CLASSNOTES The College of Liberal Arts A Small Act Yields Generous Rewards The daughter of an Oberlin College professor, Joan Steiner gave 30 years of her life to Drew as a beloved teacher and respected scholar of modern and contemporary British literature. Shortly after arriving at Drew in 1968, Joan developed some of Drew’s earliest courses on African-American literature, then an emerging field of study. University Archives; Bill Cardoni After her retirement in 1998, Joan made Drew a beneficiary of her retirement assets. She also left the university her home in Florham Park, New Jersey. Her gifts, which amount to $2 million, are now supporting the Library Book Endowment Fund as well as materials related to African-American studies. They also serve as a reminder of the transformational impact that bequests and other planned gifts have on Drew. 32 Drew Magazine I Drew and Entrepreneurship Jim Dewart, [email protected] 54 Mary Z. Hepburn, [email protected] I have volunteered to resume doing Classnotes, a position that my wife, Elaine, assumed for many years prior to her death in 2012. Seventy years ago Elaine and I met at a welcome party in Brothers College. I continue to live in our South Jersey home and remain active at the Haddonfield United Methodist Church. I have close ties to my three children, eight grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren. Margo Sarno, who lives at Heritage Village in Southbury, Connecticut, remains upbeat. We remember her incredible solos with the women’s chorus. Mary Romano Alvey C’45, P’77 maintains her private piano pupils and directs a women’s chorus in Morristown. Louis Philippe Goldman C’50 published a book of fables titled The Rise and Fall of the Gimmee Gimmee Birds. I’d appreciate hearing from members of our class. Look for my call for information about your families and activities. By naming Drew a beneficiary of her estate—an easy and powerful gesture of generosity—Joan Steiner left Drew a transformative $2 million planned gift. Your legacy. Drew’s future. For more information on planned gifts, contact David Terdiman C’89, 973.408.3899 or [email protected]. 48 Marianne (Kirchoff) and Warren Campbell C’55 greatly enjoyed a 2014 Christmas visit from their German granddaughter, Katie, who lived with them for a year in 2012–2013 and this year graduated from her German high school. Last spring the Campbells traveled to Germany for a three-week visit with their son, David, and family near Hannover. The group enjoyed a 10-day RV trip through southern Germany, where Marianne visited seven first cousins with whom she had grown up. I was sorry to learn from Ruth Moorman Hardin that her husband, Bill, died in September 2014. She still resides in Stuart, Florida, but returns to Green Pond, New Jersey, in the summer, where both her son and daughter live nearby. She plays golf, bridge and mahjong and belongs to two book clubs. Last fall she went on a cruise to ports in Italy, France and Spain. Ruth exercises daily to “keep fit for two granddaughters, aged 6 and 7.” This past summer she took art lessons. Nan (Lawthers) Dreselly says her life in Vernon, Connecticut, is “same o l’.” She enjoys singing in a choir, taking piano lessons, playing bridge and continuing with her part-time job as a recorder at the Superior Court. Recently she enjoyed a weeklong visit with her granddaughter, a student at Embry Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Florida. Richard “Hoppy” Hammond and his wife, Marilyn, traveled with a group to Lima and on to Cuzco, Peru, to work for two weeks on a construction project at a Cuzco Methodist church. Cuzco is about 14,000 feet in elevation, hence, “breathless” was his description of their time there. They tore down an old adobe kitchen and built a new, outdoor kitchen in its place. They all attended a fourhour Sunday service (Dick said he’d never again complain about an overlong Methodist service back home). “Seeing Machu Picchu,” he said, “should be on everyone’s bucket list.” Pat (Carnaghan) Kroepke is glad to be in Vero Beach, Florida, with the benefits of an ocean breeze. She planned a visit across the state to Sarasota, where her nephew from Long Island was vacationing. She continues her regular volunteer work with the Humane Society. Charles Cross and his wife, Judy, live in Willsboro, New York, on Lake Champlain, where they had some excitement this summer during the high-profile search for escaped convicts. Chic was carefully guarding his paddle boat. The Crosses do leave the cool air and beauty of Lake Champlain each April, when they flee to Sanibel Island, Florida, to recover from those upstate winters. Bob McKee and his wife, Grace, were at Drew Reunion last spring and enjoyed talking with Nancy P’81,’84,’13 and Richard Rice C’54, T’58, P’81,’84,’13 and Marianne and Warren Campbell. Richard Johnston lives in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. He and his wife, Pat, enjoy the activities of their grandchildren. When I mentioned Drew years he recalled the “lounge lizards” (including Bob McKee, Charlie Allen and him). Dick is a former teacher and hopes that people around us continue to learn about the history of our country. Ruth (Brown) Padawer works on archival portfolios for a “lifetime of artwork,” including her original artwork contributed to the Morristown High School yearbook and newspaper, the Drew 1953 Oak Leaves, The Acorn and Tower, as well as for Mademoiselle. More recently, many of our classmates saw copies of her award-winning watercolors presented at our Reunion in 2009. 56 Ronald Vander Schaaf [email protected] Ingrid Mueller May is a celebrity in Leipzig, Germany. Taxi drivers, store owners 60th Reunion and especially the staff and members of St. Thomas Church recognize her. St. Thomas is the home of the Thomaschor, the famous boys’ choir whose first cantor was J.S. Bach. Ingrid and her husband, Albert May, committed $300,000 to Summer 2015 33 the new elementary school the choir members attend. At the setting of the cornerstone Ingrid was given a hammer to set the top of the time capsule. The main auditorium will be named “Ingrid’s Hall” in her honor. Ingrid taught German in two high schools in Ohio for 22 years. Albert is a pediatrician. They have traveled to Germany 19 times on the Queen Mary and will be making their 20th trip in November to celebrate Ingrid’s 82nd birthday. They have two children and six grandchildren. Jim Hill says the biggest news came in a small package when a great-granddaughter arrived last October. Jim lives in Arizona. Mimi Brewster Hollister’s stepson got married in June 2015. Family from all over came for the occasion, including her daughter from Montana. Mimi and her partner, Don Gardner, attended the reunion of the Shanghai American School where Mimi attended eighth and ninth grades. Mimi is in charge of reunions and also edits the school’s alumni news. Carole (Horncastle) C’59 and Dick James C’56, T’59 visited their grandson Brad in Colorado in September 2014. In October they visited their granddaughter, Laura, who attends Miami University in Ohio. They have a grandson at the University of Texas and another at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. In March, they came to Florida. At a dinner meeting we discussed how many of our classmates have died. With the help of David Rein, we determined that 30 classmates are gone. Ruth Schubert Haynes and Roy Haynes attended a family Christmas celebration in Dover, Delaware, with Ruth’s sister. Last August they headed west to Missouri for their stepdaughter’s wedding. In between they journeyed to Lynchburg, Virginia, to celebrate Ruth’s brother’s retirement. As usual, March found them in Florida. As if driving all over the country was not enough, Roy managed to bike more than 1,000 miles, and Ruth did 240. Jean Barbour Peterson teaches writing at Carnegie Mellon University. She sings in choirs and plays in a folk orchestra. Prunella Read Williams went to Scotland in June 2014. Starting in Edinburgh, she traveled to Outer Hebrides, Isle of Skye and ended at Loch Ness. University Advancement SUBMIT YOUR CLASSNOTES [email protected] ALUMNI & PARENT RELATIONS 973.408.3229 800.979.DREW [email protected] ALUMNI HOUSE 36 Madison Avenue Madison, NJ 07940 34 Drew Magazine I Drew and Entrepreneurship Flora Robinson Hullstrung and Bob Hullstrung T’60 moved into an apartment in the home of their son, Russell, in Connecticut. Barbara “Bobbi” Simpson Schlerf keeps busy taking care of her two poodles. Barbara, her daughter, Christine, and three dogs (two poodles plus a Shar-Pei) went to Georgia to celebrate Bobbi’s 80th birthday, the highlight of which was a day spent at Alpine Village in Helen, Georgia. Grandson Matthew started college at the University of West Florida in Pensacola. William Onderdonk’s son, Jeffrey, is a traffic controller at the Seattle Center. His daughter, Susan, and her two sons live near Bill in Spring Lake, New Jersey. The older boy, Adam, attends a local community college, and the younger one, Garrett, is starting ninth grade. The boys have traveled to Belize, China, Hawaii, England and Turkmenistan. As Bill said, how times have changed. When he was a kid, going from Brielle to Asbury Park was a big deal. Patricia Brown McQueen and Bob McQueen C’54 enjoy watching their daughter Diana act in plays. She recently played Billie Dawn in Born Yesterday. Their other children are spread across the land, from Virginia to Montana. Diana Miller Custer has three sons. David lives in Finland with his Finnish wife and three children. Todd is married, has two sons and lives in Manchester, Connecticut. Michael is married and lives in Florida. Both Todd and Michael teach tennis. Claire Dresner Newman and Edward Newman are mostly retired. Their three children attended Oberlin College, and now a granddaughter will enter her sophomore year there. One son has a PhD in neuropsychology from the University of Cincinnati. Another has a PhD in geology from the University of Rochester. The third son has a master’s in information technology from Drexel. Yours truly, Ron Vander Schaaf C’56, T’59, took a 1,050-mile bus tour of Poland in September 2014. Highlights were Holocaust sites, a huge castle, a wondrous salt mine, a Soviet-era apartment building two kilometers long and a Chopin concert in Warsaw, his hometown. I also had a short article published in the “Metropolitan Diary” section of The New York Times based on a mugging I prevented many years ago. My grandson, Mark Vander Schaaf, who developed a strokeprevention medical device, had the instrument approved by the FDA last May. A few days later a doctor who’d just seen a demonstration used the tool to capture and remove a large blood clot in a man suffering a stroke. Within three hours all signs of the stroke were gone. Dottie Simpfendorfer Noyce’s highlight of the year was a trip to the Holy Land in May of 2014. Then she and her sister, Sylvia, went to California for the reunion of the Chilean United Methodist Church Dottie attended in her youth. She reconnected with a high school friend, Richard, and the two have each traveled to meet the other’s family. She also took advantage of a visit with family in New Jersey to go to the Drew Reunion. She had a great time in spite of being the only one from our class in attendance. Don’t forget, next year will be our 60th Reunion. We’re on the verge of getting old and antiquated. But coming to Reunion will rejuvenate you. 57 Eleanor (Sheldon) Stearns [email protected] Dottie Strout deSilva’s son, David deSilva, flew to Beirut in February to talk about his book Introduction to the New Testament, which had just been translated into Arabic. He visited other cities of interest to him and hoped to connect with Judy (Palmer) Harik, but Judy left Beirut and spent the summer on Cape Cod with her daughter, Vaira, intending to do a lot of painting. She sent me a picture of one of her paintings; Mrs. Korn would have been proud. In October on her way home, she will be presenting papers at a conference in Frankfurt that is considering a nuclear- and missile-free zone for the Middle East. She will be addressing the Syrian crisis and Hezbollah’s arsenal. We wish her luck in her efforts at the conference. Jan and Stan Wiley C’57, T’61 are moving again to live in their daughter’s home in Hopewell Junction, New York, with their four grandchildren. After some health scares, Stan is stable and feeling much better. We all hope that he keeps up the good work. Johanna Zimermann Wishart and Vern Wishart G’58 made a trip to Colorado in June, piggybacking on the work-related travels of their daughter, Karen. It was a chance to show her and their son, Jim, who joined them and did the driving (thank heavens—lots of zigzag roads) the place in Colorado where Vern spent his college years, including the Broadmoor Hotel, where Vern worked as head waiter. They then went to Aspen, Rocky Mountain National Park, Boulder and back to Denver for their flight home. The park was a highlight where they saw much wildlife. If anyone wants to join our email group list, please send your email address to me at my address listed above. I love to hear from everyone with news for the magazine or just to keep in touch. 