| Class Notes - 1966 |
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From the July/August 2008 IssueCharles F. Homeyer announces his retirement from Holy Cross Episcopal Church in Grand Rapids, Mich., effective January, 2009. He has been rector for 30 years. He and Sara took their grandson to Costa Rica, where they all rode zip lines through the Cloud Forest. Contact Charles at 3539 Quiggle Ave. SE, Ada, Mich. 49301; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it From the May/June 2008 IssueLeonard A. Caldwell writes: "Almost retired, but working to bring the first chapter of Cradles to Crayons (www.cradelstocrayons.org) to Philadelphia. C2C is a unique nonprofit model that started in Boston in 2002 and, through existing social service agencies, recycles new and gently used essential items from affluent communities to children in need. We opened our warehouse in June 2007 and have already engaged 1500 volunteers in the work, signed up 70 social service agencies, and served more than 2000 children throughout the Philadelphia area—and it's all free." Contact Leonard at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it From the March/April 2008 IssueRobbie Dokson (see Laurie Dokson Gaydos '98). Walter Donway's new book of poetry, Touched By Its Rays, was published in February by the Atlas Society (www.atlassociety.com), a nonprofit publisher located in Washington, D.C. Walter is a lifelong writer and editor who started the journal Cerebrum: The Dana Forum on Brain Science and edited it for eight years until he retired in 2005 to become a full-time writer and investor. In 1970–71, he worked in the Brown development office as director of foundation fund-raising. He lives in Greenwich Village and in East Hampton, Long Island, with his wife, Robin Shepard. At Brown, he studied poetry with the poet and Blake scholar, S. Foster Damon. Walter has a son, Ethan Donway, who graduated in 2007 from Drew Univ. Contact Walter at 279 Stephen Hands Path, East Hampton, N.Y. 11937; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it Judith Howard Montgomery lives and writes in the high desert of Oregon. Her first poetry chapbook, Passion, received the 2000 Oregon Book Award for Poetry. Her first full-length book, Red Jess, was published in 2006 by Cherry Grove Collections. Her second chapbook, Pulse & Constellation, was a finalist for the Finishing Line Open Chapbook Competition and appeared from that press last summer. She is now working on two new manuscripts thanks to a literary arts fellowship and an Oregon Art Commission Individual Artist fellowship. Ann Honan Rodrigues (see Leo Kobayashi '94). From the January / February 2008 IssueAmy Bernstein Brem (see Marcella Bombardieri ’99). Frank Ryeyk is helping revitalize the historically black Jefferson City Community Center Association by initiating a speakers’ program and involving his Rotary Club in renovation work. Contact Frank at 406 Chestnut St., Jefferson City, Mo. 65101. From the September / October 2007 IssueRichard Ballou '66 (see Sandra Sundquist Durfee '57). Robert Dokson writes: "In May my youngest daughter, Jamie Dokson '01, married her long-time beau, Seth Mrozek '01, with whom she has been a couple since their junior year at Brown. The matron of honor was Jamie's oldest sister, Laurie Dokson Gaydos '98, and one of Seth's attendants was Laurie's husband, Christopher Gaydos '96. We are a Brown family through and through. Laurie and Chris are currently expecting the first Dokson grandchild, so perhaps we have a candidate for Brown's class of 2030 or so. As for me, I continue practicing law in Atlanta with a significant amount of my professional time spent as an arbitrator and mediator, primarily in commercial and employment disputes." Patrick O'Donnell writes: "I returned to Boston in 2006 after a six-year project in the U.S. Virgin Islands and am looking forward to more time with family and friends in the New England area." Patrick can be reached at 140 Charles St., Boston 02114; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it Meryl Smith Raskin's first grandchild, Olivia Faith Raskin, was born Dec. 27, 2006, to Eric Raskin '97 and his wife, Robin. Olivia visited Brown for the first time at her father's 10th reunion, where she also met her great-grand-uncle, Bernie Bell '42, and her cousin Jonathan Bell '78. Daniel Sullivan writes: "After ten years developing and leading the cancer imaging program at the National Cancer Institute (NCI), I returned to Duke Univ. in July. Among the many initiatives and activities my program developed with funds from NCI is the American College of Radiology Imaging Network, whose biostatistical center is at Brown, where it is led by Constantine Gatsonis, who was featured on page 15 of the May/June BAM. At Duke I'll