From the May/June 2008 Issue

Tom Generous writes: "I've finally reached the end of a squash career that has been a joy, both playing and coaching at Choate and at UNC since 1976. Little bits of arthritis here and there make it too uncomfortable. Now I hope to have more time for the flute and the ukulele."

Brooke Kruger Lipsitt writes: "Paul '50 and I have sold our home of 24 years and are enjoying apartment living while in search for a new, smaller house. Paul continues to work part-time at the Boston Univ. mental health clinic. Our daughter, Sarah, 27, is recently engaged, and I stay busy with political action."

Richard P. Miller (see Rebecca Miller Glenn '96).

Hilary Salk '65 MAT writes: "Some things endure: my marriage of 44 years to Stephen Salk; my mother (Pembroke '32) at age 96; myself with five granddaughters, one applying to Brown for fall of '08. Some things change: after 33 years on President Ave., Providence, I have moved to New York, now in Brooklyn across from the Brooklyn Museum and the Botanic Gardens, and near my mother, my two children, and four of my five granddaughters. I've become a member of the Union Temple just down the street and seem to have become a born-again Jew. I continue to seek publication of a novel, Unter Oberammergau, inspired by the true story of a man who lived in this German village famous for its Passion Play and was attacked on Krystallnacht by a group of men, one of whom was allegedly the man who played Jesus in the 1950 play."

From the March/April 2008 Issue

Elaine Piller Congress writes: "I continue as a professor and became an associate dean at Fordham's Graduate School of Social Service in 2002. The second edition of my book, Multicultural Perspective in Working with Families, was published in 2005. I also represent the nongovernmental organization The International Federation of Social Workers (IFSW) at the U.N., and am the North American representative to the International Ethics Committee for IFSW."

Lucy Diggs writes: "Somewhat late in my life (age 59) I took up tennis. It quickly turned into a passion. Last fall the United States Tennis Association team for senior women that I captained qualified for the National Championships, which means that we were in the top 65 percent of USTA League players in the country. Out of the seventeen teams who qualified for nationals, we finished fifth. Certainly my Brown education helped get us there. Tennis is mental as well as physical, and captaining a team requires strategy and managing people. A thorough knowledge of Machiavelli also helped."

Robert A. Eisenbeis recently retired as executive vice president and director of research at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta and is looking forward to an active and busy retirement.

Lewis Feldstein coauthored Better Together with Robert Putnam. Lewis has three children and three grandchildren and enjoys catching up with Brown friends at events.

Tom Generous writes: "Diane has made a brilliant recovery from multiple myeloma. We were unaware how lucky we were to be only three miles from the world-class oncology department at the University of North Carolina!"

Betsy Hammatt Hawes was awarded the Silva Award by the US Orienteering Federation for her work with the Hudson Valley Orienteering organization.

Gregory D. McLaughlin founded his own company, North East Sales Services Inc., last year. The company trains auto sales personnel. He writes, "This year has been wildly successful."

John H. Mensher writes: "After practicing full-time since completing residency in 1973, I am now working part-time in ophthalmology at the Polyclinic in Seattle. Both sons, Daniel and Ian, have graduated from law school and are clerking for judges in Washington (Ninth Circuit) and Oregon (State Court of Appeals). My wife, Gail, continues teaching French and is an administrator for a small school in Seattle, the Valley School. She also teaches French at the Women's University Club in Seattle."

Joanna E. Rapf '73 Phd writes: "I continue as a professor of film and English at the University of Oklahoma. During the academic year 2007-2008, I am on sabbatical at Dartmouth, working on various film-related projects. My son, Alex, is a cameraman in New York City."

David Sanders writes: "Daughter Rachel '10 is now a sophomore at Brown."

Nancy C. Scull writes: "In October, I shared an extended Cape Cod weekend with Ann Reilly Mostoller, Ann Kidder Bickford, and Victoria Buchanan Ward. All are highly energetic and enjoying varied interests, as well as grandchildren. It was great fun! Now, I'm off to East Africa, a lifelong dream! See you all at our reunion in May."

Ward Thompson retired with his wife, Diana, to the Sierra foothill community of Lake Wildwood, California, which named him its 2007 Citizen of the Year for establishing a Canada goose control program that works. "Playing Pied Piper is a switch from my foreign affairs career," Ward writes, "but is at least as gratifying." Contact Ward at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Richard G. Tiberius transferred from the Univ. of Toronto medical school to the Univ. of Miami medical school to help medical teachers improve their teaching. He will be reducing his time at the university to give more attention to his oil painting, which is going well. He will have another showing in Boca Raton and his work can be viewed at tiberiusart.com.

From the January / February 2008 Issue

Class Secretary Jennifer Williams Ketay reports: “I encourage you to send news to This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it Please share with us where you are in life and what you are doing; inquiring minds want to know! Watching the August preparations on campus for the class of 2011, I was reminded that it was 48 years ago that we were in the same situation. How amazing to think of connections and friendships (and marriages) forged then that still continue, and lives built upon what we learned here at Brown, in the classroom and out. Do plan on coming back Memorial Day Weekend to join your classmates at the stimulating faculty and alumni forums. See the new buildings and how great Wilson Hall looks following its summer-long cleaning. Your Reunion Committee, headed by Bob Nickerson, is planning a great time for all, and to make it truly great we need you there. May 23-25, 2008, are the dates to keep in mind!”

On a personal note, Jennifer writes: “I continue to love working with the alumni relations department at Brown and with alumni clubs all over the world. Last year I met with alumni club leaders in more than 30 U.S. locations and in Tokyo, Hong Kong, Paris, and London. The number and quality of the events that Brown’s 80 alumni clubs are putting on is very impressive. My son Sam continues to work as a director of commercials and a freelance cameraman in New York City, and my daughter Sarah was granted a PhD in social psychology and is working in a lab at Mt. Sinai School of Medicine. I still love travel, even though I do it so much for work, and spent two weeks in the Dordogne and in Paris last April.”

