Colby Magazine vol. 80, no. 5

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INSIDE COLBY O

n the surface there i little to connect our cover story about College alumniworkingonMain Street (page 13) with the d ia­ logue among writers on the En­ glish faculty (page 6) or the mil­ l ion-dollar grant Colby h as rece ived from the H o ward Hughes Medical Institute (page 31) or Profe or J im Fleming's meterological musing ( page 24 ) . But all four stories lend ubtext to an important issue: the im­ pact Colby has on Waterville. Colby pumps million of dollar into the area economy and allow liberal access to cam­ pus facilities and events. And while some of the older alumni on M a in Street l ament the College' diminished v isibility downtown, they themselves under core a third benefit. Doz­ ens of Colby alumni choose to ray, and many become civic, cultural and bu ines leader . Their pre ence is comple­ mented each year by another valuable human resource: writ­ ers l ike James Boylan, usan Kenney, I ra Sadoff and Richard Ru so as well as musicians, art­ ists and cienti ts. Whether they spend an entire career on May­ flower H i l l or a year or two, alma t all add to the qual ity of Colby-and Waterville. Some of the positive influ­ ences that ripple through the communities that surround Colby are hard to quantify, bur at least one comes readily to mind. Waterville High i now under tudy by the tare ofMaine, which i trying to determine why tudent there score well above average on tandard test . Many factor influence chools. I n Waterville' case, proximity to Colby is probably a major one. Colby, November 1991

Cover Story 13 Alumni on Main Street: The banker and the bookseller are Colbians,

and o are the mayor and the columnist and the haberdasher and the art framer. There are father-and-son dentist , father-and- on broker , hu band-and-wife restaurateurs, alumni all. Still don't think Colby adds spice to Waterville life! Ask gounner grocer Jon Jor ensen '88.

pg. 6

Features 6 But Do You Have to ]ump?: Nor really, bur a novelist explains why

he wa prepared to experience kyd i v ing firsthand during a wide­ ranging discussion about modem fiction among four members of Colby's creative writing faculty.

24 Now, for the Weather: Meteorology has traveled far from the days pg. 24

when it was considered a mere hobby and ha encountered some torm along the way. Colby Profes or James Fleming, who has written a book on the subject, traces the voyage.

Pl President's Report 1 990-9 1 -Colby in the '90s: President Wil­

liam R. Corter call the past year "a rime for introspection" rhar involved completing a key planning process, reaffirming basic free­ dom and responding to rising criticism of American college . H is annual report follows page 3 2 .

Special Insert

Departments 2

Gift & Grants

3

33

New from the H ill

Alumni At Large

27

63

Faculty File

Obituaries

28 pg. 28

31

Peri cope

Books & Authors


PERISCOPE Gleaned by Dean Earl H. Smith from his weekly campus newsletter, FYI.

Think Globally; Act Locally While there is much head scratching about ways to improve public primary and secondary chool education, Colby is doing something about it. Every fa culty member in the Natural Science Division and the P ychology Department has signed on to participate in an exciting new program to help enhance science education in area public chools. Jay Labov is directing the outreach program originally made possible through the federal Dwight Eisenhower Act and now richly expanded by a generous grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute ( see related story page 31 ). A Colby re ource directory has been circu lated to all local science teachers, listing faculty member and their areas of expertise and interest. Professors will consult with teachers, visit classrooms and be ho t to campus visits. Up Front

Colby is one of the 3 5 3 top U.S. college and univer ities selected for inclusion in Peterson's Comperitive Colleges, relea ed recently by the Princeton, NJ-based education and career information publisher. Peterson' i the on ly college guide that uses objective criteria to identify the institution that consi tently attract and accept the nation's brighte t students. The book uses student achievement rather than application number or reputation to iden­ tify colleges for inclusion. More than 60,000 free copies are distrib­ uted to high-potential students, including talented minority stu­ dents.

Colby Pride

Cal Mackenzie's piece on political correct­ ness, which appeared in the August issue of this magazine, was adapted for the September 4 issue of The Chronicle of Higher Education . . . . Abbott Meader was among three filmmakers featured in a public television special titled Wide Angle . . . . Keith Devlin, Carter Professor of Mathematic and chair of the Mathematics and Computer Science Department, was invited to give a short course of lecture at the University of Bielefeld in Germany la t month. One might think the invitation would have come from the math or computer science people, but it came from the university' depart­ ment of linguistic and literary studies. The folks there are fascinated by Keith's recent work on the mathematics of information and cognition and, in particular, the use of natural language in human communication.

Names We Know

Bob Kany, a principal architect of today's expansive summer and special programs, has accepted a new challenge a associate director of corporate and foundation relations in the Development Office. Bob came to Colby as administrative assistant to President Robert E. L. Strider in 1 969 and has been director of pecial programs since 1 97 2 . Heading Special Programs is Joan Sanzenbacher, an as ociate since 1 978 . . . . Charles "Chuck" Kittrell, familiar and friendly fixture of the afety and Security Department since 1 979, ha accepted a supervisory post in the same

2

realm at M iddlebury College. We'll miss him . . . . Margaret "Meg" Wickes, who personified graciousness and good will as secretary and receptionist at the Museum of Art for 1 8 years, retired in Sep­ tember. . . The Admissions Office has captured two bright stars from recent graduating classes, Maria Arroyo Shaghaghi '89 and David Unruh '9 1 . They succeed Tim Burton '90 and Jennifer Rubin '87 , both off to grad chool.

Extraordinary S ervice

Colby h a i ls Annette Reynolds, mail room assistant, who began her 4 1 st year as an employee in August. A lumni will recall that Annette worked for the late Malcolm Trott when the bookstore occupied a corner of the Spa in the basement of Miller Library. She moved to the mail and duplication department in the Eusti Building in 1 97 5 .