be on the executive committee of the Cancer Center, working to integrate novel imaging methods into cancer clinical trials and advising the dean of the medical school on strategic planning for imaging at the Duke Medical Center. I'll also be working part time as science adviser for the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA), where my charge is to help the RSNA Board develop and implement a strategic plan for quantitative imaging. Cathy and I are excited about returning to the N.C. Research Triangle area and look forward to spending more time with our daughter Erin, our son-in-law Cliff, and three grandsons, who live there as well. Our son Todd Sullivan '97 graduated from the American Film Institute's graduate program in June. He and his wife, Elena Ritchie '98, continue to live and work in Los Angeles." From the July / August 2007 IssueCharles Homeyer writes: “In Feb., the Grands Rapids Area Center for Ecumenism awarded me their annual Ecumenical Service Award for an individual.” Charles can be reached at 3539 Quiggle Ave., SE, Ada, Mich. 49301; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it From the May / June 2007 IssueRichard Hiller (see Oliver Hurst-Hiller ’98). Rene Murai (see Oliver Hurst-Hiller ’98). David A. Rosenfeld writes: “My last visit to Providence since graduation was to take my two daughters on tours of Brown hoping that one would choose Brown. After graduation I taught school for four years, and then somewhat out of necessity I attended law school. I graduated from Boalt Hall School of Law at the University of California in 1973, where I met my wife, Shirley Woo, also a lawyer. Our daughters unfortunately chose other schools: Miriam is at Swarthmore, class of 2006, and Katherine is at Yale, class of 2010. Since graduating from Boalt, I have been practicing labor law on behalf of unions and workers, and our law firm is the largest union side law firm on the West Coast—Weinberg, Roger & Rosenfeld, located in Alameda, California. I have had an incredibly varied practice handling arbitrations, administrative matters, negotiations, litigation, and over 100 appellate cases, including cases in the California and United States Supreme Court. I have also started a second job teaching at Boalt where I am now teaching the basic labor law class. I am one of those lawyers who is thrilled to be able to use the law to advance progressive causes. I am still pleased to see that there is a strong force of social and political progressive activity at Brown.” Michael Targoff (see Oliver Hurst-Hiller ’98). From the January / February 2007 IssueMargie Satinsky, president of Satinsky Consulting, LLC, in Durham, N.C., is the author of a new book, Medical Practice Management in the 21st Century: The Handbook, to be published by Radcliffe Medical Ltd. in February. Margie is also a docent at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University and a yoga instructor. She can be reached at 201 Cedar Ridge Way, Durham, N.C. 27705; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
Jim Tatman writes: “I sold my home in Southern California last year and bought a beautiful new home in Tucson, Ariz., on an acre of land. I just finished putting in the pool and spa, did land- From the May / June 2006 IssueReunion ’06 weekend is almost here—May 26– 28. Return to campus to renew ties with old friends. Start with Campus Dance and finish the weekend by passing once again through the Van Wickle Gates. Visit the reunion Web site for complete details: http://alumni.brown.edu/news_events/reunions. From the March / April 2005 IssueCarlton R. Asher, Jr., was appointed to the board of contributing legal editors of Securities Litigation Commentator, a publication covering case law of brokerage house disputes. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it John G. Butcher has published The Closing of the Frontier: A History of the Marine Fisheries of Southeast Asia, c.1850–2000 (Institute of Southeast Asian Studies and KITLV Press). Joe Griesedieck writes: “After nearly two decades with Spencer Stuart, the executive search firm, including two terms as worldwide CEO, I joined Korn Ferry International, the leading global executive search firm, as vice chairman, with responsibility for the firm’s CEO recruiting practice. I continue to be based in San Francisco.” Joe 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 IssueDrew R. Weinlandt writes: “I taught English at Garden City High School, N.Y., from 1970 to 2001, when I retired. During those years I wrote a tremendous number of letters of recommendation to Brown on behalf of my students. In 1999 I received two teaching awards on the New York State level. Last May, as a member of the Nassau Community College honors program faculty, I won an Excellence in