Cochair of the 65th Reunion, Jack Hess, reports: “Edna Coogan Snow and I as cochairs of the upcoming 65th Reunion hope you’ve marked the dates May 23-25, 2008, on your calendar. We will focus both on our reunion and on recognizing the Class of 2008, beginning with a reception on Friday, May 23, and winding up with the Commencement procession on Sunday, May 25. Details will follow.”

Andrea Whitaker Baumann writes: “I am still recovering from a knee operation. Walt and I took one cruise—Egypt in February for 14 days with Grand Circle Travel. It was a fantastic journey through ancient Egypt: five days in Cairo, one day in Alexandria, six days cruising up the Nile from Luxor to Aswan seeing all the temples and tombs (including Tutankhamen’s), and one day flying to Abu Simbel. Otherwise, I keep teaching my strength/aerobic/stretching/balance classes each week. We now have five grandchildren, ages 15, 12, 4, almost 4, and 6 months. Our five children are all doing well and remain busy with children or dogs or cats.” Contact Andrea at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Judy Neal Murray writes: “After enduring the humbling experience of signing up for Social Security and Medicare, I decided that the best antidote was to start a new job. In July, I was hired by Harvard to initiate a student docent program, training undergraduates to lead gallery talks and tours for fellow classmates and alumni in the Fogg, Busch-Reisinger, and Sackler Museums. I’m also coteaching a Harvard Medical School course, Training the Eye: Improving the Art of Physical Diagnosis, that develops students’ observational skills by looking at art. Best of all, I recently became a grandmother to grandson Owen and granddaughter Sophia. I am looking forward to catching up with classmates at our 45th reunion this spring.” Contact Judy at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

William L. Palmisciano writes: “I had an opportunity last summer to get together with classmate Bob Sliney and his wife, Diane Jones Sliney ’64. I had seen neither since graduation. We had a wonderful boat tour of Narragansett Bay together.”

Leslie Leopold Sucher and Liz Nowlin Drumm joined Janice Fernald Huang and her husband, Tom Huang, on a family-and-friends retirement birthday celebration trip touring the newly tourist-friendly national parks in China. They report they enjoyed incredible sights, fantastic fun, and memorable sharing.

From the November / December 2007 Issue

Stephen Tracy writes: “I have just retired after completing five years as director and professor of classical studies at the American School of Classical Studies in Athens, Greece. The school represents the interests of all American archaeologists working in Greece and acts as their liaison with the Greek authorities. It also provides graduate students in archaeology and classics and related disciplines with first-hand experience of the material culture of Greece. It was an exciting and enjoyable assignment that was made more challenging by the international political situation and the weakness of the dollar against the euro.

“I am now director emeritus of the school and also emeritus professor of Greek and Latin at Ohio State Univ. My wife, June W. Allison, and I are living near the beach in St. Augustine, Fla. I am currently revising a reader on Pericles that will be published later this year by the Univ. of California Press. Our son, Benjamin A. Tracy ’07 is attending the Univ. of Virginia Law School.”

From the September / October 2007 Issue

Class Secretary Jennifer Williams Ketay reports: "It seems distant now, but before we know it our 45th reunion, next May 23-25, will be upon us. Please put those dates on your calendar and plan to join your classmates for a great time on College Hill. Also, please keep those class notes coming by sending your news to me at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it or to the BAM at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it or Box 1854, Providence 02912."

From the May / June 2007 Issue

Class secretary Jennifer Williams Ketay reports: “Many thanks to the more than 60 classmates who contributed dues to the class treasury. Those who haven’t done so, please get them in by the end of June by sending dues (and more news) to me at Brown University, Box 1859, Providence, RI 02912-1859. And thanks also to the increasing numbers of you who have contributed news to the Class Notes section! We hope that inspires even more of you to update all of us on your doings, comings, goings, etc. Please e-mail me at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it with your news, or send directly to This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it Only one year to go until our sensational 45th reunion! Please put May 23-25, 2008, in your mental calendars for your return to Brown.”

Martha Anderson will retire from teaching in June. She can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Robert A. Brown has been teaching high school science and Bible at Dade Christian School in Miami, Fla. He would love to hear from former classmates.

Ray Fisher writes: “I am now director of NGO CRAG (Colorado Russia Agricultural Group). I travel to Russia and thereabouts twice a year. Our CRAG newsletter is up to issue 36. My wife, Judy (Univ. of Tennessee ’68), is a counselor at a high school in Colorado Springs. My son, Matt, graduated from the University of Colorado in journalism and advertising in 2004. He is a downhill bike racer and works at University Bicycles in Boulder. My wife and I ran a business in Colorado for twenty-seven years, Sagebrush News Inc., distributing out-of-state newspapers including the New York Times. Thanks to Professor Brown for starting me in Russian language.”

Mary Mathewson Grusin writes: “I am working at the Marquesa Hotel, named best in Florida by Travel & Leisure Magazine. My husband, Richard, is a dive-boat captain for Lost Reef Adventures in Key West. I am on the board of the Key West Literary Seminar, an event that draws a national audience to Key West every January. Let us know when you visit the southernmost point in the U.S.A.” Mary can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Carl E. Lane writes: “I have been in practice doing cardiovascular and thoracic surgery for many years in Macon, Georgia. We have also been involved with teaching at Mercer University School of Medicine in Macon. I have also had a commercial farm operation for many years, primarily raising beef cattle.”

Robert J. Rosen writes: “I have been living in El Paso, Texas, for thirty-three years still practicing ophthalmology. I’m in touch with Larry Gross regularly, and Rich Hirsch and Dan Alper occasionally. Both children graduated from Brown (Andrew ’92 and Brooke Rosen Tyroler ’96).” Bob can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Harris Schrank writes: “I have spent nearly a decade running Harris Schrank Fine Prints, specializing in fine old master and modern prints.” Harris can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Bob Sliney writes: “I have retired to R.I. on a part-time basis via the purchase of a condominium overlooking Bristol Harbor. We are enjoying it as much the second time around and would gladly welcome any classmates.” Bob can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

William Van Ness writes: “Daughter Paige graduated with the Class of 2006.” Bill can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

From the March / April 2007 Issue

Joseph Fisler writes: “Our son-in-law received tenure at Brown in 2006 and a promotion to associate professor in the computer science department. He and our daughter, who received tenure in computer science at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, are on sabbatical, dividing their time between Edinburgh, Boston, Australia, and Texas. They love living in Providence, and we welcome the opportunity to visit them and the campus whenever we can.” Joseph can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Alan S. Geller (see Michele Geller ’92).