58 John Borden [email protected] Thanks first from all of us to Helen Williams for being our class secretary for so long and doing such a wonderful job! Helen writes that she is trying to sell her historic home in Georgetown, Delaware, so she can move into a retirement home close to her daughter Dawn in Annapolis. Julia and Robert Phyliky rented a home in Venice, Florida, and were visited for dinner and a round of golf by Chris and Doug Lonnstrom. JoAnn Mantel met the Phylikys and Helen in Fort Myers for lunch overlooking the water at a favorite restaurant. Pictures of grandchildren were passed around as well as stories of Willy (Williams) and Greg Mantel. Bob and Julia stopped to see Franki C’60 and Dick Edel in Florida. Dick, in particular, would like to hear from the Class of ’58. Llew Pritchard was feted in Seattle on June 18 as the 2015 outstanding lawyer in King County. He said, “It is terrific to be honored by my peers! Jonie C’59 and I are still holding hands as we lurch through life.” Peg Luisa Mitchell was in Jacksonville, Florida, with her husband, Charles, for a fun reunion with Charles’ shipmates from the William H. Stanley. Peg waves hello from North Carolina to all her classmates. Joyce and Peter Rushbrook went to Disneyland on June 6 for eight days and then to Lake Tahoe for a family reunion. Peter has been retired for 17 years and has yet to become bored. Peter laments that our classmates do not send in their news enough and suggests we all get on Facebook to keep in touch between magazines. Casey Smith Mollach C’58, P’81 lives in beautiful Oswego County, New York, near the famed Cooperstown, on her 70-acre Tanner Hill Herb Farm, growing herbs, perennials, vegetables … “and my pottery, if I ever get to that.” Her brother has the neighboring 500 acres. She has never been happier or felt better. She encourages classmates to find her on Facebook, either as herself or as Tanner Hill Herb Farm. In February and March Casey goes to Caloosahatchee River, Florida, upstream from Fort Myers. Casey may come to California in the fall. David Morse has been enjoying his new inflatable rubber boat, so he is as laid back as a Drew grad has every right to be, being pulled along by his wife, Barbara, in the boat ahead. Nice! Dave is a huge fan of PBS and gardening with Barbara, whose garden is justly famous! Dave sent around a DVD of the garden a while back. Holly and Mac Hubbard just returned from a Florida vacation. There must be something in the southern waters, so many of us end up there now and then. I, myself, have been spending New Year’s in south Florida for 18 years and counting. Nancy and Walter Adams also spend the cold months in Florida. Last fall they attended a reception for Drew President MaryAnn Baenninger at the Union League in Philadelphia, as she had been riding the circuit to meet with various alumni groups. They found her most impressive. “Drew has made a wise choice. We were the most ancient alumni there!” They get into the city often to the art museum, the Barnes Museum and the Philadelphia Orchestra. It’s a short train ride for $1 for senior citizens (Walter detests that patronizing phrase but is happy to have the discount). Otherwise they tend to their grandchildren a couple of times a week and are glad to get to Florida for the winter where they get to see Lorraine “Woody” Wood, William Craven C’57 and Casey Smith Mollach. Dave Ossenkop continues to professionally write program notes for music performances. The Drew Society STUDENTS add to the world’s good by responding to the most urgent challenges of our time. drew.edu/respond FACULTY mentors engage with the world beyond Drew’s gates. drew.edu/engage ALUMNI share their experience and offer service to better the university community. drew.edu/share Members of the Drew Society provide the leadership and support to make Drew a university that shines. Heritage Oak Club: annual gifts of $10,000 or more Copper Beech Club: annual gifts of $5,000–$9,999 Sycamore Cottage Club: annual gifts of $2,500–$4,999 Evergreen Club: annual gifts of $1,000–$2,499 Learn more at drew.edu/drewsociety. He often sends me emails about classical music, which I keep in my music textbooks as reference. During the last 30 years—really as far back as his Hamburg years during the 1960s—Rolf Ahlers has spent most of his time in German Idealist thinking, mainly Jacobi, Fichte and Hegel. Retirement in 2010 brought a stop to his teaching, but Rolf’s research, publication and professional society work continue as usual. He is now working on a new book manuscript that deals with the tradition of negative theology. At the International Conference on Persons at Boston University in August, he read his paper “Holy Robot. Discourse on Persons and Machines in Early German Idealism.” He bones up on his Greek and Latin language skills and 16th-century Italian and studies Greek intensely every morning for 30 minutes. Rolf’s wife, Luise, also retired in 2010 from her decades-long teaching and practicing career in pediatrics in Germany and in upstate New York. They celebrated 50 years of marriage this past July 31. Classmates, please send me news! 59 Ellen deLalla, [email protected] Jodi Della-Cerra Headley C’60 and Pete Headley were very fortunate this winter and didn’t see a single snowflake. They spent most of January in Charleston, South Carolina, and Florida. February and March were spent in Arizona for the 11th year, watching baseball spring training games and the Arabian Horse Show. At the end of May they returned to the Drew campus for Jodi’s 55th Class of 1960 Reunion. They helped raise money for that class’s internship fund. Twelve C’59ers (Pete calls them the “1959 Dandy Dozen”) contributed to the Class of ’60 Internship Fund, helping them reach their required threshold total. Pete says “No wonder I’m so proud of my classmates! Thank you, Dandy Dozen!” Jodi adds, “I owe you all a lunch.” Declares Pete, “We will try to motorcycle your way in the coming months with her credit card.” The last issue of Drew Magazine, with all its Reunion info, reminded Walter Lidman of a very pleasant 10th Reunion his late wife Nancy Taber C’56 attended, during which Summer 2015 35 they ate dinner with Dean Morris, who not only put them at ease but captivated them, getting them to chat easily about trivia and deep matters. Walter still loves teaching developmental reading and writing classes at Union County College in Cranford, New Jersey, where he often sees Jeff Shalan C’84 and Lauren Falkowski, both full-time faculty at UCC. Walter also teaches English as a Second Language to Spanish-speaking employees at a company called Excelsior Medical Corporation in nearby Neptune. Aside from that, he keeps himself in excellent physical condition by swimming 500 yards a day, four days a week. After hearing from Pete and Jodi Headley, I am looking forward to our 60th in 2019! See all of you then! 60 Carl Verrusio, [email protected] This May our class celebrated its 55th Reunion. Wow! Only seven members of the class showed up; nevertheless, we had a wonderful time. A trip into nostalgia now and then is good for the spirit. We all take different paths in life, but no matter where we go we take a little bit of each other with us. The group banded together and railroaded me into being class secretary. Given my propensity to be long-winded, tactless and insensitive, I seemed well suited for the job. Proceed at your own risk. My bride, Elaine Norris Verrusio, and I were walking across campus when I said, “That sounds like Nancy Marshall Stroh.” Lo and behold, she and Judy Smith appeared on the path. Kiss, kiss, hug, hug! We agreed to meet at the Korn Gallery after we registered. As we approached the registration site the door opened and Jodi Della-Cerra Headley and Pete Headley C’59 emerged. Little did we realize that except for Midge Morell Campbell and George Hayward, that would be it for our reunion party. Bennett Cerf— not a classmate—said, “Middle age is when your classmates are so gray and wrinkled and bald they don’t recognize you.” Do you think more of you were there but we didn’t recognize one another? The Elizabeth Korn exhibit was exceptional. There was a progression of her work from early figure studies to Neo-Dada (oh my!) reliefs and mixed media collages with classical figures. I have always wanted to own one of her paintings, and much to my delight some of the paintings in the exhibit were for sale. After the gallery show, the group gathered at the lovely home of Midge and Ed Campbell C’58 for drinks, refreshments and reminiscing (read: gossiping). Judy Smith said, “Carl, if you haven’t anything nice to say about anybody, come sit next to me.” Elaine intervened, and we were forced to behave. You will recall that when we graduated, the Age of Aquarius was waiting in the wings. Our generation embraced the New Age movement with a vengeance, and set out to change the world. The most recent manifestation of our trendsetting, mind-bending, over-the-top approach to life involves a member of our class who married his father. This requires an explanation. For years Norman MacArthur and William Novak wished to solemnize their 52-year relationship through marriage. Since this was not possible given our antediluvian marriage laws, they first registered as domestic partners in New York City, but when they moved to Bucks County they learned that Pennsylvania did not recognize domestic partners. The only legal method to protect their spousal rights and assets at the time was through adoption. In 2000 they obtained an adoption decree and Bill became Norman’s father. Nearly 15 years later, when Pennsylvania’s marriage laws were declared unconstitutional, it seemed that common sense would prevail and they could at last be married. Not so fast! Their status as parent and child was a problem, so they filed a petition to vacate the adoption decree. In May the adoption decree was vacated (the first time in Pennsylvania) and Norman and Bill were free to marry, which they did soon after. Mazel tov, guys. Oh yes, the Episcopal priest officiating at the ceremony was none other than our own peripatetic preacher Nancy Marshall Stroh. Provence, the Holy Land, Bucks County ... “Have Bible, will travel.” We should elect her class pastor. On Saturday morning our small group attended the Alumni Achievement Awards Champagne Brunch. The recipient of the Volunteer Award was our longtime class agent, George Hayward, who gave an outstanding acceptance speech. His underplayed, deadpan delivery suggested he was channeling George Gobel. He had the audience roaring as he recounted tales of the Drew food strike and his four winless years on the hapless basketball team. At one point after the team blew a game, the coach refused to buy the team dinner. George’s fundraising team (Midge, Jodi and special assistant Pete Headley) raised $56,750 for the Class of 1960 Internship Fund—a recordbreaking year for both the amount donated and class participation (81 percent of our class gave!). See photo below. Regrets from Vic Burke (lost his crown, on a front tooth), Jerome Wolfson (family emergency), John Gill (in Seattle for the birth of his fifth grandchild), Carol Purdy Twomey (too far to drive alone) and Deanna Formica Lewis (didn’t finish her English lit paper). Reid Morrow moved to a retirement community in Knoxville, Tennessee, following the death of his wife, Adelle. Robert Bredin moved from Hilton Head to Fort Mill, South Carolina. He is involved in community theatre and just wrote his first book, Grains of Sand (available on Amazon), about a retired Wall Street executive who trades the challenges of investing for the life lessons discovered as a trash man on the beach. Judy Smith is still in New York City, where she teaches reading and is involved with a small theatre group. (Probably runs the whole show like she did at Drew.) She and I each know one of the authors of a new comedy, Application Pending. That’s all, folks. Keep those cards and letters coming. I’m a troglodyte when it comes to new technologies. Remember what Emerson said, “The best effect of fine persons is felt after we have left their presence.” Please send news to me at the email above (don’t forget the extra “e”) or 107 East Nevada Ave., Beach Haven, NJ 08008. 63 THE CLASS OF ’60 RAISED MORE THAN $54,610 FOR THEIR INTERNSHIP FUND LAST FISCAL YEAR! 36 Drew Magazine I Drew and Entrepreneurship Ellen E. Baker, [email protected] Hello from Maryland! I’m delighted to hear from Jeff Gillman, who is still working part time for a local law firm, which gives him, as his wife, Marie, says, the financial freedom to chase the little white ball all over a golf course. He enjoys the office work, which keeps the gray matter working. The Gillmans’ kids and grandkids are all within a 30-minute drive. Thus, they pick them up, drop them off, visit school activities and watch sports, which keeps both of them going. They winter in Florida, with golf clubs in tow for Jeff and book for Marie. They’re taking a trip to France soon, after spending a vacation in Scotland, Wales and England last year. My hometown friend, Candy Ridington, a volunteer for the Montgomery County Maryland Historical Society, will be portraying Emily Dickinson in Attleboro, Massachusetts, in October, for the Conference of Retired Unitarian Ministers. After all these years, I finally made it across the pond. My husband and I traveled above the Arctic Circle in Norway in hopes of seeing the Northern Lights. We finally did for a brief moment in Tromso. We also spent a fascinating time in London and nearby Windsor Castle. The Churchill War Room was intriguing, and we had a chance to visit John Wesley’s Church and learn some more about our Methodist heritage. Windsor Castle and Westminster Abbey were truly amazing and make age 73 seem not so old after all. Not all of us are Facebook regulars, so please send an update to keep us posted on your most recent adventures. 