charlie Morrissey wrote from Irvine, Calif., how disappointed he was to miss our reunion, but he was back at Colby recently for the rededication of the hockey rink. Four of his five kids are Colby grads, two of whom mamed classmates. Charlie (call him Doctor Morri sey-he completed hi Ph.D. in ovember 1 996 at ClaremontGraduate School) continues to teach at Pepperdme and UC-Irvine . . . . Dave Van Allen sent a great picture of a reunion he had last September in Wolfeboro, N . H . He and Peg were joined by Mane Angelica and J ustin Cross, Nancy (Roseen '5 7) and Bob Leavitt, Sally and Bill Haggett and George Haskell ' 5 5 . Except for the white hair, or lack of, you guys look j ust the same . . . . l 'm out of pace and will save the other responses for next time. Ciao. -Karhleen McConaughy Zambello

the Planned Giving Office at Colby. A properly planned gift to Colby may enable you to unlock the income potential of

A T

57

A you read this, our 40th reunion has come and gone, but the column is being written in May for publication in J uly. The update from Reunion Weekend will be in the next issue. I hope l will have seen all of you on campus by the time you read this! . . . Dick Phillips writes that he plays the banjo to relieve the stresses of h is Wall Street work. Dick is fim vice pre ident at Grunral & Co. and a l itrle surprised to find himself there . . . . Eleanor Shorey Harris has garnered yet another honor, having been named c hairman of the board of d irectors of the Marlborough ( Mass. ) Regional Chamber of Commerce. Ellie has been a member of Colby's Alumni Council, the Worcester Arr Museum advisory board, the U M ass Health System/ Marlborough Hospital board of incorporators and the board of directors of the United Way of Assa bet Valley . . . . Bev (Jackson '60) and Tony Glockler are still in New Jer ey after more than

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


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m,in,1gc r for ETS . . . . Don Tracy \\T i t\.'' t h at

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he'> now !>em 1 - rc t 1 reJ , hal' i ng mvneJ anJ del' e l ­

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ret 1 remenr i n her letter. . . . After ah\1ur 1 2 \\.'<tr'

Percr-.1n, . i re r b n n t n g t h c 1 r f1r't rrir .1hn 1,1,I (\I

or more ( I rea l ly c a n ' r remcmhcr l . t h 1 ' will he

Swt land .111d England t1i cl'iLhr,HL' r h l.' t r 1 'i r h

my last c o l u m n for the c la" note' '\.'C t tllll 11( t he

.1 11 n 1 1 c r,,11, .

maga:me. S a l l v D ixon Hartin w i l l r ic k up r h e

Pat'\ . arc rcured m Pll\\'n,d , l\ 1 .1 1 n1', and h.11 \.' ,1

rr,1ftled m

pen (or s i t J o w n a t the keyboarJ ) frum mrn n n

wmrer home m �.)uthern Pinc-,, � . C . D.11 e\

that the rL'r , in he me' to emulate ' ' J ulw. _eel ye

. David O ' B rien , m d h" 11 tlc,

59

Donald " keeter" Megathlin. recentl)

:-:eu Eni:kinJ Real faww }uumal,

aid

R1'1er .md c h.n. g1wn rhe • >rr<1 rt u11 1r y w chome

and t ry to keep you abre;1,t oi y\1ur c la"mat e•<

tntere't 111 phPt<1gr.1rh1 lc•J fli , 1 ph11t<' '>,lf,lfl {\l

l 1 1·e>. I r '> been great fun hearing I m m a l l of you

E<N Afriu 111 1 996 . . ind 111 l\ 1 . 1 rc h 1 49 7 lw went

an\ vnc a t H 1n, he'd e i ther he FCC cha irman or a

who wrore, eopec 1 '1 I l y re<tdmg vt1ur rh1 iugh tful

lln ,1 f1'h t n g <Ind rlww trip t11 T 1 e rr.1 de! FuL'J.!ll,

Care Cl1,I rnur guide . . . . Bovd

comment" abou t l i fe\ t W 1 ' t ' anJ rnms anLI ho11

A r!!l' n t t n<l. Fur u rc mp' ltke t h 1 , mdud1: Qu,heL

our year' ar Colhy had such a rrnfounJ effe c t 1m

and

Mt)r<KL<>.

Re, 1 dc, 1 h 1' cxtcn,11 e r r. t vc· l m c ,

the year!-- . God bles�.

-Bnan Olsen

58

coc k i

Ruth Winterbottom Peaa proiessor of commun1ca­

t 1ons i n busmes and lives 111 Laredo, Texas. Her h ushanJ, Von, '' the

D o n a l d " S keeter" M e gat h l i n ' 5 9, rec ently p rofi l e d i n

New England Real Estate Journal,

said

that the p e rson h e tries to e m u l ate i s J u l i u s S e e l ye B i x l e r a n d t h at, g i v e n t h e o p p o rt u n i ty t o c hoose any vocat i o n , he'd e i t h e r b e F C C

agricu l t ural manager for Bird� Eye de Mexico. What keeps her o u t of

c h ai r m an o r a C ap e C o d tour g u i d e .

h.xh

h •r h igh 'ch11nl ath-

lellc'. & >yd h i-

l ife to

L l . t t tun, rhc g\l\·emmg

so many of our l i ves. Thank' for your h e l p , and your patience, on:r

ands head> the

1c11 J eN''\ �riHe lntcr,ch11l,h t 1c Arhlenc A o­

dedicated h1'

hdpmg kid' a n d in a lengthy news­ r.1rer a rt i c le ll'J

LalleJ "prnhab!y

t he be·t teacher I know" h a fellow educawr. . . . ]Lian (Crowell '60) and k i p Tolette travel a l l 01·er t o 'kt, golf, raft, etc

Their '>tamma 1'

mcreJ1hle . . . . Jay Whitman i our c la" rerre,entat11·e on the A lumrn Cnunc t l , amon g h1" other Colby act 1 nt 1e-.. \X. 1 fo Chri

( Rand) 1 pre­

rarmg a clas-, letter to update u-. on

the roc k 1 11g c h a i r 1 not hav ing Lme.

the

Instead, she has trave led to such exuttc locales

Dave works w i t h

, r u r w m k I n , t 1 rure, an

" hat's h<irrenmg ar Colh) . . . . Remees Mary

as M a l aysia, Tha iland, Nepal and I nd i a . In re-

organt:atwn that prnv 1de, care and 'en ice' iur

ponse to the question "what 1mportanr parts ' f

the men t a l l y hand1c aprcJ ;md ahu>ed. Oave

and Gard Rand manage to find r i me ro k 1 , bike and h i ke w h i le Gard 1s a vol u n teer office man·

your l ife started at Col by ?" Ruth, l i ke many

and Patsy have four chi ldren and rhree grand­

ager for the Pemaqu1d Watershed A ociat1on.

others, rep! ied that t t 's the friend h ips she de­

chi ldren . . . . We ha1·e reached rhe age of tech­

. . . Greg MacA rthur ha

ve loped. She a l o mentioned her apprec1at1on

nical re t i rement, but mmt of u now hal'e nme

sec u r 1 t 1 es h u me

for the people who "ded icate the mselves tO

for our other mtere. t . Helen Payson

e>t i n ' 1deoconfere n c 1 11g. He ha · been quoted

learning and haring t he i r knowledge e n t h us 1 -

and her hu band, Brad, are borh "ret1reJ" but

in e 1·eral puhl t c a nons and I > an a u t hority 111

astically"--our professors . . . . Cathy Srinneford

are greatly i n volved in orga11 1 : 1 11g and fund

t h e fie l d . . . . Tony R u vo 1

Walther sent a wonderful group p i c t ure of her­

Camp Corp. m

self and Bob, Kay and Warren J udd, J oyce and

ra t mg tL) restore the African M eermg Hou e on Nantucket. s mgmg and c a r i ng for gra ndc h i l ­

d i rector of public affaw ar a Washmaton lum­

H e ss e at a group

dren. Helen is very i n vo l ved now 1 11 singing in

ber/wood trade as oc1ation, urges rhe non­

Ed R ushton and Gail and Bob

eager

pent

30

year m the

and now has a spec i a l m r e r·

a

P at U n ton

ew J e r ey . . . . A l l an W i lbur,

reunion a t Oc e a n Point, Maine. We certa m l y

her church choir and commu111ry choru e , w i t h

con''form"1 t among you to send your new to

w e a r we l l ! . . . Jane Reisman D a i b ha retired,

occasional solo s i ng mg.

me l'ta e-mail; good idea, A l ! My e-mail addre

as has John ' 5 7 . Retirement has allowed them

probably part ic ipate in more sport now t ha n

1s now included w i t h the corre pondenrs' info . . .

rime to travel frequently, such as an ecology

mostof us put together. Her hushand, K a r l , is stil l

. Anne Worster writes movingly about the

cru ise to the Pacific coast of Costa Rica and a

a lawyer/corporate ecretary fo r Quaker Chemi­ cal Co. , but Ann, who l i ves i n Conshohocken,

emotional ordeal of losmg her hu band.

simi lar adventure in Belize and Guatemala. They

. A n n Wieland Spaeth

getting along pretty well except

he ts

r rhe unex·

also enjoy E l d e rhostels and have gone to

Pa. , has found rhe time for tennt ,

kiing in

pected moment when the reality of her loss htts

Macki nac Island and Tiburon ( San Franc isco ) .

Colorado, rowing a double hell with Karl on the

her. . . . Elaine ( Healey '62 ) and Paul Reichert

J ane a n d J o h n have a on w h o is a urologist i n Indiana a n d a daughter w h o i s a third grade

Schuyk ill, hiking and some biking-phew! Last

are in Friendship Force and have had l' i itors

October she wa

named the fifth member of

from all over the world. Paul, an avid boatperson,

teacher in Oh i o . . . . Bob Sal tz loves his work as

Springside School's athletic h a l l of fame. After

is a power squadron commander. . . . Retiree·

C O L B Y

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

44


A L U hi !'< I

Mary and

Dean Stewart are enj oy i ng l i fe in

Largo, Fla . . . . Keep those cards, letters and e­

mail coming, folks!

60

-Ann

Segrcwe Lieber

It 1s always nice to hear from you after

the quesmmna1res go out from Colby and you take the r i me to sit down and .; end a long your news. Please keep those c a rtl · and l e t t e r s coming!

. . . John Bailey 1s n o w a 2 1 -vear t r a n -

plant to Louisiana from Connecticut. He knows we ha\'e heard the good ( , uper Bow l , Ja::fest, !'11ard1 Gra · ) and bad about New Orlean , bur he says 1t 1 a grear rourist and con,·ention town and figures that sooner or later most Colby alums will get there. He would love to hear from anyone planning to come or after they've ar­ rived (phone numlers are 5 0 4 - 2 8 -7667h or

504-626-083 1 11'; fax 1 504-2 3 - 7 ' 3 5 ; e-ma i l 1s 1nlpctm·y@ aol .com ) . . - . Chet Lewis, a law­ yer, wrote from East Lan mg, M ich. He i a

1·­

tan r attorney general. M ic h igan Department of

activities ! H i s wife, Charlotte, is president of the NE Conference of N A ACP Branche , and their daughter is a recent graduate ofNorrheasr­ e m . . . . Dick Peterson will retire this year as 1· 1ce cha irman of M iner H o l d i ngs Inc. in New York . He and his wife, Bette, a psychologist who also plans to ret i re this year , l i ve in Bryn Mawr, Pa. Dic k is a trustee of both Eisenhower Ex­ change Fellowships and the College of I nsur­ ance i n e 11 York. For fun last year, he went heli-skiing in Brit ish Columbia in March, trav­ e led to Spain in J u ne and ran in the N . Y .C .

Marathon in N o ,·ember. Daughter Wendy is a senior at Middlebury . . . . Life in the north coun­ try is great.While I was writ i ng this, our resident black bear paid us a " is i r for the second nme in three days. He/she has been a regular for the past

concentrated in the finance of nonprofit health

care facilities. Hb wife, France·, is a proofreader 11ith the Michigan Legi larive Ser"ice Bureau,

61

A - I look m·er a three-month collec-

tht' pro pectoffinally hav ing a l l offsprino orad u ­

·nil bu · ier than e\· er .

ated from college . . .

took ad\·anrage of e-mail to update me on his

111te, Marilyn, li\'e 111 East Longmeadow, Todd 1

wrnre, "I

M as · .

N ew London. NH 03257 603-526-9632 fax: 603-526-802 1 e-m a i l :tcloc k h a rt@aol com. 1 96 1 J u d ith Hoffman H a kola 8 Charles Place Orono. ME 04473 207-866-4091 207-58 1 -38 1 2 e-ma i l : 1 udyhak@m a i n e . m a i n e . e d u 1 962

. . . Terry Lee is one who

1 8 1 M a i n e Ave n u e M i l l i nocket. M E 04462

1 963 Ba rbara Haines Chase 1 73 Spofford Road Westmorela n d . NH 03467 603-399-4957 1 964 Sara Shaw Rhoades 76 Norton Road

an e tare a n d fi nanc i a l planner and

life. He wnres from Massachusetts that 1 996

Kittery, M E 03904-54 1 3

wa a very eventful year for him. H e had surgery

fa 1rw 1 n dsc@aol . com

really e ni oy bemg self-emplL)yed. My

for pro. tare cancer, from which he is recovering

207-439-2620

work is ,·ery reward ing." He spenr a week m

,·ery nicely, and he

tarted h is own bu ine s ,

wmerland at an m\'estment conference and

Career Growth Management, w h i c h p rov ides

went paragl idingand loved 1 r . Todd and Man lvn

career transinon assistance to i ndividua ls and

. Ed Marchetti

groups. A former member of Colby Eight, he

have three grown c h i ldre n. . li1·e m

1 70 C o u nty Road

207-723-5472

-Caro l y n Webster Lockhart

that the bigge t recent change in their l i ves 1

. Todd Marchant a n d h is

C a rolyn Webster Loc k h a rt

be expensi\·e! . . . Thank you for your contribu­ tion · to the column and have a great um mer.

rion of questionnaire response and other notes from you, l not i ce that many of you are busier than ever-and that some of you are retired and

and they have three grown c h i ldren . H e write

1 960s Correspondents

Patricia Farn ham R u sse l l

Attorney General, and his pracnce remains

outh Hami lton, Mas . , w ith h i s wife,

snll s 1 11g with a church choir and other groups.

Par. Ed 1s pre 1den t and CEO of Offic e En1·1ron­

. . Diane Sadler Martin 's questionnaire de­

men t of N ew England, I nc., 111 Bo·ton and

c n hed a life so bu-y that I was exhau red when

Shrewsbury, Mass . , Port land, M a i n e , and

I fi n i hed reading it. he is a certified activitie

1'1anchester, N . H . Ed wrore that Pat, a teacher

consultant who trains others to work w i th adults

of pecial need

rudents, has been a rower of

111 long-term care fac i l i ties and, as Dr. G lad Bags

rrength throughout the founJ111g and Jevelop­

the c lown, train older folks in how to mini ter

L A R G E

1 960

three vear and alo..va>•s seems to know when we forget to bring i n t e birdfeeders. While this creature is a magnificent a n i mal, he is getting to

h

A T

1 965 Richard W. B a n k a rt 20 Valley Ave n u e Apt. D 2 Westwood. NJ 07675-3607 2 0 1 -664-7672 1 966 Nata l i e Bowerma n Zaremba 1 1 L i n d e r Terrace Newton Corner, M A 0 2 1 58 6 1 7-969-6925

me nt of the bu i n e . He say that he has expe­

to other old ter through clowning.

rienced much growth: h is fa mily, his bu mess

husband, Fred, a retired Episcopal priest, are

am! h1 1 a 1stline . He al o wrote, " Deteriorating

also busy keeping track of nine c h i ldren and

295 B u rgess Avenue

eye 1ght k e e p i n g pace w i t h d e t e n o r a n n g

even granddaughter· under the age of 5 . Wendy lhlstrom N ielsen i s the office manager

Westwood, MA 02090

memory!" I daresay y o u p e a k for mos t of u , Ed! . . . If anyone reading this column th inks

for husband Bob's insurance agency in New

e-mai I : Bob_ G rac1a@brookl 1 n e . mec. e d u

Canaan, Conn. Like many of u ,

J udy G e rrie H e i n e

life i> too bu y, you should talk

to Leon Nelson.

he and her

he i

very

of Lolech Enrerpn e in Bo -

proud of her children and i glad he had the

tun and is a consultant in urban affair , market­

opportunity to make them her "career" when

Leon i pre idenr

ing, fmancia l mstirnrions and event plann ing. He is

publt her/ed i tor of Boston Mmomy Busi­

Robert G racia

6 1 7-329-2 1 0 1

2 1 H i l lcrest R d .

they were young. When it comes to retirement,

Medfield. MA 02052 508-359-2886

they are still at the "think i ng about" stage.

e-ma i l : h e i n ejg@a o l . com

ness News anJ president of the Greater Roxbury

Tho e who have actually taken the plunge into

Chamber of Commerce. In add i t ion, Leon i

retirement inc l ude

pre 1dent of the Greater Roxbury Economic Develr :nenr Corp., a trust ee of the Boston

An occupational therapi

outreach coordinaror for the town of Carli le,

Local

Developmen t Corp, VP o f the N a t ional

Mas . Those of you who remember Lee as an

Assoc1a non of Black Chamber of Commerce, d1recrorof Bosron Economic Development and

avid skier won't be surprised to learn that she

Indus trial Corp., a lecturer a t Northeastern Umver it y' College of Busine s Admini rra­ tion and a member of Colby's Board of Over­ 'ecr!;-tO n a me j u t a few of his extracurric ular

1 967

Lee Holcombe Milliken. t , s h e h a s retired a s the

and her husband, Art, have traveled to Aspen, Yellows tone and even New Zealand in search of the perfect powder. . . . After working for Gen­

32 years, inc l uding s t i nts i n Venezuela a n d C h i l e , Bob North retired last eral Motor

for

45

1 968 M a ry J o Cala brese Baur 1 37 Lexington Road Dracut, M A 0 1 826 508-454-9733 1 969 Diane E . Kindler 1 1 7 Alba Street Portland, ME 0 4 1 03 207-774-7454

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


A Healthy Bottom Line

F i rst 1 t was double-d1g1t i n c reases 1 n hospital costs 1n the 1 970s a n d 1 980s. and now it's l i kely to be a cut of

$ 1 1 5 b i l l ion out

of health c a re provider payments over the next five years. says W i l l i a m Loveday

'67.

The president and C EO of C larian Health

Partne r s , a n l n d 1 a n a po l 1 s , I nd . , hospital with revenues of $1 2 b i l l io n and the country's second l a rgest nu mber of 1n-pat1ent admissions. Loveday 1 s a cutti ng-edge manager who pays c lose attention to costs "Our goal 1 s to take f i fty m i l l ion dollars out of cost. a n d that's a conservative number," he said C l arian Health Partners 1s a not-for- profit pr ivate corporation formed last Jan u a ry

1 by the consoli dation of three existing

I n d iana hospitals. health plans and occu pational health pro­ g r a m s . Fi fty percent of the new entity's revenue comes from Medic are and M e d i c a i d . and the two powerhouses " te l l u s what they're going to pay us They don't negotiate . " said Loveday who was president and CEO of I nd i anapolis's Method ist Hospital tor e i g h t years before the recent conso l 1 d at1on "The only way you W i l l i am Loveday: " W e n e e d to s t e p u p . "

can deal w i th a fifty-percent buyer whose payments are not kee p i n g u p with i nflation 1 s to control your price ·· As more and

Health c a r e i s s u e s w1I present pri a t e hospitals w i t h great

more patients come to hospitals on contracts with pr ivate insur­

c h a l lenges 1 n the future, says Loveday an economics maior who

ance companies and self-ins ured emp loyers. he says he and

earned an M B A at the Uni ers1ty of C h icago For instance. he

other health care a d m i n i strators 1 n the compet1t1ve health care

1s certain that the consumption of health care by those over

i n d u stry "are t ry i n g to put together effective networks to deal with

already four times the rate of those under

these larger payers "

American popu lation ages

65.

65,

will i n c rease as the

Although some c ritics argue that

social i n frastructure and f u n d i n g mechanisms don't work or that

C l a r i an Health Partners has been in e x i stence for only seven month s , so it's early to speak of accom p l ishments. he bel ieves,

Soc ial Security won t e x i st 1 n 20 1 0 when Baby Boomers begin to

although he says consol idating the teac h i n g programs of the

turn

t h ree e x i st i n g hospitals i n to a single program w i l l cut costs. A

involved in preventive med i c i ne a n d ind1v1dual respon s i b i l ity

65 .

Loveday says h e ' s opt1m1st1c

We need to get more

s i n g le board of d i rectors. shared h u man resources staff and one

I n surance companies need to provide more incentive and be less

benefit prog ram cove r i n g all 9. 700 emp loyees a l so helps

focused on d isease and injury We need to step up." he said

He

Loved a y . who s t i l l h o l d s a pair of Colby p a s s i n g records

projects savings i n the first year to be $ 1 2 m i l l io n .

30

years after his q u a r t e rb a c k i n g d a y s o n Seaverns F i e l d , enjoys golf and b a c k p a c k i n g The father of f 1 ve-h 1 s wife. Joyce, 1s a c l i n i c a l p s y c h o l o g i st-he a l so h a s r u n the L o n g B e a c h Mara­ thon and a i m s to run the Boston M a r a t h o n . " R u n n i n g h e l p s you m a n a g e all the p r e s s u r e and keep 1 t all i n foc u s , " h e s a i d . " Half o f k e e p i n g fit i s for mental h e a l t h . Y o u ' v e got t o p a y atten­ t 1 on . "- Roberl Gillespie

46


A L U M

September, only to he recalled and gi\'en a s1x­ month market ·tudy assignment i n Yene:ue la. Bob counts himself a success becau e, in h is words, "l learned to enjoy my life, friend and family at the expense of high rank, b ig income and great presuge-my life i · good, I con tinue to be very happy anJ sat isfied . " . . . G o rdon Prud'ho mmeaux has retired to W i nter Harbor, Maine, after 40 years a i l ing the seas. (I will retrain from making remarks about ancient manners.) Hts wife. Barb, i a soc ial worker, and

Germany, Mas achusetrs and New York to see their c hildren. John say he marvels at how many of us have retired and that he will J oin us in 30 year . I understand that he was a key player

in planning the reunion . . . . Brenda Wrobleski Elwell still works a a national account manager in New Jersey. Her daughter, Monique, i a financial analyst for Smith Barney on Wall Street, and son Gregory, who j ust entered col­

lege, plans rn be a meteorologist. Brenda and her

I

A T

L A R G E

ance. They have three sons, one of whom. Christopher, 2 3 , i a Peace Corp volunteer m Latvia. Denni said that although he ran a very slow New York Marathon, he 1 s in tram mg for a better showing at age 60 . . . . Thanks again to all th e folks w h o worked hard planning our activi­ ties and raising funds for the reunion.