Mary Mathewson Grusin is working at the Marquesa Hotel in Key West, Fla., which was named best in Florida by Travel & Leisure magazine. Her husband, Richard, is a dive boat captain for Lost Reef Adventures in Key West. She is on the board of the Key West Literary Seminar, an event that draws a national audience every January. She writes: “Let us know when you visit the southernmost point in the U.S.A.” Mary can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Stewart Hauser is nearing retirement but still represents New York City on several homeland security committees in Washington, D.C. He enjoys teaching, consulting, and developing programs for importing and exporting. He married Michelle Maslow on December 17 after a long courtship. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Robert S. Hodavance plans to attend the 45th reunion in 2008, when his daughter Kristen (his last undergraduate) graduates from Brown. This year she received honorable mention as an All-Ivy field-hockey goalie. She has started three straight years for Brown. Contact Robert at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Barbara Hoffman continues as a prominent arts and entertainment attorney. She writes: “In connection with my recently published book, Art and Cultural Heritage: Law, Policy and Practice, I have made presentations and was hosted in London; Newport; Xian, China; Shanghai; Alta; New York City; Boston; and Washington, D.C.” Barbara can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Lee Korhumel, after selling his firm, Chicago Capitol, Inc., to Wunderlich Securities Inc., serves as senior managing director, working primarily with individual clients on their investment strategies.

Philip Jay Lewitt writes: “In May, at 65, I married the lovely Miss Tomomi Maeda, age 29, after six years together as partners. We’re having a grand life in Kyoto, Japan, where I’ve lived and taught university for thirty years.” Philip can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Toni McKerrow writes: “I have four grandchildren, ages 2 through 5. My husband, Martin, retired last spring from Lehman Brothers. He enjoyed his unbroken summer in Nantucket so much that we stayed on past Columbus Day, with a two-week break in September to play golf in Scotland. We were back in New York City for the winter. I look forward to travel in the spring and turning my snow bunnies into a ski team this winter. I am still vice president of the Maria Mitchell Association on Nantucket, and Martin is chairman of the board of trustees at Bloomfield College in New Jersey.” Toni can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Robert Nickerson writes: “As chairman of our 45th reunion committee, I believe that it is never too early to reach out for assistance from my classmates. If you have an interest in being on the committee for our 2008 reunion, or if you have thoughts on any of the events, or if you would like to encourage classmate attendance, I can be reached at Stone Tower Properties, 545 South Main St., Providence; (401) 490-6444; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it Our first reunion committee meeting will be sometime in September 2007, and the reunion will be on the weekend of May 23, 2008.”

Bill Palmisciano reports that his daughter Lynne M. Palmisciano ’90, ’94 MD is now an emergency room attending physician at Hasbro Children’s Hospital in Providence. Bill just celebrated his third wedding anniversary with his wife, Judy (his first wife passed away eight years ago). Bill can be reached at william.palmisciano@axa.
advisors.com.

Hilary Ross Salk writes: “Fast forward living: five granddaughters, same husband. We live in New York City, doors away from Penn Station, which is convenient for traveling back and forth between the Big Apple and the Small Plum (Providence.) Almost all my family lives in Brooklyn, including my mother, Ruth Berger Ross ’32, age 95. Current dream: to have my novel, Unter Obergammergau, published.” Hilary can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Nancy Scull and Ann Reilly Mostoller had a lovely November visit with Ann Kidder Bickford, who retired to Prescott, Ariz., in 2000. They enjoyed reviving their bridge skills and seeing some local birds, which, Nancy writes, were “quite different from those on the East Coast (where I live) and Tennessee (Ann Mostoller’s home).” Nancy can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

G. William Spohn III retired from Coleman Spohn Corporation after forty-four years with the company. Coleman Spohn is a regional mechanical contractor based in Cleveland, Ohio, and William served as executive vice president and operations manager for many of his years there. He consults from his new home in Mebane, N.C.” He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Remy Zimmerman is still working as a product liability litigator at Wiggin & Dana and still married to Darlene. They have two sons (both single!), Kent, 34, who markets wine online for boutique West Coast wineries (www.openmarketwine.com), and Tad, 30, who is a pharmaceutical sales rep. Remy can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