64 Jackie Shahzadi [email protected] Toni (Kenner) Pepe writes that “life is good.” 2015 marks her 45th year of singing in the Danbury Concert Chorus, one of the performing groups of the Danbury Music Centre in Connecticut. Next spring she and her husband, John, celebrate their 50th anniversary. Their daughter, Mara, author of Inner Divinity, continues her work as an artist and healer in North Carolina. Every summer their extended family has a reunion at Capon Springs and Farms in West Virginia, a rustic and peaceful resort. Dianne Murphy Frazier C’64, P’97 is still consulting in genetics, mostly on a volunteer basis. She is also completing the certificate program in botanical illustration through the University of North Carolina Botanical Gardens. Though this activity might not ever lead to any job offers, Dianne says it is great fun to use a different part of her brain. Her husband, Jim, also continues to work, but has scaled down to allow many other activities. They are the proud grandparents of Betsy and Sadie, their daughter Jenny Leventhal’s [C’97] children. Daphne Miller-Marselas and her husband are happily retired and enjoying a relaxed lifestyle with two dogs, several cats and a summer veggie garden. Daphne goes to yoga twice a week, walks the dogs, reads, cooks and enjoys using her electronic tablet. Donald Scott is still serving as minister of visitation at Trinity Presbyterian Church in Palm Coast, Florida, where he is also a chaplain at Florida Hospital Flagler working in the same-day surgery unit. He also runs the church’s columbarium, is editor of its monthly newsletter and manages its Facebook page. Retirement has been busy, according to Don, but his wife, Vickie, and he get to enjoy three weeks each October at their beachfront condo in Cancún, Mexico. Don’s son, Kirk, and his grandkids live four hours south in the Fort Lauderdale area. Don loves Florida! In December 2014, my daughter, Susanne, became a live kidney donor in a donor chain, which ultimately resulted in her husband receiving a much-needed kidney from another live donor. Coincidently, she just started THE CLASS OF ’65 CELEBRATING THEIR 50TH REUNION IN MAY 2015. Front row: Kathy Henry, Carol (Mims) Dukes, Joyce Brunelle Pazianos, Isabelle (Miller) Kanz, Naomi Shapiro, Dianne Mabb Peeling. Second row: Howard Currid, Art Mittler, Keir Hoeltzel, Peggy Leichthammer Domber, Isabelle (Street) Smith, Bruce Littmann, Barbara Eichhorn Stevens. Third row: John Hicks, Jon Schweiger, David Schlansker, Allen Hood, Bob Smart, Andrea (Kaufmann) Scott-Ram, Jim Eastman. Top row: John Allen, George Burrill, Roger “Rusty” Martin. a new job with One Legacy, coordinating organ donations! Everyone reading this: Please consider donating your organs. I am still remembering fondly our 50th class Reunion at Drew, with good thoughts of all those who came to celebrate. Hope to see even more at the next Reunion! 65 Allen Hood, [email protected] Naomi Shapiro greatly enjoyed seeing and speaking to classmates Joyce Brunelle Pazianos, Dianne Mabb Peeling, Carol (Mims) Dukes and the two Izzy’s, Smith and Kanz. She says the movie, The Duck Diaries, was terrific and hopes everyone will get a chance to see it in the future! Naomi continues to teach cello, volunteer at New Eyes, swim and hike. She is also enjoying her partner’s semiretirement, since he can now share dinner-making activities! Joel Merchant heard from four longtime friends who weren’t able to make it to Reunion because of scheduling conflicts. George Engelhardt was unable to attend Reunion, but was planning to go on a safari this past summer with his wife, Carolyn. Your class correspondent, Allen Hood C’65, P’92, had a busy winter blowing snow. My wife, Kit, and I finally had enough by the end of February and headed to Cape Coral, Florida. My pal, Pumpkin Beagle, and I headed home in April to mow the lawn and begin gardening. I had a wonderful time at our 50th Reunion, greatly enjoying seeing classmates again. I’d love to hear from everyone. Please write to the email address above, or to 380 Whitney Road, South Royalton, VT 05068. My door is always open for visitors! 74 Mark P. Lang, [email protected] Pam Jutkus Schmidle and my old roommate, Robert Schmidle C’75, report that Bob completed his doctorate at Georgetown. His thesis was The Power of Context in Shaping Moral Choices—perfect for a Marine Corps lieutenant general. Robert works in the Pentagon analyzing defense strategies and weapons cost and effectiveness. I ran marathon number 31 and have entered another. I’m also training my puppy in versatility, working toward a show. 75 Robert Zwengler [email protected] The Class of 1975 had a good turnout for our 40th Reunion in May. It was great reconnecting with so many people. Among those in attendance were Rusty Siegel, Mike Sigal, Ed Golinowski, Frank Brady, William Muscato, Michelle Boyle, Anne and Jeff Noss and Scott Amann C’74. Lynn K. Jones recently started an online coaching program to complement her inperson and phone coaching, consulting, training and retreat services. She hopes that this service will allow her clients to be able to access her services no matter how busy their schedule is. 76 Marie “Seren” Walls Cohen is one of the fewer than 50 psychologists certified as a geropsychologist. To become certified, Seren passed mul40th Reunion tiple rigorous written and oral examinations concerning the mental health needs of the elderly and their families. She has been practicing as a clinical geropsychologist for the last 20 years. 77 Deborah Yingling [email protected] 2015 was a significant year for most of us because we turned 60. While each of us may have different thoughts Summer 2015 37 Join us for the Department of Music’s HOLIDAY CHOIR GALA & CONCERT FEATURING Benjamin Britten’s Saint Nicolas & Music for the Season Saturday, December 5, 2015 Cocktails & Dinner | Concert Proceeds benefit the Drew University Department of Music and its Choral & Vocal Studies program. Sponsorship opportunities are available. drew.edu/choirgala about approaching that decade, it is a milestone, and those milestones have a way of making us look backward and forward. I was fortunate to celebrate my milestone in May in the company of several dear friends from Drew. Laura Papa, Larry Babbin C’79, Jennifer Beaver, Christine Stack Bell, Paul Bell C’76, Michelle Boyle C’75, Kathy Hyman Floyd C’78, P’13, Robin Stern, Oona Stieglitz C’79 and her husband, Lee Arbetman, and other family and friends, helped me to celebrate turning 60. Doug Goodman C’76 and Nikki Shomer C’78 wrote well wishes. The gathering of Laura, Jenny, Chris and Robin at our house was particularly meaningful because of our long connection, since freshmen year, and because geographical distances make it sometimes hard for us to get together on a regular basis. The power of our connection has prevailed all these years, and that force that was the two Holloway quads freshman year and the Foster 22 suite sophomore year is still felt when we get together. While I will always be grateful for the formal education I received at Drew, the personal development and friendships experienced had perhaps the most lasting effect. Andrew Sciranka retired from his post with the Laser Spine Institute on Dec. 5, 2014. He is a professor of medicine at the University of Science, Arts and Technology, a position he’s held for the past three years. Andrew lives in Scottsdale, Arizona, with his shelties. The Facebook posts I see by Drew friends indicate that others also developed lasting friendships during their Drew years. Happy 60th birthday, Class of 1977! Before we know it, in 2017, we will be celebrating our 40th Reunion—a big one we don’t want to miss. In the meantime, write to me and let me know how you celebrated your 60th birthday. What is going on with you? 38 Drew Magazine I Drew and Entrepreneurship 78 Thomas Tani [email protected] Guy Blumberg and his wife, Melissa, “live a pretty quiet life, especially by Manhattan standards.” Guy said they are homebodies but do enough typical New York-y things to not be considered boring. Three years ago Guy went back to the education media world and works with Editorial Projects in Education. Guy spends occasional time with Nancy Frohman, Martha Herrmann and Marla and Paul Boren. He recently spent an entire Sunday morning with Eric White while in San Francisco for a conference. Craig Stanford is still a professor of biology at the University of Southern California (USC, for acronym lovers), and continues to study and publish books about great apes and human origins. He also does a lot of traveling with his anthropologist wife, Erin. His son, Adam, will be a freshman at Stanford University in the fall and just hiked the John Muir trail solo. His daughter Marika is a senior at USC, and his eldest daughter, Gaelen, is putting in crazy hours as a thirdyear medical student at the University of California, San Francisco. Exciting, indeed! Debra Bass C’78, G’90,’02 has had, in her words, “a very busy year.” She celebrated her 40th year in the preaching ministry, in which she presented a workshop on the racial and gender issues in the Woman at the Well story for the Presbyterian Church in Alabama in August, completed her third book, Journaling through the Year with God, and was appointed dean of conference course studies at the AME Zion Church, Birmingham District, North Alabama Conference. Dennis Wanless is still instructing continuing education classes for water and wastewater treatment plant operators in Virginia. Dennis says that developing and presenting classes on dozens of different topics over the last decade makes him feel he will never be done with term papers and exam preparation. He is puzzled that despite his research skills, he can’t locate Rob Mack or Denise Olesky from our class, and asks if anyone else knows what has become of them. Joanna Mauer “continues to survive” as an appellate public defender in Tallahassee. She is also in a loving, growing relationship; her partner built them a movement and meditation studio on their property. She wishes she had more time to use it, as she is also very busy continuing to present “Transforming Through Moving” workshops. She continues to be indebted to and thinks fondly of Drew! Marlene Connor sent her regrets for missing Reunion this year. After many years of working in architectural/engineering firms on public transportation planning projects, she set up her own consulting practice, Marlene Connor Associates. Her company is based in Massachusetts and North Carolina, but she works on assignments all over the country. She said, “It’s great to be out trying the new market economy and making a go of it!” From the “small world” category, Gail Gardner sent this story: “Last summer I was sitting under a tree at Maine Fiddle Camp, talking with a friend I’d met there a few years before. He was telling me about a trip he’d gone on after college. When I asked where he went to college, he told me that it was a small college in New Jersey called Drew University. It turned out that we were there at the same time (I transferred there for my junior and senior years, and he was there all four). Since I took a lot of art and English classes and he was in the sciences, we don’t remember meeting, in spite of Drew’s small size. But Jonathan Leonard and I are great friends now!” Carol Torchia Clinton asked me to let the class know that she wed her longtime beau, Joe Reina, on July 11, in a garden outside a restaurant in Basking Ridge, New Jersey. “Both sets of family and offspring, his and mine, celebrated that we finally tied the knot!” Since completing her master’s, she’s been working as a certified holistic nutritionist for a couple of integrative practitioners in the Somerville area. Joe is a consultant project manager for J&J in Raritan. Bonni Van Blarcom works as a trade policy specialist, advising governments on trade policy reform and assisting the private sector with public policy advocacy. She is currently at the Library of Congress, Business Reference Services, in Washington, D.C. Bonni welcomes visitors to the D.C. area. Lynne Merbler Pradke became a firsttime grandma! Her beautiful granddaughter, Gianna Marie, was born on June 9, and “of course, she is the most perfect baby ever!” Her oldest daughter is getting married on October 3. Lots of excitement! Susan Fenske McDonough remains in New Hampshire helping to care for her 98-yearold dad, an amazing WWII vet, who still gets out to seniors’ potluck lunches. She had a couple of nice visits at Drew this spring to meet the new president and some of the new staff, and enjoyed the Celebration of Benefactors luncheon with her brother Karl Fenske C’74. (There’s an intern scholarship in her mother’s name.) Freddi C’79 and Jack Dempsey’s oldest daughter, Kelli, 21, is a junior at Ramapo majoring in biology and wants to go into research or genetic counseling. At the same time their middle daughter, Allison, 18, just graduated high school and will enter Rowan in September to study graphic arts and music. Their youngest, Shannon, 14, will be a freshman at Somerville High School. Not to be left out, the pair celebrated their 34th wedding anniversary on June 13 in Sea Girt at a place called Scarborough Fair, which was also