Name s the Same This year's student directory has rwo each of the names Eric Johnson, Heather Johnson, Michael Keller, Michael Murphy, Heather Smith and John Smith. M iddle initials will settle the confusion for all but the Eric Johnsons, upperclassmen who also share the middle name David. They have been asked to add their Colby ID numbers to signatures on important papers. Much Too Gullible Perhaps readers will want an update on the struggles against the eutrophication of Johnson Pond, caused in part by the influx of w ild ducks and sea gulls. Signs prohibiting hand feeding went up in the spring and the bird popula­ tion went down. The pond is improving. So far, so good. But while the small number of mallard seem to be fending for themselves, the gulls have been willing victims of drive-by feedings from well-meaning but poorly informed passing motorists. No arrests have been made. Moosecellaneous

English Professor J im BoyIan's popu­ lar novel, The Planets, is being published in four foreign languages, German, Dutch, J apanese and Polish. Asked why there are no Spanish or French editions, Jim suggests that he may not be a funny in Romance languages. (For more on Boylan and h is colleagues in the Creative Writing program, see page 6 . ) . . . Colby stands out among imilar college with low default rates among borrowers of federal student loans. While it is not unusual for peer institutions to have default rates of 20 percent, Colby's is an astonishingly low .07 percent . . . . Dead flies were the apparent cause of a false alarm in Mill er Library in August, causing some anxious moments when sirens wailed . . . . Hurricane Bob closed the Colby offices early on August 1 9 . While parts of Maine took a beating, Mayflower Hill got away with only a brief power outage and a few downed trees. . . . Colby and Our Neighbors, a booklet describing the College's offerings to folks in the area, has been revised and mailed to local alumni and other leaders. Copies are avai lable. Colby, November

1991


NEWS FROM THE HILL Five Professors Named to Endowed Chairs !?r

esident W illiam Cotter ha appointed five members of the faculty to endowed chairs, three a the first holders of new pro­ fessorships. David H . Firmage was appointed the first Clara C. Piper Professor of Environ­ mental Studies. Firmage, who teaches in the Biology Department, has been a member of the faculty ince 1 974. the year after he earned h is doctorate in botany from the Universi t y of Montana. He earned a bachelor's degree in economics and a master's degree in botany at Brigham Young Uni verity and ha taught principally in the fields of botany and ecology at Colby. The chair was endowed by W ilson Piper '39, a Colby trustee, in honor of h is mother. Edwin J. Kenney, professor of English, was named Colby's first Distinguished Teach­ ing Profe sor of Humanities, a chair en­ dowed by Colby alumni in response to a challenge grant from the National Endow­ ment for the Humanities. A graduate of Hamilton College who earned his master's degree and doctorate at Cornell, Kenney has taught American, British and [rish literature at Colby and has been a ubiquitous figure on campu , serving on many committee during his 1 7 year at the College. He is married to usan Mcllvaine Kenney, who is also a pro­ fe or of Engli h at Colby. Thomas R. W . Longstaff was named to succeed Robert Reuman as Dana Profes or of Religiou Srudie . Born in New Hamp­ shire and raised in Maine, Longstaff ma­ triculated at the University of Maine and earned a d iv inity degree from the Bangor Theological Seminary and a doctorate in biblical language and literature from Co­ lumbia University in cooperation with Union Theological Seminary. An ordained Episco­ pal priest, he has taught at Colby since 1 969, reaching the rank of full professor in 1 984. Hi principal area of research, biblical ar­ chaeology and Christian origins, has lured him to [ rael summer after summer to par­ ticipate in a significant archaeological dig. G. Calvin Mackenzie, profe sor of gov­ ernment and director ofColby's public policy Colby,

ovember 1 991

program, was named Distingu ished Pre i­ dential Professor of American Government, a chair endowed anonymou ly. Mackenzie, considered one of the nation' leading ex­ perts on public personnel management and government organization, transition and ethics, wrote The Presidential Appointee's Handbook, published in 1 98 by the Na-

tional Academy of Public Administration. He earned hi doctorate from Harvard Uni­ versity and taught at George Washington University before coming to Colby in 1 97 He served as the College' vice president for development and alumni relation for three year in the late 19 Os. James Meehan has become Herbert E.

Mary Ellen Matava

Firs t Look at Davis Gallery Guests toured the Mu eum of Art's new Davi Gallery and renovated Jette Galleries when they were opened in late August. At a luncheon preceding the opening, Pre ident William Cotter thanked El izabeth and Stanton Davi for the gift that allowed the gallery that bears their name to be built and noted that "one final, pectacular impact of their genera ity" would come about next spring, when the gallery will di play for the first t ime the Joan Whitney Payson Collection. Cotter al o thanked the Bixler Parmer , a group of Colby alumni and friends who contributed to the Jette Gallerie renovation, Museum Director Hugh Gourley and hi assoc iate and pa t benefactor to the mu eum, including members of the W illard W . and Willard H . Cumming , Marin, W ing and Abbott familie . The $833 ,000 Davis Gallery is situated between the old B ix ler building and the museum's J ette wing. l t will add one-third more wall pace to the existing 6,500 quare feet of gallery pace. 3


Wadsworth Professor of Economics, assum­ ing a chair endowed in 1 940 to support "the practices and principles of sound and pru­ dent business" and last held by Professor Emeritus of Administrative Science Walter Zukowski, who retired in 1 982. An expert in the areas of government regulation, anti­ trust enforcement and industrial organiza­ tion, Meehan was appointed assistant pro­ fessor of economics at Colby in 1973 after serving on the faculty at Northeastern Uni­ versity and on the staffs of the Federal Trade Commission and the anti-trust division of the U. S. Department of J ust ice. He was promoted to full professor in 1 982 and ha been a departmental and division chair.