From the January / February 2007 Issue

Tom Bale writes: “It sounds like the vast majority of us are not reachable. We can only guess. I respond because I worry about the possible pandemic flu. Even though there is a continuous flow of information in the news and our federal government is allocating great sums of money to prepare us for this catastrophe, I find most of the people I talk to really aren’t up to considering what we may face. My first question to all our bright classmates: in the best of the most sophisticated public relations operations, what strategy would be suggested to overcome denial and resistance to planning for survival in a flu pandemic? A second question: do PR firms do pro bono work when the social cause is a great professional challenge? This has become my volunteer activity. I have been looking for something that would demand the best of what I had to offer and this issue jumped out at me. If this pandemic came, it could very well wipe out my handicapped daughter. There’s the personal ripple up my spine. I’m working half-time now as a family therapist, so I have a lot of time beyond digging in the garden in the sun.” Tom can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Barbara Blangwort writes: “I am very sorry I had to miss the Boston event. I would dearly love to have been there and see everyone and have a day of just fun and good talk. Alas, it was my son Paul’s birthday. In general that would be no big deal for an about-to-be-27-year-old, but given our last year, it was very important that we all be together. His brother John, 28, died last September, and we’re all still grieving. John had epilepsy, apparently well under control, but he passed away in his sleep, perhaps because of the disease. Christmas and New Year’s were very hard, as you can imagine. Life goes on, though. At age 64 I just became a Level 1 professional ski instructor. I specialize in blind and developmentally disabled students at Bretton Woods. I’m also in charge of getting grants for our newly formed Boys and Girls Club of the North Country. Given all my deadlines and everything we have had to do to settle our son’s estate, it has been a very hectic year. I am back to being a full-time volunteer. By the way, he may not have won the gold in the Olympics, but Bode Miller is a hero of mine. He has a fund-raiser every year at Bretton Woods called BodeFest and he donates all the proceeds to the Adaptive Ski Program. He is also the largest contributor to our Boys and Girls Club and just a genuinely nice person. I send my best to everyone.” Barbara can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Lucy Diggs writes: “I have some news that I would really like everyone to know. For the past ten years I have been making quilts with fabric I have dyed myself using dyes and methods that predate the Civil War. After the Civil War chemical dyes came into general use and by the turn of the century had more or less completely replaced the old natural dyes. It’s something most people don’t think about, but from the dawn of history up to the Civil War, all cloth that was colored in any way was dyed with natural dyes. This includes the robes of the Egyptian pharaohs, the Bayeux and Gobelin tapestries, the Oriental rugs of the Turkish sultans, the gowns of Queen Elizabeth I, the French blue of Napoleon’s soldiers, the British Redcoats, etc. Colors produced from natural dyes are more complex, subtle, vibrant, softer, and altogether more beautiful, in my opinion, than those created by the currently used chemical dyes. In February, there was an exhibit of my quilts at Cattle Track Gallery in Scottsdale, Ariz. In conjunction with the show, Cattle Track Press published a limited-edition book of my quilts together with commentary about the dyes and some riffs on the quilt makers of old. This volume, Old Dyes, New Quilts, may be purchased for $350 from Cattle Track Press, 6105 N. Cattle Track Rd., Scottsdale, AZ 85250. I’m living nowadays in the country in the California wine district. I have a large garden that includes quantities of organic vegetables and many dye plants. I would love to see or hear from any classmates.” Lucy can be reached at 4901 Wallace Creek Rd., Healdsburg, Calif. 95448; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Judy Brick Freedman writes: “My life is split between a Manhattan apartment, an Ocala, Fla., horse farm, and our voting residence, a farm in Charlotteville, N.Y. I maintain my practice, studies, and teaching of Iyengar yoga. Though no longer traveling to present workshops, I remain involved with the international yoga community as I study in alternate years in India and assess aspiring teachers throughout the United States. Last October I hosted Sri B.K.S. Iyengar in New York City, as he completed his book and television tour in the U.S.A. I’m on the executive committee of the board of trustees of Glimmerglass Opera Company and active in supporting young musical artists. Collecting antique horse trappings, an outgrowth of my interest in horses and riding, connects me to fascinating places and people. I am on the advisory council of the Textile Museum in D.C. My husband, Allen R. Freedman, though officially retired, remains active in business, mostly in this country but more recently in China. We never have as much time as we would like to visit children and grandchildren in Bellingham, Wash., and Summit, N.J. Please get in touch so we can arrange a visit.” Judy can be reached at jbrickfreedman @aol.com.

Tom Generous writes: “Somehow I’ve kept in some kind of contact with a few of our classmates who were and remain dear. Because there are others I’ve lost, I hope to hear from anyone who would like to hear from me. After the Navy, I got a PhD at Stanford, then taught at Choate, the Connecticut prep school, for twenty-eight years. I went there because I wanted to coach, and it turned out great for that and many other reasons. Diane and I retired in 1999 and moved to Carrboro, N.C., a village totally enclosed within Chapel Hill. She’s traditionally retired, in a garden, a movie, and a book club, and is the social director of the neighborhood association. Very valuable woman, our neighbors all think. I teach one history course and one squash course at UNC. We both go to all the basketball games. Our daughters Michelle and Suzanne will be 40 and 37 this summer—yikes! Both are professionals at the top of their games, but neither is married. Years ago, both my grandfather and my dad, without knowing that the other had said so, told me that they began to die when they quit working. They were Depression guys, you see, so they identified themselves by their jobs. Well, I could see that in me, too, so I was determined I was going to learn things that I could do in retirement. Two of the results: I’m fairly good at both the flute and the ukulele. Thinking of me singing ‘Pearly Shells’ in the Hawaiian language and my Rhode Island accent is pretty scary, isn’t it? Another one is I write a lot. Since leaving Choate there’s been a university press book, Sweet Pea at War, about a WWII U.S. Navy ship, and a tongue-in-cheek article about successful Presidential death in an online magazine. Please get in touch, hear?” Tom can be reached at tomgenerous @earthlink.net.

Margaret Lang writes: “In my retirement from a career in physical therapy, I’ve now published fourteen stories—many in Chicken Soup for the Soul. I’m also a Christian speaker/teacher with engagements in the United States, Thailand, East Timor, and Australia. My hope is to help the poor overseas. Six months a year I teach orphans in Thailand and assist with a health clinic in East Timor. My daughter is a physician/missionary to Asia, and my son a worship leader. I’m happy to say that I have two granddaughters. For more information, e-mail contact@ servingourworld.org.”