-Judith Hoagland Bristol

63

Spring came

lowly to New England

this year. What signs there were we welcomed­

Mame, although her retirement as a med ical

kids traveled to yria and Egypt la t summer and learned a lot about rhe yrian cul ture by travel­ ing independently and v isiting w i rh yrian fnends. Brenda also visited with Margot Ettinger

technologtsl may be only temporary. For now, he and her husband, Dick, are enioying the i r

Tartak in Bushell, Fla. . Linda Nicholson Goodman had a good reason for nor coming to

Office and spoke with Barbara Chase ( can you

new home i n Topsham, where they a r e near Dick's elderly mother and aunt. They also do ome,kimg and tra\·el rn Flonda, Califo rn i a and

reunion: the marriage of son J i m, 3 1 . Last sum­ mer L i nda and David's oldest son, Jay, 3 3 , mar­ ned m J uly, and then son Bill '9 1 , 28, married H i l lary Robbins '9 1 in September. Linda still loves her Job as a chool psychologi t. Her hu-­ band, Dav id, 1s president of ensor Applica­

the) have three children . . . . Carol Davidson Jack ts another classmate who has retired to

Idaho to see family . . . . Speaking of traveling, that' what Tom and Dottie Boynton Kirkendall did m March. Daughter Tammy' wedding on Sr. Lucia in the Canbbean was an excuse for Tom, Dottie and their fa m i ly to go sail ing and

but alas, there was only one response to rhe mailing this time. I even cal led the Alumni believe i t ? } , who rold me 31 letters were sent to class members. I guess you all are too busy or too tired ro respond, or i t could be that you have J USt been overwhelmed w i th mail from our reunion committee, which is already hard at work. . . . Bill and I have another building project under­ way. This rime it's a barn ! No, not for animals, I hope. I t 's for storing thing , l i ke a tractor and

snorkeling m the Bri t ish V i rgin Islands-a \'ery

t i on . . . . Peter D u ggan had a Greenbriar weekend the same weekend a our 3 5 th o couldn't attend. Peter is enior VP of marketing

exc i ted about this barn ? ) We also are celebrat­ ing rhe birth of a second grandson, thb one to

different world from the central Mame lake where

and sales for Lance, I nc . , and Mary is a guardian

our daughter Sally and her husband, Brian, and

they have a summer home . . . - On April l , while Mother Nature was pulling an April Fool 1oke in

ad !item with Youth and Family

ervices. The

we plan a trip ro visit them soon in Virginia . . . .

the fom1 ofa massive snowstorm m southern New England, I wa delighted to get an e-mail me sage

Duggans moved ro Charlotte, N . C . , two years

I do have news from Chris Von G lahn, an

ago. Daughter Lesley, 29, is a second grade

attorney, who has recently moved with h i fam­

teacher, Peter Jr. is an account execu tive wirh

ily back east to Rhode Island after l iving in

from Bill Wahtola, who used being snowbound

J effer on P i lot Communications, and Vail, 2 3 ,

California for 25 years. He is looking forward to

as an excuse to drop m on old friend

a brush hog and a chipper. ( G uess who 1s \'ery

' ta the

i s a n event coordinator i n Charlesrown, S.C.

tarting a new business, after which he and his

Internee. Bill 1s enjoying the creative wrnmg

Peter and Mary celebrate their 30th wedding

wife, Sherryl, plan to build a new house. Last

cour e he 1s raking, and, 1f l don't get some new

anniversary this month. Peter, who is recover­

from some of you oon, I may a k him to "create"

ing from back problems, sponsor Richard Perty'

summer the Yon Glahns vacationed in their travel tra i ler in North Dakota. I hope herryl's family there was nor affected by the deluge . . . . I

. . I am ad to report that we

NASCAR racing car =43 in the Busch grand

have lost another classmate. Rebecca "Becky"

national series . . . . For the past six years, Pamela

also unearthed a questionnaire received from

Bachman died m New York C i ry m Fehruary.

Taylor has been involved with geriatrics, tak­

John Wilson in February 1 996, which for some

Oursympath iesgo our roher IS[er, Ann Bachman

ing care of elderly parents and providing mental

Ryan, of Ausrm, Texas.

health evaluations and treatment for house­

reason I filed in rhe wrong place and happi ly discovered j ust when I needed news. ( Sorry,

the next column!

_

-Jud)' Hoffman Hakala

62

I have enjoyed being class secretary,

(as part

Piscataquis counties. Pam aid that she's back

John, for rhe delay . ) He and his wife, Anne ( Nancy Godley '65 ) , l i ve in Lexington, Mass . ,

where she started, making home v isits again

and reach French at different schools. A w e l l a s

bound folks over 60 in Maine's Penobscot and

eptember)

after many years of soc ial work administration

reaching, J o h n works for a company that is

I' m turning over rh e position to Pat Farnham Mary and

in hospitals in Massachusetts. Pam says she manages to call Jean Kou lack-Young, who is

doing voice recognition research and is gather­ ing chi ldren's voice samples for rhem. I n their

E l mer C. Bartels have a widowed daughter

happily remarried and a grandmother. Suzanne

"spare" time John and Nancy take student groups

who:,e 2 year old, Jaye Mary, loves to have

B u rleigh Meyer and her morher visited rwo

to France, and for the past four summers they

grandpa read to her. The i r son, 24, 1s l iving ar

years ago, and Garth Chandler helped Pam'

have been

home. The Barrelses traveled to the Panama

parents rewrite their wills when they moved to Mame. ( She says that her dad, a retired lawyer,

chian Mountain Club family camp called Three

bur

Rus

of my retirement last

ell, a veteran from past year .

_

.

.

Canal rwo years ago wirh John F. " Bud" Johnson '60 and wife Trish on a Princess Cruise, and last January Mary and Elmer celebrated rheir 3 5 th wedding anniver ary ar the M i lepo t Restau­ rant in Duxbury, which theJohnsonsown. Elmer, who has been commissioner of rhe Massachu­ sett Rehabiltrat1on Commission for rhe past 20 years, travel· a lot to Washington, D.C., to restifv i n favor of rhe needs of rhe disabled . ·

· J ohn Chapman is m financial services, and

his wife, Al!tson, ts a choral music teacher m Brun wick, Maine. Their five chi ldren inc lude Bnan, who marrieJ in December, A b iga i l , a fre hman ar Sarah Lawrence, and Joseph, who

graduateJ :l m h1 s c lass from Kenrs H tll m May. John and All ison ger ro rravel to California,

never topped talking about hi attorney mak­ ing a house v is i t . ) Pam remarked how wonderful t t was to see Garth again last fall after h is chemotherapy treatment. And ar a state social workers conference recently, Pam visited wirh Loutse McCubrey '65 and Nancy Forman Gaston '7 1 . Pam had worked w i th Louise at the Maine Medical Center in Portland, and N ancy used to work where Pam now works at Community Health and Counseling Services. . . . Class presi­ dent Dennis Connolly did a wonderful j ob

planning for the 3 5 th. Dennis, an attorney, is a principal and senior VP at Johnson and H iggins Insurance Brokers, and h is wife, M . Patric ia, is as i rant general counsel at American Reinsur-

47

ummer managers for an Appala­

M ile Island on Lake W innipesaukee in N . H . B i l l and 1 were happy r o see N ancy and John at a lake nearby last summer. . . . Ceylon Barclay is enjoying life in Guilin, China, nor far from Hong Kong. Ar the t i me his letter was written, he was trying to help arrange for a senior student to spend her J an Plan with them while studying ar the university. I t's hard to believe rhe J an Plan has been part of the Colby curriculum since 1 96 2 , when we were j uniors, a mere 3 5 year ago! . . . My deadline is upon m e . Hope t o hear from more o f y o u i n t h e future.

-Barbara Haines Chase

64

I hope you all read Gary Trudeau's

class notes t itled "Class Trash" in rhe May 5

U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


A L l1 M

I

A T

l !\ R , ; I

1s>uc nt Time ma g a : 1 n c . Ir wa' ;1 m:a c , anJ r h c fo ll o wm g c o l u m n w o n ' t n>mparl' ! T h i ' ye,1 r'

Larr} . . . . Linda

pea r E l w e l l ,,1y'

1:cd ,1 tL·lcc1 1111 c radc m 1 " 1 1 1n to f r ,dy this pa t M,1v I l e <Htt:ndcd Prc'1dcnt Cotter's Campa ign ver'1un li( t he quc,t 1 < m 11<1 1 rc y i e lded 1 2 re,rnnw� le ge arc "h< l\1 ru lll ; l l n l , 1 1 1 1 ;l ro, l f l \'e M l l t l llic. F1 1r C :o lhv mee t mg <It the Ph 1ll 1 p ' Ga l le ry m c h i quarter. Louis Ch es n e r , t >pt n m c t r i ' r 111 L1 how r u hn n).! up c h i l d re n , how t ! l h,ll'L' ,i g1 ll i,J W,1 h m g rn n, D.C., rmd rcp11rrs 1r wa> "a great J o ll a , a l 1 f. , whnm we haven't h e ; i rd trum "nLc r 1 111c 111 'r1re , , f ,1d1 c r, 1 1 } .tnd r h , n f. 1 m i l } .mJ 'uLcc,,." M} le, JnJ e>e have a son in the sixth 1 989, a m were d all the que uom. He <rnd J,1;111 h t , d 1 h are '' ' rn u L h m l lrl· 1 m r•>rt,111 1 r h ,1 11 f , 1 m e g r. i J c , ".i 'clcu '''Leer pl d ye r , " and another son have t wo c h dJren, J o n il c h a n , 1 1 , a n d M1chdel, a n d wea lth." . Ka ren E�k e�en ' ' le.1 rn 1 n g w h< J 1, <1 f n: , h rn a n at Langlc} I l 1 gh. . G i nger 9. He duesn ' c p l a n w r e t i re h u r tL> w n r k le" wh e n ''hu\\ l u u 'c , 1 \\'l l rcl prnL C'" 'r, . 1 h rn 1 1 J u l 1 l" ( . .1L­ Goddard Ba rne; w,1., named p rc , 1 denr of the the u me come> . . . . Jon A l len 1' a ,c.1ff ,L 1 c n C 1 ' l " 1 r .mJ l..lL 1 a l 1 < l ll ( rc l , 1 1 1 vl' ro Jc\'<:lupmcnr' 1 n H um;1n Rc,<Jurcc Counc il in Bo>mn. he' also w n h RF r,)WCr Product' L i l Nc11 Jcr,cy. He ,md C r e e k / R u ma n , t r r of 1 h . 1 1 pcn,1d ) , Mt 1:,1rr \ P t ­ t h <rngcd Jnh, and 1 m 1w director of HR at hi, wife , Shirley, h a v e a l 1 - yc <1r- n l J lb ughccr. , 1 111 1 ::-- o n.H . i ,,7_" , h e , , ,,., ,he h," nnt l c ;i rn c d N ,1uun,d a h l c Commun1cac1om in Boston. J o n ' answer co " ho w far h<1ve w . i me n p mg rc"e J "che 1 11 n e r w< 1rk t n g ' ot .1 L . l r .md h< 1 11 tu t h . m ).! c Le a h A ran o v i tch p rou d ly repom that her mce The Femmmc M:vsriqu<' wa' pu bl "h c J 1 n .i w •i- h n m , 1 , h , 1 w c r r h mJ.!." '-,he .1 1,,, u >m lllt' n h . d .t u J.! ht cr , J e n n i e , wa named a Bixler cholar a 1 964 ?": "A fa i r l y k mg w a y in c e n m nt f, 1 r m;1 l "R\'!lrl' ' A rc you mm ! ' I 1 1 1 , 1 g o l ' 1 a r r cJ . '" A n d < J n ,1 ,nphomorc ,mJ wa, ,)ne of twu recipients of rule and law-. However, >tlC 1 a l p re i ud 1 u : ,t i l l r hc quc,r 11 1n < 1 f \ \ h l l l l1 < > 1 1 r L l.1" u1uld h,1vc clnne r h c Phi RL·t.i K,1 pp <1 ... cholamc achievement pen> 1 > t , and c h e r u les a rc nuc ah1 <lY' t u l l , nvcd." a hcHcr iuh 1 n W , 1 , h m g l < lll, , h e \H i t e , , " f J , 1n't ,1 w.i rd J e n 111c 1, ,m Engl 1,h maior and was e­ . . Charlie A nge l l 'aY' he\ lc;1 rn m g t'' c n 1 1 ,e k n uw . 1 h < 1 u t ,1 ht:cra J • 'h, hut mmt 111 c h.: L l . 1 " kcteJ t<J ' r ud v < H Oxford Urnver t ty for her the Ner, what p at i e n c e rea l l v m e a n ' and hml' w w11uld h,ll"c 'Ct\ c d 1 1 L'll, h 1 >nc, t h , m d Lmh­ J llnt\lr yeJr. . De nis Carter work full ttme manage a general eJuca t1on re new 1n a highly fu l l y- h u t \l l' ll i J n 't , d 1cl we." . . 01 er,i ll, rcupk 11 n h Cuun,c l m g A ,..,oc 1 a t 1umt1fWmona, M i n n . co mr le x lllSt 1 t u t 1onal >e r r i ng. In an,wer rn "Arc 1 n 'l l c n t t f 1 c .mJ h u , 1 n c " l .Hl'U' 1n 1ulcl 1 .1 h· Ht'. ' ,1 l"1 hecn n>nducung research on uh­ you i n the sandw i c h generamm. c.mng fnr k id ' L h 1 "c' in .t r t . m u ' t l ,mJ l 1 t l 't.1 t t1 rl' 11 g 1 1 cn , m · ,t,lll ( C .mJ hch,11·1or add 1ct ton and wa puhand raren r - ?" he say that h1, wn " liv e ' w 1 c h u' <1t hL·r l h,mcc ,tr u i l kt.!c C' h ,i rl 1 c . ,1 L n l l .: g.: 1 1 ' h e J i n r h c )mmll1.I of Sexual Add1cuon and and a l read y chmb he\ caring for CompuLm 11;1 in 1 996. Dern enioys us . . . . J ohn Brassem, r re , 1 d en r ,,f p l aymg th 1rJ '>Olo comet Ill the h 1 Ct)mrany, doesn't e x pect to rc­ W i nona Brass Band, a 30-ptece BritN EWS MAKERS ure ever b ur ohserves there are fewl't 1 , h- ' t} le ememhle. They rnmpeted an d fewer new e x ren se s a' t 1 me Carl Glickman '6 , profe r of cduca­ in the ;monal Bra Band Cham­ passe . . . . Larry Braun 1� ' t i l l in mm anJ founder of the program for pion h 1r' IJ>t April. . . . Dave Par­ business i n New Y o r k C H y . Hts "m chr1ol tmprovemenr, ha' been named i . h , an attorney and partner m graduated from Harvard and h1, Unt\·er tty ProfeS><.1r, the U 111ve r-1rv of Ruden, McClo. ky, 1 on the board daugh t e r fro m P e n n . J ea n Georgia's h1ghe t fac u lry honor The ,1f Equal Oprorrum ry Family Health Brennon Call wntes that she\ learn­ award recognize faculty who.e "acttons Lnter--a nor-for-profit integrated as c hange -age n ts have improved t he i ng "how very d i ffi c u lt t t 1 wa tch ­ health care Jelt\·ery '>)'Stem. He 1 ing parent become old and infirm, qua l t ry with which che umvernt) 'erve:. ,11,n on the board nf the Jew1 ·h Com­ 1 mi >ions.'' . Rocco Landesman '69, and fig u r i ng our how be c m heir m u n i ty Center' and 1s 1mmed1ate and make the righc dec 1s1ons." Many r.ist rre.1denr of h 1 local center. headofJuJilmcyn Theater m ew York Davc lecture on health care mat­ of us have e i t h e r completed th i s tt}, ha> formed a rarmersh1p with Carl Glickman '68 Pace Theamcal Group m create, pro­ ter for the Flonda Bar A' 0C1auon journey or are copmg a well as ,md Hnsp1 cal Trade A oc tatton. pos ible . . . . Phil Choate, who ts in duce and distribute Broadway how . Ac co rd mg LO The New Yark He\ a l..n r u blt , hed everal arncles the hosp ital bus ines in Mame, Time5, the new theatrical giant, which p l ans an mvesrment pool of $2 0 -$2 5 million to nurure and pre enc new how worldwide, " 1gnals and a b,xi k charter on health care wme , " ! think Medicare and o ­ matter�. Dal'e traveled to I rael la r ctal Secumy will be aro und 1 n 2007 a change in the way Broadway make cheater." .,um mer co vi 1t h i on who 1 a high when we reach 65. Budger increase >chool rndent there. Dave's daugh­ in Med icare will be pegged to CPL ter t a semor at Emory Untver tty. Ht other on teac her, ,aid, "A deve lopmental p ;y ch o l nin Retirement age for our k id will extend-maybe 1 a fre hman at T ufc tht fal l . . . . J udy E ge coun: would have been u eful. and a h1 wry of to age 68 or 70. And w hy not ? L i fe expectancy Dalton, who work a a sales rep and travel c 1 ent 1 ftc th ou ght from 1 5 4 3 to the pre>ent has increased and mosr people 65 and over are agenr, report> crave! wtth her hu band, Bob, last would ha1·e helped m0re than dissecting a fetal very produc r ive." . . . Marge Convery has a N ov ember rn the Barbado . La t March they r i g . " Marge ,aid he would have stuck Wl[h daughter, I rene, j ust graduated from toneleigh went ro c. Croix with their three daughters. French and srent her J un ior year abroad. Larry Burnham School and a son, Andy, entering h is Daughter J u:-.cme 1 enroll mg at the Tuck chool would have taken more 1·ariety, espec ially to sophomore year of h igh school. She say she i nvest igate many profe sor . Amst Karen wnuld for an M. B . A . , Vanes a has a grant to produce a misses Colby in May, enjoying the sun by the dLKumentary on women's i ue , and A lexis i a have taken math and geology. Opinion on che pond or driving to the coasr. . . Bob Drewes ophomore ac Williams. J udy reports seeing Ruth fracerniry/orority ituation were pltt, 50/50, says all three of his c h i ldren live west of the and Harold Kowal. . . . And a reported by Tim with Phil aymg, "This is a dead 1 ue. Leave it Rockies, while he and Robbie ( G i lson '65 ) are Hill i n his A lumni Counc i l new letter, J oh n there." Generally, people are av mg, inl'e ttng still in Virginia. He's learning German t h is Cornell ha been recognized for his contribu­ for retirement. . . . One more piece of good year. . . . Larry Dyh rbe rg has great new -a news. Colleen Khoury i the 1 997 rec ipient of tions and was elected an alumni tru tee . . . . Hail, brand-new daughter, born February 2 7 , named the Mame State Bar As oc iatton' Carolme Colby, H a i l ! Caroline. H e says he's learning lots of things ! -Richard W. Bankarc Duby Glassman Award. H is Peace Corps tour in 1 994-5 in Poland showed -Sara Shaw Rhoades h i m that che PC is still a wonderful American B ruce Logan, his wife, Ann-Marie, institution. On the how-far-have-women-pro­ and daughters Annaleah, 1 2 , and Jennifer, 10, Recognition. Myles Denny- Brown gressed question, he says, "Significantly but not live i n South Orange, N.J . , w h i le Bruce works in received offic ial "recogn ition for over 30 year sufficiently. I feel the women of 1 964 have been the c i ty a chief of med icine and e nior vice of service to U ncle am." Myles, who toils as an wonderful examples of the potential for indi­ president of the New York Down Town Hosriinternational economist in Washington, organvidual excel lence . " Bless your l it t le heart,

67

65

C

0 L B Y

U M M E R

1 9 9 7

r h c 1 mpor ·

rant lc''"n' 'he h;i- l c ; r rn cd ' t n c c l.:,1 1• m g col ­

48

�:


A L U �I 1' I

ral. . . . Elaine and K u rt Swenson rerorr chat cheir cwo ons have graduated from Dartmouth and Princeton and arc no\\' learnmg abou t the Jl1b market. Kurt contmues runnmg his grantte business 111 New Hamp·h1re and enjoymg t t as much as ever. . . . I n a warmer c l imate. Woody Roll and his wife, J anet, l ive m 'L)uthside. Va . . where Woody works a s a pwgr<1 m manager for a

has prepared me fo r the challenges and demands of motherhood," she writes from Oakton, Va., where she l i ves with her husband, M ichae l , an attorney. She ay · ·he is fi nally computer li ter­ ate, - urfs the N e t daily and has become an tndependent investor. Si!lce her knees are no longer whar they used to be, she has been forced

uainmg center and J a net manages a l ibrary.

to l i n1 1 t her mogul runs while k i tng . . . and has taken ur golf!

Woody and J anet have two c h i ldren, Evan, a

- Robert GraCta and ) udy Gerrie Heine

high chool ophomore, and Emma. a fre·hman at Georgetown. Woody l i ke

to ride motor­

cydes when he can; E\·an and Emma lean to­

68

:\ T

L !\ R G E

three: Andrew, who graduated from BU 1'. 1 e d t ­ cal School in M a y a n d mame<l 1 11 J u ne, A d a m , w h o fi n ished h i

second v e a r a t Dartmouth

Medical Schl'o l . and daugh ter

ura1ya, who

graduated from Bentley and no\\' works in the compu ter software industn• . . . . O u r daughter Karen graduated from Bowdoin in May, after rec e i v mg a Ful bright Scholarship co Germany. Daughter Christine is an atrorney i n M assa­ c h uoett . Tha r ' all for now.

-Mary Jo Calabrese Baur Once

again,

greetings,

cla mates.

69

bagpipes and Emma takmg to the stage. Perhap·

From Boi e , Idaho, Barbara Brown Rals ton \\'ri[es that after � O year of teaching, she's left the educat ion field and opened a v m tage c loth-

vut of re peer for her father's

Oh the places we have gone and the careers we have fo und 1 Recent respon es to quest ionnaires are fu ll of i n fo rmatton about

ward the performing arts, Evan playmg the ew England

111 g

connec tton, Emma recently performed a one­

hop with her daughter M i chele, who'­ oon w be married. Her daughter A l i xe i-

the many d i fferent paths members of the Cla s

per·on ·hm\ , "The Belle of Amherst . " . . . Larry

rnamed and in southern Californ i a , where she

doing all sorts of i n tere ting th mgs 1 11 all sorts

Sears, after d t CO\'Crtng that he 1 < only a few

works as an adm1 - ions counse lor at USC den­

of places. Bob Greene, a criminal j ustice con­

\'ears away from ret trement, has gone back to

tal �choo l . J am ison, 1 6 , her youngest, is a stel­

s u l tant based in

school to work toward· a ·ecl1nd maste r's degree

lar ba ketba l l plaver at Boise H i gh. H usband

work l a [ year 111 S i ngapore for the ir Depart­

of 1 969 have taken in terms of work . We are

ouch Carol ina, did some

111 coun el ing. Curre n t l y , Larry t> teach i ng m El

Larry ts a real e· tate broker, and they own three

ment of Prisons . . .

Pa. u, Texa . He reports that la ·r summer he

dogs. Barbara t s espec ially b u · y with the 1 4

manager li\·ing in Port land, Ore . , wt th his w i fe

\'i ired with Dick H unnewel l :rnd h is family m

year old and hupes omeone i s that good t o her

and d1ree c h i ldren, J u lia, Ryland and Olivia . . . .

when

J udy Lee Moec k e l , a reha b i l itat ion cons u l tant

ew Hamp·h1re after takmg a b i ke tour m

he' · h i

age.

he say- the bottom line

.

Howard C u tle r i a grant ­

�l

Vermont . . . . Clark Whittier h a · been named

'll

after all these years ts that "home and family

i n Connec t i c u t , has taken up both regular

ttmton• manager of M a me and Vermont for

take� first place." . .

e x e rc i s e a n d t e a c h i n g voice . . . . R o b e r t

American Pamot

from Rochester,

ancy Fischer Reale, .Y., has been active fo r years

Oldershaw l i \'e a n d work in Amher·r, Mass ..

LeBoeuf & Associates m N eedham, Mass. Clark

as an ad\·ocate for public educat ion on local,

with h is wife and two young c h i ldren. Both

and Kathy and rhetr two c h i ldren live m

mth

Cllunty and · care le\·eb. For fun, she enjoys

Bob and his wife are doing scientifi c research,

Yarmouth, Mame . . . . By the t i me you re. d th ts,

competino on her hor e , On To Gold, i n the

we wtll have had our 30th reu n ion and c 1ught

sport of eventing. W i t h three grown sons, she

he in b i o logy and he i n a tronomy. Bob says he has "lost h i s t i c ke t on the info rmation h i gh­

up with many classmates on campu. . Howt:\·er,

find

way . " Perhaps he can get a new one from

111 p lann ing the 30th we got the chance tl1 ca•ch

able. Two 'ons arc college grad

up with a

1m·e tment ba n k i ng 111

m It.

Im

ale> after fh·e year

\\' t th

of people from the Cla s of 1 96 7

the "empty nest" s i t uat ion very agree­ working 111

Sharon Timberlake, w ho has left the trenches

an Francisco and in

of soc i a l serv ice · to tart a new career in the

whom many ofy o u haven't heard a b o u t m q u i te

con u l t t ng 111 Boston. The younge t is a fresh­

travel and tourism business. Currently she i

<nme time. Pare of the fun wa c a l l ing c la,,mate>

man at Prmceton. H u band V mce ( they've

lead i ng both adult and youth tours in Canada

been ma med 2 7 year· ) i

urgeon who is

and the U . S . I f you see Sharon drive by on a bus

catching up on old t t me . We poke to Phil and

concerned \\' t t h the d i rec t ion of health care

i n your c i ty, she's the leader of the pack.

Valerie Robin on A twood in

and t s work i ng on i m p ro v i n g the w h o l e

. .

to see

1f they were commg

to the reun10n and ouch Carol ma.

a

.