Teaching award, of which I am also quite proud.” In addition to these awards, Drew frequently earned the Favorite Teacher award at Garden City High School and was listed several times in Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers. From the September / October 2004 IssueWendy Knox Bulkowski writes that she is teaching English at Shoin Women’s University in Kobe, Japan, on a two-year contract ending in March 2005: “Very different from teaching ESL back in Delaware. I’m enjoying the punctual trains, festivals and live jazz. My children, Brian ’89 and Julia ’01, are living together in Palo Alto, Calif. He is a software engineer and musician, and she is an elementary teacher working with NASA to develop science lessons based on space experiments.” From the July / August 2004 IssueJohn Cross ’68 AM writes that he has rejoined the workforce after three years of semiretirement and caring for of his life partner, Benjamin Diamond (Harvard ’74), who suffered a subarachnoid hemorrhage nearly two years ago. “I decided to try something completely different,” he writes. “I’ve moved into the business of managing a small homeo- pathic pharmaceutical distributor, Dovetail Technologies, where I am chief operating officer. I get to manage the office, the cash flow, the vendors, the marketing, and the general operations. One day we will be profitable. It’s a far cry from the U.S. Senate, TV reporting, GE Capital, and running the American subsidiary of an Australian communications company, and it’s long hours. But right now it beats working—in some ways it even beats worldwide traveling. We’ve done a lot of that this year while Ben got on the road to wellness.” John can be reached at 136 Tennessee Ave. NE, Washington, D.C. 20002; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it From the May / June 2004 IssueDavid Beckman and his wife, Sharon, moved from New York City to northern California. David is working on a novel. Sharon is involved with Canine Companions for Independence, which breeds, raises, and provides service dogs. David can be reached at 4715 Tee View Ct., Santa Rosa, Calif. 95405; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view itNeil Markson and Miriam Grace Silverman (see Karen Grace ’94). From the January / February 2004 IssueMarjorie A. Satinsky writes that she has established Satinsky Consulting, specializing in the management of medical practices. She also writes regularly for the North Carolina Medical Board newsletter. She is an adjunct faculty member at the University of North Carolina School of Public Health. Peter Sohn (see Amy Sohn ’95). From the November / December 2003 IssueLydia Briggs Petty, of Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass., announces her marriage on May 3 to Barrett Reed Petty in Greenwich, Conn. Martha Cornog and Leigh Dickerson Davidson ’68 have published The Big Book of Masturbation (Down There Press). Martha was the author and Leigh served as editor. They write: “Both of us credit much of our intellectual curiosity to our shared linguistics background at Brown.” From the September / October 2002 IssueJohn Keedy '72 M.A.T. writes that he was promoted to full professor at the University of Louisville in the field of education administration. He is the author of more than fifty articles and was previously a principal and an assistant superintendent. He is married to Cathy Meine and has a 12-year-old daughter, Emily, who would like to attend Brown. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it From the July / August 2002 IssueThe Rev. Charles Homeyer writes: "I am now cochair of Faith in Motion, a religious coalition dedicated to improving public transportation in Grand Rapids, Mich., and remain chair of the Total Ministry Committee of our Episcopal diocese, developing alternative models of parish ministry." Ronald V. LoLordo writes: "After thirty-two years in the practice of law in New Jersey and California, I retired to pursue a lifelong dream. I'm now a special education teacher at a charter high school in Santa Fe, N.Mex." Ronald can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it Frank Rycyk writes that he appears regularly on two cable-access television shows in Jefferson City, Mo. He recently filed as a candidate for state representative. He can be reached at 406 Chestnut St., Jefferson City 65101. Penny Whorton Wells was named the Ohio VFW Teacher of the Year for Citizenship Education. The VFW recognized her for promoting citizenship education in the classroom. Carlyle Thayer writes that he returned to Australia in January after completing a three-year contract with the U.S. Defense Department at the Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies in Honolulu. He is concurrently professor of politics at the Australian Defence