Common Ground Is Dedicated The Marson Common Ground, where members of the Colby community can gather to learn about other cultures and share their own, opened in the Student Center in Sep­ tember. About 50 people, including bene­ factors Dorothy and David Marson '48, at­ tended the ceremony to rededicate the former Marson Club Room, which was refurbished in late summer. The Common Ground is a statement by the College, President William Cotter said, "that we want everyone to be comfort­ able and have a place they can meet people different than themselves and get a chance to know them better." The room is stocked with newspapers and magazines from all over the world. Two television broadcasting programming from the CNN and SCOLA cable networks, a stereo system (bequeathed by the late Pro­ fessor and Dean Emeritus James Gillespie) and a shortwave radio l ine one wall. Com­ fortable couches and chairs are arranged to allow for reading, informal conversation and televi ion watching, and the wall coverings were specially designed for visual exhibits. The effort to bring the Common 4

Ground project to fruition wa mandated by the board of trustees' subcommittee on di­ ver ity and spearheaded by Assoc iate Dean of Students Victoria Mares Hershey. The idea, according to Hershey, was to design a "student space that wa not a classroom where you can get exposed to all these differ­ ent things as a matter of the environment." She worked with a cross-section of tudents to plan the room and says she wants other in the community to get involved. "We're hoping people will come and bring th ings from their lives to share," Her hey says. Maria Arroyo Shaghagi '89, who re­ turned to Mayflower Hill this fall as a sistant to the dean of admissions, gave one of the first talks in the Common Ground. She spoke of her experience as a Puerto Rican student at Colby and of the two year he lived in Germany.

Colby Again Among U.S. News Top 25 Colby pulled down 20th place among the 1 40 most selective liberal arts colleges ranked by U.S . News & World Report in its "America's Best Colleges" edition, published in September. The magazine, which high­ I ight only the top 25 colleges, placed Colby 1 8th a year ago. While many dispute the validity of the criteria used to generate it, no one denies that placement on the l ist has a significant positive impact on a college' national reputation and on applications for admission. W illiam took the top spot thi year (replacing Amherst, which moved to third ) . Bowdoin ranked fourth, and Bate wa the only college listed among the top 2 5 i n 1 990 t o drop off the I i t .

Nyasinga Kandwire, a visiting student from Malawi, and Courtney Powers

'94 admire a display of

miniature flags from around the world in the Marson Common Ground. Colby,

November 1 99 1


Opening Ceremony Michael M iller of Hartford, Conn., and Meilani Clark of Juneau, Alaska, carried the banner as the Class of 1 99 5 marched into Lorimer Chapel for the traditional opening assembly. Dean of Admi ions Parker J. Beverage pre ented the class to President William Cotter, noting that Colby's newest students come from 3 5 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto R ico and more than 20 foreign nation . The flags of the ir countrie of origin bedecked the chapel during the ceremony. A record one-third of the class was admitted after early-decision application, nearly 40 percent came from outside ew England, 1 1 percent are from Maine and 1 0 percent are student of racial minority background-a sign that the College seems to be making headway in its resolve to increase diversity. Every clas seem to produce a statistical blip or two worthy of mention before relegation to the trivia pile. Seven twin entered Colby with the Class of '95 , Beverage noted, but none with h is or her sibling.

New Professors Join Colby Faculty A pecial i t in the social implications of technology, a wetlands geologist and an expert on moral education in ancient Greece are among a dozen profes or filling tenure track positions at Colby thi year. Two of the new facu lry members, Batya Friedman ( computer cienc e ) and J u lie M i llard ( b iochemistry), were hised as Clare Booth Luce professors. In addition to her interest in society and technology, Fried­ man's areas ofexperti e include information systems design and the use of computer edu­ cation. M i l lard, a graduate of Amherst who earned her Ph.D. at Brown, has published numerous articles on the chemical proper­ tie of DNA. Paul Doss, a peciali t in the interac­ tions between groundwater and wetlands who holds a B.S. from Purdue and a master's and doctorate from Northern I llinoi Uni­ versity, joins the Department of Geology. J il l Paulette Gordon and Cheryl Hau e

Colby, November 1 99 1

Calhoun are the newest members of the Department of Philo ophy. Gordon will teach Greek ph ilosophy, Calhoun's research focu e on the emotion and ubjectivity and on feminist ethic . In all, 37 men and women joined the College faculty in eptember. Among the vi icing scholars are Abbe M aazaoui ( French ) , who earned his undergraduate and master's degrees from the Univer ityofTuni and hi doctorate from the University of Provence; Yuet Keung Lo (Chinese ) , a Hong Kong native whose dissertation examines early medieval Confucian metaphy ic ; David Hari Da ( Russian and world hi tory), a graduate of Bowdoin who holds a master's and Ph.D. from the University of Washing­ ton; Mary Ruefle ( Engli h}, the author of three volumes of poetry and the recipient of the 1 988 lowa Poetry Prize; and Sarah Wil­ lie, a Ph.D. candidate at Northwe tern Uni­ versity who i serving as Colby' minority scholar in residence as part of a program ponsored by the Consortium for a Strong M i nority Pre ence at Liberal Arts Colleges.

College Wins Court Ruling The Maine Supreme J ud1cial Court has ruled that Colby was not in violation of the Maine Civil Rights Act when it sanctioned 63 student for their involvement in an underground fraternity la t year. Attorneys for the Maine Civil Liberties Union argued that the anction -proba­ tion for some tudent , uspension for oth­ er -represented an illegal encroachment on the students' right to free a ociation. But in a unanimous decision, Maine's highest court disagreed. "We are, of course, pleased that the [court] ha affim1ed the propriety of the College' actions," aid President W i l liam Cotter. "The College remains committed to an open campus community, free of the k ind of unde ireable activities that gave ri e to this ca e ." Of 24 students suspended for a semes­ ter, 23 have returned to complete their de­ gree requirements. 5


Susan Kenney

SAILING

lUllM aalll

But Do You Have to

Jump?

Sometimes Their Fiction Does Imitate Life , Say Four Novelists on the College Faculty, But Truth Runs Deeper Than Reality

C

ourse in creative writing are pe­ rennially oversubscribed at Colby, and a key reason is the reputation of the people who teach them. Published fiction writers and poet , they bring both marketplace avvy and cholarly sen itivity to the delicate busines of teach­ ing undergraduate writers. Colby gathered four members of the creative writing faculty, Susan Kenney,Jame Boylan, Ira adoff and Richard Rus o, to discuss, with moderator Robert Gillespie, Colby' college editor, the state of modem fiction, along with their teaching methods and ome observation about writers' lives.