Marty Lawyer writes: “In October 2006, I saw two classmates, Doug Barnes and Henry Hammond, at the Brown– Georgetown football game in D.C. Henry’s wife was there, too. I also saw three of my fraternity brothers—Dr. Charlie Jackson ’64, Maurice ‘Rocky’ Mountain ’65, and Bob Bidwell ’64. Ross Dicker ’66, whom I knew well both at Brown and at Vanderbilt Law, was there, too. So I saw and spent some good time with several old friends from Brunonia’s days. The game was fun, with the Brown Band in good form. The temperature was in the nineties, but you don’t mind when Brown is winning. After that weekend, I went to Vermont for some bicycling, which is how I happened to be passing through the D.C. area from Florida. Those two bike Vermont tours were my fifth and sixth.” Marty can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Norman Reynolds ’65 ScM writes: “As the guy who was turned down for Navy ROTC because I was a premed student, I would like to point out that I’m a retired colonel of the U.S. Army after thirty-five and a half years of service in the Army National Guard. Yes, I was confirmed at ‘Smokey Steve’s’ across the street from the Refectory, but now I serve as senior warden of St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Milwaukee, and will soon be acting rector as my ordained rector takes his sabbatical. In my spare time, I’m chief of neurology at the Milwaukee VAMC and professor of neurology at the Medical College of Wisconsin.” Norman can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Sara Silberman writes: “I am now blissfully retired, having completed nearly forty years of teaching U.S. history at Connecticut College. I am finding that being essentially unscheduled after all these years is wonderful. Equally, I am treasuring the opportunity at last to devote my full attention to a book that I’ve been working on for years—a biography of Dr. Edith Banfield Jackson (1895–1977; Vassar ’16; Hopkins Medical School ’21), who was analyzed by Sigmund Freud from 1930 to 1936 and then spent her career (1936–60) as a professor of pediatrics and psychiatry at Yale. I’m also treasuring the additional time that I can spend with my husband, who retired from teaching philosophy at the University of Connecticut, with my two daughters, and with friends. My husband and I moved to Pawtucket, R.I., just blocks over the Providence line, seven years ago, and we are much enjoying Providence—ready access to Brown and to theater and music in Boston.” Sara can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Douglas White writes: “Classmates with interest can learn much about me from my labyrinthine Web site: http:// eclectic.ss.uci. edu/drwhite/. It’s used for university teaching, databases, downloadable publications, and to compensate for the inevitable complexity of life and the pervasive memory loss that ensues. There are pictures of pugs and a grandchild as well. We are not long for this planet, so we might as well make use of the Web. I wish our classmates the best.” Doug can also be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

From the September / October 2006 Issue

Rear Admiral James B. Greene Jr.,U.S. Navy retired,received the Naval Post­graduate Distinguished Alumni Award on May 17 from the president, Rear Admiral Richard Wells. James is the Naval Post­graduate School (NPS) acquisition chair and was recognized for his significant contributions to and impact on the educational programs of NPS. He was a member of the Brown NROTC program.

Brooke Kruger Lipsitt (see Paul Lipsitt ’50).

Rear Admiral Merrill Ruck, U.S. Navy retired,has taken an appointment as executive director of the Naval Postgraduate School Foundation. The foundation is a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization through which donations can be made available to the school. The Naval Postgraduate School, founded in 1909, is the primary source of graduate education for the military. Merrill was commissioned through the Brown NROTC program.

Bruce Saypol (see Josh Saypol ’92).

From the March / April 2005 Issue

Finn M. W. Caspersen (see Charles M. Royce ’61) is chairman of the board and CEO of Knickerbocker, of Gladstone, N.J. about being busier in retirement than when working; for me that mostly means helping Amish neighbors and church and Masonic activities. Grandchildren, of course—fifteen! Our door is always open to all Brown affiliates passing through, especially those of the class of ’59 who remember me. We are located about fifteen miles south of Iowa City in Grant Wood country. We are very close to the Amanas.”

Richard F. Judkins writes: “Retired after forty years of ENT/HNS practice on July 1, 2003. Enjoying golf and winter in Palmetto, Fla.”

Bernard G. Koether II writes: “Go to glaciersociety.org for the full story.”

Theodore K. Mathews writes that he retired after 37 years as a professor of music at Agnes Scott College in Decatur, Ga. J.

Stewart McLaughlin writes: “For the past three years I have been the court-appointed receiver of Brunswick Hospital in Amityville, N.Y., a 474-bed private hospital that became involved in a contract dispute concerning its sale and ownership. A great experience for a country lawyer!”

Aaron Mendelson writes: “I am taking more time off from the insurance and investment business. Spending time in Naples, Fla., visiting friends, skiing with our daughter in Breckenridge, Colo., and going to Smith College with Cyndy auditing a course. I am very grateful for our good health.”

Brooke “Bonnie” Hunt Mitchell writes that she was very disappointed to miss the reunion. “When the Pembroke group photo arrived, it was great to recognize faces. Best wishes to you all.”

John R. Morava writes: “Carol and I enjoyed the Brown D-Day trip to France and England even more in the company of classmate Andy Davis and his wife, Gail.”

David L. Morton welcomed grandson Samuel Morton Kleid on Sept. 25, in Los Angeles, Calif. His parents are Melissa Morton ’92 and Mark Kleid ’92.”

Fiftieth reunion cochair Caryl-Ann Miller Nieforth writes: “Please contact me if you are interested in being on our reunion committee. She can be reached at: This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Robert Pratt writes: “I’m still kickin’, but slower.”

Judith Eastburn Sawyer retired Aug. 31 from Randolph Macon Woman’s College in Lynchburg, Va., after seventeen years with the Macon Bookshop.

John W. Soggs writes: “I retired from the real estate development business at 55, but my son Randy finished law school and chose to."

Marion Post and Joseph Hardman ’64 celebrated their daughter Tracey’s wedding Sept. 24, in Connecticut. Chip Cutcliffe ’64 and Debbie Payne Cutcliffe ’65 attended. Tracey Hardman (Colby College and UConn Law) and her husband, Steven Hryniewicz (Notre Dame and UConn Law), practice law and reside in the Hartford area. Marion can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

From the November / December 2004 Issue

William R. Caroselli was named a “top 100 Pennsylvania Super Lawyer” by Law & Politics and Philadelphia magazine. He writes: “On June 25, I married Dusty Elias Kirk and am living in Fox Chapel, Pa. I am practicing law full time and finishing my last year as chairman of the board of the Easter Seals of Western Pennsylvania. My wife is also a lawyer, but in another firm.”

Steve Tracy (see Mark A. Tracy ’95).

From the September / October 2004 Issue

Gail Caslowitz Levine (see Jeffrey W. Goodman ’96).