Kerry Hayes continues doing still photog­

If\

Phtl commuce to the U m ve rstt) of

.C.. where

:.ystem . . . . I n NO\·ember. Col . J o h n B ubar

raphy on mov i e

J•

he ts a geology professor, and Val ha

tarred her

rook command of the I 0 1 - r Refueling W i n g ,

Hol lywood, and recent fi l m he' been involved

ets. Kerry has an agent in

f, :L

own busine s preparing gift ba ket>. They've

M a me A t r N at ional G u a r d i n Bangor, ranked

with inc lude Striptease and To Die For. H is

purcha. ed a 1 0,000- qua re-foot ret a i l space, an<l

first of 89 guard u n its i n the U . S. A t r Force.

fam i l y is back in Toronto . . .

llfi

they're renovating l 1 v 111gquarcers abo\'<: t t while uttl1:mg the retail space fo r Val' bu;,, i nes and

J o h n , whn ha n u merous m i l i tary awards and

Hoek Abraham , a l t hough lacking a n agent­

decorat tons, has been a captain with A merican

as far as I can tel l-does have a new M . B. A

111ventory. Both of their k ids have graduated

A 1 r l 1 11es ince 1 986 and will conti nue to d iv ide

from Babson Co l lege , magna c u m l a u d e .

from college. Their daughter is worktng tn gcol­ Og) in Wa htngton, D.C., for a fe deral agency,

his t i me between c 1 v t l 1an employment and the Air N at ional Guard . . . . George Rideout con­

. . . L e s l i e B landing of B o w , N . H . , is married, has fo ur c h i ld ren and I i t her occupat ion a

t t nues as leader of the Westgate Church i n

"Mrs. Calaba h, storyteller, coach and origami

.t'

and their

u!

on has returned home from

ew

.

Deborah Van

Orleam, where he attended Tulane and had hi

W e l lesley, Mass . , and h i s wife, M ary, is both

artist." Les l i e wonders about the whereabouts

own bu,iness, to a si t tn t he i r new venture. A

admin istrator and teacher at We tgate Chris­

of David Katz. David, plea e get 111 touch with

\ Ou can ee, mo t of us have not lowed down

t i an Academy. Thanks to daughter Amy and

M rs. Calabash . . . . Bud H iggi n s continues as

one btt! . .

Susan Monk Pacheco write from

her hu band, Dav i d , they are grandparents a

chief of emergency medic ine at M a ine Med ical

her horni: in Dayton, Ohio, that her <laughter,

econd t i m e . Their on Ian married last year.

Center, has a daughter, J enny '9 7 , and longs to

Chnstma, graduated Ph 1 Bera Kappa and magna

. When la t heard from, J eremy Schneider was on h t way to I taly for i x months, reca l led

s i m p l i fy h is life a bit. . . . Roger Hopk i n s de-

to active d u ty in t he N avy to help d i rect air opera t tons fo r the Bosn ian peacekeeping m is­ sion. For the d u rat ion, w i fe Vickie w i l l have to

television personal i ty." Roger recently has been involved i n a eries of programs fo r Nova on

.

cum laude from Colbr m 1 996. Her trengrh in her b1ochem/Engl i h ma1or must have been

genetic 111 pas ed, since

usan is a ped1atric1an and her hu band, J a i me , 1 a phy ic1an spec 1 al i2 111g 111

hemato logy/oncolo gy .

They a lso have a

on, Ben1am in, who 1s a fre hman at UVM . . . . Ru ell Starr listed her occupation as "retired" on the recent c la survey, but she ure

Ann

ound busy with daughters J es ica, 1 3 , and V ictori a, 9. "I am not sure that anything in l ife

be both Mom and Dad to daughter Remy, 1 1 , in Georgia. J e rry a lso leaves behind his work a t B l u e R h t no, a company t h a t supplies propane

cyl 111der . . . . Barbara Stanford Tremblay was named N ew Hampsh ire Assi rant Princ ipal of the Year i n 1 99 5 . She is the proud mother of

49

cribe

h i mself as " tone mason, a u thor and

P B , "Secrets of the Lost Empires." Roger was married i n 1 995 to !gal Gala!, the b a l l e t d i rec­ tor of the Cairo, Egypt, Opera House . . . . I t is no secret that I am purs u i ng my uue c a l l i ng as a hockey mother fo r my 1 0-year-old son _ I do a l i t t l e c l in ic a l soc i a l work and p ychotherapy a the various athletic schedules al low . . . . Keep

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


·\ L l

1 '.J I

A I

I ,\ I\ l� J

tn wuc h .111d l e t me kn,,w w h e n: your r• i r h -, . m:

. 1 d m 1 t 1 1 1 1 h .1t Wllrd " 1 1 l d " ? )

T <l k 1 t1 g

g< > < H it Ill J on

YL'lL

-Dllme E KmJ/er

70

)\1u

k n l 1 w ytiu're gn >\\' t ng l liJl'r 11 ! 1 e n

J"n

ch.lt

.di

r lw 11.t) d1 111·n hl·re 111 l\1.1n l . 1 11d 1 ) ,1

wrntng. Lau ra hJd rhc

g laJ she

,t 1 l l h a , t h e memt>I) t l l ht• uf h c l p 1 M ,

hl•t:n 11« 1rk 1 11g w n h ( .1 1 l h tn e-1 . 1 h J i ,h mg ,1 ( l . 1 "

, J " 1 1 1K t 1 l 1 il 1 1 f h p r t ng l 1f ( l l !hy

Dennis Power� 1

! 1}7l� W e h p.ige I l e ' i.! " 1 lllllic 1 1n - l 1 m (. ht·Lk II • > I l l

our

2 'i t h rL· u n 1 1 1n

'"- r i ll

II

1 1 1 1 ng I l l

letters and e-mail nn t c' you guy' 'end help Keep

\cc1 cn

ThL·

J a ,, t , f ! 970 recent h

has rrnd ucc J twt> rn.iJ1'r excc u r 1 1·es

(ar

le , i - t t hc1

73

. Geoff

Folev 11·.,rk, ,1

Gillit::»

( /mt'

1

hal't� great m i e s ) . Mark Zaccaria 1 -, t h e COO ,,f

rerre,l'n l ,l ( ! I L' tn

h.i ' ' " ' t epd1 i l d rn1 m J I � , r e r-gr.111ck lt d , l ru1 ,

h

H11111t'.

c>rth A nd 1 1\ n , :--. 1 . 1 ' '"-hL 11. 1 1 1 J , 1 nl·t 1 11 1 1 rk mc 1 u1 hc·r

g 1 r 1 ' _ lJ ,

pharmaceu t i c a l 111dtMry. ( j 1 N a thoughr-wnuJd

M . R . :\ . •1nJ cn m ml· n i - r h.11 ret u rn i n g tll d"'nl 1 , ,111 ,1dulr 1 , .1 big L h 111 1.! L f r, 1111 'L hc11 1 l .H i:l l l lccc

rnenl'.

ftir rhe

" u neth ical" pharmaceuc1c,1l mJu,rry 1 ) Mark. h1'

age. She l ll t e n

w ife , Ruch, three k id , and dng live 111 Mum'

L t i ll e gc l t hrJrt.111

Co u nt y ,

. J . M ark al\\1 rept1rc- h;11·1ng d i nner a

l'l' '

m ed ic a l schtinl. . . . Thi-. c o lu m n '

tor

David

Marshall

75

spaces-we're

all

upennrentlent of Warer­

pa t year- he recel\·eJ the D1 tingui. h d Pnnc 1pal\ A\\ard for Mame and the M a i n e E d u c a to r A \1 a rd

. . David

Light Co., an energy company m P1ttshurgh, Pa. . . Jay Mc weeney ' 7 7 t s the new v i ce president

of e

tt maring and pre-conscructton

ervice for Kay Con trucnon Corporat1Lm, a Bo ton general con­ tracting and consrructton management firm.

Demgen 1

a wetland

he and her family

Ken Ei en

Birchs: A daughter,

quare Ctn·

ema 111 Waten· t l le, fi lm critic for \lame Times anJ fi lm m .t r u e tor at Cnlh\ . The J;i-,c ume l mentioned Ke n m the column, I mcorrecdy rlported h t '

wife'·

name.

orry,

Rerh Ann�

-Marl(arec McPanland Bean

74

Ir's late Apnl. our fu-sr real

sprmg Jav a· I wme th ts. Rodger

1k1 and

ilver rein are both

�1-D.

t >rh r halmo l og1 t� m Che,ter,

'.J

Rl)Jger enJOY> rendmg time w1ch 'u:anna, 1 2 , cuba J 1 nng, collect

14,

mg car , and rnkmg Rhen,

to

t e n n i s matches "hither & yon . "

. . . Ro ma and J eff eip and daughter Lauren mO\·ed from audt Arabia to .::' h angha1 last year. The c limate

M I LE POSTS

he is a fifth

anca F e , N .M.­

\'1 1-

Mar hall ' 7 5 h as been appomted pre 1denr and CEO of Duque>ne

that he has ach1e,·ed her dream of

maje tic mountam , starry kt es, open

anJ

v1 lle, Matnl, puhlic chool on J u l} I. In

their products (Thanks, Greg 1 ) and

grade teacher in

unvenc1on

Bureau for conmbuc1on. to local

the as't. rant

phone d1recrones on CD. I 've med

living in rhe oud1West.

Fran Gate

d1recwr at R;:11 lrnad

ro u rn m . . . . J o eph Ma t t o ' 7 3 became

D ,el J., te le­

to what they\·e always wanted to do.

fame,

B<ingtir,

the ha ll, as they recently made Greg

Case m po111t: J udy Wood.Judy writes

h u hl H h enJOV pl ay· mg mu teal tn CT\J­

t h�t r lwmc tn rhc N e t h e r l, m d s . .

awarJeJ che 1 997 Eagle .A,,,arJ by the

t1on. Acx1om mu t be \'el) much t>n

able to change direction and return

\\

'Pt:IH .1 11 L'ek.·nd 111 lvfa t n e wHh Merrilee

Pete r Da i gle '70, J1rector uf operamms

was purchased by Acx1t1m Corpor,1-

go, Greg ! . . . I 'm always ennous

Old

Bon ney ind her fa m t ! \ , who wen� \" h t t t ng from

for Lafayette Hord' t n Mame, wa

Andrews. Greg\ company, Pw CD.

when I ee cla smares who have been

This

Robert Di.imonJ I ' 111

N EWS MAKERS

o t h e r maior e x e c u r 1 1 e 1. G r eg

Mountain T ra t ! at 'ugarloaf. Way to

and

1� a �elf-Je,cnhed "fi l m gu} "-<o­

ha r les h the 'e 111 o r nnn-l\!D a J ­

began but!dmg a ca m r on the West

Home Time

usan Rennau 1-, a re g 1 �t e red nur'e

hri., Hannon, 11 h1 1 1, .1

1 n1·e,tnw n t h . m k m c .md lw.1d, t he c l 1 1h.1 l m.ir-

m t n 1,rracor at f\,1,t11n U111 1· e r' t r ) \

they work great. Thi;, ummcr Greg

11< 1 1 ch mc

l-- 1ul11g1,r 1 n \'al leio. Ca l i f.

while agt> w 1 d1 Charles Ter re l l .

Pro CD's CEO. Pro

a ca,tno game.>

he . 1 11J h e r hu,hand, Rick Hoffman. have twtn

11 1 1 h nwre un

an;nhmg

They have

.1nJ 111.111.iJ.!t:' 1 1-.: rc t ! 1 1 1 c t: n t l' r tn :air Lake C1ry.

np appl1cat1t>n soft w a re ')'Ct'm' t n r the eth1c.1l anyone O\\'n up tn d e l' e l l1 p t ng

1 996.

t wl l d.1 ugh rL'r and gener..il c o nt ra c. t ed thetr own

.11<:-,

A1rrncd1ca T e ch no k1gy Gruup. The firm Jt'l'L' i ­

tht·

hea Legg

m.111ag..:r 111 Adanttc Ct n . He .111J Bnnrne have h.,11 e

Janet

dnd Janet

" 'n \ gr,1d u,u 1on tn May

Wa1 nl· h,1,

h ea r f n >m \'l \1 1 , N i c k y Pach rh,1m· lwmc I

• •

Ma rga re t

1 >f

Blanchard

mcm 1 >ne' g n h,1d. ahout . is f.1r a ' yesrerd.1y The

up the gnod wmk 1

...

.it tenJeJ t heir tho: nf hcmg r h c pdrenc' of the fmt I he C[.1,, of J 97 ) Cl\ 1.,'l'<lJUate from

ph1 1 1 'e

'>pt.:c 1 a l t h .111b t'' \Vayne

I>

I0

\rnrks ,is <I manager of product

dc,1gn .ind deve l u pm r nt tn New York "he ts 1 h 1 1 r. , ug h lv cn)uymg her young 'on , Michael.

l n ud -,iglt t 1! rl·lid .111cl r h c r h 1 1 ndt.:rnu' .1p­

perspec t l \'L' nf someone \\' h n l i ved t h n > u gh the plea,ure ,if th;it experience t h e t >t h e r 111g h t . I ' m

Lichtenberg

Fm.illy (I h e.m l

. 1 1 We-,1 V 1 rg 1 n 1 . 1 U n 1 1·cr 111

4 r11

n n g m g tn ag..: frnm

1 , 1 11 1 he h 1 < >lugy tkr.1n r n e n t

y o u ftir .i h 1 , w ry paper hec,11"e h e w;111r' r11 g e t t h e

event' ahnut wh i c h he

A r.1 h1 111 ( ) u l f lie .mJ M<1h;il have three hoys

Thl 1

11 c lcl lmecl W d l 1 a m R < >he rl Wl'l.: 111' '" c l w 1 r f.1111 d y 1 11 F-c h ru, t ry

y o u r ' o n L < t i i - from u i l kgc . m d ,1-,b rn 1 1itcn·1t· w

tng •mcl h.1, mm cd from Be i r u t tn f\.ihra tn 1n t he

( .llngr.1t t t l .11 1< >11'

Weem� .me! h 1 ' w i f e . I )< > nn . i

and oc tal -tre e are very differ·

arah Kinney, to K a y a n d Robert Kinney '79.

1 e a lous, J u d y '

enc, but they have made the adjw;r­ ment from met I lamic culture to rhe den e populanon. Jou y air and

Im

ket' d 1 1• 1 , 1 on of The Barclay� Group. He and

cold weather of

thing. Ted has rejoined the Peace Corps and i.

J e n n i fer ha ve three children . . . . Ken Gross

now in Africa. H is daughter graduated from Colby­

maintains a law office m N atick, Mas . He 1

recordmg and producing multicu ltural harp music for PolyGram Records tn California.

Sawyer last spring. (Another thought-are Laura

c h a i rman 0f the lnternammal A:.--oc1arion of

. . . J ackie Olivet wme

Jaz: RecorJ Collector'

m u i c commmee. He

that she has changed career from fa mily law tCl

go to a school w1th Colby in itsname?) . . . Sharon

make dec i ton about what material the a> o­

teaching 0C 1al -rud1e at the econdary chool

N iles Brokaw is a senior hi toric preservation

c i a r 1on will issue on CD and 1s Ii red as producer

leve l , realiztng her long-standmg incere t m

specialist at rhe Rhode Island Historic Pre-erva­

of the new CD . He play trumpet m the Natick

education . . . . Laura and J im Lazour are 1n

tion Commission, where he manages grant and

Legion Marching Band and occa-ionally play

loans. Following thedeath of her husband, Walter,

in jaz: banJs. . . . Carol Chalker McDowell i a

after a long illness in 1 994, Sharon has been able

sc hool p ychologt t in the Beverly, Ma s . ,

dennst with the George Washington Univer­

to get on with her l ife in a very po itive manner.

chools. S h e a n d h e r husband, Charley, enjoy

sity team. He ha been to 1 0 NCAA tourneys

She has taken drawing and painting courses at

visit ing their daughter at Bryn Mawr and the

Rhode Island School of Design and p ychology

Un iver ity of M iami . . . . Jonathan M i l ler is an

with rhem ! J i m also ees J i m Glover occa ion­ ally . . . . Norman and andy Spurr Michaud

courses at Rhode Island College. Sharon writes

attorney in Boulder, Colo. He and Arleen have

that she'd like to hear from "old" (her word, not

a son, Jonah, 7 . Jon volunteers with the Boulder

mine) cl assmates. ( Another thought-three in

County Audubon Society and the Sugarloaf

Boston, and Norm is senior research tech at

ever

School. . . . Noreddin Nahawi is t i l l in bank-

Mass General. They enjoy ons Ru el l , 1 1 , and

. Ted Wells is another cla;, mate doing

and I the only one in our c las who e kid

didn 't

one column, a new record !-will any of us

C 0 L B Y

U M M E R

1 9 9 7

50

·

hanghat. . . . Diana

tork 1

from Catsk i l l ,

.Y.,

Virgm1a, where J i m is a dentist, a youth ba ket­ ball coach ( D.C. area champs la t year ! ) and

are in Reading, Mass. Sandy i a scientific a O· chepen Eye Research I nsti tute in

c iate at


A L t.; �I N I

!'JI

Lucas, 9. (Great name-I have a Lucas, roo l ) Sandy plans to attend our 2 5 th reunion and would like to hear from or of Kyle and Glenn MacPhe rson . . . . I n Charleston, W.V., Marcy Aswad Greenfield is a church organi t, a nd husband Dand is publ1 her/editor of the Charles· con Datl-v M ail ( c ircu lation 4 1 ,000 ) . They have two da-ugh t e r s , M a l l ory, 1 <, and A l i on, 1 1 . . . Kudo to Ed Hatch for be mg named the =2 an a l y t m 1 996 by the Wall Srreet]oumal. Ed works for UBS Securities and earned a 47 per­ cent return in h is stock picks, 1 f l understand the article correctly! He and Kerry enioy their sons, Kevin, ), and Connor, 2 . . . . Clo er to home, M ilton and Nancy D u bois T r u man are in Biddeford, where Nancy teaches language ans and French to middle choolers and M ilt i banquet manager at the Portland Regency Ho­ tel. Son Mikel, 2 1 , i a dean' l ist 1 u n 1or at Colby, and daughter Kate, 1 8, will start at Roll i ns th i� fall. Na ncy en1oys readmg the clas� news (thanks for the par on the back ! ) and hear from Dianne Chaplin Risner in Shal imar, Fla., wnh husband Keith and daughter Paige, and also from Jan Hampshire C u mmins, who is adopt· mg a Rumanian child this year-an exciting life change . . . . Ted Field wmes briefly that he is busy directing a nonprofit management program at the Universiry of Maryland. He also consults for the D.C. Public Health Comm is ion and for eco·tounsm m Mozambique . . Here at home, 1 2 -year-old Lucas's Odyssey of the M md ream finished second ar the stare compermon m Apri l, a thril l for us all! M ore next time!

nJ

-Shelley B1ermger Rau

111

�(

·n

Jl

76

tr c

nJ UT

et· ,n,. (!·

"

,ud If •

JJll

Susan and Brad Cohen were blessed with the arrival of W1 l l 1am David Cohen in October 1 996. We hope that the new parents have caugh t up on their sleep b y now . . . . Sharon Marden John on, a ma sage therapist in the Wa te rv il le area for almost 1 5 years, wa recently elected member-at-large ro the American Mas­ age Therapy As ociatton. he l ives m Chi na, Maine, with hu band B o b and d a u g h t e r Hannah . . Barbara Brennan Silano wrote from Menlo Park, Calif., where she works a the deputy chief of the organized crime and rack­ eteering tnke force i n the U.S. Attorney' Office in San Franc1 co and l iv e s with husband Bob, a sp ec ta l agent for the DEA, ara, 7, a n d Ma tt hew , 5 . . . . Where are you, Janet Gorman ? John Luker '75, c u rre ntl y in l nd 1anapolis, is look i ng for you . . . . Steve Shafarman reported on his doings s inc e grad u a t i o n . Like several other '76ers, he rece n d y p u b l i s he d a book; h is work rs titled Awareness Heals: The Feldenkrais

MeihodFor Dynamic Health. Steve l ives in

anta

Barbara " 'ld recently started the Ph.D. program in human devel op men t at the Fie l di ng l nsti· tute. . . Harriet Buxbaum Pinan ky reported that son Sam, 1 7 , a French horn p l a ye r, per· formed at the White House. Sh e rece n t l y re-

tumeJ to work; husband David ' 7 5 works at the FDIC, and daughter arah i 1 2 . . . . Manny Rosa, recentl y returned to N . Y.C., i now an

a si rant VP for external affa i rs at New York City Health and Hospitals Corp. and serve as board member for several worthy cause . .A member of our c la s fo r only two years, David McKay Wilson i a newspaper reporter in White Plains, N .Y . He l ives with \11ife L i l and son Luke, 1, and enjoys long-distance bike rid ing in his spare time . . . . Wendy Swallow Williams loves her job teaching college students. A journal ism professor ar American Un iversity in D.C., she lives in Kensington, Md. , with sons Joey, 9 , and Geoffrey, 8, and has publi hed artic les in several national periodicals . . . . Scott B utchart li,·es i n my hometown, Needham, Mass . , and works as a French teacher at Brookl i ne H igh chool. He and wife Christine have a new ·on, Liam Christopher, born in june a year ago. . . . Kathy Donohue Yeo reported that she and Ron ' 7 5 recently celebrated their 2 0 t h wedding anni­ \'ersary. They l ive in Albuquerque with chil­ dren Heather, 1 1 , and Peter, 7 . Ron is as oc iate professor of psychology at the University of New Mex ico, and Kathy 1s a c linical soCial worker at the UNM tudent Mental Health Service and also work in pri ,·are practice . . . . Also ce lebra r • mg their 20th were Rab and Martha Bell. The Bells l ive in Cresskill, N .] . , where Manha is a writer/ediror and Rab ts a consultant. They have two g i r l , V i c toria and Madeline . . . . J i m Wiederhold bragged about k id Aaron, 1 4 , and Kyle, 1 0 . He l ive in Marietta, Ga., where he runs h1 own executive search firm in health care . . . . Carrie Getty e-mai led from Idaho Falls, Idaho, where she is executive director of the Idaho Falls Arts Council and is renovating a local vaudevi l le theater. Husband Grego Smith ha· authored everal books on beer-both Gregg and Carrie are "national beer judges." . . . Joanne Defi lipp A lex, fo under and director of the t i l lwater Montessori School, Old Town, Maine, wa chosen one of rhe nine finalist for the 1 998 Mame Teacher of the Year. . . . Steve '77 and I continue to love l ivmg in Cape Elizabeth, Maine. Like so many other parents, much of our time is dedicated to watching our sons ( Dan, 1 6 , and Derek, 1 2 ) compete on athletic fields or in the gym; our jobs are demanding, but family comes fir t! Keep those responses com ing so I can share your news! -Valerie ]ones Roy

77

I am sorry, class, that my lasr column got lost. I think it was my best! . . . Randall J . Schreitmueller has been appointed assistant vice president for marketing with Allendale I nsurance. He has been a writer for them, in Boston and in New York, but was promoted to sales manager in 1 990 . . . . Michael T. Martin was rec og ni zed at Fleet Bank and Canal Bank for his experience in loan portfolio monitoring and collections . . . . Kent Wommack writes that he is executive director of the Nature Conserva­ tory ( the Mame Ch a p ter ) . Hi sabbatical from his job mcluded a two-month camping trip with h is spouse, a natural resource consultant, and t he ir three "wonderful chi ldren." It made h im

51

-\ T

L .-\ R G E

1 970s Correspondents 1 970 Steven C l i n e 6602 Loch Hill Road B a l t i m ore, M D 2 1 239-1 644 e-m a i l :steve@ca llaha n-adv.com 1 97 1 Ja mes Hawkins 485 Locust Street Attleboro. MA 02703 508-2 26- 1 436 1 972 J a n et H o l m G e rber 1 1 1 08 Broad G reen D rive Potomac, M D 20854-202 1 3 0 1 -299-6240 1 973 Margaret M c Partland Bean RR7, Box 2795 Augusta, M E 04330 207-623-22 1 0 e-ma i l : m bean@ma 1 n e h ousing.org 1 974 Shel ley B ieringer R a u 1 23 H o t e l Road Auburn. M E 042 1 0 207-783-0829 e-m a i l : rau@maine .com . 1 975 N a n Weidman Anderson 806 Partridge C i rcle Golden, C O 80403 303-279-6287 1 97 6 Valerie J o n e s Roy 38 H u nts Point Road Cape E l i z a beth, ME 0 4 1 07 207-767-0663 e-ma 1 I: Roy2casts@aol .com 1 977 Madeleine Theodore 31 H ig h l a n d Street Portsmouth, N . H . 0380 1 603-436-9385 6 1 7-893- 1 1 23 1 978 N icholas Levintow 1 02 0 1 Forest Grove Drive S i lver Spring. M D 20902 30 1 -68 1 -3327 1 979 Robert Kin ney 2 9 1 1 Edg e h i l l D rive Alexa n d ri a , VA 22302-2 5 2 1 703-836-4227 e-m a 1 l : rj kin ney@l l g m . com