Force Academy and on-site coordinator for the College of Defence and Strategic Studies at the Australian Defence College. Carlyle can be reached at 11 Ambara Place, Aranda, ACT 2614 Australia; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it Ricker Winsor writes that he will be teaching painting next year at the American International School of Dhaka, Bangladesh. His Web site is www.rickerwinsor.com. From the May / June 2002 IssuePaul Kelly writes: "I spent most of January on a temporary assignment at our embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan. As a former Marine, I was particularly moved by the dedication of the Marines protecting the embassy. Now that I'm back, I hope to get involved with the Brown Club of Cape Cod!" From the November / December 2000 Issue
Robert F. Hall was admitted into
the Worcester Academy Hall of Fame on May 6. He played for two years
with the Minnesota Vikings. After his football career he joined the
Rhode Island Hospital Trust Bank and later founded the Providence
Group Investment Advisory Co. He has served on the academy’s
board of trustees. Robert Welch, who was vice president and academic dean at Goucher College in Baltimore, became the school’s acting president on Aug. 1. From the September / October 2000 IssueCarlton R. Asher Jr. writes: "I have practiced law in New York City for thirty years, including ten as a partner of a large, but now defunct, firm. For the past six years I have had my own firm. I concentrate in commercial and securities litigation, corporations, trusts and estates, and international law. My wife, Florence, and I live in Manhattan. We are best known in the neighborhood for our soft-coated wheaten terriers. Flossie is getting a Ph.D. in American history from the City University of New York." From the May / June 2000 IssueThe Rev. Charles F. Homeyer, of Ada, Mich., writes: "Last summer I enjoyed a sabbatical from my parish, traveling to Ireland, Wales, and parts of the United States." Kristie Miller co-edited We Have Come to Stay: American Women and Political Parties 1880-1960 (University of New Mexico Press). Robert Waxler, of North Dartmouth, Mass., has been appointed to the board of directors of LifeStream, a human-services agency in New Bedford, Mass. Robert is a professor of English at the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, where he is former English department chair and former dean of continuing education. He cofounded the university’s Center for Jewish Culture, serving as its codirector from 1980 to 1995. He also cofounded Changing Lives through Literature, an alternative criminal-sentencing program established in 1991. Drew Weinlandt, of Huntington, N.Y., was named New York State English educator of excellence last year. One of his former students, New York State Senator Michael Balboni, proposed and passed a state senate resolution honoring Drew’s contribution to education. From the March / April 2000 IssueShahin Akhavi is still living in Paris at 20 Rue du Cmdt. René Mouchotte, 75014 Paris, France; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it She would be pleased to hear from friends and classmates. Jon Keates has been named vice president for institutional advancement at Occidental College in Los Angeles, where he will head fund-raising and public-relations initiatives. He was previously vice president for development and external affairs at Claremont McKenna College, where he worked for sixteen years. From the January / February 2000 IssueMaryanne Cline Horowitz reports that she received the Jacques Barzun Award in Cultural History at the November meeting of the American Philosophical Society. The award was for her book Seeds of Virtue and Knowledge (Princeton). She is a professor of history at Occidental College and an associate of the U.C.L.A. Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. Her husband, Ellis, is director of distance education and information technology at the University of Southern California's engineering school. Susan Lane Markowitz (see Hawlan Ng '93). John Seale (see Jennifer Seale Aitken '96). From the November / December 1999 IssueJudith H. Montgomery (a.k.a. Judith Howard Havens) writes: "I received two poetry awards this past spring: The poet Alberto Rios chose my poem "Gallop" as the winner of the Red Rock Poetry Award, and Mark Doty chose my chapbook Passion from among the 132 manuscripts submitted to the 1999 Defined Providence Chapbook Competition. For those who might like to take a look at Passion, the book and four poems from it (including Gallop) can be found at www.definedprovidence.com." Judith can be reached at 3821 N.E. 35th Pl., Portland, Ore. 97212. From the July / August 1999 IssueKristie Miller, McLean, Va., co-edited We Have Come to Stay: American Women and