the title of their wedding song. Jack and Freddi met in botany class October 14, 1976. “OMG the years.” I, Tom Tani, feel like a slacker when reading about the great accomplishments of my classmates. I continue to enjoy retirement, and just finished my third year full-time substitute teaching, staying busy until Christine retires early as well. Someone asked me what the difference is between corporate life and a school environment and my answer was, “I deal with more adults in school (bah duh bump).” Working with Madison, Morris Plains and the Parsippany-Troy Hills districts offers all the opportunities I could want, with the freedom to be able to say no when I’d rather referee rugby matches. This spring saw me doing a lot of U19 (high school) matches in addition to adult ones, which is a form of substitute teaching in itself. I find myself meeting more U19 vintage ruggers who are sons or daughters of folks I played against. Time marches on. Christine, Philip and I enjoyed a great vacation to London during the past Christmas holiday. It will be our last “fun” vacation for a while, as our next family trips will be centered around the college search process! It’s been very enjoyable talking with Drew alums who have already gone through it all. While I didn’t see anyone else from our class at this past revival of the spring Reunion, the numbers apparently were good enough that Drew will keep this going. Hopefully we will have our usual stellar turnout when our 40th rolls around in 2018! to provide adult supervision in the form of refereeing the almost-annual alumni rugby match, stepping into the shoes of Tom Tani C’78, our traditional referee, who this year was a late arrival. Mike has been living up in Vermont for a few years and comes down for all the important alumni events. Others in attendance were Steve Dultz, a dentist in Gillette, New Jersey; Keith Martin, an attorney in the Philadelphia area; Michael Ravensbergen, who works for JPMorgan Chase in New York City; and Kevin Marino, an attorney in and around New Jersey. You can see Kevin mentioned in some newspapers from time to time when he represents some higher-profile clients. Alison Grillo came out from New York City. Alison, among other things, is a stand-up comedian, which takes her on the road to colleges and universities. Craig Keyworth came up from Georgia, where he works at ADP; Marianne Hyzak Ehinger and Tony Ehinger came over from Morristown to check on the campus; and Andy Rupp came up from Berkeley Heights. Ralph Scoville played in the alumni rugby match along with me. Having Ralph, Exxon and me on the pitch meant that the Class of 1980 was better represented than any other class, with the possible exception of the Class of 2017. Speaking of the match, Paul Cortellesi C’84 got a crash course in playing in the front row and survived it—even while wearing sneakers. Ben Malin C’90 temporarily traded the use of an arm for a T-shirt. Over the extended July 4 weekend, Steve Thompson C’83 hosted a soiree at his house in Maplewood in honor of our visiting prodigal brother, Tony Buttacavoli C’82, who was in town with his wife, Delane. Tony and Delane are both commercial pilots and live in the Detroit area with their daughter, Hannah. Also visiting the Thompson homestead that evening were Mickey Green C’79, Bill Ehlers C’82, Ricki Curran C’82, Lisa King Nolet C’84, Edith Wolf Marucci C’86 and Tony Marucci C’85. Chip Nolet, who retired from his law practice, was in Atlanta with their youngest child, Pete, at a baseball event. Drop me a line. Let me know what you’re up to, via the Drew alumni office, the email above or the C’80 Facebook page! 83 Susan Kessler Apter [email protected] Heidi Utz works as an editor for National Geographic Books and recently moved to Montana. She continues her work as a professional writer and photographer. Mordechai Bermann retired as president of the New Jersey State Society of Anesthesiologists in March after the completion of his two-year term. He has been chief of the anesthesia department at Southern Ocean Medical Center in Manahawkin, New Jersey, for the past nine years. His daughter, Mia, was married on June 28 in Long Branch, New Jersey, to Shai Van Gelder. My husband, Alan Apter C’80, and I took a trip to London and Paris in May, visiting our son on his semester abroad from the University of Maryland, from which he will be a 2016 graduate. This was my first trip back to Paris since the spring of 1982, when I did the Drew London Semester and spent part of spring break touring Paris with Becky Emmons Wisser and James Dobbins C’83, P’15. 85 William Pezzuti, [email protected] Katherine L. Savige’s daughter, Morgan, just graduated from Riverdale Country School in the Bronx and will be attending the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia this autumn. She had a big celebration at the Monkey Bar in NYC for her 17th birthday on May 29. Katherine celebrated her 51st birthday last November at Le Bilboquet—a large, irreverent bash. They divided this past summer between Maui and Sagaponack. They’re still on the Upper West Side with their Yorkie, McTavish. 86 Sandra Miller [email protected] Harriet Middleton Wright finished nursing school last year and has been working 30th Reunion in psychiatric behavioral 79 Richard Raphael was awarded the Austin Joenen Career Achievement Award on May 6 during the Municipal Forum of New York’s 26th annual Awards and Urban Leadership Fellows dinner. Richard has been with Fitch Ratings since 1989 and is currently the U.S. public finance head. 80 Chris Walsh [email protected] We had our 35th Reunion at Drew in May, as Reunion weekend has been moved back to the spring. Perhaps we’ll all be more used to that in five years, and we’ll get a big turnout. Among our classmates who attended were a newly almost-svelte Mike Stern C’80, T’84, who’s almost half the man he used to be. Mike was feeling spry enough THE CLASS OF ’90 CELEBRATED THEIR 25TH REUNION IN MAY 2015. Back row: James Jones C’89, Audrey Rigsbee, Deb (Barkhausen) McKinley, Traci Hilbert (wearing sunglasses), Brett Hendricks, Ben Malin, Craig Chanti, Anne Yearsley Crisafulli. Front row: Dean Blumetti, Christine Zmurek, Khurt Williams C’91, Bhavana Raval Williams, Emilio Cordova, Bonnie Draina, Linda HagenBurger Krebs, Deb Pawlikowski, Danielle Ring. Summer 2015 39 health in acute care. While she especially enjoys her young adult patients, she is hoping to move to pediatric nursing. Harriet and her husband, Cary, will celebrate their 25th anniversary this fall. Their son Henry, 20, has been cooking in a local restaurant and may apply to culinary school. Despite his extensive kitchen training, he has managed not to cook a family meal at home. Their daughter Addie, 18, captained her high school soccer team to a Virginia Independent School Division I state title and is now at Wake Forest University, fulfilling her dream to play Division I college soccer. Harriet still catches a movie with Paul Babitts every few months, or they’ll pass each other (Paul in an oldschool white Volvo sedan) driving around Richmond, where they both live. Alicia Galli-Amil took a new role as vice president and global product and technology counsel at Automatic Data Processing, where she has worked in the legal department for 20 years. She and her husband, Bill, will celebrate their 20th wedding anniversary this year. Their daughter, Sara, is finishing her freshman year in high school and plays on a nationally ranked field hockey team as goalie; their son, William, is in middle school. Stephanie Miller Laborde lives in New Orleans with her husband, Bo; they have three sons, one of whom is starting his freshman year at Georgetown. Stephanie has been Facebooking with Cheryl Nelson, who lives with her husband and two children on the island of Nevis in the Caribbean. Stephanie thinks a road trip may be in the works. Brenda Rhodes started contract work as a business analyst at Genesys, which sells IVR solutions to call centers. She is thrilled to be working from home while taking the occasional business trip to Canada. Brenda continues to sing in her church choir and the Georgia Symphony Orchestra Chorus. She also volunteers at many different agencies as well as running her nonprofit, Simple Needs GA, which celebrated its fifth anniversary in June. Brenda was accepted into Leadership Cobb, a ninemonth program run by her county Chamber of Commerce that recognizes local leaders in business and the nonprofit community. On the home front, Brenda got closer to the crazy cat lady designation, as she now rescues kittens and keeps them in her bathroom until she finds them homes. Margaret Lee recently attended her 25th reunion for the University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine. She is still practicing in West Chester, Pennsylvania, with her husband, Eric Shelly, and a third partner. She has also started her own business making jewelry (horsetaillegacy.com). I had a great time catching up with Marc Scarduffa this spring when he was in Cambridge for business. Marc is still slightly baffled by my choice of lunch restaurant, which featured a bar completely covered in Wacky Packages stickers and a life-size Barbie doll in the foyer. Thanks for keeping me up to date with your news. I love hearing from you. 40 Drew Magazine I Drew and Entrepreneurship Jess (Snyder) C’02 and Jeremy Katzeff were married in November 2014. Stevan Overby Jendi C’99 (far right) officiated the ceremony, and Toral Patel Jendi C’02 (next to Stevan) was a bridesmaid. 92 Vanessa Allen Sutherland has served as the chief counsel for the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration at the Department of Transportation since 2011. On March 3, President Obama nominated Vanessa to serve as chair of the Chemical Safety Board. 93 Having completed her degree in veterinary technology, Karen Thomas Kolber is now pursuing a master’s degree in veterinary education through the Royal Veterinary College. 96 Shannon Tilton Travis [email protected] Greetings, my fellow C’96 classmates, from Jacksonville, Florida. Let me reintroduce 20th Reunion myself: I am Shannon Tilton Travis. Since we graduated, I married my wonderful husband, Jeff, almost 10 years ago. We’ve had the privilege to explore and travel to various places around the world, including Italy, Spain, Greece, Cyprus, Malta, Egypt, South Africa, Mexico, the Caribbean and others. My career blossomed in the property and casualty insurance space. I am now a director working in the advisory practice for PricewaterhouseCoopers LLC. My jobs allowed me the opportunity to live and work in two wonderful states (Virginia, and now Florida), and now I get to travel weekly and experience many of the great cities in our country. It is exciting for me to be taking on the role of class secretary. I look forward to catching up with each and every one of you and capturing your stories for Drew Magazine. Please reach out to me and let me know what is happening in your life. You can reach me at the email above or at 804.397.5195. Have a wonderful autumn. 97 Daniel Ilaria, [email protected] Mauricio Rodriguez is a behavioral health counselor at Broadway House in Newark. He and his wife, Claudia, welcomed twin boys, Bryan and Randy, on Dec. 22, 2014. Mauricio and Claudia celebrate their ninth wedding anniversary in September and live in Summit, New Jersey. Sara Hall Phillips is a project manager with the National Association of State Workforce Agencies Unemployment Integrity Center of Excellence. Sara gets to work from home in Columbus, Ohio, and enjoys the extra time with Leah, her two-year-old daughter. Kat O’Connor just released her first audio drama, Simple Harmonic Motion, from her Burning Bridge Media company. My wife, Kristine Papachristos Ilaria C’00, and I welcomed Emerson Joy on March 19. Our son, Aaron, 6, enjoys being a big brother. I continue to work with preservice mathematics teachers at West Chester University and as a professional development consultant with Teachers Teaching with Technology. Marti Winer is the chief of staff for MaryAnn Baenninger at Drew. She enjoys the challenging work and not having to search for a parking spot around campus. 