From the July / August 2004 Issue

R. David Drucker just celebrated his fourth year as director of the Chenonga County Historical Society Museum in Norwich, N.Y. He earlier managed Shako:wi Cultural Center for the Oneida Indian Nation, and is still doing research in Mesoamerican archaeology, archaeoastronomy, and linguistics. He writes: “I am now returning to teach anthropology as an adjunct at Utica College—Native peoples of North America. I haven’t considered returning to radio, but teaching and museum management are a certain (if more limited) form of entertaining audiences. I’d love to hear from old classmates.” David can be reached at 2801 Oneida St., Utica, N.Y. 13501; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

George Garland writes: “I continue to help the United Nations Association of the National Capital Area promote better U.S.–U.N. relations and the millennium development goals. What better way to apply mathematics?” George can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Bob Rosen (see Harlow L. Paul Jr. ’40).

Nancy Scull writes: “My new career as a photographic artist is progressing. I’ve just finished a show at the Cape (Cod) Museum of Fine Arts and will have a second solo exhibition at Boston’s Eclipse Gallery in November. In between are juried exhibitions at various art associations and a couple of private solo shows. A very busy year.” Nancy can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

From the January / February 2004 Issue

Lewis Feldstein has coauthored Better Together: Restoring the American Community (Simon & Schuster) with Robert Putnam. Lewis, who has had a long career in civic activism, and Putman report on how Americans are developing new ways of making connections among people, reestablishing bonds of trust and understanding, and revitalizing civic spirit.

Tom Generous writes: “I’m working part-time at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill as both an adjunct professor of military history and squash coach. I teach one course, an undergrad research seminar on guerrilla warfare since 1945, in which the students learn to “do” history. My new book, Sweet Pea at War: A History of USS Portland, was just published by University Press of Kentucky. Marty Lawyer stopped by after the reunion last May. Diane and I would love to see others, too.” Tom can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Jean Vallee Kates writes: “My three sons are married and I have two granddaughters now. I am still working full-time as a college English teacher. In the past, Brown and Pembroke alumni living in Israel had mini-reunions. Who are the alumni in Israel today?” Jean can be reached at Kibbutz Barkai, D.N. Menashe, Israel; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Robert McKenna writes: “I am married to Ann Dewitt McKenna, with four sons. Timothy lives with his wife, Elbey, and son, Diego, in Caracas, Venezuela. Christopher is vice president of McKenna Financial Inc., John is married to Karissa Ellis and had twins, Fiona and Ian, last February. James has been traveling in Europe since March 2003. Ann and I founded McKenna Financial in San Diego in 1969.”

From the March / April 2003 Issue

Reunion weekend, May 23–26, is rapidly approaching. Registration information will arrive in the spring. If you did not receive the fall reunion mailing, please contact reunion headquarters at (401) 863-1947 or reunions @brown.edu.

Marty Lawyer writes: “I’d like to invite classmates to join me May 19–22 for a pre-reunion bike tour in Vermont. Contact me or visit bikevermont.com for more information. I’m really looking forward to the reunion.” Marty can be reached at 5227 Bon Vivant Dr., #195, Tampa, Fla. 33603; cmlawyer3@ aol.com.

Peter Wehmann (see Todd Wehmann ’94).

From the November / December 2002 Issue

Steve Cymrot (see Helen Cymrot '99).

Robert N. Nelson writes: "I am pleased to announce the arrival of David Lanier Nelson, my second grandchild and first grandson. Lanier, as he will be called, is the son of David and Jennifer Nelson of Macon, Ga. David's mother is Anne Milbouer Nelson '64, '66 M.A.T. of Hyde Park, Mass. I am still working half-time as a senior research associate at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. I hope to make it to our 40th reunion next spring. It would be my first since the 15th." Robert can be reached at 12131 Long Ridge Ln., Bowie, Md. 20715; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

From the September / October 2000 Issue

John Burnham (see Lyndon Burnham ’32)

From the July / August 2000 Issue

Gail Caslowitz Levine (see Jane Levine Snyder ’88).

Phyllis J. Marsteller, of Metuchen, N.J., writes that she accompanied former employees of the British Antarctic Survey on their return to Marguerite Bay, Antarctica, in February.

Babette Freund Sackheim writes: "I’m now ‘commuting’ between California and Huntsville, Ala., where my husband, Bob, is assistant director of NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center."

From the May / June 2000 Issue

Dan Alper, Michael Cardozo, and Larry Gross (see Ty Alper ’95).

From the March / April 2000 Issue

Barbara Chernell Faigin (see Randy Faigin ’90).

Robert J. Rosen, of El Paso, Tex., writes: “I am pleased to announce the birth of our first grandchild, Blake Andrew Rosen (Brown 2021), son of Andrew Todd Rosen ’91 and his wife, Cathy.”

From the January / February 2000 Issue

Marty Lawyer reports he has been divorced since April and is still living in Tampa, Fla.

Bob Nelson writes: "My son David and his wife, Jennifer, gave me my first grandchild, Elizabeth Anne Nelson, born Sept. 28. David's mother is Anne Milbouer '64. I am in my last year of teaching chemistry at Georgia Southern University in Statesboro, Ga., and look forward to moving to Bowie, Md., in May to join my wife, Mary; to enjoy retirement; and to work part-time for NASA at Goddard Space Flight Center." Bob can be reached at 12131 Long Ridge Ln., Bowie, Md. 20715; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

From the November / December 1999 Issue

John W. Sparks (see Norman E. Searle '30).

From the September / October 1999 Issue

Finn M. W. Caspersen received an honorary degree from Johns Hopkins University in May. Finn is chairman of the Hodson Trust at Johns Hopkins, where grants have steadily increased under his guidance. He is also chairman and C.E.O. of the Beneficial Corp.

From the July / August 1999 Issue

Jean Vallee Kates writes: "Since 1963 I have been living on a kibbutz in Israel. I have three boys, ages 22, 25, and 28. My eldest is in charge of field crops on the kibbutz. My middle son is going to study art, and my youngest is an army officer. I teach English at a teacher-training college in Tel Aviv. I very rarely meet anyone who went to Brown or Pembroke, but I'd love to hear from anyone who is coming to Israel." Jean can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Robert Kroin, chief architect of the Boston Redevelopment Authority, has been awarded the Thomas Jefferson Award for Public Architecture, given by the American Institute of Architects. The award is the nation's highest honor for public architecture. Robert has contributed to the designs of such Boston landmarks as the New England Holocaust Memorial, the Hynes Convention Center, and Copley Place. He lives in Brookline, Mass.