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


Corrected Vision

Twenty-three years ago Doug Smith ' 70 was a young Air Force officer s1tt1ng i n a b u n ker 1 20 feel beneath the Montana p l a i n s with h i s f i n g e r on the button of a n u c l e a r weapon a i med at R u s s i a n cities He n e v e r stopped t o think a b o u t who the p e o p l e he m i g h t k i l l w e r e or w h a t t h e y w e r e l i k e Six m o n t h s ago h e f o u n d o u t Smith, an optometrist 1n Medford. O r e . s a y s he 1s purging h i s p a s t by part1c1pat1ng 1n a humanitarian and business exchange with

D o u g S m i t h has warmed u p t o R u ssians.

some of the same people he would have wiped out a generation ago His involvement with Rotary International has taken Smith to Siberia

The e x perience was profound for Smith who says he couldn't

twice this year, and, he said, he has forged relationships with "some

escape the irony that these people were once the targets of his

of the warmest people I have ever known "

nuclear missile "There s a lot of baggage there. h e said " I shed a lot of tears [ The t r i p ] was a very emotional time for me "

Smith says Russian businesspeople. many of whom come from mil itary backgrounds, are aggressively seeking U S expertise on

He is now corresponding with and hopes to soon meet his

market economics as we l l as help 1 n meeting their country s basic

Russian counterpart. a former nuclear missile controller from

need s . I n January. Smith and h i s fellow Rotarians traveled to

Novos1bersk. who. Smith said

had me 1n his sights at ground zero

•

Petropavlovsk, a city of 300,000 on Kamchatka Pen i n s u la n i ne

Smith says that for 1 O years after he left the service he had

t i me zones east of Moscow. The 1solat1on that made 1t ideal as a

n i ghtmares about the nuclear holocaust scenarios h e and his

Soviet nuclear submarine port also retarded the city's progress.

fellow officers were taught a s part o f thei r s u rvival training

I had

resulting 1 n severe deprivation for the populace. "We v1s1ted one

s u p p ressed them for years until I went to Russia and while I was

hospital where eig hteen women were giving birth. and there was

there I had one n i g htmare I haven't had one since " he said S m i t h was i nvolved 1 n ROTC and maiored 1 n psychology at

only one attendant for all of them , " Smith said "Very basic things

Colby a n d he Joined the A i r Force p l a n n i n g to make 11 his career

like analges1cs-as p 1 n n-are prized items there "

"I

decided about e i g h t hours into my f i rst d ay that that wasn't in

the card s . " he said When his four-year stint ended 1 n 1 974, he attended Montana State for one year and then entered optometry school at Pac1f1c U n iversity graduating in 1 979 He has had a private practice 1n Oregon since Smith . who made another t r i p to Petropavlovsk i n J u n e , said " the infatuation [ with Russia] has matured a b 1 t a n d we are looking at a long-term commitment to meeting the health care needs there . " h e s a i d . " Every time we g o i n we take five or six h u n d red pounds of medical gear . " Smith hopes t o b e back o n C o l by's campus later t h i s year.

He

and his wife. Hazel (Parker ' 7 0 ) , have been a l u m n i interviewers for the Adm1ss1ons Office for

25 years

"I t h i n k we've netted n i ne

k i d s d u r i n g that t i me , " he said . " From Oregon, that's not too bad. "-Kevin Cool

52


A L U �1 N I

decid e rhar there' something rn be · a id fo r the life ofleisu re, or l ively lei ure I should say. Kent,

]

remem ber you from John Sweney's American rudies English enior seminar. I wrote a parer

on rhe theme that I thought was i n M e k i l l e's The Encantadas: a tortoise 1 both black and

hnght. l lo t rhar paper also! . . . W i ll iam Yoder senc me a Jame Dean stamp. His spouse. J udy. i a writer. Their hou e 1 a \·ery. very, \·ery fine house with rwo dogs and car in their yard i n Arlmgton, V a . He i a management consultant

m the area of organi:arion and change and has been working for the same technology con-ulr­ mg firm for 15 years. Willy, 1 0, and rephanie,

1 2,

are good rea on rn be active i n PT A and Cub Scour and ro coach a Lierle League team.

L i s a still gets mgetber with Ted '76 a n d Rae Caravaty Shanahan occas1onally, including a

recent celebranon of her 40th. Congratulanon s on that mile rone1 I 'd l ike to hear from anyone who thinks their 40th birthday celebration wa unusual or unique in some way . . . . Got a ntce

A T

L A R G E

can be occasiona l l y bittersweet, and rhi

col­

umn serve a a case in roint. Fir t , the weer: after many years of not-much-news, I recenrly recei\·ed a wonderfu l l y upbeat e-mail from our friend Laurel J ohnson Black. Laurel 1s an assis­ tant professor of Eng l i h a t Indiana U n i versity

long letter from Doug and Marjorie Gonzalez Blackwell, who report that their daughters, Laura

of Pennsyh·ania ( ! U P ) , and she and her hus­

and Courmey. are highly competitive swimmer . The Blackwells bought a house in Chatham,

W i l la, who has added a wonderful new di men­

Ma ·s., on the Cape, to which we're all im·ited as -oon a they ger it fixed up. Marjorie is still with DEC, and Doug is now with Lightbridge Inc . , but the job· may go on hold once Laura and Courmey

band, Bill, are the recent parents of daughter sion to their lives that those of us with chi ldren can all understand. Unfo rtunate ly. life also pre­ sents challenges, and Laurel's challenge these days-besides being the mother of a dynamic soon-to-be 3 year old-is brea t cancer. She has

helby Moravec '76 wrote ro

make t t w the 2004 Olympics . . . . J im De Yoreo, "rhysic1st, section leader for cry ral develor­ ment," win this column's pn:e for most New

me that she'd love to hear from her old, \·ery

Age occupation. J i m and wife Kelly are stationed

ljblack@gro,·e. iup. Best of luck, Laure l . . . . I

dear friend-you. I don't g1\'e our aJdres�e but

also ha\'e some old news to take care of ( "o ld " in

. Bob Keefe was

i n Li,·em1ore, Caltf. , along with three kids and upll'ards of a dn:en pets. (I can only imagine what

1m•olved in a smal l - 1 -beaunfu l - rype venture in

hopping for food for e\·erything from a guinea

whi le and recenrly discovered during redecorat­

Deb Buccina,

the Alumni Office will. .

.

recently hegun radiation treatments, and I am sure i t would cheer her to hear from classmates as she ban le this terrible di ea e . Her e-mail 1

the sense that it's been lo t in a drawer for a

a pec t al way last year through h 1 comrany 111

pig ro a <et offrogs must be like: "Do you think we

ing ) . Dr. Curt Moody and wife Rosemarie

Minne ota. He wa chosen a one of l 0 expert

need two boxes of fl ies this week, honey1") J i m

OiBiase recently moved ro Wellesley, where

in the new technology of membrane fi l tra t ion,

also reports rhar they recenrly f1111shed budding

they are raising their two chi ldren, J u l ia ( who

which imprm·e

the quality and effi c i ency of

the ir own hou ·e . . . . Anthony Cagino, M . D. and

started kindergarten last fal l ) , and Alexandra,

food production in underde\·elored countrie .

pre·ident of Capital Pulmonary and Crnical Ser­

3 . Curt is an a l lergist in private pract ic e who

He poke m Rome ( I taly ! ) . Maybe t t ' l l he Peru next year, Bob ( nor M a i ne ) . . . . Jan taples

,·ice , responding to the question of what has

a l o works at Ch ildren 's Hospital in Boston.

changed recenrly i n his life, stated, "Leigh. 8,

C a r l L o v ej o y began grad u a t e s t u d i e s a t

Wunderlich, thanks for your ntce note. \'ery

Lauren, 6, and Kristen, 4." l can relate, with our

Dartmouth l a s t summer, where he c la i ms r o

few women are rock trader and partner , too!

Sara,

, Dand, 6, and Chri ·ropher, 4 . . . . Sandy

have spent more time in t h e library i n eight

Congratulation . I remember you from fre·h­

Buck has wrapped up h i job a· director of out­

weeks than in four year a t Colby. ( Can anyone

man year, when we were noht across rhe hall

reach, Kieve Leadership Decision In titute, and

\'erify this?) He is director of admi sions a t the

from

ts sramng a> president of Hon:on Foundation, a

Cardigan Mountain School in Canaan, N . H . ,

nonpmfit educarmnal foundanon. Sandy report

where he a n d wife Cari l ive a n d rai e three boys:

one anorher first semester. I espec1<ol l\'

remember the picture on your bureau of you in a long, bright yellow high

chool graduation

that after

1 8 years of teaching. fund raising and

.

Ben (seventh grade ) , Matt ( th i rd grade) and

dress. Your engagement picrure, I gues'i. My

a<lmini >tering in nonprofits, "it is excit ing to be

N i c k , 4 . . . . Dr. David

II

lives in

graduatton dress was a red and white dotted

in the business of grantmaking." Sandy is looking

Cumberland Center, Maine, with wife

usan (a

forward to reunton '9 .

_ Waterville' Morning

gourmet chef) and the i r two chi ldren, David I I I

forgt\'e me for the good memory I '"e been told I

Semmel recently earned a long piece on Bill

and Lauren A h lyne . . . . Louise "Robin" Reid

have. . . . Bruce and Jenn ifer Davis Thomson

Linnell ' 0, who has become a nuclear safety

writes from Vermont, where she i production

live m Ann Arbor, Mich. They were looking

acnnsr. Bill ha

tinted as a lobsterman. ship­

manager for the Charlotte Neivs and husband

forward to eemg Lot

wis long gown ( Ann Fogarty-designed ) . Please

. .

Phil lips

of '77 alum: at our re­

wright and teacher and now ef\·e as town coun­

Robert Mack is a dairy farmer and town selec t­

union. I remember they were there at our I Orh

cil member in Cape Elizabeth. In his "spare rime"

man. They have two children Eric Mack,

and were doing something exotic sounding hav­

he is probably the biggest thorn m Maine Yankee's

and Peter Reid Mack, 2 + , who is very polite, I ' m

ing to do with Japan. You'll be lucky ro have

s1Je and i leading a referendum drive to close the

told . . .

seen them, given the di ranee they ha\•e to

plant when 1 t licen e expires in

2008. My favor­

.

1 2,

Julie Sydow Palmason writes from

L i t t leton, Mas ., where she has managed to

13

travel and their now-burgeoned family untt­

ite quote i n the article: "A lot of people think all

remain employed at Digital for more than

three chi ldren and a dog . . . . Another class­

anti-nuclear people have long hair and wear

years despite several "downsizings." She i c ur ­

mate whom I met sophomore year acros

rently a training manager. S h e a n d husband

rhe

bead . Those are wonderful people, bur you don't

hall b S u san Wadsworth. Chi ldren have been

ha,·e to be a hippie to recognize the dangers of

Robare raising two c h i ldren, Erik, 6, and H i l lary,

a bles�mg to Su an and Dave Bourdela1 . a

nuclear power." Good work, Bill. . . . Elizabeth

4 , who can sing "Hail, Colby, H a i l " and report­

fintshing up with the lnternanonal

edly wants ro go to Colby and follow i n her

Steven,

3, has a newly born brother.

usan and

Dugan i

Dave have a bu y extracurric u lar l ife given their

Republican Institute in St. Petersburg, Ru sia,

mom's foorsteps. J u lie keeps up w ith Lou-Ann

family re pon 1bi l 1ttes and

and heading to Cambodia. Liz's career focuses on

Takacs Brown, who lives outside A tlanta and is raising three girls . . . . J acie Cordes Hurd and

u an' tenured job rare

building democratic institutions, and she also is

College . . . . The beste t e x c i tement i n my l i fe

looking forward w explonng that exotic comer

her husband, Charlie, have switched roles, w i th

1 that l picked mayflowers for the first t i me

of the world. As Liz put it, "Phnom Penh will

Charlie rejoining the work force after

yesterday,

demand a whole new wardrobe." Liz has nothing

primary caregiver to M ax ,

but prai e for the Russians she met and worked

J a c ie assuming a new, "non-career" role and

in art h i s tory and art a t F i t c h b u rg

fore.

Oh

unday. I 'd never smel led them be­ •r' a wonderful life.

-Leslie A.

78

Ramsay

1 0 years as 1 0, and Lydia, 8, and

with in her two years in r. Pere. And in the world

having great fun. J ac ie keeps in close touch w i th

of obscure trivia, did you know that Liz's mom

Jane Venman Ledebuhr and Jean Sherwood

and my dad were a near-item in their college days.

Lynch . . . . Kay Lavoie Lowell and husband

hope it bea the deadline ! ) , and I ' m late i n my tour as class correspondent (! thmk ) , o I'll go

Strange world. See you all soon.

N a than l ive i n Greeley, Colo., where Kay is the

straight to the new . .

79

It' late m the day, this column' late ( !

.

. Li a Klein Boldt writes

that he and family have moved ro M i llburn, N . J .

-Nicholas Levintow

library guru at the Un iversity ofNorthem Colo­ rado ( i .e.,

The task of being clas

53

correspondent

he'

as is rant professor of library

science and catalog librarian ) . The i r daughter,

U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


i\ L L �1 ,

I

•\ T

I 1\ R \. �

E l i:ahe t h J ca n , r urn e d 2 in Ma) and he lp' <J n itmd

cunle"e' t h M t h re e

t h e hou'e with t h e ft 1 u r Gib .

mer h,\\ l' l t: f t her " "ne\1 h,H 1aJl',I .ih"ut t h l·

11 L't:b 1 11 l:urupL l,1,1 'i 1111-

yc;.1rs. They have 8, J ulia, 6, ;inJ JlMph, 2. Wright, h u ,han<l B e n 1 . i m i n and 'un T ra\" I ' \l' e l ­ m . i t l· n . d 1 , m , i n d . 1 r r i t 1 u ,i l 1 t y in m 1 1 L h u l T h e y t r,1\'cleJ to Disney World 111 1 996, a "wel­ c u mcJ t h e a m \' a l nt" E m d y Oe h r k· ,1n l!ecemher A m e r 1c .1 . M a r y Ramundo. /\ 1 [) , h . 1 , heen Lnmt: rc,rne , " accorJ 111 g to Dan i . They hope 2 2 . 1 996, a wond e r fu l hnl 1da1 pre,eni ! . . . a­ mak 1 11g the p,1per' ,1 .1 re , ul t nf her effnrt' ro t hl' l r next mol'e w d l f,e to the 'te1te�. Karen rah Davis rece n t l y adt1prcJ <1 1 4 - mt m t h - t i lJ girl hr111g the hL''t , 1 1-. 1 1 l .1 h l e rnt:d l L , i l L<lre tll pt:r"lll\ Orloff anJ her hu,hand, Brian M addo x , ha\'e from Chang:hou. Chma. , <l rah, a l<inJ-.c.ipe two c h i ldren, Phoebe, 5, ,ind I an, horn 111 J uly with l I I V r h n 1ugh .i nt: \1 L l l l1 1L 1 11 '-, t . J 1 i h mhu ry , arc h i tect in Rerhe-,da. Md., Je-.cnhc, h e r a-. a \"'r. The d 1 111c 1 1pent:<l 1n r h i: I . d i ut 1 996 under 1 996 . Rn a n I'> m fmanC1al public rdat1ons, and real jt1\' . . . . David Bernier, furmer rn,1y,1r of , 1 gr,tn t f rom che ft: d i:r. i l I lt: . d r h R e ,ourLt:' K,1ren ,, at home w i t h t h e two c h i ld re n. he Watervi lle, 1;, a p<1rrncr 1 11 the l a w fi rm "t ,mJ "L' f\ 11.. i:' A d m 1 n 1 , l r. i r 1u n . Jeremy Be al e " nrt:' th;Jt Phoebe ha' h,1d qutCe an adiustment M a r d e n , D u b n r J , R e rn i c r & S t e \' c n ' 1 n l 1 11 ,1 1 [ -. fn1m ran' t h ,11 hl' I' I r,1 n [ m g . 1 l 1 i t tll t hl' a dJ 1 n g d nc.'w younger hrother ro he r life and Waterville anJ when n,1t prac tic i ng [,1 11· he l p' \l.'/l''t C''"'' m h" 1nh 1 , 1 r the m u l t 1 L t t1: r< il ClrgJ­ ,t,irung kmdergarten ,d i at the same time. w i fe K a ren Unger rai-.e r h e 1 r t h ree c h i ldr e n , n 1 :a1 1 1 1 n f11r Eu mo1 1 1 1 l ( -, '' >pL' r<H i.111 . mJ Den: l ­ L a u ra M a n ge r L e n e w e a v e r 1 l i v i ng i n twins M a t h ieu Jnd Luc, 8. and Dmeke , 'i . . a­ o p me nt lll1 pul iL \ ,llld rt:gu l,lt nry ri:fllrffi\ f,ut Ck.1rw .1rer, Fla , anJ 1 a contract t rainer with rah MacColl 'wam t h e an nu .d Po.>a k , - r , i - Port ­ 1 h,1r h e h,1 ' ni n run mt11 . 1111 ( \, [ by rePplt: Dawtln he and her hu hanJ, Gene, ha ve four l a nd race la>t Augu t, e\·en tlwugh t hL' r<Jce \1·;i, J nl'my t:arned ,1 dt 1( ( t 1r.11t' 1 n t n t t'rn d r i u n. d rd,1 '"n , t w t m Ry,111 and Kyle, 1 0, Andrew, 1 , and o ffic i a ll y canceled Jue tti fog. Her n.:,1 ' o n ' " I 1 1 1 111' . l l t hL Ut1 1 \"l'f, l l \ " ' "u''"" 111 t h L· L1 K , Tk1,llcy I . David Rocks 1 l 1 vmg m Prague turned 4 0 r h i year ( 1 996). ; 1 nJ fig· m t he C:ech Repuf,lic with his wife, urcd I'd J1) rhi, and run r h e 1 1'. b m c ] J 1C4ue lme Luca , a n d t h e i r da ugh · N orth Star Acad e m y C harter S c h o o l , fo u n d e d marathon, a nd t h e n I can > i t home ter, b mt:, I . They are 111 Prague and e a t bon-bon' and never Ju any· wnr mg for Tli.! Boscon Gl.obe, Taronw and co-d i rected by J a m ey Verri l l i ' 8 3 , was t h m g ag a m" (quoted frum c he Mame.' Globe and foil, and Cfucago Tn­ praised by N .J . Gov. C h ristie W h i tman in h e r S u nday Tdegrn m ) . . . . Dr. J o h n bune. Da\ 1d ay' 1( any Colbytte are C ri s p i n wa;, c e m fied in A p r i l in t h e 111 the n e w .,ra r e r or maga:me bu>1· " state of t h e state teacher" add ress and a n esthesi.1 s u b - , r ec 1 <1 l t ) ot r a m ne ' t he) a re available for work. mam1geme n t , o n e of , 1 nl ) a handfu l s e lected as o n e of t h e best schools i n t h e state. The\ ha\·e travcleJ to Martha' of anesrhe;,iologi t;, 1n M itne w i t h Vmevnrd, ColuraJo and ourhwest t h 1 - ub-,pec 1alty. J ohn i c h 1d ,,f France. J odie He we y Murpbv the department of ane rhe;,1,ilog\ at Ce n t r,11 t aught at <l Lill i \ er'HI ,m J wm k e J Ill t h L prl\<l[L .mJ ht:r hu band, Richard, are li\'lng 111 • orth M a me Medical Center. . . . Kay, /\ b r r hew anJ I 't:cwr. . . Clo,er t l l hume, l 1 K a l p rt: ' ' d 1rrmi.:' Chd m,ford, M a The\ have two on , ean, 5, welcomed a rah ]\,fo,e Kmney tm Ma y 1 9, 1 997. anntiunce t h a t Rick To nge ha bl'cn ,elected ro ,111J hn topher, 3 Jodie returned co work as a -Rohm Kmne)' be trea>urcr of r h e nc11 W ltl'f\ die h.heJ ent I t\" ,1,frw JrL de\·clnpment manager after bemg at fu rrne J f,y the recent merger of t h e h>L,d Pn11· h11ml h1r about a year and a half. R i c hard 1s a Co ngrar u l a t wm are 111 ord e r fur and G i r l ' Club .md the Y MC A . Tht: new 1: n t 1 r y .,nfrn arc engmeer. They rraveled to the 1 e11 Marjorie Smith Bose, who gave birch w a , , r l ann mg t h e cun,rruL t l l lll n i r he nl'W H .m 1 IJ H amp,h1re W h i te Mountain " 1th the boy to daughter, Kend a l l Jean, last summer. _ he and anJ R 1 hhy Alfnnd Yllurh Recn:.nwn C.:nrcr v 1 , 1 r roryland and , anta' V i l lage and co nde ( 111c lud 1 11g J new tiut d ot1r rnnl w rLpl.ice tht: husband Ron are thril led , a l t hough I 2 - year-o!J the nrrh OOl\a\ centc railroad . . . . Katie eymour, the family can me, ha� been suffering one on N nr t h - r r ecr ) rn f,e hu d r nn l 0 ,icrc:' of C r i tchlow Luther and husband Mark are ll\"lng somewhat from a form of attent ion defi c i t J1;,or­ land off DrumrnnnJ Avenue . . . . On ,1 re r>t ma l 111 Mandan, .D They have two children, der. Mariorie anJ family live 111 Derry , N . H . . note, after t h reL 1 ear, at Amtr.1k, I h,n e Jumped Megan, I 2, a nd Jed, 7. Kaue wnte that he sh1r ( or t ra t n m th 1 · ca,e ) w rake ,111 1 n -hnu e S i m i larly ble ;,eJ 1 s t h e re\'erenJ J a ne E.D. recently q u 1 r her ioh a- a geolog1 t to ray at Dibden Schwab, whose newborn on, Arthur l e g a l 1 o h w i t h MC! s u p po ru n g c o m u m e r l ,ome full t i me wt th her c h i ldren. Her hu ·band, Jonathan Mo e� D1bden, JOtn a growing family operatwns. Please let me k now whar\ new 1ark, " al o a geologt t. . . ue Perry 1 living m Upton, Mass., anJ 1 a large-animal x-ray of three girls ( Lisa, 7 , A my, 4 , Ja mine, 2) and with you-enher through e-mail ( you may u e husband David W . chwab. The chwab fam i ly e i t h e r i o h n v e d l e u x @Compu e n · e . c o m t H r echnic t a n. ue traveled ro the Olympic Ill has recently moved to Vassalboro, Maine, after 72072. I l l 4@Cornpu en·e.co m ) or hy lerter at Atlanta to ee the eque man events. he ha) tint in V irginia, Vermonr and Texa ( m Hous­ 84 1 3 ParkCrcsr Dnve, Si lver prtng, M D 209 IO rwo hor e of her own, Magic and ugar, who are kept m !111e by car Dai y and kipper. Last year -John \ 'crlleux ton i n the spring of '96, Jane pa tored a church called Crossti mbers ) . Jane's present mini try i� ue rode Magic m The Hunter Under addle I recently ran mto Kathy Beane Rock­ Cla:, 1c and won ! . . . DeAn n Lewi and her as an ESL turorfor rhe Waterville public achoo! . She a lso report that Diana Small and hu band strom un the commuter rad from Bo r o n. La c husband, Henry Col l, live 111 outh Portland, October, he anJ her hu·banJ , J an , had a econd R ich Snow have bought a howe in Belmont, Mame. DeAnn i a v ice pre idem, compliance ·on, Kurt, who JOll1s brother Enk, 2. Kathy i Mass . . . . Novel-writing, guitar-playing, roll mg officer of Key Bank of Mame, and Henry is a rill work mg at Fleet Bank 111 Bosron in the same stone Geoff Becker writes from Colorado nam i ng coordmator at Burge Bu ine olu bui lding I work 111 , bur we seem to catch up with non m Bath , /\fame . . . . BiU Lichtblau pent Spring , where he 1s a v isiting Engli h profes or two months last ummer cycling m France He each other on the tra111. Kathy and Jan l ive in at Colorado College. Geoff ha been traveling a ha wmten a book m l e d Drive Yourself co Cycling Carlisle, Ma s . . . . Herb Perry 1 a staff reporrer lot and giving readings ( includ i ng at Colby} for the Frankfort ( Ind. ) Indiana Times, covering Heaven in France and is looking for a publ1 her from his growing body of work. Check your c i ty and county government a well as bu me·s. Anyone inrere red can reach Bill by e-mail bookstores: h i novel should be out 111 paper­ ( funhog@colorado.net ). Herb graduated from the U niver i ty of Indiana back by now. Goeff and his fam i l y of guitars -Beth Pniewski Wilson in 1 994 with a master's in journalism and worked seem well but pose a question I can't answer: for the Indianapolis Scar before j omi ng the Times. "Where' R . P . ?" Any sightings to report7 • • Deborah Nader Hartshorn wa due to He and his wife, Kathy, have two c h i ldren and Nearby i n Bou lder, Colo., a SlSted by cat K irnba, live in Frankfort . . . . Dani N emec M icsan has have a baby girl sometime at the end of Apnl. Lori Batcheller is freelance writ i ng, hav i ng moved once again-this t i me tO Rabat, Mo­ Her husband, Torn, i a contractor, and Deborah finished a master's in j ournalism and ma s com­ rocco. Dam's husband, J im, i in t he foreign is a k indergarten teacher. They are living m munications at the Univer tty of Colorado. Lori . . . Karen Oehrle