98 Kristen Daily Williams [email protected] Hey, classmates! I had the great pleasure of attending the July 11 wedding of Aaron Smith and the brilliant and beautiful Danielle Kane in New York City. At the reception, where we all enjoyed breathtaking views of Lady Liberty and her purlieu, there were at least two tables chock-full of Drew folk. Despite the delectable menu, we weren’t seated for long. Burning up the dance floor like it was a 1996 cast party were William Addis, Carolin Collins, Kate Cyr, Darren DeMarco C’96, Annie DiMario C’00, Marsha Harman, Jennifer Jones C’97, Suzanne Longley, Joe Mihalchick, Sarah Murphy, Meg Daniel Nelson C’97, Steven Strafford C’99, Joy Tomasko C’97 and, of course, the amazing bride and groom. And, guess what! I have news from others to report! Katherine (Smith) Krivan and her husband, David, have been living in Truckee, California, near Lake Tahoe, for more than two years. Anna is in first grade, and Frank is nearly 4. The Krivans enjoy the magnificent Sierras— and happily welcome visitors! To celebrate her approaching—ahem—milestone birthday, Katherine rode in a Sierra Century bike ride on June 7. How about the rest of you? What are your 40th birthday plans? Stacey (Trzesinski) McClain’s family grew by one daughter last April: Abigail Violet. Emily, 3, loves being a big sister. The McClains live in Berlin, New Jersey, just outside Philadelphia, where Stacey works full time at home for an arts consulting company, Elliott Marketing Group. Her clients include the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra and the Philadelphia Orchestra. Chiara Mastrodomenico Engstrom saw John Holden, Rob Benacchio, Joe Lamberti, Lisa Cornacchia and Jeanine Columbo at the Wall Street Semester reunion last spring. It was the first time she’d done a Drew alumni event since graduation—and we hope it won’t be the last. Chiara said Danielle Paganuzzi wasn’t able to make it because she was on a tropical island vacation with her fiancé. Very good excuse. Chiara sees Jeanine once in a while at AIG, where they work in different areas. Chiara’s been at AIG nine years and is currently the chief of staff for the treasurer. She says she “moved really far away from Drew … all the way to Chatham,” has been married nine years, and has two kids, Sebastian and Annika. She saw Joel Wallace, who lives in D.C.; they did a tour of Drew (“it was amazing to see all the work that has been done”) and lunched at the Nautilus. In April, she did a half-marathon relay and helped raise $10,000 for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. It turns out Jennifer Morgan Kidd C’97 was running with and fundraising for the same group. Chiara says it was awesome to give back to an organization she benefitted from: She was diagnosed with (and beat, thankfully!) stage four non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2014. Chiara, you’re an inspiration! Penny (Trease) Schade lives in Germany, where she helped organize and maintains a clothing bank for residents in need from countries like Kosovo, Syria, Albania, Eritrea, Somalia and Serbia. Sometimes her daughter joins her. Penny stays busy working and caring for her daughter and son, and just enjoyed a summer vacation in Turkey. She loves seeing the updates and pictures of fellow Drewids on Facebook. Jonathan Slaght translated Vladimir Arsenyev’s 1921 book Across the Ussuri Krai from Russian into English. It was picked up by Indiana University Press with an autumn 2016 release date. He is in talks with the Russian and the environmental studies and sustainability departments at Drew to give a talk on campus about his work with owls in Russia this fall. Mia Pappas is getting married May 15, 2016, to Steve Piluso, a Boston College grad. We’ll look for a photo in Drew Magazine next year! Jill (Graffagnino) Nitkinas was elected to her local Board of Education and began her three-year term in January. Kathy Forrestal is in the final stages of her master’s degree in adolescent education while serving as director of education at King Manor Museum in Queens, New York, the historic home of founding father Rufus King. Most weekends find her on a hiking trail or mountain. Kathy finished climbing the 48 peaks in New Hampshire that are over 4,000 feet in elevation. Nine to go for the 115 highest peaks in the northeast. Speaking of exercise, Fran CaggianoSwenson is training for a Half Ironman this September and ran several marathons last year—one with Chris Tyburski C’96. During Reunion 2015, Fran attended fencing Coach Dayn DeRose’s retirement party in Great Hall, where she, not surprisingly, ran into John Holden. And when she’s not commuting from New Jersey to the company she works for in Minnesota (you read that correctly), she’s hard at work with her husband and two cats finishing a never-ending bathroom renovation. (Note to self: Investigate cats as construction crew.) Heather (McMurchie) Champagne and her husband, Craig T’00, hang out on occasion with Deb (Pierce) C’97 and Paul Coen C’91 and the aforementioned Chris Tyburski and Fran Caggiano-Swenson and their respective spouses, Joan’na and Jan. Deb and Craig work together at West Orange High School. Heather works as a paralegal at a medical malpractice firm. She is running for town council for her ward in Roxbury! As if that doesn’t keep her busy enough, inspired by my last column’s evocative description of the scrumptious baked goods in my life (or perhaps moved to take pity on me), Heather has plans to send me a holiday care package with her own goodies. Who knew being a class secretary came with such bonuses? 99 Kristy Miskoff Materasso [email protected] Alison Bayersdorfer Vovchuk and Dmitry Vovchuk live in Brussels, where Dmitry works for NATO. Alison is pausing from full-time work outside the home as a reading specialist to enjoy exploring Europe with Dmitry and their boys, Nicholas, 7, and Benjamin, 5. Yesenia Aquino Ruffin has lived in Australia for the past seven years with her husband, Michael, and their two young sons. Yesenia works part time with the severely mentally unwell in reaching recovery goals. She and her husband also own an IT consulting company. Yesenia continues to write during her rare free time and is hoping to dust off her completed screenplays and submit them to the pros when she works up the nerve. 00 Kate Harvey Gratto, kate.gratto@ gmail.com; Jennifer Hicks Tocco, [email protected]; Janet Wong, [email protected] Thank you to all of our classmates who returned to campus for Reunion this year! We received happy news from Anna Kaltsas, who married Fotios Harmantzis in August on the Greek island of Sifnos. Congratulations to Anna and her groom! Brian Smallwood is an assistant professor in technical direction for the Department of Theatre at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. For Wendy Crouse, who spends six months a year traveling, Bali has become a second home. There she creates batik artwork at a local artist’s studio. Thank you for sharing, Wendy! Rebecca Fraser Thill and her husband, Brian, welcomed Theodore William on June 16. He joins older sister, Kara, who is thrilled to trade her baby dolls for a real baby! Alison O’Connor Wetmur married John Wetmur in 2012, and they make their home in New London, Connecticut. In April 2014, they welcomed a son, Liam. After leaving Drew, Alison learned American Sign Language, then earned a master’s degree in social work at Rutgers. She works as a licensed clinical social worker providing in-office mental health counseling to both deaf and hearing clients. Alison is a longtime adjunct professor of sign language at Manchester Community College. Edward Dooley works as a systems engineer at Picatinny Arsenal. He and his wife, Stacey, live in Madison with their two kids, Emma and Shawn. Ed loves watching Emma compete on her swim team, and Shawn just graduated kindergarten. Thanks to everyone for sharing your updates, and we look forward to hearing more from you soon! Aaron Loether C’11 and Annie Horlick C’12 married on August 24, 2014, with lots of Drew friends in attendance. Summer 2015 41 01 Maren Watkins Calzia [email protected] Congratulations to Katie Woods for her induction to the Connecticut Lacrosse 15th Reunion Hall of Fame. Katie is the women’s lacrosse coach at the University of Connecticut, and the Huskies finished with a winning record in each of Woods’ first four years at UConn as well as making their first appearance in the NCAA Tournament. Jairo Cano was married on April 11. The happy couple had their engagement photos shot on Drew’s beautiful campus! In addition, the American Bar Association’s Tax Section selected Jairo as one of six Nolan Fellows for the 2015–2016 period, in recognition of his leadership qualities. Many bouncing baby Drewlers have been born in recent months. In December, Sara Zarbo Morrison, her husband, Shawn, and daughter, Charlotte, welcomed new baby Henry to their family. Sara and her family live in Los Angeles. Maria E. Perez and her husband, Telmo, welcomed their first child, Ines Sofía, on January 8, at Morristown Medical Center just one day before Anetta Puszynski Burdzy welcomed her first child. Heather Cantwell Miller and Matt Miller welcomed Adalyn Drew Miller on April 9. On May 18, Bart Zoni and his wife, Anna, introduced Natalia Magdalena. Bart is optimistic she will hit it off famously with Chris McNulty’s boys. Some classmates have been planting their roots. After purchasing a three-story Victorian house in Somerset County, Michele Wallace C’01, G’05 is a hip homesteader, raising free-range chickens—very handy after the hike in egg prices. She stays busy building an apocalyptic bomb shelter and growing organic veggies. D.J. Wright purchased a funeral home in Flemington, New Jersey: Wright and Ford Family Funeral Home and Cremation Services (wrightfamily.com). The funeral home is undergoing a massive renovation. D.J. is excited to continue bringing traditional-yetprogressive funeral services ideas to those in need. New initiatives—from “green” funerals to therapy dog visitations—are in the works. Katherine Knotts lives in Corfe Castle, Dorset, in the United Kingdom along with her son, Emory. She obtained a master’s degree from the London School of Economics. She owns her own consultancy, working with microfinance organizations worldwide. In 2014 she was an invited presenter at con- ferences in Istanbul and Dakar. Her book, co-authored with Anton Simanowitz, The Business of Doing Good, was recently published in England. 02 David Lee, [email protected] The Class of 2002 welcomes new additions to the Drew family! Amy Cavanaugh and her husband, Alvin, announced the birth of their second daughter, Finnuala Susanne, on April 13. She joins older sister Eleanor. Peter Cole and his wife, Vanessa, welcomed their son, Rhys Ian, on March 8. Corrie Aukema Cieslukowski and her husband, Brian, welcomed their fifth child, Arlie Mac, on March 14. Arlie joins siblings Aurora, Braego, Olesia and Henry. Aaron Zegas is the children’s librarian in New Jersey’s Camden County Libraries. Romit Patel has a new job at the Hartford. Congrats, Romit! Jess Kates Galatro and her family moved to Providence, Rhode Island, where she is a project manager in the capital projects office at Rhode Island College. Her children, Hannah and Eva, love living close to “Aunt” Amy Ewen C’03. Congratulations to Suzanne Rovegno Apicella, named a 2015 “Teacher Who Rocks” by WDHA. Suzanne is an art teacher at Hanover Park High School in East Hanover, New Jersey, a position she has held since we graduated! Many happy years to Jayson Swanson, who married Gina Ipolysagi on July 12. Jayson has also been busy publishing his first book, Where’s the Math?—which explores the connections between mathematical topics and everyday careers. Buy your copy on Amazon or createspace.com. The Theological School 60s 08 70s Stephanie Rice has performed with three professional improv troupes, two in Shanghai. Her current improv troupe, Sea Tea Improv, is building its own theatre space in Hartford, Connecticut. Stephanie is very thankful for her experiences at Drew! Elizabeth Moore published her first novel, The Truth and the Life, with Alternative Book Press in Marlboro, Massachusetts. 09 The Future of Global Christianities and Mission: 130 Years After the Appenzellers The Tipple-Vosburgh Lecture Series Theological School Alumni Reunion Drew University | October 13–14, 2015 Visit drew.edu/tipple and check back often for details and registration info. 42 Drew Magazine I Drew and Entrepreneurship Zack Bircks, a former Drew baseball player, successfully pitched his Ugly Christmas Sweater idea to the NFL. Ugly Christmas Sweaters for your favorite NFL team are available for purchase online. 11 Aaron Loether and Annie Horlick Loether C’12 married on August 24, 2014, at the Lake House Inn in Perkasie, Pennsylvania. Their bridal 5th Reunion party and attendees included many recent Drew University alums. See photo, page 41. 13 Ashley Petix was the set designer for Father Kennedy, a play performed in August as part of the New York International Fringe Festival. Stanley Wiley C’57, T’61, a pastor, shares seven messages to bring the focus of Christmas to Christ in his new book, Save Christmas for Christ Alone: 7 Biblical Messages and Hymn Texts for a Faith Adventure with Our Savior, published in July by Xulon Press. The Goodwill Industries Hall of Fame, which recognizes retired Goodwill partners who have made lasting contributions to the organization, inducted George Kessinger T’69 for his work as CEO of Goodwill Industries of Orange County in Santa Ana, California. He developed the shopgoodwill.com website, which, since 1999, has brought in $300 million for 137 registered local Goodwill members. David E. Wiley III T’75,’76 published his first book, Why Mark: The Politics of Resurrection in the First Gospel. It is available on CSS Publishing’s website. James L. Harring T’77 was recognized and honored on the occasion of his 60th ordination anniversary by the congregation of the Church of Christ Uniting in Kingston, Pennsylvania, which he has served for the past 16 years as minister of pastoral care. He and his wife, Doris, live in Mountain Top, Pennsylvania, and observed their 63rd wed- ding anniversary April 10. The couple has two daughters and two grandsons. In March, Pilgrim Congregational Church in Chattanooga, Tennessee, welcomed Marvin L. Morgan T’79 to serve as its interim minister. During his term, he will help local leaders guide a church-wide analysis to determine the type of pastoral leadership the congregation seeks in its next settled pastor. 