John Peeler's book, Building Democracy in Latin America (Lynne Rienner Publishers) has been awarded the Arthur P. Whitaker Prize by the Middle Atlantic Council of Latin American Studies for the best book published by a council member in the last year. John, of Lewisburg, Pa., is professor and chair of political science at Bucknell University.

Nancy Scull, Cambridge, Mass., writes: "Last July I left Digital Equipment Corp., where I had been vice president of analyst relations, in the wake of its acquisition by Compaq. In September I drove from Anchorage, Alaska, to Montreal, Canada, with Mary "Kibby" Carlisle Schultheis, who was moving back to New England after twenty-five years in Alaska. Great trip! I am currently enjoying a 'sabbatical' year catching up on all those things one just never gets to do while working. I'm also starting a consulting practice."

From the March / April 1999 Issue

Robert J. Rosen, El Paso, Tex., and Jane J. Rosen announce that their son, Andrew T. Rosen '92, received his D.D.S. degree, summa cum laude, from the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio in May. Andrew and his bride of two years, the former Cathy Jones, live in Houston, where he is a resident in orthodontics.

From the January / February 1999 Issue

John Andrus, of Andrus Realty Group, is president of the Chicago Association of Realtors' board of directors.

Finn Caspersen (see Artemis Joukowsky '55).

Carol N. King, Groton, Conn., misses seeing classmates at their 35th reunion. Carol and her husband, Peter, led a sailing safari on Lake Kariba in Zimbabwe. Their company, King Yacht Charters, organizes sailing trips in fascinating locations around the world, including many for Cruising World magazine. Carol can be reached at (860) 536-9217.

From the November / December 1998 Issue

Bob Eisenbeis is senior vice president and director of research at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Bob and his wife Mimi moved to Atlanta from Chapel Hill, N.C., where he was the Wachovia Professor of Banking at the Kenan-Flagler Business School at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Bob has published more than five books and ninety articles. This is his third tour in the Federal Reserve, where he is involved in the monetary policy process. "The work at the Fed is fresh, challenging, and enjoyable," he writes. Bob and Mimi's son, Mark, works for Centura Banks in Rocky Mount, N.C., and their daughter, Jill, is a junior at Brenau University in Gainesville, Ga. Bob can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Janice Huang (see Steven Huang '93).

From the November / December 1998 Issue

Bob Eisenbeis is senior vice president and director of research at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Bob and his wife Mimi moved to Atlanta from Chapel Hill, N.C., where he was the Wachovia Professor of Banking at the Kenan-Flagler Business School at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Bob has published more than five books and ninety articles. This is his third tour in the Federal Reserve, where he is involved in the monetary policy process. "The work at the Fed is fresh, challenging, and enjoyable," he writes. Bob and Mimi's son, Mark, works for Centura Banks in Rocky Mount, N.C., and their daughter, Jill, is a junior at Brenau University in Gainesville, Ga. Bob can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Janice Huang (see Steven Huang '93).

From the September / October 1998 Issue

Our 35th reunion was a celebration of connecting and reconnecting. It was great to see old friends and meet new ones. The weekend gave us an opportunity to see the many exciting changes on campus and around the "Renaissance City" of Providence. From the Saturday night dinner on the banks of the Seekonk River to the Water Fire on the Moshassuck River downtown, we had a bird's-eye view of all the changes. It was great to see so many of our classmates return. Keep that connection going by sending in your class notes to the BAM. - Bob Nickerson, class president

  • 35th reunion attendees included: Judith Rice Abate, James Abernathy, Daniel Alper, Norman Alt, Andrea Whitaker Baumann, Judith Watman Bernstein, Sandra Kinder Bertsch, Carter Booth, Stephen Bray, Elaine Butler Cameron, Susan Mason Carlisle, Dayton Carr, Robert Cashion, Finn Caspersen, Shirley Brothers Clay, Elaine Piller Congress, Elizabeth Nowlin Drumm, Carol Spindler Duncan, Lewis Feldstein, William Generous, Lawrence Gross, John Gunzelman, Henry Hammond, Stewart Hauser, Theodore Heyck, Thomas Hoagland, Janice Fernald Huang, Richard Johnson, John Kaufmann, Jennifer Williams Ketay, Carol Norton King, Robert Kroin, Clarence Lawyer, Gail Caslowitz Levine, Brooke Kruger Lipsitt, Robert Matzke, Devereaux McClatchey, Daniel McDonald, Arlene Arnold McGibbon, Judith Neal Murray, David L. Myers, Peter Nickerson, Robert Nickerson, Carol Burchard O'Hare, Fred Parker, Robert Reiss, Donald Roy, Hilary Ross Salk, Bruce Saypol, William Schnell, Nancy Scull, James Seed, Eleanor Lindgren Smith, Charles Bond Sokoloff, Leslie Leopold Sucher, Paul Sydlowski, Robert Tortolani, Sandra Camp Turgay, David Wheatland, Gordon Williams, and Dennis Wyckoff.
  • From the July / August 1998 Issue

    Suzanne Walter Bassani (see Margaret Jacoby '52).

    Sandra Kinder Bertsch's husband, Bill '61, is president and CEO of A.W. Bertsch Inc., floor brokers at the New York Stock Exchange. Their son, Todd, is the company's chairman of operations. He was married in Tulsa, Okla., on Sept. 27, 1997, to Amy Merrill Schermerhorn, granddaughter of Edwin J. Schermerhorn '34 and Phoebe Merrill Schermerhorn '36. Sandy and Bill's son, Will, is a vice president at Merrill Lynch. He was married in New York City on Oct. 19, 1996, to Lindsey Bunkelmann. Their daughter, Hilary '88, is an architect with Ehrenkrantz, Eckshet & Kuhn in New York City. Recently, Sandy and Bill purchased a vacation home in Palm Beach. They have lived in Oyster Bay, Long Island, since 1976.