'er1 ice " ' r hev mt>ve every few t hrL·e c h i l d re n , Jc.,.,1ca,

80

81

82

C O LB Y

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

54


:\ L U M � !

northern Vermont, where they keep busy run­ ning , skiing anJ renornnng their 1 30-year-nld hou e . . . Sharon L D u l u d e rece t\'eJ her ma ter's in social work m 1 99 5 anJ is now working for the weerser Chi klren 's Ser\'lce m the Sacopee Valley chool District in Mame. haron's husband, Tom Cuset, ts a chef. Their rwo per- are Wild W i llie, a poodle, and Luc11le, the ir cat. . . . Brian Sharpie sends news from A u u n,Texa • w h e r e he 1 p r e s i d e n t of InrelliQue t lnformauon G roup. l n te l 1 1Quesc went pu bli c m May of '96, but Brian consider raising hi da ughte r , Chloe, 4, co be the most fulf1 l l mg experience of h 1 l i fe . . . . L e s l ey DeYulio Defio ts a cancer informanon p e c 1 a l 1St and al o a figu re skating in truccor. Her husband, J o e , is executive director of msticu­ nona l sale· of J enkins Music. They haYe mo dogs. Rudy and Truffles. . . . Carolyn Berry Copp gave bmh to Charlotte Page Copp on ept. 3 , 1 996. Charlotte goes co daycare four d ay a week at her dad' h igh chool, L mcoln­ Sudbury High, where he ceache math and 1 abl e ro v istt her durmg the day. C a ro l y n recencly took on the new i o b of d 1 recror of markettng at Lmkage I nc orporate d, a n oroan i:at1onal de,·d­ opment c onfere nc e and con ulr ing compan) . This ts a change from the conference marketing that she had been doing. Carolyn has a st ep so n , who ts currently c a k i ng nme off fro m col lege, and a stepdaughter, who wi l l be enrenng co l l e ge this fall. U nfort unately, Colby 1 not in the warm climate that she eek ! . . . After 1 1 ; e a r with t h e W 1 l l 1 a m - M y· c 1 c Progra m , E l l en

o c 1 a ce d 1rec ­ torof the Connecncur Co1 \ e ge annual fund. Fm three-plus year , her husband, Gary. an am c, has been re cormg an d docu menting the Watch Hill Carousel, the oldest conr muou ly run car­ ousel m the co u n rry . H e ha done a ful l restora­ tion of each hor e, wh ich i nc l ude remo\"lng more than 30 layer of paint off of each one1 They have two children-Dylan, 7 , and Elt: a­ beth, 5, who ha\'e been i n a K- 1 c l as together m

Heubsch Ander on ts now the ai.

a small

chool. Ellen's earlier ambitton

of a

career m hi cone pre ervation have been d i­ rected into the refurbt h i ng of their 1 30-year­ old house, a former stage coach house j use before

the Rhode I land-Connecucut border. A s the ch il d ren get older, Ellen anuc1pate the recum of tennis into her life . . . . Andrea Brantner i s now on the legal staff at The Boeing Compa ny m

Seat tl e. Thi� is a switch from seven years of practice w i th M i lbank.Tweed, H ad ley

private

&

McCloy, which took her co New York and

Tokyo . Andrea moved primarily for a better quality of life.

hifcing co m-house gi ves better

hour , but the bureaucracy 1s wor e! Andrea is trying "-' work with some Colby alum in the

eattle area to gee a local Colby Cl ub starred and keeps m couch with Sarah Perry, Diane

Zavot

ky McClenehan and Karen Enege

. . . .

Big ch ange

l a t e l y for C a t h e r i n e S m i t h Badm ington and h e r fa mily. After eight year tn a downtown row home m B al u m ore , t h e y have moved to the suburb i n earch of green spaces

and good school . Cathy and her hu band, Rich, ha,·e three children-Cas ey, 6 , Timmy, 4. anJ Brady, a l most 2. Cathy 1s at home ful l t i me now after 1 0 years in education, teach mg and admin­ istration. They .ee Carter Kn ipp, who l i ves nearb� . They greatly miss Sarah Fox Whalen, who had l ived nearby but has relocated co Rhode I sland . . . . Beth E llis Tautkus 1 1,·es m New­ port N ews, Va . , with her husband, Keith, and their four c h ildren: Ja on, 9, Katherine, 7 , Jen­ nifer, almost 4 , a nd Austin, almost 2 . Keith is a teacher, and Bech carted teaching after separat­ ing from the Air Force. Beth 1 - in the AF Resef\·es working in A clant1c l nrel ligence Com­ mand. Lase summer she spenr three weeks on the U .S . S . John F. Kenned-v aircraft carrier. Beth had a great t i me talking � bout old times at the Wa h ingcon, D.C. , campaign k ickoff with Col­ leen Plourde Harv e y and Denise G lennon. -Mnni H . Rasmussen

83

ews from Macedonia comes m a long letter from Steve Nicholas, who left h is job as a enior en\'tronmental planner fo r the c i ty of - eaccle in 1ay 1 995 to take a iob in the fo rmer Yugo lav republic. He works for a Vermonr­ ha>ed nonprofit organi:atton called the I nsti­ tute for uscainable Communn1es. Ste,·e i the director of che Democracy Nerwork Program, a t hree - yea r program funded by American tax­ payers ( \•ia the U . . Agency for International Deve lopment) ai med at trengthening the new democrac\' in Macedonia by strengthening i ts fledg l ing non-governmental organ1:auons via grant , training anJ technical a 1 ranee. I t has been a real challenge, reve say , but also a lo t of fun. I n 1 996 he w a s trekking the canyons and mountain· of the Zagona region of northea t Greece when he copped for a night in a remote village c a l led T epetovo. The innkeeper cold teve that another American was there and chat he should meet her. - he turned out co be H amett Matthew , Colby art professor! They enioved a bo t t l e of retsina and chatted about "all things Colby" and debated the on-going war of word between Macedon ia and Greece . . . . Another 1nrerescing piece of news came from the pages of Brown Un ivers i ty 's maga:ine inter­ v i ew t n No\'ember 1 996 with our own J oh n Tomas i . J oh n 1 the tanley J . Bern tein A s is­ canr Profe sor of Social ctence with a spec ialty m pol itical theory, ethics and public po l ic y . The mtef\•1ew w a rnled "Rights and Wrong: Polit1cal Theori t J ohn Toma 1 wonder whether our pur u i c of md1v1dual ri ght s has gone roo far." It reminded me of the good old days of having the t i me to sic roge c h er with extremely rhoughc­ provoking classmate a r Col by whi le we ralked about the world around us . . . . Founder and co­ d 1 rector ofNonh car Aca dem y Charter chool of N ewark J amey Verri l l i w rot e from Cranford, N . J . H is n ew sc hoo l o f g rad es 5 through 8 has heen prai ed by Governor Whitman in her"state of the race reacher" address and selected a one of the best in the state. When not running the

r\ T

L A il. G E

I 980s Correspondents 1 980 J o h n Ve i l l e ux 84 1 3 Park C rest D rive Si lver Spring, M D 2 0 9 1 0-5404 e-m a i l : 72072. 1 1 1 4@Compu S e rve C O M 1 98 1 Beth Pniewski W i l so n P

0

Box 602

H a rvard, M A 0 1 4 5 1 6 1 7-2 6 1 -4664 1 982 Mimi H. R a s m ussen 63 R e s e rv o i r Street C a m bridge, M A 02 1 38 6 1 7-492-1 002 e-ma i l m h ras@ M IT E D U 1 983 S a l ly Lovegren M e rchant HCR 62. Box 244B M t . Desert. ME 04660 207-244-0441 fax: 207-244-9445 1 984 M a u ra Cassidy 38 I rw i n St #3 Winthrop, M A 02 1 52 6 1 7-539-0 1 76 1 98 5 B a rb a ra K n o x Autran 1 74 Degraw Street, Apt . B B rooklyn, NY 1 1 23 1 -3008 7 1 8-875-9 1 05 1 986 Wendy L a p h a m R u ss 206 C h elten h a m Road Newark, DE 1 97 1 1 302-738-6261 e-m a il : i w r us s 1 @aol.com 1 987 Jane N icol M a n u e l 6 8 5 7 A n t e l o p e Drive I nd i a napol i s . I N 46278 3 1 7-329- 1 646 1 988 Lauren Frazza 200 East 78th Street. Apt. 1 9A N e w York. NY 1 00 2 1 2 1 2-7 1 7-7020 1 989 Deborah A . G re e n e 62 Locust Ave n u e # 2 Worcester. M A 0 1 604 508-755-8804 e-m a i l : debora h . g re e n e @ u m m e d . e d u

�chool, J amey and hi wife, Bech, a teacher, take

55

U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


Solving the Ide n t ity Crisis

O n e d a y the research c o n d u cted by Beth Sc hwartz- Kenney '86 may h e l p put a c r i m i n a l behind bars. Recently tenured a s a n associ ate professor of psychology at R a n d o l p h- M acon Woman's C o l l e g e . Sc hwartz-Kenney r s work­ ing on a " l i n e u p kit" d e s i g n e d t o help c h i l dren r d e n t r fy strangers, a tec h n i q ue t h at c o u l d be applied 1 n legal cases 1nvolv1 n g e y e w i t n e s s testimony. According to Sc hwartz- Kenney . c h i l d re n as you n g a s pre­ s c h oo l a g e can make competent w i tnesses b u t lack the c o g n i tive

B e t h S c h wartz - K e n ne y l i ne s u p a s o l u t i o n .

a n d l i n g u i s t i c a b i l r t r e s to s po n taneously report details of an event Her research i n c h i l d ren's eyewitness memory i nv o l ves

S h e sa1s t h e ne :1 t e c h r q u e s s 1 1

deter­

prov1de o n l y a genera

m i n i n g w h a t types of things they can remember a n d what types

descrr ptron trat r s .;se u l n r arrow1 n g h e f eld

of t h i n g s they c a n 't . " Her focus has settled o n the latter because

report i n g what a stranger looked I ke , r

of

suspects

"In

ould a t least give the

she h a s fou n d that c h i l d re n have d 1ff1 c u l ty report i n g what a

legal system sorre riforma ion on who can be e 1 m r nated I t won't

person looks l i k e , an obvious rm pediment to effective c o u rtroom

d r aw a picture.

she s a i d

Schwartz-Kenrey rece1 .•ed her Ph D rn cogn itive psychology

test i m o n y . After i nvest i g a t i n g tec h n i q ues u sed r n h e l p i n g people

1 99 1

i de n t i fy s u s pects i n c r i m i n a l cases, she found none that were

from S U N Y - B u f alo in

a p propri ate for c h i l d re n . The t r a d r t r o n a l l d ent-A-K 1t req u i res the

says. as an u n dergrad u ate · At Colby I took a J a n Plan course on

Her interest rn he field began. she

user to s u bjectively c reate composite images of s u s pects from

human factor psyc hology-it s a lot about how people wor

t ra n s p a r e n c i e s of f a c i a l featu res, a n d r t has a poor record of

together-w h i c h g ave me a better i dea of the kind of psychology

a c c u ra c y , p a r t i c u l a r l y when used by c h i l d r e n , she says

I wanted to work i n .

H e r l i ne u p krt i n c l u d e s erght c h a racterrstrcs-r n c l u d r n g h a i r

she said

My honors paper a t Colby dealt

with eyewitness testimony so that also was an interest of mine •

c o l o r . eye c o l o r , w e i g h t a n d h e i g ht-to a r d c h i l d ren r n g r v r n g

Recently she has been researc hing ch ildren's understanding

d e s c r i ptions of p e r s o n s they d o n ' t know. R a t h e r than verbalize

of secrecy. w h i c h may help d r aw out the testimony of child ren

t h e i r descriptions, c h i l d ren c a n select p i c t u res of, for instance.

who have witnessed an event b u t been asked not to talk about II

b l u e eyes, o r use l r n e s o n a w a l l to a p p ro x i mate h e i g h t . "It g rves

by the perpetrator

t h e m someth i n g c o n c rete to point to, whrch we felt wou l d h e l p

keep i n g the 1 nformat1on to themselves and then eventually re­

t hem , " Schwa rtz-Kenney s a i d .

port i n g r t

'What happens rs that often the children are

Defense lawyers t h e n can say that their story is not

c r e d i b l e because they have contradicted themselve s , " she said "I f i n d t h a t [area of research ) i n t r i g u i n g because rt deals wi th c h i l d re n ' s u n d e rs ta n d i n g of t h e m i n d , how their mind works and how other people's m r n d s are d iffe rent from t h e i r own . " she said. " I t gets more a t the theory of cog n1t1v e psychology

56

"- Kevm Cool


A L U M .' !

mne ro run around with kids Nathan, 6, and All 1son, 2 . . . . The update from Big Sky, Mon­ tana , is that J acq u e Poisson Persons and Brantley Per ons were married m October l 996. •cque, who is enjoying own mg her own re tail clothing and gift bounque and horing to start a family .oon, li ve. with Brantley, a fly fishing guide, and their tlut>e large Alaskan huskies. Binney Hare wrote from Cambridge, England, where Bin's a graphic designer. Her husband, Norbert Peahody, is an anthrorolog1st at the Unaversny of Cambridge. Their -on, Marcus, is 5. Hellos to all three of you and thanks for wnring, Binney Are you rlaying any squa h ? . Playing more tennis here in the - tate- 1> Wendy

A T

L A R G E

h is Ph . D. from Ohio tare th is year. He has written rwo books, one on drug policy and the other on planning and de,·elopment in Hong

after kid

Kong, and dozens of reports and article . Cathy Altrocchi Waidyatilleka is living in para­

though she only received one vote-her own.

di ·e-in Honolulu-with husband Nandi and children Caden 3, and D i l l ion, I . Cathy and and 1 met while she was in ri Lanka workmg

her ranee on many topics. Her plarform's slo­

1"

Hall re ponded, "All of above." . . .

Kim Crook writes that she decided to run for president of the United States la t elec t ion, he enclo ed her platform, which i l l uminates gan was, "You can't be serious." . . . Adam '83 an d Becca Cunningham Weiss recently moved

w i th the Peace Corps. He is emrloyed at the Mandarin Onenr'.11 Hotel and she is a n i nth and

to W i l l i ton, V t . , where Becca i an artist, home­

tenth grade Engli h teacher. . . Joan ( Ray '85 ) and Dieter Weber, a busmess analyst for !GS Corp . , l ive in Boulder, Colo. They love the

Becca has become a board member ofFriends of

maker and domestic goddess! Adam is teaching. Indian M usic and Dance, which helps to brmg Indian music and dance to N ew England. She

rrox i m i ty to the mountains and the biking,

wishes that her routine could include doing

h i king and snow year-round. They have done a

more artwork but with three kid -Mara Mar­

Wittel Renz in Gui lford, Conn. Wendy's the

ton of tra,·elmg in the American Southwest, the

g a re t , C ae l i n C u n n i n g h a m and A n th e a

vice chairper on at on Tyler's nursery chool

R oc k i e -both Canad i a n and U . S .-and

Skydel-and leep depri,·anon, s h e doe n't get

and does the bu y mom routine wi th Tyler, 4,

Germany . . . . Kit W i l l iams i an as ·ociate dean

to. The fam i ly doe

and Lauren, 2 . Wendy 1· wondering what hap­ pened to Maura Shaughnessy, .o anyone in

at Bo ton U n iversity, "'here she's workmg with

though. . . . John and J ennifer Cleary Calabro

Chuck McCormick '89. Kit got marned la t

live m Merrimack,

contact with Maura, rlea e update us . . . . I was

summer-and had a great day until Hurricane

attorney and John i s an engineer. They have

hike and

w im often,

.H., where Jenn ifer is an

glad to get a letter from Abiga i l King Diggi ns,

Bertha howed up and the ceremony and recep­

three chi ldren-Billy, 7, Teresa, 6, and Joserh.

who ent a wedding phoro ofher elfand her new

tion quickly moved insid e ' Carolyn Donovan,

born in February. Jenmfer finds volunteering in

husband, Jeffrey Diggms, who is a consulrant.

Melissa Carperos and J i m ' 5 and Karen Melino

the schools and working one day a week in a

Joanna Hughes Brach was Abby'- matron of

Cruickshank attended. The Cruick-hank have

eptember 1 996 wedding. Abby

mo,·ed to Needham, Mass. Karen 1s an assoc iate

small office practicing real estate law the perfect balance between juggling the chi ldren's ac nd­

'tarted a new law fmn with two partners named

dean at Babson College, where she directs the

ties and keepmg in tune with her rrofe SIOn.

LeBlanc and Young i n February 1 99 j , and a

office of clas deans. They traveled to I taly m

-Maura Cassidy

fourth attorney J oined them m eptember 1 996.

1 994 and Au tralia m 1 995 and had the ir first c h i ld, 1cholas Jennmgs , on December 1 7, 1 996 . . . . Carrie Leggett and Randy Wilmot

corre pondent is getting a letter from old friends.

honor at the

The itrm rec1alt;:e m handlmg tru ts and e tate . The couple l i ve m Cumberland Fore•1de, Maine . . . . Darryl and Deb Caldwell Wooten 'ent news from Norn:e l l , Mass . , where Debl: ie

l ive m Concord M a ., with their j amin, 3 . Randy i

85

The most wonderful part of being a

on, Ben­

Whether it was dishmg out food in the din ing

a project architect with

hall or dancing t i l l dawn, Richard Leitch knew

that a new baby girl 1 · due to JOm

W i l l iam Rawn Associates in Boston and has

how to make us laugh, and o it is with great

brothers Brandon, 6, Dom m 1 c, j, and Zachary,

comrleted many award-winning pro1ects, m­

pleasure that I report that the " tickman" has

3 , thl5 month. Darryl 1

c luding Phillip

been married 1 1 years, has two kids and is l iving

report

a track coach and an at­

Exeter Academy'

Forrestal­

home dad, and Debbie 1 · an Ob-Gyn phys1-

Bowld Mu ic Center, a Bosron

ociety of

in M i nnesota . . . . Frank Porada is an attorney

C1an.

Archi tects Honor award winner. . . . J on and

re iding in Colorado with h is wife, Beth, and

. New from optometry doctor Jennifer

Ambler was mixed with joy and adness. Her

S ue Palmer Stone are back in

ew Canaan,

their two c h i ldren, Erik and Ian . . . . James

daughter, Kate, who turned 2 m January, is

Conn., with on Roger and daughter Ab igail.

Martin works as an editor and is l inng in

ue ha found staying home with the children

Norwalk, Conn., w ith h is wife, Jacquel ine, and

"defm1te future college material" in l ight of her current learning trends, ay� Jennifer. Kate al o

more rewarding than she ever imagined . .

their on, Wyatt. . . . Carol Simon has estab­

love to 'nowmobde, fish and water k i . to name

I abella and Tom Underwood are in Beverly

lished quite a reputation as women's basketball

Farms, M a s., with the ir c hildren Hannah, 4,

coach at Brandeis. The team has won five

husband died unexpectedly of a heart attack m

and I an, 1 - 1 /2 . Becoming a father has been the

8 champion hips and one ECAC Conference

a few of her outdoor act1vine .

mce Jennifer'

ew

November ! 995, he ha been cop mg bu ily as a

smgle most important change m hi life, Tom

D ivision l i l tournament. Way to go, Carol! . . .

smgle mom and busines owner. In her "spare"

writes. After many year in education, he re­

Mary-Jane James-Pirri is working i n the mos­

time she 1 state treasurer and pre ident of her

ce ived hrs master's in soc ial work and is em­

quito abatement office of the Rhode Island

local branch of AAUW, an mternat1onal com­

ployed as a ocial worker/therapist. I abe l la i a

Department of Environmental Management.

mittee member in Rotary and on the board of a

teacher. Tom write char Bill Rogers ha com­

MJ writes, "the office was 'abuzz' with activity

local art� orgam1at ion.

he also went on her

pleted h 1 round the world trip! . . . Theresa and

this past summer due to the unprecedented

ion m February 1 997 t o El

Jeff Bi trong also are l iv i ng on Boston' North

amount of eastern equine encepha l i t i isolated

hore, in Manche ter-by-the- ea. J eff is a direc­

from mo quitoes trapped in Rhode Island." . . .

econd medical m1

alva<lor, performing eye exams and dental care, 1s ter c h urch and renewing

tor of emerging marketing/inve·tment banking

Ann-Meg White and husband

friend hips. . . . Thanks to a l l who wrote and

a t BancBo ton Securities, Inc., and travels for

have a new addi tion to the family: Sarah Louise.

v isi t ing the i r

keep those cards and letters flying in. Anx iou to ee you all in J une!

-Sally Lovegren Merchant

84

am

Staley ts l i v mg m Bellbrook,

Ohin, with hts wife,

usan, and c h i ldren Claire , 3, and Evan, 2 . H e is V P o f research for Buckeye

Institute for Public Pol i cy olutions, a free mar­ ker think rank he founded in '89 that focu es on

ean Padgett

quite often to Laun America and Asia.

They moved to Arlington, M as ., last fall. . . .

They have two girl , Emily, 4 , and Madel ine, 2, and Theresa has put her social work career on

Mike M u i r i very proud of h is son, Chris, 6, who started kindergarten last fall and 1s now

hold for a t i me to rai e their chi ldren. Jeff writes

"reading up a storm." M ike works a a practicum

chat they are close to completing their antique

superv 1 or for the Univer i t y o f M a i ne a t

bu ine

dream hou e/money p i t/restora t i o n rite of

Farmington . . . . L a u r a Mahoney w a s married

passage . . . . Hall Adams i

to Terry McGovern. Laura i s a planning con­

in W ilmette, I l l . ,

w i th wife J u l ie a n d t w o daughters, Marie, 5 , and

sultant, and they re ide in Newton, Ma s . .

Eleanor,

He's a partner a t the law firm of

E l liot Kolodny and h is wife, Andrea, j ust pur­

I.

W i l liams and Montgomery, Ltd. When answer­

cha ed a new home in Chalfont, Pa., and should

m economics m '87 at George Mason

ing the que tionna1re for "what fitnes programs

be moved i n by the t i me you read this. E l l iot

University in Vi rginia and expecrs to receive

or acnvity? Marathons? Triathlons? Chasing

Oh10 publtc policy 15 ue . H e completed h is

M.

.