80s Lorna Lee Sellers T’80 and her husband, Ed, opened their recently remodeled, expansive Jacksonville, Florida, home as the Summer Dreams Bed and Breakfast. Dean Fager T’81 is the newly appointed pastor of Knox United Methodist Church in Indiana. He and his wife, Jan, live in nearby Plymouth. Yale University Press released the seventh book by Robin R. Meyers T’81 in April. Spiritual Defiance: Building a Beloved Community of Resistance is expanded from his 2013–14 Lyman Beecher Lectures at Yale. Elizabeth S. Hall T’84 retired in August as president and chief executive officer of Homeless Solutions in Morristown, New Jersey, after 17 years in the position. 90s Lee Jessup T’92 recently announced his retirement as the president of the United Way of Davidson County in Lexington, Kentucky. September 1 marks his last day on the job, which he’s held for the past 14 years. His retirement plans include continued support for the Lexington Kiwanis Club and trips with his buddies to the Lexington Golf Course—which he can see from his house. Shawn Moses Anglim T’99 is the pastor of First Grace UMC in New Orleans, where he lives with his wife, Anne Daniell G’00,’05. In a letter to Dean Viera, he noted the Theological School’s tremendous influence on his ministry, which helped to rebuild First Grace after the storm. First Grace’s altar came by way of Dean Samuel and a crew when they came in 2007 to help rebuild. 10s Sharon Jacob T’10,’13 joined the faculty of Phillips Theological Seminary in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and will teach courses in the New Testament in the fall semester. Her book Reading Mary Alongside Indian Surrogate Mothers is set to reach publication early next year. Ronald E. Verblaauw T’12 is the interim pastor at Rutherford Congregational Church in Rutherford, New Jersey. He received the Class of 1956 Dr. Franz Hildebrandt Award at Drew in 2012 for excellence in theological studies and student ministry. The Caspersen School DLitt Jude M. Pfister G’07 published Morris County’s Acorn Hall (History Press Publishers, 2015), a biography of the hall and the families who lived there prior to its becoming the admired historic site it is today. Arthur Turfa G’07 published his first book of poetry, Places and Times, with eLectio Publishing in April. PhD Darius Salter G’82,’83, senior pastor at Richardson, Texas, Church of the Nazarene, was the featured pastor at a camp in Beecher City, Illinois. Jeffrey J. Richards G’83,’85 traveled to Kiev, Ukraine, in May to teach a 10-day course to 12 students at Kiev Regional Bible College. Mark Sneed G’88,’90 published The Social World of the Sages: An Introduction to Israelite and Jewish Wisdom Literature with Fortress Press in June. Hugo Walter G’94,’96 published a book titled Sanctuaries in Washington Irving’s The Sketch Book (Peter Lang Publishing, 2014). Vincent Bacote G’99,’02 released his new book, The Political Disciple: A Theology of Public Life. Summer 2015 43 In Memoriam The Drew community and its alumni associations extend our heartfelt sympathy to the families and friends of those alumni and members of the Drew community listed below. Our ranks are diminished by their loss. College of Liberal Arts Americo P. Cocco C’42, of Philadelphia, passed away at home on January 16. He was 101. After Drew, he earned a master’s degree at Columbia University. He served in the U.S. Army during World War II from 1942 to 1945, and served as an interpreter of French, Italian and German. Thereafter, he taught European history at Seton Hall University, until his retirement in 1978. Americo loved traveling, singing and playing the piano. He is survived by many nephews and their spouses, great-nieces and nephews, and great-great nieces and nephews. Alfred Zampella C’43, a lifelong resident of Jersey City, New Jersey, died on February 1, 2014, at age 90. He served in the Pacific theatre of World War II, and then earned degrees including a master’s in educational administration at New York University. He became an influential educator, spending 37 years as a Jersey City teacher and principal. When he retired in 1990, his school was renamed in his honor. He is survived by wife Jaclyn, three sons, two daughters-in-law and six grandchildren. Frederick L. Askham C’47, of Oceanside, California, died on March 9. He was 91. He served in the Army Air Corps during World War II. After earning a bachelor’s degree in chemistry at Drew, he attained a master’s degree in chemistry at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, and went on to a career in technical sales and marketing. In retirement he served as a volunteer and supporter of many organizations, most notably a food pantry. Fred and his first wife, Jean, were married for 54 years, until she preceded him in death. Fred married Mildred Sudman Stewart in 2004. She survives him, along with a daughter, a son and two grandchildren. Dr. Ralph R. Pfeiffer C’48 was born in Germany but grew up in New Jersey. He served in the U.S. Army in Europe in 1944–46. He then earned a doctoral degree in chemistry at Syracuse University and had a long career in science, both with Eli Lilly & Co. and in pharmaceutical consulting. He died on June 1 as a longtime Indianapolis resident, and a member of All Souls Unitarian Church since 1959. He is survived by his wife, Fay, their son, three daughters and two sons from a prior marriage, a stepdaughter, a stepson and three grandchildren. Arthur Grambling C’49 passed away peacefully at the age of 88 on February 22. He proudly served in the U.S. Navy and felt very fortunate to earn a degree at Drew under the GI Bill. His professional career was dedicated to the United Way, serving as director of the Broome County, New York, chapter before retiring. He is survived by Lois C’49, his wife of 66 years, two children, their spouses and three grandchildren. Eleanor Wisner Gural C’50, a passionate advocate for animals and nature, died on March 8 at the age of 87. She was a lifelong resident of Summit and Springfield, New Jersey. She and her late husband, the Hon. 44 Drew Magazine I Drew and Entrepreneurship William Gural, were the proprietors of Laurel Woods Nursery, later named Springfield’s Hidden Garden. Ellie graduated from Drew and from the Bank Street Teachers College. She taught nursery school in Geneva, Switzerland, and second grade at the Far Brook School in Short Hills, New Jersey, before raising her family. She is survived by her daughter and son, their spouses and one granddaughter. John T. McCallum C’51, a resident of New Hope, Minnesota, died at 92 on December 16, 2014. A World War II veteran of the Army Air Corps, he went on to have a distinguished career as a social worker. He was preceded in death by his wife, Dorothy, and is survived by two sons, their wives, seven grandchildren and a brother. Lois Mays Osborn C’51 of Hockessin, Delaware, died peacefully at home, surrounded by loved ones, on April 1. She was 86. She met her husband, Kenton C’51, at Drew, when she was a student there. They enjoyed 55 years of marriage, in which they raised four children. She taught yoga, worked with children and traveled. Preceded in death by Kenton, she is survived by their four children, five grandchildren and a beloved companion whom she met in her widowhood. Eleanor Karasic Gould C’52 died on February 14. After graduating from Drew, she taught kindergarten in Ocean Township, New Jersey. A lover of art, music, theatre and cooking, and an active book-group member, she also served on the auxiliary boards of the Middlesex County Medical Society, Perth Amboy General Hospital and John F. Kennedy Medical Center in Edison, New Jersey. She was preceded in death by her husband, Louis, and is survived by three children, five grandchildren and members of her extended family. Norma Jean Brown C’53, of Phoenix, Arizona, died December 10, 2014. She was 87. Born in Lincoln, Nebraska, to immigrants from Norka, Russia, she met and married Ed Brown T’53 in 1944, when he was stationed in Lincoln with the Army Air Corps. Subsequently, they arrived at Drew, where Norma graduated with a degree in Christian education. She and Ed served in the United Methodist Church and worked for over 18 years in Peru, South America. They returned to the United States in 1970 and continued their ministry at churches in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, eventually retiring to Maine. They recently celebrated 70 years of marriage. Norma is survived by her husband, their four children, several grandchildren and other relatives. Esther D. Paddack C’53 passed away on March 5. She was 83. Born in Iowa, she moved to New Jersey, earned a bachelor’s in theological studies at Drew, and settled in Atlantic Highlands in 1953. She made use of the degree by teaching in a Christian school and many Sunday schools in the Atlantic Highlands area. She was predeceased by her husband, Robert, in 2011, and is survived by three sons, their wives, three grandchildren and her sister. Margaret “Peg” Reed Bloom C’55 passed away on May 3 at age 82, after 60 years of marriage and over 20 years in retirement. A special education teacher, she earned a master’s degree at Columbia University while her children were still young. A Methodist minister’s wife, she assisted her husband, Art T’54,’75, with numerous church committees and endeavors. Peg is survived by husband Art, their children Bryan and Joyce, a son-in-law, three grandsons, a greatgranddaughter and several other dear friends and relatives. The Rev. Malcolm Howard C’55, T’58 passed away on Dec. 13, 2014. He is survived by his wife, Joan. Clyde Lindsley C’59, who helped to bring big-name artists to the Strand-Capitol Performing Arts Center in York, Pennsylvania, through contacts he had in the music and theatre industry, died on November 11, 2014, in Olney, Maryland. He was 77. Clyde served as executive director of the Strand from 1984 to 1999. He also opened up the theatre to a wider variety of performances, helping to grow the Strand. He is survived by his wife, Sara, two children and four grandchildren. Beverly Cole Boston C’64, daughter of the late Dr. Austin A. Cole, the former director of admissions at Drew, passed away on February 9 in Albany, New York. She was 73. During her college years at Drew as an English major, Bev became an anglophile. While at Drew, she met her future husband, Robert S. Boston T’64. They married in 1964 and began serving churches of the United Methodist Church Troy Conference in New York. Bev also enjoyed a 20-year career as a librarian, but her real passion was her family. She is survived by her husband of 50 years, Robert, their two children, many grandchildren and great-grandchildren and extended family members. The Hon. Deedee Corradini C’65, Salt Lake City’s only female mayor to date, died on March 1 at age 70. After Drew, she relocated to Utah. During her tenure as mayor of Salt Lake City from 1992 to 2000, she was instrumental in achieving milestones of urban redevelopment, a transportation hub in a former red-light district, a new baseball stadium and in securing the 2002 Winter Olympics for the city. In 1998, as a panelist at a Renaissance Weekend in Hilton Head, South Carolina, she went “head-to-head” with a Southern gentleman, John Huebner, on the topic of the changing relationships between men and women. She married him a year later. She is survived by John, her two children, three grandchildren and many other cherished relatives. Dr. Richard A. Lehne C’65, age 71, of Charlottesville, Virginia, died peacefully at home on March 16, with wife Nancy at his side. A native of New Jersey, he held a PhD in pharmacology from George Washington University and was the author of a leading textbook on pharmacology for nurses. His writing style was known for infusing humor and personality into a potentially dry subject. He met Nancy in a swing dance class, and literally swept her off her feet. Other survivors include two stepdaughters, a brother, many more relatives and a farm full of cats, dogs, horses and ponies. Crane Nichols Zuvich C’65 was born in Manhattan in 1930. She became a featured performer in the Water Follies in the 1940s. After Drew she became a criminal psychologist, whose research papers are housed at the Criminal Justice Library at John Jay College. She was also involved in horticulture-related volunteer work. A resident of Lakewood, New Jersey, she died peacefully on July 8 at age 85. She is survived by husband Jerry, two sons from a prior relationship, their wives, two grandchildren and her brother. Donna Kennedy Walker C’68, of Daytona Beach, Florida, died on April 8 at age 68. After Drew, Donna earned a graduate degree at the University of Delaware. Donna then began a career in the Philadelphia area as a college instructor, proofreader and editor. She then pursued a two-year counseling program at Westminster Theological Seminary in Glenside, Pennsylvania, which led her to start a counseling ministry at her church. She is survived by Bill, her husband of 30 years, two children, four grandchildren and many extended family members. Richard Kastendieck C’69 passed away at 67, on July 5, as a resident of Baltimore. An attorney, he received degrees from the University of Wisconsin–Madison and Temple University, practiced law in Pennsylvania and ultimately retired from the Maryland Attorney General’s office. He was an engaged volunteer and member of his community. An athlete, he remained active, hiking parts of the Appalachian Trail. He is survived by his wife of 32 years, Sally Miles, their two children, a twin brother and one sister. Eric R. Nahm C’71, P’05 died on March 6 at