But Is It True? In the first chapter ofJames Boylan 's novel The

Planet , a character named Edith Schmertz leaps from a plane in Centralia, Pennsylva­ nia-wi ch disascrousresults. The scene prompted

6

a question from Susan Kenney and led co a discussion about che ways in which fiction re­ flects an author's "real life."

Kenney: Tell me something.Have you ever done skydiving? Boylan: My wife and I had this terrible fight about it because he aid, "But I don't care how good you want thi chapter to be, you're not jumping out of a plane!" l read a newspaper story about this woman who wa going to jump out of an airplane 30 times on her 30th birthday, and I said, "Great, this is the woman I want." So I called her on the phone, I madean appointment,and she said, "OK, yeah, you can come up with me. I'll get you all set up and if you want to jump, you can do the jump." So I was very excited by this. My wife was furiou .She aid, "You're going to kill yourself!" And I went there­ and the woman never hawed up.It was this great washout. So I found out the fact of

what the in ide of an airplane would look like and what [skydiver ] do.Later l went to go see someone else skydive. I'd sit on the ground and watch what they would do, but I didn't get inside. Sadoff: ard!

A real writer' po ition. A cow­

Kenney: So that's why we never get how it feels to be coming down. Boylan: Exactly right. I had her jump out of the plane and that's the start of it.I had a student who went skydiving later and said, "God, you got that exactly right." She was trying to convince me even after the book was published that l should still skydive. "After you've written about this, you should make it true." If it's really that true, I'll crash through somebody's roof. ... You probably all have the experience of having a student write something that you re pond to by saying, "This i completely Colby, November

1 99 1


unbelievable." And the tudem, with tears, ays, "But thi i really true!" And you have to make them understand that the truth of a story is different from the truth of their life. And you have to bring that different kind of reality to the tory to make it true. Sadoff: They don't understand that facts are unimportant in a way, but an emotional truth is more important. The other end of that is the way in which you work with material that's really volat ile and important to you and when you do that, obviously it ha to be intimate with your life. It has to be real for you to be able to make it real. I always have a glib answer for people who a k me [if my writing is autobiographical]. l say, "All of the emorion are true, and most of the facts are wrong." Boylan: I think that i probably true for all of us. I t's true for me. Recently I have been intentionally trying to write comedy. Com. edy i about twisting things; but you have to twi t thing in a logical way or el e it's not funny, it' just strange and tupid. The things I write about are concerns of my own. The pa sions of my character are exaggerated, but I hope that they're exaggerated in a way that's true. Most f my character are reflec­ tions of me in ome way.A person a ked me in an audience once: "Where do you get the e idea ? Who are these people?" And I aid, "Well, they're pretty much all me, except for the dog." Kenney: ometimes people don't j ust ay, " l thi autobiographical?" They want to know how autobiographical. People aren't just dropping out of the ky in Centralia, Pennsylvania. Once a woman a ked [the question] and then she an wered it-that what goes into (your fiction] often is a kind ofdaily experience, which I would call maybe ju t "the weather." You know, you look up and the clouds are rolling in. The example she used was of raindrop falling in the mud. They always make the same k ind of little crater. And that i something that come directly out of an ob ervation that might be made that day. I think this extend to things that are going on in your own life, right up ro the big things, e pecially if you're working on a book. I t's bound to come in. Somebody walks in the door and there' a natch of conversation that you have, and you ju t take it. Sadoff: When you think about the rela­ tionship between fiction and experience, in ome ways you tum the work into a wish

Colby, November

199 1

fu lfillment. You alter it to make life easier, you can make it harder. Kenney: You've got your life and then you've got the life that's going on in the fiction. And probably all our families know­ but we may not-that we really do go away when we're in the fiction. You're really in another place. And when your life is de­ manding so much of that attention, when you have a crisi , then you really have to live here, and then it inevitably get into the fiction, becau e you have to deal with it somehow.

The Long and Short of It Gillespie: When do you know you 're writing a story and when you are writing a novel? Kenney: The easy answer is that your pub­ li her tells you.I ubmitted [In AnorherCoun­ rry] as a collection of storie , and then my editor got to think ing about it and had a commercial reaction: fir t novels ell better than collection of hon torie . That was one element to his decision, but he's a per­ son I really respect and I don't think that he would have sold the book out and made it something it wasn't ju t to ee that it would ell better. There is a narrative that runs through, and when I came to revi e it, know­ ing that they were going to put it out as a novel, I trengthened that o that I now have no problem thinking about it as a novel. Sadoff: I have a collection of stories that's going to be out in '92, and all of a udden I finished the la t story of the collection--0r what I thought was the last srory. Then I realized that there were four or five stories that had the same et of character and had the same set of concern , and I began to wonder whether in fact this was a novel or stories-and I could not tell. Part of the problem was there was no driving plot.There was thematic material and there were char­ acters, but there wa n't nece arily a "spine" to the novel, which was an investigation that has to do with what happen in the world. And so the answer to that question l think i very difficult. Boylan: When I was writing The Planets, I literally had an idea for what I thought would be a long srory and I got a handle on the e character and they ju t kept talking and they j ust kept going and l wa surprised