57

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


t\ L t

�I

I

1\ T

I ,\ \\ l o I

1'.1 . m . i

II' r i te,, " M y rc l<mnn,h tp' w i t h m;my nf m� ( 'olhy

mc ll llk' h" c l ,1 " t l < t l gu 1 t . 1 r 1 ' 1 \.\ t k .

im . : n d, c on t i n ue m hL'

m� , t ronge, t . "

M 1 c h .t l 1 1 ,a nuu, h t , I 0- 1 c;1 r - < 1 l d ' u n , h t ' ,log . tnd

. . . Steve Lawson 'pend' h 1 , 'P<ire t i me w i t h h t , c h i l d r e n . T t m< i t h y ;111d r w m ' Ch. t r ll)r rl' a n d ' h a n e . Stt'vc and h t , w t fe, S u :;m nl', hu t l r < 1

gn· k , ,ire

') . 1 x r o n ' R l \·cr,

C \ ef\ \\ h crl') . . . . W c k o m e h u m l r n J oyce

\' 1 u 1 1r1a. I het

<1tn<H1g

h o u s e ,mJ tnll\'Cd w W d brah,1 111, M,1" · Lhl · year. . . . Sheryl Larson Mortensen and h e r

h u han d , R , 1Jnl'v, arl' h u t ld 1 1 1 g a huLN:. " L t k " hec t i c ,md \.\'l1nJcrful w i t h t 11 , 1 l t r t le onl'-.'' "'"

Beth Towle 11 ;1' m ;i r rtc J

w T 1 mn­

t h y Licke, a n d rhey arc nnll' l t v m g tn

W m c hl''·

� hc ry l . . .

ter, Mas,. In au endance a r t he ceremuny were

S h a n no n Morr i s s e y and Don n y C ro n i n , Marybeth Boland Haut, S,tnJra W 1 m h 1 p '1-14 and Wayne Eddy, Carnlyn ( R ny n to n 'H4 ) ,111Ll Kevin Bruen, K;Hen M a rq u ard t M c Lc l L111 'H, Li a M a r i a B o o t h and W e n d y N e v i l l e Kraunelis . . . . Jeffrey D . S mit h was appnt nrcd

h 1 , Pe n t i u m

I 3 3 ( u,

C P lll J' l l l l f

Egypt ] < >yce

''

d

!am t ! ,

tnL l ude'

.1

L l \' t l e ngmcu

L 1 n d -. . 1 \ ,

l\lcthucn,

l nve-rnrs, Boston . . . .

Died re Ga l v in - We m ple

has be e n app imted rn the pos 1 m m of d ev o: l ­

Thank!! to "

,tLcnunr m,111,igement at an mcere1ctive ad: al;o f-u1 me -111 . 1 p;i rrme n t w1th a roofwp patto (big c11up tn . . Y .C. 1 ) 'o 1 c ., h ,i u lJ mc1te ma n y B8QI .md

,·c n 1 � m g a ge nc y 111 N e w York Ct t)» I'm

a s k ed for n,1me 'ucgc-.uun' f11r P..1b' =2 . hut

h ,1 1c < l l1l' p 1 L k c d l l U t h 1

t he\

nu11 . . . . Tht·

�c p t c m he r, ;inJ

a

\.\ t t h g"nJ tnend � I h<>re that mcludes

\

de· at Bc,t BudJ1e>, a nonprofit orga n t:a· rH1n h;i-ed tn M 1am 1 , Fla., and B r e n da Kneuer Zurita ,md ane sa Reed, who keep promung ,1 ' h t r \ mc,..,,1 .i ,,.[c, execu t 1 1· e for a puhh,h­ mg i1rm 111 Ma_,,,JChu en,, travel, excensivel1.

E [ 1 ,c de,crihed 1 r , ht· ' ' " t he

rarrrnenc

f tfch or ' t x t h male tn the t a m t l v ro he cr,JCcd \.\ 1 t h the n<1 me 1 " The y l " c 111 \X/mc ht,tcr, M,,,, , 11 1 t h r h e 1 r mu Jog' . . . /\forL L lll d,1g�)

heila D u ffy ha' d1"'en

n a mt·

( .tnli

Ptnt' L ic\l�r

Brcnd,1 anJ her hu hand, William,

College. De i d re w i l l re-.earch and C <Hre,pond

�tare Rep.

w i th donors.

Ego- urfi n g ,

anyone ?

of 40 emcrgmg �rate lcaJers from aero''

creatmg the Cla ·s of '86 homepage

Maura Smith '88

8Irths:

A son, Dean Arthur

to from the I 0th reunion and l isted

Valavanis

Ste m , to Den111

we'll have our very own Web complete with an '80

ite,

oundtrack, a

\\'llchcd

mith '80 . . .

reve ( < md three cat ), are tying the knot chi� J u l, after a w h 1 rl w md ro· mance Mel, who ts a . oc tal worker and J 1 recwr

of

tudent l i fe m

Bo'·

tun , made a Canbhean crut e " 1th Hope Worden . . . . Ln add mon to workmg a_ the dtrector of GranJ

oumy Re ource for Youth

(mm·

,1rga111:arn.m ) , Kate Walker eecru busy w i t h

mtth, to Mark ' 0 and Patricia

. A on,

O.C.

. . . Melis a Ru ff and he r f1ance,

pr,iftr drug anJ alcohol prevenuon

M I LE POSTS

all your personal phone and pager Colby, remembe r ? ) Someday maybe

,cnnc>

piece 111 Portland maga:me.

out ( www.colby.edu/classof/ 1 9 6 ) .

n u mbers . ( J u t k i d d i n g- t h i s is

c 1ate editor and wnrer nfhu,me

mi th

gear wi t h a humorou�. f.icr-ba,ed f1ct ton

working on ·etting it up. Check it W e ' v e p u t up some great nude pho­

, as,,1.

. Maura

for Forbes ma ga: t n e, recently

on Colby's Web · i re , hut t h a t honor me in March to let me know he was

'

the countq

would love to take rhe c r ed i t for

goes to Da v id Epstein. who cal led

Pau l Do y l e ' 5 ( 0-Werher -

Fellow�h1p program, tapptng him a> one

I

Va., near

Brenda' iob t n Wa h m gt on,

fielJ, Con n . ) \1 � nameJ ru the Tt1ll

-Barbara Kno.\ Atarnn

86

t>wn a home t n '\rlmgron,

N EWS MAK E RS

fund mg sources for the c o ll eg e , draft grant prnpL1sal

Mark

· l i e , who 1w e ro;ec., the publtc relat10n

opment associate at Mount Al,1y,. iu

ara Dicki on, who' been Bo.. ron , for all her ttme

recruiter tn

wtth r h 1 column I ' m the director of marketin�

J u h Ann

h;md, [\ 1: 1 e r . Thc t r ,,,n, Dn: 1 c r Lee, """ h" r n 111

nf

·"

t ton t n rhc fa m t h \\,1' c x p c t t c d tn

is a bo pur,u 1 11g h i s m,hter's tn bu,tnL''' ad m t n -

is engaged co M i c hael G u e l t J r.

88

hu'\

\\' I t h t h e i r daughter, /\1.1 d "''n. I . A n 1 1 r h c r .1d d 1 -

pany e nga g ed tn h a nk in g and tru'>t 'en· 1ce'. J e ff

Mass. Ke l i t I> a n eq u i t y ass " t a n t at Dewey � qua re

-Wend;t Lapham Ru

; 1 1 , 1 1 \ c 1 11 L.1guna 1 1guc l , ( "t l t f .

n;1nw Lltlemm.1 w a , t .t , t l \' '"ilcJ t o r El ise McDonough Gardner ;tnd her hu'­

Kel l i C r u mp

t < > t\'L' r yo n e .

t h,11 t l l i l - f rn: 1 h 111g Wllrkcd n1 1 1 ) An n . tnLI ht.:r

hupcf u l l 1

1 s trat to n at Thomas Co l l ege . . . .

.1g.11n t l l l )ave E. f"r h" help. Happ) lace ummer

M L . · Ann

an born Ciulla wt >uld I ' " c rn k n , 1 \.1 h,111 yllu ,1 1 1 , m: , '" p k . he 11 m e ;tnd t d l 1m· ( nr t .tll t i I ge1 h u ,h, 1 11 d ,

I can J11wnlm1d your pager the c la,� homepagl ) . Than·

( L''PL'l l,i i h now t h<Jl n u m hc r' from

Th e i r

6 , a n LI J ,1 111 c , ,

4 . . . . , u r c t <' L1ur 1e, �u:annc, ,1 11 J

Vt . , where he l ive> w1rh h1� w1fe, never thought I would he�r

ynu

'un·t \'' "r I ma) h<1vc rn start pe s t e r i ng you

hu1t h

tcaLhL·r .it W tnLh c,t er H i gh '.x hllnl 111 /\ 1 e l rn,c, M,1" · · .ind Kc\ tn ' '

Tom 1 d tret·

, 1 ho u t t h 1 ,, d td \'< lll , Ox ! Co ng ra t u la t io ns ' . . Th . i t \ 1 t h •r now Pic,N: w rt t c and re>pond tom1

re t u rne d tn t h e ..., t ,1tc' .liter , 1 l m, 1 t r w"

year' 1n A l c x . m d r t . i ,

Ve rm o n t

r 1 1r ,,f dt•vclnpmt·nr .ll Vcrmonr AcaJemy m

u tton Ander�on <llld her h 1 1,ha nLI , Jc... c , 1 11 , wh1 >

h;l\'l'

chief u p e ra r w n , offi c e r , 1· 1cc prc, 1 d e n t ,it

Cam d en N a nnnal C,1rporanon, a h n ld 1 11 g cnm­

ot ( l ll11 tne rL c Rll,1rJ 111

athamel Alexander Hokanson

cein and Kim be r l y Hokan on ' 1 . . . . A daugh­

ter, Kait lyn J u lie Leerburge r-Ma h l , to David Mahl and Marian

Lee r b u rger -Mahl '84 . . . . A daughter, Bridget ha Horwood, to Fr ed e ri c k '87 and Gail Glic k man Horwood ' 6 .

v t rtual Green Death party and a

k t 1 n g and

last Oc tober. . . . B r i an

mith

graduated m May with a Ph.D. in JU>t1c e -.rudie from Arizona Un11·er 1 ry. H1

dog, Ja per,

rate

"the

fastest dog m Tempe," rag· alongon h1

rollerbladmg and h i king esca­

pade · . . . . M aybe W h i t ne y Ke I ting's dog.

real - t i me di cussion Lln the tup1c "A L i beral

momker for her two chocL1late Labs:

A ns Degree: Useful or Almost U eless?" I can

To bl e ron e . I guess that's hetter than the name

G louce ter ( "the big red hound " ) , can g ive ]as·

d ream, can't I ? . .

I would have picked ( Chip and Malt ) . She i la

per a run for hi

Epstein. He's t t l l doing the weather thing, but

now l ives tn

hu hand,

only part t ime now. H e l i ves in Boston and

Raymond Brou ard and I - year-old daughter

works for a company cal led First Cal l, which

Larkm . . . .

distributes research data to stock brokers. Doesn't

and busy as a new morn and homeowner in

mem organization. Wh imey, "finally done \1•1rh

sound nearly as exc it ing as pred icting major

Gui lford, Con n . , where she lives w ith hu�hand

school after 25 year ," completed her Ph.D. tn

Anyway, back to Dave

e t ie and

erious

,,no.11:.hoemg m Fra ·er, Co lo. Kate attended Lo rin Haugh ' weddmg

anta Fe, N . M . , with hu band

Kathleen Hooper Zane ts happy

swrm sy rems, but I bet the pay is better. I t was

Chris and I -year-old son Ian. They moved into

great to get a phone call from a classmate! l ' ll

their hou e a mere five day after Ian was born­

check with my boss to s e e if I 'm a l lowed to gi ve

yikes! Kathleen caught up with classmates Dan

out my company's toll-free number. . . . I go t an

MacDonald, Kel ly Donahoe and Jay and Lori

money. W h1mey

and her

reve Runge ' 7, l ive in Walt ham,

Ma ., where W hitney teache· E L clas e and work for R I M , a refugee assistance and re e t de·

outh Asian re ligion .

he keep 111 touch with

I r ish company called Tran l i ft and was recently

i n g that Tom Oxholm wa

recently elected

Hillary eward, Li a Kearney, Chri Brown. N anc y Knapp and Ha n k and C indy Hud on W h itten be r g . . . . Sheila Rudolph Correia i a research lab technologist ar Ma General and nurture a ide-bu ine in graphic for c1enc e. She mentioned that Alexandra Motyka Dufh

promoted to capta i n . H e says h is family unit

president of the Great Falls Regional Chamber

had her econd on, Brian, thi pa t October and

e-mail from W il l ia m Arsenis, who l ives in Ath­

O'Keefe B u rke at Heather Cameron'87's wed­

ens, Greece. H e is now work ing as a pi lot for an

d i ng la t fall. . . . I got a news c l ippmg announc­

C O L B Y

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

58


A L u �1 � I

rhat Terry Allen and hi wife had a new baby recendy , . . Daniel "Ch ip" Nyhan and hi wife, Mary, are in the midst of the "temble twos" with their on, Graham. Chip and his wife. •eacher m New Hampshire, are researchmg reaching opportun it 1e at American school m . Carol O'Hanlon lshiguro works Europe

home doing Japanese translation while bemg a full-ttme mom to her daughter, Bonnie Grace, born m December 1 994 . . . . David and Les li e Migliaccio Mitchell enioy rhe1r t\\' l> girls,

from

1. in the midst of de,· e loping a Web s ite for the Class of ' 8 8 . Toby a lso keeps in touch with Randy Catlin, a proiect manager for hawmut Construction m Bo ·con . Randy currently i · m·er­

·eeing the 2 5 ,000-square-foot add i tion to FAO ch wart: in N. Y .C. . . . Ii you keep up your end ot the bargain by wnting, I prom1 ·e to deli ver the news on time ! -Lauren

89

Da ve

Fra��a

A T

L A R G

E

from UVM med school ) , after rhetr second year in school . They figured 1f they could get through the bas ic c 1 ences together, they could get through anything! N icola 1s an Ob-Gyn resident at Temple. Much thanks

for

a l l the

adnce, Rob ' -Deborah Greene

90

Margaret Clymer has taken a leave of

absence from her J Ob as a h i gh school teacher McCauley 1

looking for any

Eli:a and l ·abel. Leslie is a comptroller at N orth­ east Healthcare, and Dave ts v ic e pre 1dent m portfolio management at Flee t Bank m Pro,·i­

alum111 up tn the Monrreal area; he has been the

dence, R. l . . . . Derek Sappenfield received h 1 M.B.A. from Duke last May . . . . J e n n i fer Spen­ cer Haddkk enioys pymg famous author. m Manchester, Vt., where she works as a oraphi..:

A l though he's way up there, h 1 iob has allowed

in

eattle and is now teac h mg elemen tary

school in a rural community m Costa R i c a .

internat ional sales and finance manager for

Before re turning to L a t t n America ( Margaret

Mtchelex Industrial Group in Mas·ena,

spent a semester in Ecuador during our j u n io r

.Y.

year ) , he r an m the

him to tra\'el to South America and rhe Medi­

eatrle Marathon. which

he counts among her major achievements.

terranean looking for new market for ca·settes

Margaret wntes, " I am learning

and CDs . . . . Andrew Ayers 1s m his third year

much more ! . . . I t's been a big year for me ! " . . .

orthshire Bookstore.

ar Georgetown Medical School and will be Dr.

Reed Bernha rd, a l ieu tenant in the N avy s ince

She say·, "! read great books a l l the t t me and

Ayer· by our next reunion. He also has taught at

1 992 , fl ies hel tcopters off of a i rc raft carriers in

the Delbarton - c hool m l\ 1orr i · town,

.J . , and

the Adriatic, the Persian Gulf and the Red ea.

in physiology from Georgetown as

Reed w t l l move this fall to Wh idbey l land,

de igner/bookseller at the ha\'e

met

Pat Conroy,

tephen K i ng, Anne

I\ 1. �.

panish, and

Rice and Richard Ford." . . . Havmg ventured to Ala ka for a ummer stay ix years ago, David

has an

wel l. . . . Dayna Adams met her future hu band

Wa·h., north of

Rand has been in Anchorage ever smce and

on an airplane and ha, now moved to Dem·er,

graduate school there , in add 1 t 1on to flying

works a a general manager a t Land i· & _ taefa ( a sub 1d1ary o f S1emen ) . He al o w i l l complete

Colo. , after six ) ears m l\!ex 1co. Her pre\'1ous

mountain search and rescue m issions . . . . Ted

hotel experience helped her land the position of

his M B.A. by year's end. He plan

eatrle. H e plan

to go to

d i rector of re\'enue management for four hotels

W a l sh and his w i fe , M aya G los '9 1 , are l i v ing m ew Hampshire, where Ted is spec ial assis­

newlyweds Ellen and Rich M u e l l e r , who reside

in Denver. -he and her fiance are oumng and

tant to

m Guatemala. Dave also ment ioned M a rc Cadieux' upcoming mamage in J u ly . . . . Kristin

remodelmg their future house and planning

nor, Jeanne Shaheen, and Maya 1 a teacher at

the ir August 2 3 wedding. Be t of l uc k ! .

Pommouth H igh Schoo l . . . . Megan W a h l i s

Sween and her boyfriend ( and dalmatton Cae­

Wendy Bellerman 1 a Ph.D. tudenr in medi ­

sar) en1oy ltfe on Cape Cod. K ns t m , anx 1owly

eval l i terature at

t0 v 1 i t

Y U , keeping busy teaching

ew Hamp h 1 re's first woman gover­

r i l l teach ing se,·enth orade sc ience i n Dela­ ware and 1s now a dean of students. She coaches field hockey and lacrosse and during chool

awa1ti ng graduat1 on from Bosron College with a

fre hman compo·mon (QTadmg paper ! ), taking

ma·rer' in social work, has "no c lue" a ro where

kung fu c l asse and ·earching for hiking areas in

vacat ton organi:es youth white - warer rafting

she will be or what she will be domg, bur her

ew J e rsey . . . . Congrats to Robin T r e n d

exped ittons, including an upcoming mp to

tenacity and "need to make a difference m

Baughan and her husband, Max, w h o h ad a

Chile.

other'

daughter on Ocrober , 1 996. N atalie 1 report­

Labrador puppy . . . . Lisa Wright teaches biol­

edly keeping rhem very bu y, e pec ially

ince she never nap5. Robin ts a broker manager fo r

ogy at Tidewater Community College m Vir­

and plans a move to Needham, Ma s. M uffy and

Aerna/U

school for a master's degree in bio logy or edu­

ltves" promi e an amazmg future . . . .

Muffv Guthrie 1 a techmcal uppon pec 1al ist

at a New England prepress equipment

upplier

Heal thcare, and Max 1s a golf pro­

he does a lot of c amping with her

ginia Beach, V a . , and is app l y i ng ro graduate

Vanessa Hem ley traveled ro Vermont to cel­

fes 1ona l . Currently they l ive i n Branford,

cat ion. L i-a

ebrate with Tom Charlton and h t · w ife,

Con n . , with their two chocolate Labs but may

bles ed with two wonderful c h i ldren, a son and

ays

he enjoys teach ing and is

Katherine-Tom was ordamed as a Bapttsr m 1 n-

be movi ng to Tampa soon. Robin i a l o look­

a daughter.

1�ter. He did his graduate rud1es at the Israel

ing for new from A l ison Wright and Kristen

from Birmingham, M i c h . , and is now in Marion,

( B u r ge r ) and Maj e s t e r

Steve Coan recently moved

lnsmute m the M tdeas t and fini hed h1 ma ter'

Palmer . . . . Anne

degree ar Gordon Conwell Theological School

Abdul-J a l i l are l inng m We r V i rginia, where

Mas . About h i work in the sales trai n i ng program fo r Ti deist, Ste\•e writes, "I found the

Maje ter i

in

a master's student i n b iology at

j ob I 've always wanted, working wirh the com­

Jonathan Radtke l ive i n an amazing home m

Mar h all Umversity of Graduate tud1es. Anne

pany I always wanted to work for, working in

Portland, Mame (previous owner was a wagon

1s an academic tutor and a ful l -nme mom­

an i n du try th at I l o ve ( golf) . "

painter with Barnum & Bailey C1rcu ). Muffy

wow ! The i r fir·t c h i ld, Maryam Hannah, was

A l lara is in Beverly, Mass . , and is taking a

al·o ran mto Pamela Parker, who re ides m Augu·ta, Mame, and works fo r the DEP . . . .

born J anuary 29, 1 99 7 , at 5 lb ,

oz. Maiesrer

break from her caree r a a chool p ychologist

a l o trams for trtathalon

app lying to

to be a ray-at-home mom for a while. Her son ,

Other '88ers are in Maine. Nell Walker is

medical schools-best of l u c k ! H e also won­

M ichae l , was born in the fall of 1 996; her

building her law firm in Portland. Kate Kfour

ders where A h med A ri f and Richard Lasley

husband, Mark, is a family practice physician.

res ides m

Fre e po n and works as an advtsory client rep for I BM . After a number of year in

are these day . . . . J eff Ward graduated from

.

the Darden

Ma . , with her husband, Dominic, an d her

Colby's A lu mni Offi ce, Mary Federle Porter i

a t the U n i versity of V i rginia and is now an

on, Conor Crosby Walsh. Before they were

bll:>y with her three children, Molly, Al iza and Samuel i ri Cumberland, Maine . No doubt she

mve rment ban king a ociate a t Paine Webber,

married, J anet and Dom i nic spen t a year trav­

N . Y.C. He recently married fellow Darden

e l ing around the world, l iving in Au t ral i a,

humps mto Laurie Meehan Reed, Lisa Collett

graduate M ichelle Thomas, who now works for

Europe, Southea t Asia an d rhe S o u th Pacifi c .

Hook and Toby and Vickie Caron Bel l , also

A r t h u r A ndersen as a management con­

Since returning to t h e

Cumberland re idencs. Toby, who 1

sultant. . . . Rob Cloutier graduated from UVM

S a n Francisco a n d Maine ( where ] anet worked

Boston. Muffy also reports thar Lynn and

a t Bath

and 1

c hool of Business Admimstrat ion

.

. . Dana Frost

. . Janet Palmer Blaney Walsh l ives in M i l l is ,

LL

tares, they've l ived t n

Iron Works, and V ickie, who recently started a

Medical School i n 1 99 5 and is now an emer­

at

new job in the real estate department at Hannafo rd Brothers, are bu y land caping their

gency medic ine resident a t the Medical Col ­

their family. Cro by was born in the s ummer of

lege of Pennsylvania. Rob married his COOT

1 996, and J anet is now staying at home w i th

who

leader, N icola Rotberg '88 ( who al o graduated

h tm and taking computer c ience cour e to-

new hou e. They heard from Sean Collin

,

59

Bean) before settl ing in M i l l is to raise

U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


\ l l �1 N I

/\ T

L /\ R n E

ll'ard a Jegree as a system� a m1 l y t . . . . J ohn

Woods and h i s

ll't fe , J a n e , 1 1 \' C�

har­

Porter '9 3 taughr ; H

25 ycM'> ,1go. I l e ,md J e n Trcvm write' t h , 1 1 h e "

off yuur

r 1 11 "f d i p ,111d your CocJ

i::o -at · l l �ily, " I 'm

N,1ked Beer 111 June of

arc ' r i l l r ogct h c r , ,111 J

Die T-,hm for ;innrht·r

ad d i c t ed to k , 1 y a k

1 99 7

the f t r m of Sa nd. , Ander,on, and Marb and

<I' mnunra 1 n

m,1ke It rh.: hesr d,1d - h l <1metl re union 1 n

J a ne is a 'econd grade teacher. John i , aJ,o a ski

Eydenberg Bouvier were m<1 rricd on A ugu'>I

l m tc,v d l e ,

v,1 . .

in

where Jnhn ' ' an am >rncy , \ t

coach a t a loc a l 'ki resnr t .

. J ac k

K a t he r i n e Cole Aydelott l i v e Conn. They were mameJ m

'9 1

and

i n E<Mford ,

o l hy 1 11 J u n<.'