    Carter Booth, Westfield, N.J., is a managing director in the global bank at Chase Manhattan in New York City. Carter reports that he "serves on the steering committee of thirteen international banks to assist in restructuring the Indonesian private-sector debt." He is spending a lot of time in Singapore and Jakarta.

    Roger Breslow is in his twenty-fifth year of internal-medicine practice with Slocom-Dickson medical group in New Hartford, N.Y. His three children attended Middlebury, Yale, and Wellesley. Roger, who is president of the board and a volunteer physician at a free clinic in Utica, N.Y., writes: "The community has been good to me."

    R. Glenn Cashion and his wife, Karen, returned to the United States in March after four "thoroughly enjoyable" years in the U.K. March also marked Glenn's 35th anniversary with AT&T. Glenn writes: "The question is, what do I do with the rest of my life?"

    Kenmore Commoss, Marblehead, Mass., writes: "While sailing a forty-two-foot chartered boat from Dominica to Martinique in March 1997, we encountered a flare from the crew of a sunken sailboat. In twenty-five- mile-per-hour winds and twenty-foot-high seas, we searched for a man who was unable to get into the lifeboat with the other crew. After two hours we found him and saved his life. So much for those sunny, calm, Caribbean sailing experiences."

    Elaine Piller Congress, New York City, was appointed a full professor at Fordham University Graduate School of Social Service. She has published more than twenty books and articles on social-work ethics and cultural diversity.

    Susan Davis married Offia Nwali of Ameka, Nigeria. Susan is doing a microenterprise program in Ameka while also maintaining her Chicago company and home.

    Elizabeth Nowlin Drumm, Baltimore, married Larry E. Drumm (Bloomsburg State College, Gettysburg Theological Seminary) in January 1993. Larry serves as a pastor at Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church in Baltimore. Elizabeth has been working for the Department of Defense for twenty years.

    Alan S. Geller, Scottsdale, Ariz., and his wife, Rosi, spend winters in Arizona, where Alan has a part-time practice in ophthalmology. They live in the East from April to October. Their daughter, Michele '92, graduated from medical school in May.

    Helen Baroway Goldman is still teaching high-school English in Boulder, Colo. Her son, Dan, who attended Brown for a year before transferring to Stanford, is doing computer graphics for the new Star Wars films. Her younger son, Jon, is a junior at Stanford, and her husband teaches physics at the University of Colorado.

    Michael A. Gureasko is in private practice in general, geriatric, and addiction psychiatry in Cincinnati. He is president of the Cincinnati Psychiatric Society. His wife, Patricia, is an interior decorator, and they have two daughters.

    Jennifer Williams Ketay moved from Hanover, N.H., to New York City, where she is enjoying Morningside Heights and big-city life. Sarah, 20, is a sophomore at Mount Holyoke College; Sam, 24, is in the beginning stages of a career as cameraman and future documentary filmmaker. Jennifer is an assistant in affiliate sales at Comedy Central, the cable television network. She spends her leisure time with friends at the movies, the ballet, and concerts. She is slowly trying to improve her apartment, built in 1911.

    Ted Knox, Centerville, Ohio, works with Ints Kaleps '64 in the new Air Force research lab at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.

    Stephen S. Mayne is practicing law in San Francisco with Steefel, Levitt & Weiss, a sixty-person firm. He lives with his wife, Linda, in Marin County, where they are raising two young soccer players, Matthew, 12, and Rebecca, 10, who they hope will be Brunonians someday.

    Arlene Arnold McGibbon, Westmount, Quebec, writes: "Life in Montreal is full. I'm teaching and exploring the possibilities of using hatha yoga study to align the mind, body, and spirit. I'm also continuing studies in self-realization in association with the International Meditation Institute in Kullu, India. And while working on what might be called the interior life (spirit), I'm able in a somewhat parallel way to adapt the manifest world of forms, as I assist clients to realize their interior decorating fantasies. I fill the hours in between enjoying the bliss of good friends; sharing my husband Peter's whirlwind life of deals and destinations (next, the Bahamas); absorbing the wonderful world of computers, as brought to me daily by our son, Zachary, the Internet whiz; trying to stay light with daughter Heather's next life adventure; and traveling. I try always to work from the knowledge that this great illusion of `my life,' this movie screen that seems to be my reality, should not be taken too seriously."

    John Peeler is the author of Building Democracy in Latin America (Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1998). He teaches political science at Bucknell and has been elected chair of the faculty.

    Joanna E. Rapf '73 Ph.D., Hanover, N.H., was promoted to full professor at the University of Oklahoma, where she teaches film in the English department. Her son, Alex, is a junior and a film major at Emerson College in Boston.

    Hilary Ross Salk is a broker with Salk Real Estate in Providence. She was recently hired as a social worker in North Providence schools. Hilary enjoys birdwatching and being with her 7-year-old granddaughter.

    Jeff Small (see Michael Gannon '91).

    Francis Williams (Frank Guglielmino) received his law degree from Suffolk University Law School in 1978 and now practices law in Providence at 400 Reservoir Ave., #1-A. Francis enjoys serving as a coach to the Brown Mock Trial Team.

    From the May / June 1998 Issue

    JohnC. Pennoyer has been superintendent of Adams County School District 14 (Comerce City, Colo.) since September.

    From the March / April 1998 Issue

    The great class of '63 is ready to celebrate, and we want you to be there. Save the dates, May 22-25, and come back to Brown. Your committee has planned a wide array of activities, so come share old and new memories. You should be receiving your registration packet shortly. If you did not receive the fall mailing, please contact reunion headquarters at (401) 863-1947.

    Richard M. Bernstein was appointed Pennsylvania chair of the U.S. Supreme Court Historical Society. Richard is a partner in the Philadelphia law firm of Hoyle, Morris & Kerr. He practices in various areas of commercial litigation, including antitrust and product liability.