and plea ed to find that something larger wa going on. The ummerafterthar l thought I wa working on stories, and uddenly one of the Storie started expanding and heading toward the other story. So one of the e stories wound up a the first chapter, and the other ended up as more or less the last chapter, and the novel wa "found" in be­ tween. I tarted out writing novel , I didn't start writing stories.Right after college, when I first decided, all right, I 'm going to make a go of thi , I wrote a lot of nm·els that were essentially hon torie that went on too long.The first time I wrote a good tory was maybe after fiYe years of writing awful, awful novel , just despicable things.I finally wrote a -horr story by taking 300 pages of this upposed novel that I 'd done, and I realized I had a moment I was trying tO get at, and I wa able to cut out the whole novel and make a 15-page short story out of it. I t became much clearer and more precise when I made it into a short tory. Russo: The first torie I published tended not to be stories in their real lives. Had I been able to write them a novel , that's what they would have been, because they violated all of the things that make tories stories.They tended to be 4 5 or 50 pages long, they tended ro ha\·e ix characters in them as opposed to the two or three that the typical srnry can support. And m tead of all being done in an hour or two with the odd flashback, they tended to go on for a month of narrative time. And now I have a very difficult t ime writing srorie , and it has less to do with any intention on [my] part than it doe with the kind of intuitive modus operandi that writ­ er tend tO work with. When I write, my vision is more lateral than anything else. The moment that I see a character particu­ lar! well, what I'm mo t l ikely to ee i also the per on randing next ro him. Rather, I think the genuine hort story writer very often ha a particular moment that he or he i writing toward, and the vision tends to go inward and deeper and deeper into a single character or two character . But my own vi ion tends to "go off," which is why the world of my no els i u ually big. I t's a mural that I end up with almost every time, which make hort tory writing virtually imposible. [ I n] the only succes ful story I've writ­ ten in the last five year I created a character that! imply cannot let go.I ju dike him too much. I want to pend more time with thi character . ... Discussion about how you know if something you have is a novel or a tory


ultimately lead you to definitions, and when

hon storie are not, except in terms of

American novelist have atrophied, produc­

ynu ,tart talking about what a ,hort story is

word count, nece sarily smaller things than

ing their be t work out of the concern of late adolescence and early childh od, is that

and what a no\'cl i,, one of the thing' you

nm·el . To read an Alice Munro short tory

immediately reali:e i, that if we try to say

i to read,omething as large a a lot of novel ,

they don't care to grapple with or even

that a n )\·el doe· this and a short ,wry does

becau'e 'o much gets done. An entire world

identify the moving forces in their society. If

that, we're going rofindso many examples in

is created, one of the thing a novel does

we view the world as static, we lack per pec­

bet\\'een or that cros: m·er that the first thing

particularly well.

tive on the lives we are creating. We must be

"'e're going to h<1,·e to do is violate the

ahle to feel our elves active in time and

definition.

hi

There are certain p ychological a pects to story writing or hon fiction writing and

tory."The

e people whoare writingabout

their drug experiences in New York are still

In and Of the World

writing about omething that, even 1f they

longer fiction writing that ha,·e to do with

are on the margins of ociety, i still about

our needs as writers. The beautiful thing

How does cwTent cul.cure affecr what writers

the society. lt' still active in time and hi -

about a short story 1s that when it's o,·er, you

write, and how do writers affect current culture1

tory, it seems to me. Can you make a defense

can see what you've done and 'A·hether or nor

for yourself?

you've succeeded. And if you haven't suc­

Sadoff:

ceeded, what have you invested in terms ,)f

citie are falling apart and collap ing cultur­

Sadoff:

an amount of time? One of the terrors of

ally. Unle·s you have a great deal of money,

victim for the crime. It' not the writer's fault

writing a n vel i' that the moment of know­

you can't ·un·i,·e in that culture. And things

that America a a culture i so difficult to

ing whether you've gm omethingor whether

are now divided between the extreme rich

come to grips with. We are insulated from a

you ha,·en't could come 700 page, from now.

and the extreme poor.

We're now in a time where the think it's hard to blame the

lot of that. The middle cla , which i most

Day to day the novel i· thb huge act of faith.

of us, live either in uburban or rural envi­

It' much easier if you have it in you to be

Boylan:

patient. Because on any gi,·en day you don't

ncl\'el that have come out of my generation

culture, the extremes of the culture, are not

have to succeed, or at the end of any two­

are mo rly about spoiled rich kid, in

ew

available to us, and we could not write au­

York City taking mo many drugs, and death,

thentically about it. We're working with

and being all upset about that.

very small pieces of a very large picture. Not

week period you don't ha,·e to have

uc­

ceeded at anything. Ir doe.n't really matter.

And look at the t0rie . The great

Whereas at the end of the short rory or the

ronments where a lot of the pul e of the

only i America spatially so large, bur we Narcissistic privilege. There are a

don't have acces to a lot of the most compli­

great many of those novel· bein written and

cated and difficult problem in our culture.

failed. For the rnweli·t it's an act of faith to

I think it has t0 do with a cla s problem-a

We have ome to the univer·al ones--<leath

know that yt u have to continue going, and

to who gets to do rhe writing in our culture.

short ·tory-si:ed piece of work, if it'

nor

there and ir' not working, you know you \· e

Sadoff:

le,·el it's not brave at all, because at any

Gille pie: Marge Piercy, the fcminist-poer­

given time ic doesn't really marcer.

noveli t,

aid, "One rea on wh y many

Ira Sad.off has published five volumes of poetry and a novel, 8

and love-but in terms of the historical ones, it'

it'·, I uppo e, bra,·e at one [e,·el. At another

different from Dicken living in

London and writing Bleak House. He wa there, it wa volatile for him, it wa real. We

Uncoupling.