Political Parties, 1880-1960 (University of New Mexico Press). From the March / April 1999 IssueJeffrey Becker received the Leadership in Business Award on Dec. 3 in New York City from the New York Business Group on Health, a nonprofit business coalition concerned with health care. Jeffrey is a cofounder and the senior health partner of Epstein Becker & Green. A nationally recognized authority on health care law, he serves on the boards of several nonprofit health-related organizations and is a frequent lecturer on the delivery and regulation of health care. Jeffrey is a member of the New York State and American Bar Associations, the National Health Lawyers Association, and the American Academy of Hospital Attorneys. Jonathan Kantrowitz is founder and chief executive officer of Queue Inc., an educational-software publisher. He is founder and president of the board of Brooklawn Academy, a middle school chartered by the state of Connecticut. He lives in Fairfield, Conn., with his wife and two children. Toby Wesselheft, who is living happily in Concord, Mass., with his wife and three young boys, writes that he is "looking for that elusive Vermont farmlet to escape to on weekends." He is medical director of a multicultural health center and group practice in Boston's Back Bay, facilitating its transition from a seventy-one-year-old mom-and-pop organization to a little frog in the very big pond of the organization's new owner, Massachusetts General Hospital. He has reconnected with fraternity brother Rodney Steinweg. "We still think the same after almost thirty-three years," Toby writes. From the January / February 1999 IssueAnn Arvin, a professor of pediatrics and of microbiology and immunology at Stanford, has been named the first Lucile Salter Packard Professor in the department of pediatrics. At Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, she directs the infection-control program and is associate director of the clinical laboratory section. Michael Bassis has left the presidency of Olivet College in Michigan to become dean of the University of South Florida, Sarasota/ Manatee campus, and warden of New College, USF. His wife, Mary, and children Nicholas and Christina '96 have moved with him. His daughter Betsy attends the Wharton School of Business, while daughter Jessica is a freshman at Franklin and Marshall College. Christina would love to hear from friends at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it J. Roderick Eaton (see Ken and Mary Eaton '33). Charles Homeyer, Ada, Mich., and his wife, Sara, have two granddaughters in St. Louis. Sherrill Edwards Hunnibell's work was shown at the Providence Athenaeum as part of an exhibition of recent work from the Book of Hours, the Turkish Suite, and Crossing Great Waters. Kenneth Neal (see Lisa Neal Healy '90). Alex J. Smith, Glen Head, N.Y., reports that his daughter, Katherine '02, joined her brother, Cameron '00, at Brown this year. From the November / December 1998 IssueRichard Alter (see Jaime Alter and Derek Deutsch both '91). David Deutsch (see Jaime Alter and Derek Deutsch both '91). William R. Powers Jr., Mount Laurel, N.J., was awarded the New Jersey Commission on Professionalism's 1998 Professional Lawyer of the Year award. A former president of the New Jersey Defense Association, William is with the law firm of Cureton, Caplan and Clark. Previously he was director of the Defense Research Institute in Chicago. He is a member of the Federation of Insurance and Corporate Counsel, the Association of Defense Trial Attorneys and the American, New Jersey, and Burlington County bar associations. Elaine Rakatansky and Jill Schlesinger '87 are partners at Progressive Financial Strategies Inc. in Providence. From the November / December 1998 IssueRichard Alter (see Jaime Alter and Derek Deutsch both '91). David Deutsch (see Jaime Alter and Derek Deutsch both '91). William R. Powers Jr., Mount Laurel, N.J., was awarded the New Jersey Commission on Professionalism's 1998 Professional Lawyer of the Year award. A former president of the New Jersey Defense Association, William is with the law firm of Cureton, Caplan and Clark. Previously he was director of the Defense Research Institute in Chicago. He is a member of the Federation of Insurance and Corporate Counsel, the Association of Defense Trial Attorneys and the American, New Jersey, and Burlington County bar associations. Elaine Rakatansky and Jill Schlesinger '87 are partners at Progressive Financial Strategies Inc. in Providence. From the September / October 1998 IssueFrank Rycyk Jr. addressed the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Jefferson City, Mo., on May 31. His sermon, "Twenty Minutes to Wake the Dead," partially fulfilled the special project requirements for his lay ministry studies