1 7,

h u dd 111g and ["<tddl 1 11 g a'> wd I h 1 k 1 n g . . . . Dan a n d Le� l ie

1 996, and currc n t l y

l i \· c t n

l'.\\

Y,irk

C11 \

Lc,Jey I� a,, , , t a n r V l lC rre,IJl·nt di l'tt n k e r' T r u , t , <md [);1n I'

ducrm uf urth1 1red 1c

'urger\

1 996 and have rec ently bought a hea u t 1 fu l

a t :::- r . L u ke,/RmN�\·l· l r I Jo,r1 t a l . There \\ l'rt

1 8 50 Colon i a l h o u s e i n r u r a l Connec t i c u t .

m,111y C[a<;s of '9 1 , t l u m n t in t h e i r weJd t ng,

Katherine i -; comple r 1 11g h e r docmrate 1 11 E n ­

1 11c l u d 1 n g

g l i s h , a n d Jack is ll'Ork111g a s a c h ef a t the I n n at Wood rock H i l l . . . . Anne

C i r i l l o anJ her

J e s ica B u t l e r , Leaf I ves , T ree u l l i van, J u lie Collard, Peter Anta l l , Matt Dumas, Matt Melander dnd Erik Potholm . A

Lt•,1f [ \'l,

Lu\

c o l l cc t 1 \' e l y

rhere"

and

the to u > m e on t h <1 t 'llhJ<.:lt, }OU c a n be urt hinny (Chrb Chin ) sent me a very i nfer . h 1 ' t ory nf our alma m<1 t e r ! Yahoo' More

l.:uer from h1, ahodc 111 Portland, Mame. Im .i f111a ncial grou p . He 1 l' n g .i g c d ru h e m a r r i e d 111 M a r c h 1 99 ( wngrar , ' ) ,ind ee olhy face at Gnu M c Du ff , from ttme to rime. H e heard from mat 1 \·e

where hL wnrb

Ellie

orth , who I'> 'tudy 1 11g for her m 1dw 1fe';

h u band, Rob Freed m a n , l i ve 111 Bo 1,e, l dahn,

'f" r t ng wedd i n g I' plt1 nncJ f,ir

w i t h t h e i r two c h i ldren, Hayden M a n e a nd

Arthur G ur r . �hl' 1wrb for L1r-<1n-J u h l Com·

Da e Bartlett, who

R i ley

ran1" and he , , emr loved h, Racard 1 l n r crna

Rccurd to g,1 on rour with a band ca l led Cape

u:anne. A n ne descn hes her,clf as a

"very ran- t i me preschool teacher" and .ay' Rob is a corrorate attorney . . . .

Bill Aguiar 1s

a t George Wash i ngrnn U n iventy La\\' _ c hnol i n D.C. and has a l reaJy l a nded a iob, beg 1 11 n 1 11g

t l \m a l

1n

O r h e r w e d J 1 n g/

Bermuda.

e ng , 1gemenr nc11"<

,ind

atherinc Gile� and cott he m,1mcd Juh 1 9, Tara

techer were to Taupier married D.m Dtin11ghuc on Arrtl 20.

l 1ceme at

1 m mon' College m Bu ton, and

to me. H e a l -.n Jcu•unt nf Mike Power

( whose s i ter i

hauna '9 1 ) .

h nsty

E

111g rhat C11lh\ 1, a "ryp1cal t\'Of'

re m e m b e r anyth i n g.

c o m m u 11 1c a t 1ons manager for the t i rement

the role of per onal

Laura teinbrink 1 a fund rat er for the Cuyahoga Cou n r y Rep u h l tc a n Part) 1 11 Ohw and wa. quoted m th e Clet ·eland Plam Dealer a 'a\..

Alaska and c h am pagne and doesn't

and Kev 1 11 are now l t v 1 11g 111 Prov i -

L land Employee

111

WonJer never cease ! . . .

Roc kefe l l e r P l aza i n N e w Y o r k C i ty, h a d baked

dence, R . 1 . , w h e re Chwty 15 the tate of R hode

ound1

urplted a n oudand1. h

, k 1 1 n g 111,c ructor ro Drtw Bled oe ( Q B for

Sarah Nagle '93 got engaged h i g h atop

Christy La w got

married la t fa l l to K e v i n Bl;inchard

ioh for Rounder

P,m1ot ) in W h 1 tef1 h, Monr

c h i ff, H a rd 1 11 , and W a i te.

B i l l te l ls me that

h1

c,,d ChMlie and the Weedwacker ."

d u h1uu'

afrer he graduates, at the Chic ago fi rm of

" l e ft

tower l i beral

Re-

ha , t ton . "

I

tha t a

d i rect quote from Dole'

yste m .

hauna, a l o married, l ives i n Wash 1 11gto n , D.C . , where ·he work fo r the

Lau ra Pizzare l lo I' engaged tn

orwood :cntt

' 9, and AnJrec1 Walker '93 t ' engaged t1>

Lau ren K n ebe l ha' u1m­

Com· . . . Kar •I Brew ter-Gei 1 1 c u rren tly go111g for her M . . 111 marme eco l o g y at �l D a n d w r i t i n g h e r t h e I' on menccmcnr reec h ?

Peace Corps. A t Chn ty' · wed d 1 11g, B i l l c aught

Corey Fravert . . . .

up w i t h Holly Peirce, who 1 s currently work1 11g

pleted nnc year 11fgraduate 'chool and 1' l t \' l l1g

on a doctorate i n international re lat 1on,/Lat111

m Brnok l m e , M a..,.,.

A m e r i c a n affa i rs at the U n 1 v e rs 1 t y of M 1 a m 1 ,

grade te::icher 1 11

a n d J a net Boudrea u , w h o w i l l gradu;ite from

enioy111g rec1ch111g 111 both urh,m ,md 'uhurhan

1 1 \ e' with her cat, \i('y a t t , and plan· ro ail

H a r v a rd Bu 1 11e s

area' and recently enjoyed , k 1 1 11g t n

.iround the world w i t h Bart

chool r h 1 s M a y . J a net 1s

also p l a n n i ng a J une wedd i ng . . . . Kerri Wei e

. .

Beth Ackro d ' ' ,1 hN

eeJ h a m ,

!::is>. _he rrpmr­

usan Cummings, whn worb a a manc1ger of

marrv J ohn W 1,eman nn . . Heidi

A u gu to rec e n t ly c o m p leted h e r doctorate 111

c l ient 'erv 1ce,., wa'> to

c l i n i c a l psyc h o l ogy and i s now wnrk m g to­

J u ne l 4 anJ l 1ve 1 11 W 111lhe rer, �fa" .

w a rd

Meyers Waugh, m a rr i ed

tate l i cen u re in M a

achu e n s . Kerri

tah

to ::i t tn rney Ted

and h e r husband, J on a t h a n A ugu to, 1 u t

Waugh, 1s l t v 1 11g 111 E l l icott

bought a home in M i l l bu ry , Mass ; Kerri 1s

wor k 1 11g a� an a ttorney and urhan planner. In

1ty, Md., and

'and.,harb. ''

Be t

her

y

1.

A l n '>tudy111g a long rho e l m�

Arden, whn 1 at Oregon

rate

getting he

. 111 marine re ource management.

rh e \' e n t url'

en· 1 c e

& Co.

'tephen Oregon I •'

Rickard , who 1. m

group at Robert on,

m �' an Franc1 co . . . . Al o In

Anny Mahoney, who 1. at the U of

Oregon ge m ng her degree m a rc h i tecture the Pac i fic Ocean you Ari Druker in J apan working for l a x x e l . . . . l JU c gor e - m a i l from Tim von

. . . Con n n u 1ng aero w t l l fmd

reac h i n g psyc hology at Becker College, a nd

add i t io n to a t t a 1 11 1 11 g her law degree from

J onathan is a vete n n a r i a n .

American U n 1ver t t y 111 May 1 994, she a bn

Jes

comrleted a ma ter'� Jegree m urhan plan­

he happi er with h t recent move out to Deer­

n i ng . . . . I recently received a copy of a new

fie ld, Ma s . , to work in fund rai i ng ar h i s pre·

91

-Laura Senier

Thank you for all of the new .

Rich

article about

Kay Cowperthwait, c u rren t l y

Rusnack w r o t e i n from Fish Cree k , W i . , t h a t

the c o a c h of the r h re e - year-old

he i

v e r 1 t y wome n' v a r t t y lacro e team.

c urrent l y the p r e ident of Contractual

Enterp r ises, l n c . , a reta i l , manufac tur ing, bro­

tanford U 11 1 he re­

the other day te l l 1 11g me that he couldn't

high chool a l ma mater, Eaglebrook .

Lee al o love

. . . arah

her iob- he is a relevt

reporter for WNCT in Greenvi l le ,

.C.

ion he

.Y. M arathon la t year. Con·

c ru i ts h igh school p l ayer , mostly on t h e East C ast, and ha been praised fo r her effort ar

a lso ran the

kerage and data base management company. H e moved to W isconsin from Breckenridge,

b u i l d i n g the

televi ion indu try 1s

Naomi Pietrucha, who

news is that I gave b i rt h to my second child on

work

Rttiera L n !e-Gera ldo

R i vera'

Abbatiello is c u rre n t l y work i ng a s a busine s

2 . Hi name i Max, and he and his 1 8mon th old ister are keep i ng me bu y! Keep i n

development manager in Bolton, Mass. She is

touch, everybod y '

Col o . , and he mis e the l ifestyle he had in a mall

k i town.

. C h r i s t i n e M u rp h y

M ay

tarted a Ph.D . . program i n counse l i ng p y­ chology and i l i v ing i n Denver, Colo. She would love to hear from other Colby a l u m n i in the Denver area . . . . Trevor Braden is a b i o l ­ c i ence t e a c h e r i n Sedona, Ariz.-at the same school the parents of J en

o g y and earth

C O L B Y

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

arah . . . . Al o work i ng in

for C N BC' n ightt i me

the

how . . . . Other congrat

go to Ja on Pizer and

J e ff Baron,

who are

Greetings, earthling ! l hope the sum­

to Kri tin 0 trom A l l e n , who wa married la t -ummer, w i t h Sheri Pete l le in the weddmg and L a u ra Schuler a t tending. . . . Ta ha Wor ter will

mer i t reat i ng you well and thar you a re apply­

graduate m 1 998 from U V M College of Medi­

ing your

c i ne, and

engaged ( not to each othe r ) , and

-Jennifer Wood Jencks

married to Thomas Abbatiello '89, and they pend their spare t i me ( and money) fix in g up the i r old country house . . . . Elin Baird has

tanford program . . . . M y own

grat u lation ,

93

P F d i l igent l y and l i be ra l l y ! I magi n e

that, as we speak, w e a r e l e s s that one y e a r away from our fifth-year reu111on-Mayflower H i l l

Amira Bahu has one more year ol ju t i n : Sarah N a g l e i engaged to be married in the

med school ar Rush in Chicago . . . . Thi

re v is i ted. A l i ttle older. A l i ttle w iser. A l i t t le

spring of '98 in Lo

more psyched to rage. It i not too soon to dust

engaged h igh atop Rockerfe l ler P l aza in N .Y.C.,

60

Angele , Cal i f.

he got


A L U M !'- !

had baked Ala ka and champagne and doe · n ' t iemember anythmg1 Congratulat 1om, Sara h ! . . Please ·end m e lette rs ! B y e b y e now.

94

-Elizabeth Curran

prod uct ion of Shear Madness at the Kennedy Center and worked at ocher area theaters w h i le

After a summer on Fire Island, N .Y.,

writi ng two p lays chat were produced l a · t sum­ mer: The Big Question in Bethesda, Md . , and

Jeff Carter entered the U of I owa's c hool of ursing and woulJ love to hear from any alumni ll\·mg m the Iowa City area. . . M a t thew

Gain e , working on a master' degree m phy· 1 c a l rherapy, enioyed c l i mb i ng the C a cade �1ounra ms with Paul Kirn and Eric Sokol . . . .

La>t fa ll Thomas G ul ley, a sales rep w i th A x i s Communtc attons i n Massachu etts, and Karen Schofield were engaged to be mamed . . . . A lso announcing their engagement are Teresa Luqen

and

a T A a t Maryland studying soc ial p ychology. Zachary fr eelanced as a sound operator for the

hawn Keeler, who i s employed by F i rst

U

A Bank in W i l m i naton, D e l . . . . Aft er working at an orphanage m G uatemala and

Washingcon D.C., and Goar Song at a Public School, a rad io play in Grover Beac h , Cal if. He . also enjoyed a visit from Geoff Harvey, who is work i ng in B i nghamton, N .Y . , and came to ee the Olympic soccer game . . . . J enna Dinn, proud ro part i c i pate i n the Bosron to ew York A I D R ide 2 last year, was doing research and development for Behring D 1 agnosncs to create new blood re cs for HIV and hepat iti s B and hoping ro go we · t to pursue a P h . D . i n biochem. Jenna frequently ·aw Greg Lync h, who ran rhe . Y .C . Marathon lase fa l l and was teach ing chem and biology and coach mg cros -coun try

A T

1 990s Correspondents 1 990 Laura S e n 1 e r 1 P a r k m a n Street Natick. MA 0 1 760 508-653-7927 1 99 1 J e n n if e r Wood Jencks 540 Prospect Street Seekonk, MA 0277 1 508-336-7049 e-ma i l : K l W l 540@a o l . com 1 992 M i c h e l l e Fortier B1scott1 404 East 80th Street, Apt. 48

ew H ampsh i re , David teaching h 1 tory in Holtzman became a part-rime writer/reporter

and baske t b a l l . She a l ·o heard from Kebba Tolbert , head coach of track and fie l d at Iowa

2 1 2-879-9 5 1 3

fora Bo ton-area newspaper. . . . Erik J ohn on wa: al o in Guatema la l a t ummer to learn

We · leyan College, and Rob Aldrich, who wa:,

e-ma i l : slsmb@nyl phsh mo.com

panish . . . . Connie H uffine, a c 1enti t w i t h

New York, NY 1 00 2 1

work i ng in Colorado . . . . J onathan Kaplan rec el\·ed his M . A . t n public policy from t he

1 993

an Franc 1 co

U n t \· en r y of Ch i cago and i· an economic

E l izabeth C u rran

with J.:ff Z!ut '93 . he wrote that Rachel Herf and arah White! l ive together m Bo t<m;

pol icy analy·r at The Progre·s l \· e Policy l n · r i ­ r uce m D.C. He wrote t h a t Erik Belenky

64 Dane Street #2

an Franc 1·co from

planned co work for a law ftrm t n Atlanta after

6 1 7-628-7092

graduatton from Duke Law

e-ma 1 I: beth@w3.org

a b10-tech company, l i \·es i n

Andie Sulak moved to

Colorado; Miche l le Satterlee moved from

an

Franct co to Lo Angele ; and Kirn Kes ler,

Winick i

chool and that TJ

an o n - a i r reporter for the

Somervi l le, MA 02 1 43

BC

who frequently see Megan Campbell and Ja­

affi l iate in Ft. Meyers, Fla . . . . After working

1 994

son udano, work a t C h ns t te's A uc tton Hl use

at a D.C. pub li c relation firm and serv i ng as

Alicia S. H idalgo

in Nt'w York City. Kirn, J u l i e Cyr and H o l ly Coxe

'93 served as bride

maids at the J une '96

enaror J udd Greg' ( R-

H) deputy press ec­

Dallas. TX 75240 972-980-6988

Heywood .

pos i t ion of the ·enator'

Laura, a re ·earch a ociate at

treer Cor.­

Congraculattons to Mark and Seven Lathrop

tate

5400 Preston Oaks. Apt. 1 037

rerary, Lau rie S i lverman ha mo\'ed tnto the

weddmg of R 1eJ and La u ra Keal!

pre s secretary.

e-m a 1 l : a l icia_h 1 da l go@hmco. com

tone

Grenier, who e daughter, Rebecca Bruce, wa·

. . . . Beth

horn last Augu r and co Kelly O'Rourk e and

1 995

Scoville teaches Engl i h i n J apan, and Bob

Leif Merryfield '93, who married t n October

Alyssa Fa lwe l l

sultant , and R ied, a purchasing agent a t Web>ter, l ive m Charle·town, Ma

chneider 1 back from Eur pe . . . . In L i me­

and honeymooned i n An:ona.

of

tudent upport services a t the Mame c hool

·ran. . .

Carie King work in adrnm1 tration

1 7 1 8 N . Troy Street #789

-Alicia S. Hildago

stone, Mame, J o ette H un tress 1s the d i rector of c1ence and Math, a chool he he lped to

95

Arlington. VA 2 2 2 0 1 703-276-9421

Thanks go out to Dave

Chen for help­

e-ma !Ualwe lla@gusun. georgetown . e d u

ing to gee the Clas of '95 Web s i re up and

anta Fe . . . .

runn i ng ( w ww.colby . edu/alu mn i ) . Dave work·

1 996

Andrew Kulmati k i , a "profes tonal cudenr"

at TechKnowledge, Inc. in M a i ne . . . . S u e

Amie Sicch1tano

at the Yale

Nac koney 1

at Desert Academy and lo\·e

mental

chool of Fore try and Environ­

tud1e

for the next t h ree years, is

workmgon a nutrient cyc l ing project and look­ ing forward to some worl d - w id e . . . After teaching

amp l i ng .

p a n t h a n d l i v i n g in t he

dorm for the Madiera

chool in V i rg inia for

the past three years, Caroline G ra b w i l l srudy for her master'

a t C o l u m b i a U n i verstCy'

Teacher's College. . . . Last A ugu c J enn ifer Chasin moved to rural Oregon, where

he

en1oy; working a a fa m i ly educator at Head ran. . . . Lase fa l l J oseph J abar j o i ned che firm of .'\ G Edward of Waterv i l le a an in­ ve tment broker. . . . J e

i ca Ha kell performed

m "Dreamscape , " an aud1ence - i n terac r ive, i m ­ prov1 attonal p i e c e based on che techn ique o f the Playback Theater Method . . . . Zachary

Geisz and Karyl Brew ter-Ge isz ' 9 3 , a marine ecology student at the Un iversity of Maryland, hare an apartment near D.C. with Doug H i l l ,

L A R G E

working in Oregon to protect

designated fore t area . . . . Prior to arrendmg grad schoo l , J eff Harrison wa working in Mexico on a geology explorat ion with a copper min ing company . . . . W i l l iam G i l l i s was ltv­ mg t n Part , where he is doing a number of th ing , including h t torical re earch and coach­ ing young French k ids to p lay basketball. He wrote at a t t me that Pete Gates was over for a v i sit . . . . There have been or w i l l be a number

2 5 H u n dreds C i rcle Wellesley Hills. MA 02 1 8 1 6 1 7-235-0666 1 997 Kim Parker 5382 Versai l l e s Road Lexington, KY 4051 0 606-233-4666

of m a r r i age . Cal '92 an d A i mee Flores Wheaton were married on J u ly 1 3 , 1 996, i n Connec ticut. A i mee is a m e d student at Penn tate College of Medic ine, and Cal is an in­ vestment banker ac A l e x . Brown & o n ; they

Charle Bee ler '93 and Christopher W i lde '94

commute to their home i n Maryland o n week­ ends, a long w i t h their beagle. Colby people in a ttendance i n c l uded K r i ten Fow l e r , J e n

on J u ly 20, 1 996. Laura ts working at t he

Brown, Vaughn C h a u , M a u reen F i n n , Knsta G a i '92, Beth Baumer '92 , Eric Schwartz '96

61

and Al lan Ingraham '96. Mark M e l lyn '92 , were ushers. The couple honeymooned in Vatu leke I s land, Figi and Lake Taho e. . . . Laura Moore Johnson married T i m Johnson S m ithsonian I ns t itution as a designer, and T i m is a counselor a n d a basketball coach . They bought a "fixer upper" five bedroom in An-

U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


A L U M N I

A

T

L A R lo f

1 11 Sta mford,

N.Y.

.

Regina

nn n . , and

. . . Michelle F ri ed l a nd , wlw

wnrb

\rn rerhu r) 1 1 1 C h 11 -,tL h u rL h ,

in

1, in R<1 t h ,

M a i n e , as an ed it ll r a n d fe a t u re w r i t e r

96

fm a

wee k l y newspaper, w i l l he m a r r y m g T i m

I ' 111 t h l'

Ne\\ / e . 1 l . 1 n d . -Ah "u F<1/in·/I

m in u t e ( \f 1 1 . She h,p, l ea rned t 1 1 p l. 1 � g u 1 C . i r .md

h ( \ p e s ro he <1hll' t l l t r; 1 v d ,rn,I \ L ' i l J e n Pope ,

Robinson a n d J ason Ph i l l i p> ' 9 6 The wedd mg

w h o 1, 1 11 M ,1 ' 1 . . .

G nll'C J e a n e � h . i.. gu n e

Wemwrd

Hou'>e 111 N e w Ynrk ew Ymk Film Academ1· Star Wars Ht re­ "� e mfeld" are written

rc\ckLI 111 t h e rc-rclc,i.,c of

,.l',if, t« 1r

t il l < )

t h . H the J<ikc, 111

.i

c11 Y1 1rk .wd 1ence, w h i c h 1 why peopl� don 't get t h e m . Jo h declares h1

/1.1.itm·

w i l l he hn n c y m nll n ­

h u , L nl'" w 1 t h Lwra l 1 11 1 u ' lJ 5 l11<lllL1f.1<.. r u r i n g

f ro m

• >L l l t p .i r 1 1 1n lP he a mover/telemarketer.

c u ., t o m - m adl' h o r' c h l l \ c .. . l ; r,ll l' 1 1 \ n m

Rmwn . . . . Rebecca Ma\.\ n. \� ho 1, a gr.id u. 1 1 L

Eric Loth

part of h e r master\ 1 11 puhlic h e a l t h and ll' i l l

-. ru d e n t . i t Le, i c y Cl llll'l!l'. L ' ' r ud n n g L • > i.:1:1 her

I\ irr l .md

he

t e ad1cr\ L c r u l 1 L , l l L<1l1 1 11 1: l c m c 11 c d u l . . 1t 1 n n R d1eL L .J " "o 'l'l'' A n n e

1 , m m urance

m,1,ter\ a nd

I l l \ 1 tt

b work i n g at a computer n e two rk mg com pan\'

t a r\

Gregg Leblanc worb a

. Fred Webster and Heather J o h n s on arc t11

h 1 w '>Chllll (., lln t h l' E .i ' t l .l l<l \ [ tnLI h,1, cn t r e n

m i n 1 s t ra t 1 ve ass i s t a n t w i t h E ES o l by grad

Noah E. Wepman ' 9 6 i s the n e "

at

Elections

t h e i r engage m e n t parry 1 n Chicago

incl uded B rendan Ca v a n a u g h , a

anchorper on lln the New England Cable � p ee .

and J a y Co l l 1 11 s '9 3 .

we l l .

Daniel

.

'93 1

Jon Patak i

. . . l a bo

cw'

ctwork

L<l>tmt: and nm u l t mg firm, as an ccon11m 1 c an<tlyst. Aran ensure'

r h,H he " r a k mg care to

ro let folk

L Beni:d errn,

eniuyed much >nowboardmg la1t

m

wmter and planned ro work on an

Providence, R . I .

nri.:an 1 c green� farm on Cape

not happen u n t i l '98 . . . . Cri tina Harris is

e n ga ge d w Wo,1dy P, 1l l .1d .

work ing in M a ryland . . . . D a rci e L a bre c q u e 1

a d m 1 n 1>tra r 1 ,·c as 1 ' t a n r lt ,

1 11 grad schoo l . . . . K a t hryn

m ed 1 c 1 11 e firm b u t w i l l head l t l

tee le '93 1s l i v mg had been

work i ng at a law fi rm in Bo ton hut i

. Erm Mahon works a t

1\fo u n r n<l\1 m W Dover, VL Erm

Marriage : Danielle L. Jami on '94 w Roberi

t h is pring, a l t hough it was reported

epremher. .

.

'9i.

Anne

1,

,m

8,hton t d c ­

a

(;rn

usannah Ko\\ al

c h 11,1I 111

1., \\'L>rking a'

1 the acrmg d i rector of aud 10\•1sual ervtces .it

Rnwdom

l)llege.

he ha recently .poken at

an occupa t ional t hcrar1't '' 1 t h 'pc u a l ne ed,

rwo Lunferi:nce : " Wo m e n 111

heraton resort i n Vomo Is land,

�tudent' a r t h e Cti t t mg SchL)l11 1 11 Lexmgrnn,

)\irk and "Readmg

!v1a,s. . . .

u zanne Kulin

worb .i' <ln aid for

Cod

r h 1 , :ummer. H e t ra v e l ed cro counrr.· wnh Tobi ci pione for even wee k as well a :.uh,n tute ceach mg. . . . arah Morgan

now

Figi. She i p la nni ng on head i n g to l a w school

feed ht

mu'c' 111 the dynam ic c i ty of Phila·

Je l p h 1 a.

a few issues back that t h a t wou ld

m anagmg at a

Army

M I LE P OSTS

know that she d i d mdeed g radua t e

. Erin Naftel

.