Colby, November 1 99 1


Susan Kenney direets Colby 's crearive wriring program. She is the author of five novels , including One Fell Sloop.

don't have acce s to that. The people who do have acce to it don't ha\·e the pri\·ilege of writing it. There's also a way in which the social world is not the most sanctionable thing to write about. I rhmk people he irate ro write about that because they worry about being ideologue , they worry about being moralists. It' a truggle for eriou writers to think about "what's your relatiomhip to your culture and your hi tory o you're not ju t writing about an individual ca e' -to think that your work peak to other people and has ome oc ial importance. I haven't olved that problem as a writer. Boylan: lt's especially hard to know where you rand hi torically within your culture when you're 22-to get a ense of where you fit into the big picture. And if [ peaking for your generation] i the fir t thing that' mo­ tivating you to write a tory, you're going to be topped. Sadoff: I wa n't thinking of it o much a peaking for a generation, though, a think­ ing that the whole construct of the novel i to create a world that is representative some­ how of the world. When it become reduced to the individual and there i n't a uffic ient ocial context to it, the novel is dimini hed as an art form. Boylan: Tom Wolfe created a great con­ trover y a couple of years ago by writing a manilesto accu ing modem novelists of not caring about their time . And one of the Colby, November I 99 1

things that wa obnoxiou about this article \\'a that he was, in a \\'ay, explaining \1·hy his novel Bonfire of the Vaniries \\'as truly so great. ot only because it was a great work of fiction but because it was culturally and h istorically ignificant, having captured America in the e ightie -if you want to ay that what America in the eighties \\'a about i a bunch of greedy, self-righteou bu ine guys. TI1e point of what he wa· aying \\'a , "Look at what our writer are writing about. Look at Caf\"er and Vonnegut and Barth and Barthelme. TI1ey're writing the e unimpor­ tant i olated ab tractions. The proper job of a noveli t i to be an hi torian, to be a re earcher." Well, there are a lot of novel ists who would take i ue with that, including me. Sadoff: Al o, when you choo e people like that, you are being selective. You're not choo ing Grace Paley or J amaica Kincaid, who are able to bridge the question of the personal and oc ial quite ucces fully. More successfully than [Wolfe] doe . Russo: That' the problem 1 ith trend starter . And with Marge Piercy's observa­ tion, for that matter. When you start with rho e kind of generalization , you are will­ fully not seeing the work of people who violate your definition and your manife to. Literature i hard to make a demographic study of. Which is what [the trend spotter J are trying to do. Literature really resi t that.

Kenney: I think there's a way that Ameri­ can culture ha of trying to deal with litera­ ture. We can't keep pu hing "modem" \l'ith our noses along ahead of us. We're already pa-r that. What are we going to call the modems, now that they are 50 year ago, now that they're all antiques1 Russo: We're past "postmodern." We're now "postcontemporary." Kenney: Yeah, we 're nor contemporary! But a lot of the labels that are applied ro Ameri­ can literature comeout ofart h istory. There' omeone in ew York saying, "OK, well, here' a Guogenheim, o there mu t be some 11Titers who will fit into thi fracture trend. We'll call them all 'postmodemi r·."' I n England, fo r in ranee i t really does g o b y historical period, o you have the Edwardian and the Georgians and now I gues we're going to have the ew Eli:abethans. The writer Tom Wolfe was talking about are really what I would consider postmodern, fragmented- on of the father of the postmodern movement. But that' certainly a very mall piece-if there really i uch a movement in fiction. Boylan: The people who found movements and who defend movements and rand at the fore of manife to are usually not the best writers. But if you can gain omething from tho e writer and incorporate it into what you alone can do, that' giving them ga-. 9


James Boylan 's first novel , The Planets, was published this year by Simon & Schuster.

Russo: If we're sen ible, too, probably what we would aspire to would be not to be easily categorizeable. Anyth ing that fit neatly, probably isn't. Sadoff: I think it's hard when you're in­ side an age to know what the conventions are. l would say, "Yeah, I 'm a realist," but with a footnote saying, "I don't have a handle on what's real or representational, because writing isn't photography. Language i some­ how more elusive than that. But we are working with characters we hope are recog­ nizable. " Boylan: It makes me think o f t h e great Borges quote: "God is a noveli t. Unfortu­ nately, he's a realist."

Are Writers in Lock Step? Gillespie: How would you respond to the observation that you're all writing books that are the clubby product of people who all teach and who all learned from the same people? Russo: We have this fairly prevalent no­ tion out there about clubbiness providing a k ind of universal vision and voice for A meri­ can writers because of the American univer­ sity system taking creative writing under its 10

wing. But i f you look a t the various kinds of writ ing that's being done in American uni­ versities and you compare it, for in ·ranee, to the ki nd of writing being done in England, I think that you see much more variety of voice coming out of American universitie than comingout ofBritish universitie where, with one exception, there are no creative writing programs. There's much more of a simi larity of voice and attitude and v ision and style and tone in England. There are hundreds of years of history behind that. If you were a y ung man or woman in England and you wanted to be a writer you would go to London. If you were a young man or woman and you wanted to be a writer in France you would go to Paris. There was always a place to go in the smaller European countries, there would always be that club to go to. And that's never been true in the United States. I mean, if you want to be a writer in the United States, you're j ust as liable to go to Hattiesburg, Mississippi, as you are to New York. The diversityof Ameri­ can univer ities, both geograph ically and ideologically, provides far from a simi larity of point of v iew. The re u lt ha been exactly the opposite, historically, and continues to be that way. Sadoff: The trends [in modem fiction] are so diverse that I don't know anyone who could come up with a single movement in

writing that would eem to be as dominant as, say, ten years ago, "minimali m" would have been. I think that it's very difficult to make that judgment about clubbiness in relation to fiction writing today. Russo: I don't think it's a coincidence that the short story form ha had a rebirth in the last 20 year and that that happened at about the same time writing program were coming into effect. Workshops discriminate against longer works of fiction simply be­ cause they can't deal with them. You don't write a novel to be workshopped. You write your stories to be workshopped. To the ex­ tent that the novelist gets discouraged be­ cause he doe n't have a chance really to get his work evaluated, then the workshop for­ mat and creative writing programs do have a kind of influence on proces or on the forms of fiction that are being written. But, like Ira, I j ust see everything being written out there. I think there are a zillion different direc­ tions. And I also thjnk that the idea of clubbiness is a silly notion, because there have always been clubs-long before there were creative writing programs. The arche­ type for the romantic notion of the writer i Ernest Hemingway saying that if you are going to be a writer you have to l ive alone and write- aying that at the ame t ime that he was walking down the treet and having literary di cu sions with Gertrude Stein and Colby , November 1 9 9 1