his home in Far Hills, New Jersey, with his family at his side. Shortly after graduating from Drew, Eric married Ruth Rhodes C’75, P’05. He worked for IBM and AT&T and quickly became a respected executive in sales and marketing. He later became a Realtor/broker in Bernardsville, New Jersey, and Venice, Florida, building his own dream home on the Gulf of Mexico in 2012. He was also the owner and CEO of Speech Interface Design, a voice-recognition company in Pittsburgh. He is survived by Ruth, three daughters including Erica Kerr C’05, their husbands and two grandchildren. Henry B. Selvin C’72 died on June 12. He was a 34-year resident of Florida when he recently moved to North Carolina. Henry cherished his Drew memories. Always enthusiastic, he was an active volunteer and participant at his local senior center. Henry’s favorite conversations involved Drew, his home state of New Jersey and David Letterman. Michael George Zuck C’72 died on March 7 at age 63. After Drew, he attended graduate school at the University of Maine. He shared his life’s work of building and operating Everlasting Farm with his wife, Gail. He was the founding president of the Mid Maine Greenhouse Growers Association. Following retirement he took pleasure in gardening and teaching amateur gardeners. He is survived by his wife, a stepdaughter and stepson, a sister, two brothers, a grandson and several nieces and nephews. Thomas Lanman Struthers C’73 passed away on February 15. He was 64. He recently retired as vice president and chief financial officer of John Milner Associates, Inc., a nationally known preservation and cultural resources firm in West Chester, Pennsylvania. After Drew, he earned a master’s degree in archaeology at Idaho State University. Tom is survived by his wife, Jacqueline C’73, his two daughters and his sister. Daniel J. Sumption C’76 passed away suddenly at the age of 61 on March 15. After growing up in New Jersey and graduating from Drew, he earned a law degree at the College of William and Mary. A resident of Derry, New Hampshire, he loved sailing, which led to him attend boat-building school. Daniel was a history buff, a Civil War reenactor, a master electrician and an expert tour guide. He is survived by his daughter Jessica, her husband, two grandchildren and four siblings. Margaret H. Knoecklein C’82, G’88 died on March 16 at age 95. As a young woman, she enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania and became a surgical nurse. The day after Pearl Harbor, she enlisted in the U.S. Army and served in India. After retiring from the Army, she earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in English at Drew, and then wrote a novel about her Army experiences. She found joy in her family, and in volunteering at the Methodist church in her hometown of Chatham, New Jersey, where the women’s group has established a Drew scholarship in her memory. Her husband, Max, passed away in January 2015. She is survived by their four sons and their wives, numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren and many dear friends and extended family members. Stephen Rao C’82, a cherished faculty member at the San Francisco VA Medical Center, died on May 24, 2014. He served for many years at San Francisco General Hospital. At the VA, Stephen was health behavior coordinator in the new Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Program. He is survived by his husband, Randy, his parents and a circle of loving friends. To honor his memory, his Drew classmates and family raised nearly $12,000 for the Stephen M. Rao, PhD C’82 Fellowship for Research in the Sciences. To make a contribution, contact John Holden at 973.408.3872 or [email protected]. Casimir “Chuck” Bolanowski C’89 of Boca Raton, Florida, passed away at the age of 48, on March 31. He is survived by wife Staci C’89, two sons, his mother and a brother. Anne Garrison C’90 passed away on March 5 after a long illness. She is survived by her husband, Michael; her daughter, Eleanor; and her mother, Joanne. Jeffrey R. Zecher C’96, of Madison, New Jersey, passed away on March 14 at the age of 43. Born in Chicago, he lived in Iowa City, Iowa, before moving to Madison in 1981. He was the owner of Zecher Roofing in Morristown, New Jersey, for the last 15 years. His family will remember him as hard working, loyal and fun loving. He is survived by his parents, a brother, two sisters and many nieces and nephews. Clifford Maceda C’98, a longtime resident of Greenpoint, Brooklyn, died at age 39, on April 6. His career was spent in elections research, most recently with the Associated Press. A lifelong student of history, politics and economics, he had a passion for social justice. He is survived by his parents, four siblings and members of his extended family. Clare Goggins C’16 passed away on July 7. A resident of Chatham, New Jersey, Clare is survived by her parents and older sister. Neil Torian VanDePutte C’16, a physics major at Drew, passed away after a tragic accident on July 5, in the summer after his junior year. He was 25. A resident of Toms River, New Jersey, he had maintained a 4.0 GPA and had recently won the Marshall C. Harrington Prize in Physics and Astronomy. He is survived by his parents, stepparents, grandmothers, a sister and five stepbrothers and stepsisters. Theological School The Rev. George Eppehimer T’44 passed away quietly on January 20 after a short illness. He served the Cherry Valley five-church country circuit from 1943 to 1946. He earned a master’s degree in sacred theology at Temple University in 1949, while continuing parish ministry with various churches in Pennsylvania. George and Mabel, his wife of 72 years, retired to Wesley Enhanced Living in Philadelphia. Along with Mabel, he is survived by two sons and their wives, four grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. The Rev. Dr. William D. Geoghegan T’45 died on April 25 in his hometown of Brunswick, Maine. Born in 1922, he entered Yale University at age 17, graduated magna cum laude, and was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa. In 1946, he married Sarah T’46, whom he had met at Drew. Ordained a Methodist minister, his career consisted principally of academic chaplaincy and teaching, at the University of Rochester and at Bowdoin College. He was preceded in death by Sarah and one child, and is survived by their three remaining children, nine grandchildren and other family members. The Rev. Ralph B. Shoemaker T’53 passed away on March 21. An ordained elder in the United Methodist Church, he was in fulltime ministry until his retirement in 1979, serving numerous Minnesota churches and continuing part-time ministry in retirement. A month before his death, Ralph was the guest of honor at a joyous celebration of his 100th birthday. He still had a quick wit and a desire to serve others. He was preceded in death by his beloved wife, Pearl, and one son. He is survived by two daughters and sons-in-law, five grandchildren and three great-grandsons. The Rev. Melvin R. Byrd T’54, an Army veteran and former Methodist minister, passed away in his hometown of Granite City, Illinois, on May 26 at the age of 87. Melvin was a member of the St. Elizabeth Roman Catholic Church in Granite City, and became active in the Knights of Columbus. He is survived by his wife, two daughters, two stepchildren, their spouses, five siblings, 17 grandchildren, 36 great-grandchildren and four great-great-grandchildren. The Rev. Verne E. Schattner T’54, age 94, passed away peacefully at home in Cohocton, New York, on May 29. A Methodist minister, he earned a doctoral degree at Drew. He was a pastor at the North Cohocton and Cohocton United Methodist churches from 1954 until Summer 2015 45 his retirement in 1990. He is survived by his wife of 54 years, Lillian, and many members of his extended family. The Rev. Don L. Young T’54 was born in 1929 on an Iowa farm, became a social worker and then earned two master’s degrees at Drew, in divinity and counseling. His parish ministry took him to churches in Montana, Ohio, Arizona and Washington. The father of seven, he led his family in sailing the San Juan Islands and in traveling the country with an Airstream trailer. He retired to Sierra Vista, Arizona, in 1996 with wife Helene, and remained active with Habitat for Humanity. One son preceded him in death, and he is survived by Helene, six remaining children, 12 grandchildren and members of his extended family. The Rev. John C. Barr T’56, a graduate of Drew’s Master of Divinity program, died on March 22 at age 85. An Army chaplain, he retired as a colonel, having served in the United States and Germany. He continued with hospital chaplaincy, and as pastor of several congregations in Virginia and in his native South Carolina. In 1997, he retired to his childhood home in Florence, South Carolina. He is survived by Nora, his wife of 59 years, two children, three grandchildren and a host of other relatives and friends. The Rev. Robert D. Kendall T’57 died at his home in St. Cloud, Minnesota, on March 26 at the age of 81. He became a pastor in New York in 1955 and continued as a pastor until 1968. He then became a professor of speech communication at St. Cloud State University, serving in that capacity from 1971 to 1992. Survivors include LuBelle, his wife of 60 years, four children, six grandchildren, two great-grandchildren and two siblings. The Rev. Charles H. Berg T’58, of New Brighton, Minnesota, died on January 23. He enlisted for five years in the Army, spending two of them in Germany during World War II. Charles graduated from the University of Minnesota before entering the seminary at Drew. He served United Methodist congregations throughout Minnesota. Preceded in death by his first wife, Sigrid, he is survived by wife Wilma, two sons, three stepchildren, seven grandchildren, two great-grandchildren and two sisters. The Rev. Lloyd Lester McGonagle T’58, a Methodist pastor, earned a divinity degree at Drew and then served congregations in New York for 42 years. Upon retirement to Lakeland, Florida, he became an active volunteer with many causes. He passed away peacefully at home on April 18 at age 84. Preceded in death by one son, he is survived by Martha, his loving wife of 60 years, their daughter and five grandchildren. The Rev. John Nevin Wimer Jr. T’62, of Suffolk, Virginia, died on March 8 with his family by his side. He was 84. He served in the U.S. Air Force, earning the rank of staff sergeant. Receiving the call to the ministry, he attended Wake Forest University and Drew. Ordained in the United Methodist Church in 1964 and served for 36 years at churches in New York and Virginia. While serving First United Methodist Church in Hampton, Virginia, he met Ella Mae, his wife of 47 years, who survives him, along with a son and a daughter, three grandchildren, a sister, two brothers and many other relatives. The Rev. Arthur L. Hill T’65,’67 died in his hometown of Indianola, Iowa, on June 24. 46 Drew Magazine I Drew and Entrepreneurship A Methodist pastor from 1963 to 2010, he married Edythe, also a minister, in 1962. He is survived by Edythe, two of their three children, two grandsons, four siblings (including his twin) and many other relatives and friends. The Rev. Herman A. Soderberg T’65, a Navy veteran, died at home in Fayetteville, North Carolina, on April 24. He was 83. After serving as a naval electronic engineer and earning a bachelor’s degree in math, he earned a master’s at Drew. As a Methodist minister, he served in New Jersey and North Carolina. He also taught math, religion, philosophy, creative writing, Old and New Testament at the collegiate level. He is survived by Audrey, his wife of 43 years, and many dear friends. The Rev. Frank Monte T’74, a native New Yorker, died on April 23 as an Orlando, Florida resident. He was 72. After graduating from Drew, he served as a minister with several United Methodist churches in New York City, with the support of Marilyn, his devoted wife of 52 years. He relocated to Orlando and operated a successful real estate business. He is survived by Marilyn, three children, nine grandchildren, a great-granddaughter, his brother and his extended family. Patricia Lynn RichardsonNewman T’74, of Charleston, West Virginia, passed away on March 14, 2015. She was 74. As an undergraduate, she met her husband, Kenneth T’76. Both went on to earn master’s degrees at Drew. Kenneth was ordained and served five Methodist congregations in New Jersey until his death in 1999. Patricia was a born educator, preaching and teaching in the communities where she and Kenneth served. Widowed, she returned to her native West Virginia in 2001, and married Robert G. Newman G’65, her former undergraduate adviser and lifelong friend. She is survived by Robert, her daughter, Kristan, and her brother. The Rev. Dr. Russell D. Goodwin T’75, a resident of Inman, South Carolina, passed away on April 18. He pursued a full-time career in Methodist ministry from 1967 to 1995, and earned a doctoral degree at Drew Theological Seminary. He is survived by wife Maria, four children, five grandchildren, one great-granddaughter and members of his extended family. The Rt. Rev. Orris G. Walker Jr. T’80, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Long Island, New York, from 1991 to 2009, died on February 28 at the age of 72. Born in Baltimore, he was a graduate of the University of Maryland and General Theological Seminary and was ordained deacon in 1968 and