'97 i the new e d i tor ofCoascal]ournal m Rath, Mam1:.

i to be married t h i year. . . . April

in Pennsylvan i a .

l e ft \\ 1th one ro gn on a recent . . In J u ne Aran R y a n Joined WEFA group, an economic fore­ \ hl t 1

now weekend

evilla ' 9 3 graduared from advancL•d 1 11d1v 1dual

have been told thar Pete Murphy

A rm s t rong wan ted m e

,,mdw1ch .H the Carnegie Deli anJ

.ampaii,ts &

train mg at the U . . Army l n fontry _cho,1l ofF,1rr Rennmg, G a . . . .

. . . Tracy Patton i marrymg Kurr year as

assL'>t<111 l ed1wr , J t

magazme and reports nn 1 111 nat1ve., and rdt:rc:nda. FEC,

F C and e l ec mm l a w . . . . Dan H ar r i

m e d s t u d e n t at R u s h M e d i c a l

Zsc hau th i

k la rz pnn cJ r ha r he h<ti a huge .ippct 1 cc- he arc a 2 1 - l b. pa cram1

N EWS MAKERS

a l es Lead and Heather i an adConsu l t mg , I n c .

utter.

,m

A. \ c n ue Cafe . . . . A r ra rent ly Jeff

account e xe cuti v e w i t h A merican

c h oo l ,

E r ic k G u stavson and Rob

e a t r l e , w h e r e Fred i � an

111

m LA

and 1 1 \·e

underwriter fur A rnt•r 1 c .tn l n t c rn.1 nomi l Group tn . Y.C. He l 1 ' c' " nh Ale Tal bot , w ho i a cook at Park

Robinson, whti h ;i .. hcen ,l L L C p 1 ed f < l n u rn c n H l '

They a rc c u rrent l y

a le

1'-L1 1 n e He ,i n r iupare a mp to

att e nd i n g den t a l c h ool t h e re 1 11 the fo l l . J asun

l i vin g

a pub­

.md c rL»1 1 cd h" own '>hort fi l m 1 11 addition to work i n g on th r1:1: other fi l ms . . . . Jo h Morn

mg 10 Bermud ;-i . Be ts y is c u rrenrly '> t u d y m �

30.

i:I

l 1 u i \ '"" ' i a nt .1t R a n d om

e p 1d e m l1 lo g y at t h e U 1 1 1 \'er, 1 t y of M i n ne.,ota a'

be married on A u gu>t

North

111 r h e

Bran t J aneway work

C 1 r y . I k •l l l c ndcd

AlrtL,J ,ind l t l \ 1 n g l:\'l'ry

o l by C h a p e l .

is i n M m n csora, and they

A t l , 1 11 1 1 L

Tina Garand

I l e l l , 1 <lt.!·lll1, c l;1"m. 1 1 e' '

rL'.lCl' Cnrp., 1n

A l o to be married 10 A u g u'>t <He B e t s y

G agnon ne xt momh a t r h e

;" ,, deck h.1nd t >n

, h i p ( ( 1 .,l u c l y eduC.l l l < lll ,ll t h e U n i \ L'r, L l � ut

nnpol 1 , Md . . . . Regina W l odars k i and K e i t h K ruger are to be m a r r i e d t h 1 , month. T h e y l i ve

oc i e ty " m

e11

Mame hundred· of

tephen K mg" m

'arah cxc 1Cedly repom that he ha

feet

now a program

pe c r n l need. student'> at L e mgrnn H ig h

manager for an A meriCorps program c al led

chool. . . . K i m Verner al o \\'LHk w i t h c h i l ­

the New Jer ey Comm u n i ty Scholar Corp. 111

d re n and h as b ee n 1 11tern1ng w i t h a n earl}

'ome hig event 111 Craig' l ife inc lude the grand

Princeton, N .J . The program is a con ortLum of

mtervent Lon program 1 11 Waltham and Wm­

open m g of hi store and the anncipatton of rwu

e ight co l l ege and u n i vers i t ies, each with five

c h e-,ter, M as . K i m hope" to get her m<htcr\ 111

more <1pen mg m 1 997 . . . . Big Earl Lewis � J

counsel mg/expre �1ve therapy .n Lesley Col­

re-;earch techmc1an at Thoma Jeffer on Uni­

l eg e . . . . I rec e i ved a cu rious response from

ver ity 111 Philly. Earl al o moo nlig h t

this fa l l . . . . Missy Smith 1

to

10

year

students who have com m i r ted to two of

ervice. Prior to that, M i ssy was a

111

a researcher/organ izer at a gras roots e n v i ron­

J onathan Cannon, who. cu riou ly, li ves Vermont but c l a i ms to be held pn ·tmer i n a

mental group in Sherida n , Wyo.

Lankan pnson for c r ime, he c la i ms nor to have

volunteer w it h City Year.

. . Lee Paproc k i is he dro"e

cross country by herself on the way to Wyo­

commmed. Hmm . . .

n

. Casey McCu llough 1 s

of coa x i a l cable at her d i spo al. _ . . Craig Mu rra ts the manager ofOffice Furniture U A.

as a

home brewer and completed hi first dark brown ale for the

uperbowl. . . . Gwen Nicol l� a

nursmg tudent at the B. . H opk m

chool of

. program at John>

u r mg. Gwen ha become

m ing, stopp i ng a l l a long the way. One of her

fi n i h i ng h i s first year at P h i l aJelph 1<1 College

engaged to Chri nan C i tarella '95 , and rhe two

stops i n c l uded Darrel l Sofield, a grad student

of Osteopathic Medicme and pur uing a fi,·e

p l a n ned a n A ug u t wedd i n g in Penn yl­

i n volcanology i n M i c h igan. Lee p l ans on at­

year d u a l -degree program with

tend i ng grad school this fa l l for hydrology . .

U n i versity that will lead to D.O./M . B . A . H e 1

t. Jo.eph'

vama . . . . Li sa McDonnell te ac h e

Kristen Hanssen recently left her job a t the

t i l l p l aying h oc k ey and playmg the saxophone

M assachuse t t s State Labs to work on a boat in

and the flute . . . . K . Liisi Linask is a research

with World Teach. Li

a program for h igh schoolers on Long I sland

ass istant ar the Robert Wood John on Medical

Sound. She p l a ns to a r tend med school i n the

Department of Molec ular Genet ic · & Biology.

F ran tz ' s wedding in Canada, where

fal l . . . . Lisa Kenerson is a teac h i ng as istant

. . . Andrew Minkiewicz is a law chool app l i ­

at an e le me n tary schoo l i n Bedford, Mass . , and

c a n t w h o h a s traveled to Poland, th e Czec h

is an app l ic a n t for a 1 997 -98 Rotary scholar-

Repub l ic and Austria t hi s year. He is working

C 0 L B Y

U M M E R

1 9 9 7

62

elemen·

tary school Engli h and environmental educauon in a tin y town on the Pacific coa t of Costa Rica a attended Lind a he aw

E lizabeth Garbe, Grace Jeanes, Georgia Bryant and Je sie Palmer . . . . I ' l l include the remain· der of the new in the next magazine! -Amie Sicch1tano


0

O.T. Wieden ' 2 3 , March 3. 1 997, in le, Maine, at 94. He became president of Aroostook tare Normal School in 1 9 5 2 and guided the school to it current position as the University of Maine at Presque Isle. He was awarded numerous honors for community ·er­ vice throughout his profe· 10nal career. urv 1Vl)r include his on, Clifford O.T. Wieden Jr., and h1 daughter, Carolyn Carey, a brother, 1 1 grandchildren, 2 3 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandch ild. Clifford

l resque I

Arline Mann Peake , Nov. 28, 1 99 5 , in Gorham, Maine, at 89. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate, she was a schoolteacher in -trong, Mexico, Rumford, Brewer and Bangor, M a ine. he wa a member of several teacher organization and erved a l'anety of local boards and associauons. Prede­ ceased by her husband, Lawrence A . Peake· ' 2 , she 1s survived by her daughter, J oAnn Mary Thoma , a on, David Peakes, her 1ster, Melva Mann Farnum '23, three grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

G. Her

om Lambert '30, Dec. 27. 1 996, 10

Mode to, Calif., at 9 1 . Following service m World War l l , he was a medical officer for a company in Chma. Later he served for 2 year a. chiefrad iolog i t at Gou Id Med teal Group a nd Downy Park Group in Modesto. He 1s surv1\•e<l br a son, Ronald Lambert, a daughter, Mrs. Wayne Healey, a brother and i ter, four grand­ daughter and 1 0 great-grandchildren.

Emest J . Theberge '30, Feb. 1 5 , 1 99 7 , m North Andover, Ma s., at 9 1 . From 1 936 to 1 963 he owned and operated Theberge Keystone Coal and Oil Company m Lawrence, Mas . He al o worked for a real estate bus mes and as a reacher for the Tarbox chool in Lawrence. He 1 ur­ vi\•ed bv rwoson , Paul and John Theberge, and a daughter, Nancy Theberge.

I

I

T U

A

R

I

E

m chools for the learning disabled and handi­ capped. he 1s sun·ived by her si ter, Freda De\'an.

Dorott y Connor Farnham ' 3 4 , Jan. 1 7 , 1 99 7 , m Penobscot, Maine , at 4. ' h e taught in ·chool in Ea t Orland, Franklin and Casco Bay, Mame. She 1s sun· 1 ,·ed by two daughters, a on and grandchildren.

Richard A. Reed '54, Jan. 2 7 , 1 997, in Dartmouth, Mass.. at 6 5 . After serving in the Na,·y from 1 9 5 :?. t o 1956 and the Naval Resen·e until 1960, h e was a pharmacist in Dartmouth and New Bedford, Mass. -un·i\'ors mclude his w1fe,Joan, a daughter, a son, a brother and grandchildren.

Ernestine F. Wilson '39, J an. 7 , 1 997, m Boston, Ma s., at 7 . he earned an M.A. in Engh h at Yale, then taught at schools in Pro\'iJence. R . l . , hakcr Height . Ohio, and Rome, I taly. After her retirement · he wa· m the antiques bu ine s in tonington, Mame. _ he i ur\'i,·ed by rnusin .

Shelley D . Vincent Ill '62, Feb. 7, 1 997, m Mendon, Mass., at 56. He was an estate plan­ ning attorney at Tyler & Reynold 10 Bo ton for 2 8 year before his retirement in 1 993. He also wa president of the M iiford N a tional Bank and Trust Co. He leaves his mother, a son, a daugh­ ter and a sister.

Cornelius F. Moynihan '4 1 , March 3. 1 997, m Fa1rf1eld, Conn., at 79. He erved with the a\'al Air Force during World War l l . Before ret1rmg m 1 980, he was production manager at McKe,son Laborarone m Fairfield. urv1vors mclude h1· wife of 5 3 year , Margaret, two daughters, rwo Tter· and two grandchildren.

James R.F. Qu irk ' 6 5 , Feb. 2 3 , 1 997, m Alex­ andria, La. , at 50. A professor of computer science at Louisiana State University-Alexan­ dria. he was rated by the National Chess Federa­ t 10n and played posrnl ches with opponents from around the world. Survivors include his daughter, Marie Quirk, and a sister.

Pri c ilia Gould Brock '44, Jan. 1 4 , 1 99 7 , in Portland, Mame, at 76. he was a homemaker and a substitute teacher in public schools. She lea\•e her husband, W 1 ll1am, two Jaughters and five brother· and sister .

Martha L . Bennett '69, J an. 2 1 , 1 997, in Yorba Linda, Calif., at 49. A flight nur e on the fir t Life Flight helicopter rescue program in the nation, she was a director of the American Assoc iation of A ir Medical ervice and the National Flight Nurse Association. She is sur­ vived by her mother, a brother and three sisters.

Edward W. Sawyer ' 3 3 , Jan. 9, 1 997, in Caldwell,

Raymond A. Web ter '48, Feb. 2 1 , 1 997. in Alna, Maine, at 7 2 . He was Mame's deputy commis ioner of labor from 1 9 7 1 to 1 97 3 . He worked for the C.F. Hathaway Co. and later owned and operated the J.A. Brew ter Co., a porrswear manufacturer in Camden, Maine. urvivmg are his wife, Mariorie, and two si ters.

Idaho, at 83. He graduated from West Point. Afterservmg m the Philippines in World War I I , h e earned out staff and command durie i n the States until his retirement in 1 964. For the next 18 years he taught busine admini trat1on at the College of Idaho. urvivors include a son, John awyer, a daughter, Durand Marcus, and several grandchildren and nieces and nephews.

John W . trong ' 5 2 , March 2, 1 997, in Ottawa, Ont., at 67. He received a Ph.D. from Han1ard and for more than 30 years was a professor of history at Carleton University, where he served as department chair and was editor of Canadian Slavonic Papers. Hi wife, Caro!, predeceased him.

'34, epc. 1 6, 1 996, in

Mary A. Devan ' 5 3 , J an. 30, 1 99 7 , in Washing­ ton, D.C., at 66. She earned a master's degree in education ofthedeafand was asupervismgteach er

Scarhorough, Mame, at 8 3 . A homemaker, she

Rebecca E. Bachman ' 6 1 , Feb. 4 , 1 99 7 , in New York, N .Y., at 57. She was vice president of Fitch Investors Ser\'ice, I nc . in ew York. Sur· ,. i,·ors mclude her sister, Ann Bachman Ryan.

Virginia D u ggan Boudreau ' 4 1 , Jan. 6, 1 99 7 , m \\'amp,cor, Ma- . , at 76. She was employed for many years a a vice president with hawmut Bank of Boston. he 1 sun·ived by a stepdaugh­ ter, Helen Lund, four grandchildren, two sisters and niece and nephew·.

David

Adela ide Jordan Cleaves

S

is survived by her husband, Kenneth Cleaves, and by her daughter, Erla Clea,·es Dmr '59.

Cecelia Nordstrom Hannon '4 7. Feb. 27, 1 997, in Portland, Mame, at 72. The New England archer champion for small college· while ·he was at Colby, she became a ci\'IC volunteer m Portland, where she O"W-ned and operated Albert M. Harmon Insurance Agency. urvivors include her son, Robert Harmon, a stepson anJ three grandchildren.

. Carr '33, Feb. 1 1 , 1 997, m Bradenton, Fla., at 85. He earned a law degree from Boston U01,•ers1ty, served m the Navy dunng World War II and was a director and ales manager for Na­ tional Drug Co. m Philadelphia for 20 years. He i sumved by hi wife, Marge, a daughter, a son, two grandcl:uldren and two seep-grandchildren.

'

B

63

Joseph G. Pittman '76, Feb. 2 5 , 1 997, in Fremont, Calif., at 42. He was born in Geneva, witzerland, and was a biology major at Colby. He died after a lengthy and courageous battle with schi:ophrenia. He is ·urvived by hi mother, his father and step­ mother, two brothers and three sisters. Steven W . Savchick '78, March l , 1 997, in Bo ton, Ma s., at 4 1 . An employment specialist and health care recruiter, he was director of recruitment at Olympus Healthcare Group in Westboro, Mass. He died from complication after a bone marrow uansplant for leukemia. He leave hi partner, Fred T. Fuge Jr., his mother, a brother and sister, nephews and niece . Dorothy Fosdick, L.H.D. '54, Feb. 5, 1 99 7 , in Washington, D.C., at 8 3 . he was a foreign policy expert who helped fashion the United N ations, the Marshall Plan and N A TO in the 1 940 . For the next three decades he wa for­ eign policy advisor to Senator Henry M . J ack­ son. urvivors include her ister, her niece, Patricia Down Berger '62, and a nephew. S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

C O L B Y


final period I •

What Friends Are For Museum's supporters turn helping into an art B y Kevin Cool

T

h i rt y - n i n e year, ago, two

Bet terment FunJ. Friends of Art

men bearing a

t i l l - mobt

member

pa i n t i ng of t h e n - pre, 1 J e n t J .

"The

erve a docent .

Friends of Art really pro­

Seelye B i x ler drove their station

\'lJt U5 a \\ ay of en mg as a public

wagon from Waterv i l l e to the

mu cum,"

Beek man Tower l-fotel in New

reum of tht mu eum. "Their up­

York C i t y for a meeung they hoped would change forever the

p< irt pn >\·ide,, funJi. for exhi bmoru, lcuure� and othe r even . Thq

complex ion of the Col lege. The

prnnde an unportant erv1ce."

two men, Ed Turner,

olby's vice

>a1 J H ugh Gourley, di­

The F n e n d s of A rr no\\

hope�

C u m m ings, c o - founder of the

hroaJen it member­ 1, 'eek mg more Colby a l u m n i a' p rt i c ipan t . "Colb\

kowhegan School of Pai n t ing

a l u m n i ,hl1ulJ feel very proud

pre idem for Jevelopmcm and an a\·id art lover, anJ W i l lard

and

to

a

,h 1 p and

c u lpture and the p a i n ter of

abt1ur the mu eum of art," aid

the B i x ler portra i t , were repre­

Tu rner , wh11 i lead i ng the mem­

senting a group of people who dreamed of developmg a fir t­

Theresa Violette. a Friends o f Art docent, leads a children's tour.

her hip dm· e along wi th Fnend rn-chair' H il l ary and Edmund

nt

! odern

ew ) urk C i t y ,

a h.o wa-.,

i m porranr

Lhc m u ­

um-., m the country and enhance.

c la s c o l lection for the Col lege'

has long been ,erved hy a net­

tnr of the � 1 u t: u m

budd i n g m u,eum of art. The

work of 111fl uen t rn l per,on' i n

A rr i n

woman with whom they met,

the a r t c ommun t t) , inc l uLl mg

<l Lle v o t ed fr iend t 1 f

' e u m . A b h1 H t , < l

Er\' l n ' 3 6 . " I t i one of the mo�t m a l l col lege mu

Co lby ' reputat ion . "

Edith J ette, wa a di cerning col­

former d 1 recwr nf the W h 1 mey

lector and the wife of long - t i me

Mu eum of A menc.in Arr

Colby tru tee and cha irman of

Goodrich. Goodnch

erveLl on

hcr' of the mu,cum\ ad\' 1 ">or)

the Hathaway company El lerton

the origina l ad\· isory LOu nu l .

counc i l . Through h 1 ' contact�.

Colby alumni will become an

J et te . Turner anJ Cummings'

which later became the Board of

tht' mu c u m wa' able ro a t t ract

even more e ential group in the

propo al. that Edith J e t te chair

Governor

donor' and uppt1rter� who en­

mu,eum ' ,

an organi:ation to support the

gu ide the mu,eum during i D early

Llnyd

wa' t111e l l f th e

and which he lpt:d

feli n e n H i \·e,

foun d ing mem­

C t1 l l e c r 1 o n and

h a n c e J the

A

effort

ro add exhib1t1on

pace to the mu eum conttnUt'.,

ucce

, ·ay

T umer

"The mu eum has attracted up

acquisition and exhibition of art

years. In 1 96 3 , wnh the help of

he l ped t h e m u · e u m \ rep u t a ­

port from people who m maD\

at Colby, was the genesi of the

Goodrich and

52 mu eum d i rec­

t ion gro w . A hbor t c reated a n

ca e had no rel a tton hip to the

1 t 1 o n e n d ow m e n t

Col lege , " he -aid. "We would

Friends of Art . She aid "yes," and

tor , c u ra t o r�. a r t h i tor i a n "> ,

a rt a c q u i

a year l a ter, the Friend

scholar,, a r t 1 ts a n d dealer,, the

fund t h a t today ' ' \'a l ued a t

Friends of Art a· em bled a n ex­

more t h a n

of Art

spon ored its fir t exhibitton.

4.

m i l l io n .

l ike to have more Colby alumni hecome i nvolved."

S in c e then the group has

h i b i t ion to celebrate Colby " e -

The Friend of A r t e,tablt heJ

Friend of Art a l o hope to

helped sponsor 3 70 hows, helped

quicenten n i a l , t i t led "Maine and

an amhmou outreach program

engage more student intere t m

acquire some of the mu eum's

! ts A r t i t : 1 7 1 0- 1 96 3 . " The ex­

t h a t b r i ng

of art and been a

h i b ition o pened to wide acc l a i m ,

3,500 work

more than 7 ,000

the mu eum, which would trans·

chool c h i ldren to v i e w the

l a te into greater alumni partici­ pation, Turner ay . "We ha,· e

driving force in it.s public outreach.

was mc luded in a Time magazine

College'

The mee t i ng in New York

ro undup of spring art shows and

That project i- now coordinated

thi

w i t h Edith J et te was emblematic

later was moun ted at the W h i t ­

by m u eum staff an<l supported

able here and tudent.s ofren don't

of the connec t ions the Friends

n e y Mu e u m , where i t broke an

by grant · from the J oa n Whitney

take full advan tage of it .

of A rt have used to advance the

a ttendance record.

and Charle

h ipman Pay on

want to b u i ld awareness about

Charitable Foundat ion and the

what the mu eum can offer." t

museum's growth. The museum

C O L B Y

S U M M E R

1 9 9 7

J ere A bbott, assoc iate d i rec-

64

col lec tion each year.

tremendous resource avail­

We


esooks

If

AT THE COLBY BOOKSTORE

R i c h a rd R ii. s i o

Dolt/). Sfffder '72 The Cliff Walk: A Memofr of a Job Lost and a Life Found Don J .

nyder '72 wa a profe or

of Engli h at a pre tigiou college in up tate

ew York, was married and

had three children with another on the way when he got hi pink Ii .

The Cliff Walk chronicle nyder' journey from privilege to de peration and on to a new en e of hope. Jn the end,

nyder find

grace and dignity a a laborer at a construction ite, a type of work he had run from all hi life. Written with a novelist' eye for searing details,

The Cliff Walk is a

startling tory, both infuriating and heartbreaking, a tribute to a family' love and the resource that u rained 1t

through an economic and

11 11�111rr Riduud R.Afro ojuror ofEH.j/U� Straight Man

l:rnn lluylii

Pr

In Richard Rus o' new novel,

Straight Man,

Ru o flawlessly capture

the oul of the wi e guy and the heart of a difficult parent. Hank Devereaux

yerry BOJle- '78 Potshot Gerry Boyle '78 i one of the best

i a hero who e humor and identifica­

new mystery writers today. Jack

tion with the ab urd are mitigated by hi love for family, friend and, ultimately, knowledge i elf. Unforget­ table, compa loud funny,

ionace and laugh-out­

Straight Man cements

McMorrow, Boyle's journalist sleuth, already has been compared to Robert B. Parker '54's Spenser as a quintes­ sential contemporary male hero.

Ru o' reputation as one of the master torytellers of our time. Rus o i the author of three , Mohawk, The Risk obody's Fool, which wa

previou novel

Pool and

made into a film tarring Paul

emotional free fall.

ewman.

nyder is a caretaker and housepainter in Scarborough, Maine.

M c Morrow, a former

Time

behind for rural life. In

Potshot,

McMorrow earches for the truth about ome hemp-growing hippie and a marijuana legalization novel ,

Lifeline, Bloodline and Deadline, earned glowing reviews.

An

puhl i:ihed as a Harper's magazine cover �cory in November 1 995.

A

New York

reporter who has left the c ity

movement. Boyle's three previous

He caught as a visiting instructor of Engl s i h at Colby in January 1 9 9. excerpt from The Cliff Walk was

Boyle's four mystery novels, set in Maine, follow the l ife and career of

complete listing of autographed books is available at: http:llwww.co lby.edu/bookstore/autograph.h tml 5400 MAYFLOWER H I LL, ROBERTS U N ION WATERVI LLE, MA I N E 04901 800 - 7 2 7 - 8 506, 207 - 87 2 - 3609 E - MA I L: BOOKSTORE@COLBY. EDU


Colby Maga : i n e

o n r rn f i t Orga n i :a t ion

4 1 8 1 tv ia y f l o w e r H i l l

U.

W a te n· i l l e , M a i n e 0490 1 -884 1

.

Pmtage PaiJ

Co l b y C o l l ege

Address Correc t ion Req uested

Ligh t i n g Up the P l a c e For t h e

l a:;:- l i 1 99 7 . < l r<l l ll \'

\1m menc c mc n t D.1 \ hcc , 1 rne

g l i t t e n n g c e lebrn t il m . See �t\1r\' . p�1�e 1 4 .

,1


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