Ford Madox Ford. The nature and structure of the clubs, the fact that they may be in univer ities as opposed to the Left Bank, may have ome ramifications, but the idea that we all become the same because we're all hou ed in an in titution i silly. All you have to do is look at the work that' being produced throughout this country right now ro know that there i n't any formula. Boylan: When you're in your mid-20 and you don't really know what's out there, you haven't read a whole lot, it' easy to imitate the easiest thing you find uccessful. Before you really get a sense of what's pos ible you may find your elf imitating your peer . That' not altogether a bad thing. Sadoff: A whole generation of writer were writing like T. . Eliot and Wallace Stevens. Boylan: And Hemingway. Gillespie: Think how hard it was for writer in the forties and fifties to write stories that weren't like Hemingway' . They wanted to. Sadoff: Writer write in their communi­ tie , so that if they can write from Hattie burg, or up tate New York, or Maine, they're gen­ erally not writing from the world of ideas but the world of experience that they know, and almost no writer that I know who writes well use the academic world as the volatile cen­ ter of the work. We all have live tha are

larger than the univer ity. We all take other worlds and enlarge them.

contemporary ·torie at the intro level, but I think the fir t thing is to understand "what b a ho rt srory ?"

Writers as Teachers

Russo: I have been grappling with this for a long a l have been teaching writing. It is important, if you're going to select among strategie · , to know what the various strate­ gies are. I think it' certainly historical! · important and significant, if you're going to function within a tradition, to ha\·e some knowledge of that tradition. Where I might differ lightly with [others] is the extent to which I think it is my job as a teacher of writing to provide that background for [ tu­ dents]. There i within this Engli h depart­ ment a fairly large and extensive framework for them to get that in their other courses. I suggest to anybody who's in creative writing what ·ort of literature cour e they should take and the kind of reading they absolutely mu t do. However, I don't do an a\.\ful lot of the teaching ofliterature per se. Frankly, I'm \·ery intimidated by the notion that we ha\·e to prm·ide techniques and skill and literary history. Rightly or wrongly, my own ten­ dency a a teacher is ro put far more emphasi on the nuts and bolts of writing a single paragraph of student prose. As far as provid­ ing a literary historical context in which they're going to work, it'- something that I find very difficult, pedagogically, to succeed in.I often find that I don't have time to talk about "Young Goodman Brown." You know, 'Tm -orry, I wish I did, and by God, if you

Gillespie: Do you feel an obligation to teach styles of writing that are different from your own? How do you go about teaching people how to write fiction1 Sadoff: The better the teacher, the le · ego investment you have in your own par­ ticular brand of writing. The least pleasant thing i to see a student aspiring to write the same kinds of things, some echo of yourelf-that's when you know you're not doing a good job. One thing that's important ro tress is a range of po ibilities, to defu e your power a a reacher. o, when J teach the advanced courses, I often wil l teach seven or eight different collections of torie , as dif­ ferent as Grace Paley and John Cheever and Alice Walker, to give them a ense that fiction i much more than I can do. Boylan: One of the thing you find at the introductory leve l is that your student haven't read a lot of hort srories. The first thing that I find i necessary is to reach the history of the hort story form, ro make them ee where rhi thing that they want ro do so badly has been. As time goes on, it's increas­ ingly necessary [for them] to under rand what's being written right now. I do teach

Richard Russo is the author of two novels, The Risk Pool and Mohawk.

Colby, November 1 99 1

11


haven't read it, get your ass out there and read it, but not in here. We j ust don't have time ! " Sadoff: Where I would disagree would be not that we have to provide a literary history for students but that my students seem to learn more from professional stories than from their own storie . They get to have the process of reading as a writer, and then those profe ional stories become their teachers as well as my being their teacher. If you want to learn about how to use gesture and detai l, read Hemingway, read Carson McCullers. And when we [study professional stories] in class, it requires them to pay attention to knowledge of material that they can't learn from each other because they don't have it in their own work yet. Reading as a writer means they can bring the same analytical skills to their own stories that they would be able to bring to a Joyce story or "Young Goodman Brown" or Raymond Carver. Kenney: I think you've got to begin-at least before you've got a b ig body of [student writing] and they're all working on their stuff-with the intensive analysis of stories, and I do it by subject and technique. l find that by midsemester, I 've convinced them that when I say, "Read Ursula LeG uin's 'The W ives Tale,' " to read it because they'll know that it's a good story for them to read and it may come up. Sadoff: And when you th ink about ome­ thing like a craft problem, like multiple point of v iew, which many students will cry, they don't know how to handle weight, gravity, which characters should be speak­ ing, when they should be speaking, and so you give them John Cheever's "The Rysons," and all of a sudden they say, "Oh, so that's one way to do that." Russo: But when you take a professional story, what you're saying to the student is, "To learn, go thou and do l ikewise. " And it's a little bit like having somebody who really wants to learn how to play basketball watch tapes of Jul ius I rv ing and saying, "Boy, this son of a b itch can do it, can't he ?" One of the things that they already know is chat they're not old enough, chat they haven't lived quite enough, that they're not as educated as they need to be. They know all chis, they know how d ifferent they are from profes­ sional writers. And I try to find ways to bridge the gap that will allow them to con­ t inue bridging the gap over the years after we lose them. What I find works is to take 12

maybe the first entence of[a student's] story and have the class write that sentence 1 0 different ways and discu s the meaning and the tone and all of the changes. The diffi­ culty of working with professional writers is that it' not difficult at all to convince the student how great these writers are. The que tion in their minds i always, "How do I get there?" They're certainly bright enough to understand that the professional writer's entence is a hell of a lot better than theirs. What they don't understand is that the lame entence that begins their story can become, through a process, something far better than it is. It's maybe not going to be a "Call me Ishmael" sentence, but we can show them how to make that sentence better without alluding to somebody who is 50 years old and has published six books. Sadoff: When l teach a Cheever story l try to mediate the di tance between chem, or choose stories that have hole in them so that the [students] can see the ways in which they can also and should also continue to make judgments about stories. The motor for those strategie i that as literature be­ come more and more marginal in our cul­ ture, the model for rudents for writ ing stories become television and the movies, and they honestly don't know what form they're working in. The recogn ition of the form and structure of the stories is about a third of the battle for them to write well.