priest in 1969. During the 1980s he earned further degrees from Drew, the University of Windsor and the Graduate Theological Foundation. He is survived by his wife, Norma, two children, two grandsons and other family members. The Rev. Roger W. Weeks T’81, of Newberg, Oregon, died on February 19 at 74. Born in Everett, Washington, he was ordained a Methodist minister and served 10 churches in Colorado and Oregon, retiring in 1997 as the chaplain of Kaiser Permanente’s Hospice in Portland. He is survived by the Rev. Dr. Carolynne Fairweather T’86,’95, his wife since 1996, along with two stepchildren, seven grandchildren, six brothers and other family members. The Rev. Dr. William J. “Bill” Caple T’82 of Lexington, Kentucky, died on May 1. A Methodist minister, he retired as a chaplain of the U.S. Army. He had previously served in the Air Force. He also taught English at the Japanese Naval Academy, and served as chaplain and religion instructor at RandolphMacon Academy in Front Royal, Virginia. He is survived by two children, a son-in-law, five grandchildren and a large extended family. Patricia, his wife of 49 years, preceded him in death. Arrangements were made for them to be interred together at Arlington National Cemetery. The Rev. Dr. Buddy R. Pipes T’82 passed away on February 28 in Lebanon, New Hampshire, after a prolonged illness. Born in 1931, he earned a bachelor’s degree in 1957 and married Grace Fletcher the next day. He served as pastor of Methodist churches in Maryland from 1960 to 1992, and was also active in Kiwanis. In 1994, he and Grace retired to Vermont, moving to Lebanon in 2011. Buddy is survived by Grace, three children and their spouses, seven grandchildren and two siblings and their spouses. The Rev. Dr. Dwight A. White T’82 died on March 10 at his family homestead in Ryegate, Vermont, where he had grown up. He was 89. Upon graduation from high school in 1944, he joined the U.S. Army and served in the Pacific theatre until 1946. He became a Presbyterian minister in 1953, and was married that same year to Jean, who survives him. His ministry took the couple to Presbyterian congregations in California and New Jersey. He was also a dedicated community volunteer. Along with wife Jean, he is survived by their two children, three grandchildren and extended family. The Rev. Dr. William F. Allinder T’83 of Grand Rapids, Michigan, passed away on April 3, two days short of his 80th birthday. He had a 40-year career as a United Church of Christ pastor in the Midwest. A lifelong Rotarian, he generously volunteered his time to many other charitable and civic causes. A scratch golfer and an avid outdoorsman, he encouraged young people to draw life lessons from their experiences on the playing field, the golf course or outdoors in nature. He is survived by the love of his life and wife of 55 years, Joan, two children, a daughter-in-law and twin granddaughters. The Rev. Howard Allen Chubbs T’83, a pastor, preacher, scholar, singer and spiritual father for 49 years at Providence Baptist Church of Greensboro, North Carolina, passed away on March 1 at the age of 79. Ordained at 22, his ministry coincided with his other vocational pursuits as a social worker in Chicago, a public school teacher in Virginia and an adjunct professor and guest lecturer at numerous colleges and universities. Howard received many awards. He is survived by his wife, Louise, his son, three sisters and members of his extended family. The Rev. Dr. James C. Mooney T’87, a Canadian by birth, served as a Southern Baptist pastor in the Carolinas. In 1972, he naturalized as a U.S. citizen. He retired from the ministry in 1990 and passed away on May 24 at the age of 75. He is survived by wife Barbara, a sister and brother in Canada, and members of his extended family. The Rev. Rachel Ye Kim T’89 was born in Inchon, South Korea, and moved to New York with her family. She became a Methodist minister, earning a Master of Divinity degree at Drew in 1989. On January 14, at age 50, the Milford, Connecticut, resident passed away. She is survived by her husband of nearly 17 years, the Rev. Gye Ho (Tom) Kim G’95,’99 and their two children. The Rev. Chester W. Plank T’89 passed away on February 10 in Jacksonville, Florida, at the age of 94. Better known as Brother Chester, he was a retired Methodist minister, published author, member of the Civil Air Patrol, a 70-year Freemason, barbershopquartet singer and a well-established hamradio operator. Brother Chester was also an engineer, a pilot and a Seabee in the Navy during World War II. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his dear wife, Barbara, his daughter, Rena Jean, and his brother, Robert. He is survived by nieces, nephews and many friends. The Rev. Dr. Cynthia Willis Stewart T’90, a resident of Long Island, New York, passed away on June 1. A native of Guyana, she immigrated to the United States in 1981. She held degrees from several institutions, including Drew, and occupied many offices in the A.M.E. Zion Church, ending a 13-year term as senior presiding elder in June 2014. She was also a writer, teacher, preacher and workshop presenter for the A.M.E. Zion denomination, both domestically and abroad. She is survived by her husband, Brother Ronald Stewart, five siblings and many nieces and nephews. The Rev. Dr. Clifford T. Parke T’93, a minister in the First Christian Church Disciples of Christ, served for over 48 years with churches in the South and Midwest, retiring in 2001 from his last church in Baltimore. He died as a resident of Round Rock, Texas, on May 30 at age 79. Preceded in death by his wife, Alma, he is survived by four daughters, 11 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. The Rev. Dr. Thomas P. Armour T’95, a retired pastor and resident of Hackettstown, New Jersey, died in Naples, Florida, on June 15. His ministry included a 31-year term at Gethsemane Lutheran Church, Hackettstown. In 1975, he became involved with the Lutheran Friends of the Deaf, working to enhance the quality of life for the deaf, and this continued for the rest of his life. He is survived by Lois, his wife of 58 years, four children and their spouses, nine grandchildren and many members of his extended family. The Rev. Bonita H. Owens T’97 passed away on June 17 at 68, a resident of Huntersville, North Carolina. A wife and mother of two, she earned a Master of Divinity degree at Drew. She was originally from Baltimore, and served as pastor of three A.M.E. Zion churches in New Jersey before relocating to North Carolina and assuming the pastorate of a fourth church. As recently as four months prior to her death, she was an associate minister at a fifth church, was also working as a substitute teacher and was pursuing a second master’s degree. She is survived by her daughter, DeAnna, a grandson and other family members. She was preceded in death by her husband, Kenneth, and son Kenny Jr. Aarona Cooper T’10 passed away peacefully on January 16 in Wilmington, Delaware. She was born on August 28, 1950, in New York City to the late Andrew and Ruth Cooper. She is survived by her son, Aaron Browne, a granddaughter, members of her extended family and dear friends. The Rev. Dr. Karrie A. Oertli T’10, a Baptist minister, passed away at her home in Normal, Illinois, on May 2. She was 57. Her drive to improve health care led her to the role of vice president of mission and spiritual care at Advocate BroMenn Medical Center, a position she held at the time of her death. She is survived by the Rev. Dennis Pendleton, her husband since 1996, her parents, her sister, six stepchildren, eight grandchildren and extended family members. Caspersen School The Rev. Dr. William J. Hausmann G’68,’78 passed away on February 2. A resident of Rockaway, New Jersey, he is survived by his beloved wife, Trudi, two children, their spouses and four grandchildren. Louise Ann Poresky G’77 was a literary scholar, professor and author who earned a doctoral degree at Drew. On April 1, she died at home in Nyack, New York, surrounded by friends, at age 69. From the late 1970s, she taught literature and writing at colleges in the New York metropolitan area. Her dissertation was published, as were two subsequent books she wrote. She spent the last 15 years serving the Blue Rock School, West Nyack. She is survived by two brothers, a sister, and many nieces, nephews and cousins. Mary Alison Levine G’78, a resident of Basking Ridge, New Jersey, died in New York on March 26 at age 61. Originally from the Midwest, she moved to New Jersey in 1973 and earned a master’s degree in literature at Drew. She worked in undersea telecommunications with AT&T, retiring in 2004 after 25 years. She enjoyed classical guitar and horseback riding. She is survived by two brothers, two nieces and a nephew. The Rev. Dr. Richard Miller G’87,’91, age 72, of Bloomington, Indiana, passed away on April 17. A Nazarene pastor, he served as a pastor in New Jersey and Indiana, and as an educator, teaching at the high school and college levels. An author, he published many poems and devotional articles. He is survived by Sandi, his wife of 42 years, two sons, a daughter, along with siblings and many nieces and nephews. John J. Tamasik G’96, of Waldwick, New Jersey, passed away peacefully on March 12 at the age of 62. For the past 28 years, he taught U.S. history, government, social studies and economics at Monroe-Woodbury High School in Central Valley, New York. He was named Teacher of the Year in 2014 by the Central Valley School District. He is survived by his sister, Catherine, as well as his dear friend, Marilyn, and her children. Carol Zanisnik P’01, G’09 of Springfield, New Jersey, passed away on March 6. She was a teacher for St. Rose of Lima School in Short Hills, New Jersey. Carol had been working on her doctoral degree at Drew at the time of her death. She is survived by her husband, Bob, two sons including Bryan Zanisnik C’01 and two grandchildren. Faculty, Staff & Friends The Rev. Dr. William Barrick died on June 24. Born into a large Oklahoma farming family in 1928, he became a Methodist minister, and married his wife, Jean, in 1953. The couple relocated to New York City in 1961, where both received doctoral degrees from Columbia University. He subsequently became Drew’s director of continuing education. The couple moved to Texas in 1977, where both taught at McMurry University. Predeceased by Jean and seven of his siblings, he is survived by daughter Darcy, two sisters and many friends and colleagues. Dr. Karen M. Brown, retired Drew professor of sociology and anthropology, died on March 4 at the age of 73. She taught at Drew from 1976 until her retirement in 2009. A 1964 graduate of Smith College, she held a PhD from Temple University. She was the Theological School’s first tenured woman and first female full professor. Her scholarly work focused on the religious practices of the Haitian Diaspora. The University of California Press published her awardwinning 1991 book. At Drew, she was a founder of the Newark Project, a decadelong effort to map the changing religious landscape in Newark, for which she secured a major grant from the Ford Foundation. She is survived by her spouse, Robert Machover, and other loved ones. Mary Marx P’77, A’08 passed away peacefully on December 7, 2014. She was 93. Born in Glasgow, Scotland, she served in the British Army during World War II. It was there that she met her husband. Mary worked in the registrar’s office of Drew for nine years. She is survived by her devoted husband of 67 years, Karl C’49, P’77, A’08 two daughters and their families, including Karen C’77, P’08 and Lloyd Hymen C’77, P’08 and Louis Hymen C’08. Nan Tucker McEvoy, a Drew benefactor and the grandmother of Griffin McEvoy C’13, passed away peacefully at age 95 in her San Francisco home on March 26. McEvoy was the last member of the San Francisco Chronicle’s founding family to run the 150-year-old newspaper. She was also instrumental in founding the Peace Corps. The McEvoys recognize the value of Drew’s proximity to New York City, and through the generosity of the Nan T. McEvoy Foundation Fund, an endowment now assists Drew students in the pursuit of internship opportunities there. Elfriede W. Smith, a professor emeritus who taught at Drew for 40 years, passed away on October 11, 2014, at her home in Madison. Frau Smith—as her many devoted students called her—was 73. She became the German program coordinator in the late 1980s, serving in this position until her retirement in 2008. She was an adviser for Drew students and was a frequent consultant to major publishers of German textbooks. Though she had retired from Drew, Frau Smith returned frequently as a visitor to the campus. She is survived by her brother-inlaw, Leonard Smith, his wife, Geri, and several nieces and nephews. She was predeceased by her husband, Joseph C. Smith, in 2012. Gert von der Linde, a former Drew board member, passed away on February 10 at age 85. Born in Germany, he graduated from the University of Munich and then earned a PhD in economics at the University of California at Berkeley. He taught at Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon University and Stanford University before leaving academia for Wall Street. He is survived by Margaret, his wife of almost 61 years, two sons, seven grandchildren and special family friends. Gert is also survived by three of his six brothers. Summer 2015 47
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