with the Catholic diocese of Jefferson City. From the July / August 1998 IssueRon Dwight writes: "My routine life was transformed by the fall of communism and what I thought was a footnote to my life - my Polish roots. In October 1991, I was asked by the economics department at the University of Maryland to head a development project in Poland for ten months. During this period, I also taught economics on the American studies faculty of the University of Warsaw, where my offices were in the former training academy of the Polish Secret Police. I agreed to stay beyond the deadline on the condition that my wife, Pamela Hext Dwight (Brown graduate student in sociology from 1976 to 1977), and two sons, Rutledge and Lawrence, join me in Europe. They lived for a year in France, and then in England, where the boys (ages 15 and 12) are still in boarding school, preparing for Brown admission. As ten months became years, my mother urged me to buy land in Poland so that her grandsons would have some roots. In the unspoiled lake region of northeast Poland, eighty kilometers from the place where my Polish grandmother's family has lived for 400 years (near Lomza), with a Polish partner we bought a 500-acre farm and rundown Prussian manor house, Jadamowo. This is now a B&B in the most ecologically pure region of central Europe, where the battle of Tannenberg was fought. All are welcome." Ron can be reached at Dwor Jadamowo, 13-108 Waplewo, Olsztynek, Poland; (48)(89) 513-9211; This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view itBetsy Oasis Karotkin works at the United Jewish Federation of Tidewater (in Norfolk and Virginia Beach, Va.), where she is director of human resources and in charge of young leadership development. She also works on Holocaust education and chairs the local Afro-American-Jewish Coalition. Her husband, Edward, is a professor of pediatrics at the Eastern Virginia Medical School. Their daughters, Jennifer and Hallie, live in Washington, D.C., and son Jesse is teaching English to Chinese undergraduates at the Normal University in Beijing, under the auspices of a fellowship. Mark I. Lurie, an arbitrator in West Palm Beach, Fla., has served for the past twenty years as a special master for the Florida Public Employee Relations Commission, on the roster of Labor Arbitrators of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, on the Labor Arbitration Panel of the American Arbitration Association, and on other labor arbitration panels for government and industry. In 1997, Mark wrote "The Advocate's Journal," a computer program that assists labor and management advocates in their preparation for and settlement of collective-bargaining-agreement disputes. A review of the program was published in the February issue of the American Arbitration Association's Dispute Resolution Journal. Stanley Palmer is a Piper Professor nominee. The award is given by the Minnie Stevens Piper Foundation to recognize ten Texas university professors for outstanding achievement in teaching. A professor of history at the University of Texas at Arlington, Stanley received the Academy of Distinguished Teachers Award in 1997. Elaine Revkin (see Amelia Stern Revkin '53). From the May / June 1998 IssueJohn M.Cross, Washington,D.C., is C.E.O. of business essentials at the U.S. division of an audiomagazine company headquartered in Melbourne,Australia. "We publish the magazine specifically for small businesses around the country,"John writes. His daughter, Anne, is a junior at Wellesley College. John can be reached at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view itMaryanne Cline Horowitz published Seeds of Virtue and Knowledge (Princeton University Press), which explores the image and idea of the human mind as a garden. Maryanne is a history professor at Occidental College and an associate of the Center of Medieval and Renaissance Studies at the University of California at Los Angeles. Gilcin F. Meadors announces the adoption of a fourth daughter, Justine Beth. Gilcin writes, "She has been with us on an informal basis for four years and is now in the fifth grade. She is a spelling whiz, hates math and little boys, and plays first flute in the city-wide Winchester Elementary School band." Gilcin can be reached at P.O. Box 53, Flintstone, Md. 21530. From the March / April 1998 IssueMarjorie A. Satinsky, Durham, N.C., is executive director of ReXMeD in Raleigh, N.C. She is an adjunct lecturer in the department of health policy and administration at the UNC-Chapel Hill School of Public Health and a guest lecturer at Duke's school of nursing. Her book, The Foundations of Integrated Care: Meeting the Challenges of Change, has been published by American Hospital Publishing Inc.
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