same thing in a conflict exercise. "The first paragraph of your story does this. Now, what are the options?" There are two ways that you can go about looking at that student's story. You can send the student to a Cheever story and say, "Notice where, in terms of the action, the story begins," or you can look at the student's story and say, "Here's the first sentence that I really liked in the story and it occurs on page ! O ofa 1 5 -page story. What if we start with this sentence and we move back and get the rest of this stuff in flash­ back ?" Sadoff: All of this shows how hard it is to teach writing. A lot of people who are litera­ ture teachers think that this is a really easy job and we just talk about "feelings." But the job we have is both teaching an aspect of literary history and how people work in the tradition, and, in effect, how the practical que tions of language work. You have to be able to do both, to say: "Cheever does it chis way and somebody else doe it thi way and omeone else does it th is way, these are options, but look, here are options even within the framework of the story that you're writing."

Sadoff: But you're working here with not only the individual word but "the house." Maybe this is a way of talking about the way in which we teach the story, too: a lot of my intention in teaching a story is in term of the architecture of that story. It' not so much entence-to-sentence writing in the beginning of the stories but "Why is this not a story?", "Where is the conflict ?", "What happens to the character ?", "Where is the tran format ion ?", "How i setting u ed l" If they don't have tho e elements down, it doesn't matter that they write really won­ derful sentences, because they're not adding up to working in a form.

Boylan: I t ounds as if we're saying that one of our chief goals here is not so much teaching people to write as i t i to read, or to read critically what they've written. We are trying to help people improve their writing, but so often you do that by teaching people to read what they've written-and what professional writers have written--critically. If you can do that, l guess, you've done quite a bit. Eventually the c lass will end, the workshop will end, and you'll be alone with your work. Just as the four of us are now, taring at 500-page manuscripts trying to think: "OK, what have I done here, what should I keep, what do I need to get rid of?" I t's our sensibilitie as writers, a good critics, a good readers, that's going to get us out of that. It' not our ability to create a beautiful sentence that's going to rewrite 1 ,200 page of j unk. We can teach [students] to look at stories the way writers do. Our Engli h de­ partment has a lot of talented scholars who can teach the short story and the novel in a scholarly way. We can do something a little different.

Russo: But both techniques get used in the larger conceptual issues that are impor­ tant to sentence writing. I t's not j ust a mat­ ter of changing word around to make a better entence. You could also begin with the first paragraph of the story and do the

Kenney: I t all goes beyond close reading to close reading with choices. I think, to a critic you can't go beyond close reading, but that' really not the case. [You can] go in and really discover, be able to see what choices not ju t that writer makes, but you a a writer make.

Kenney: l like Rick's analysis because he's directing them toward the words. You know, why isn't it "Hi, my name is Ishmael"?

Colby, November 1 99 1


Alumni on Main Street From an Epicure to a Clothier, a Newspaper Columnist to the Mayor, Colbians Add Spice and Style to Waterville Text by Edward Hershey based upon interviews by Stephen Collins ' 74 . Illustrations by Nora Cameron. Photographs by Mary Ellen Matava.

A

haberdashery in its centennial year till tailor to cu tamer the old-fashioned way. In a shopping center aero s the street, the owner of the area's only children' bookshop preread every title on her helve . Next door, a cu tom framer treats wall posters and hobbyi ts' acrylic landscapes as if they were masterpiece , and down the block the proprietor of a fledgling gourmet shop tocks brands of wine, chee e and pate unfamiliar to many customers. This i Main treet, Waterville, Maine, and it i not too different in 1 9 9 1 than it wa in the days when it and America' other Main treets were being celebrated by Sherwood Ander on, sentimental­ ized by Thornton W i lder and lampooned by inclair Lewis. At City Hall, the c i ty's part-time mayor i a oft- poken local attorney who eerns a shoo-in for reelection even though hi political style is ometime ridiculed by a featured colurnni t at the Morning Sentinel about a hundred yards away. Profes ionals on Main treer are right there among the hop­ keeper , and they include a denti t who ha been drilling teeth for 40 years and now has a son for a partner. Father-and- on teams are not uncommon on Main Street-another such tandem is at the heart of the c i ty' bu iest in urance agency. There are gathering spot on Main Street like the doughnut hop where the coffee is fre h and the conversation expansive. And, ofcourse, there are bank , including a saving and loan that i neither under investigation nor in danger of collap e becau e it always make prudence count more than greed. The bank' youthful president is an

Colby, November 1 99 1

almost constant presence i n the lobby, bounding out o f h is glass­ walled office all day long ( and until 7 p.m. on Thursdays) to greet customers by their first names. The men and women who provide goods and ervice on Main treet come from varying backgrounds, bur many have at least two thing in common: they never expected to be doing what they are doing today on Main Street in Waterville, Maine, and they are graduate of Colby. Ye , the banker and the bookseller are Colby alumni and o are the mayor and the columni t who occa ionally excoriates h im. The man who runs the haberdashery went to Colby and o did h is ageless uncles, who till come to work e ery day at the tore their father opened 1 00 years ago. The father and on in the insurance business are Colbians, as are the father and son who are dentists and the husband and wife who own the doughnut hop. The framer, the gourmet grocer and the children's bookseller all went to Colby, as did at least two dozen other men and women who work along Main Street. On the pages that follow Colby takes a c lo er look at 10 Colbians on Main treet. ome were born in Waterville, others had never set foot in town before the day they entered college. But all decided they liked the small town atmosphere enough to stay. Many graduate probably most- trike out for major cities with grand designs after their Colby years. But a few remain or return, making Waterville richer by their, and thus Colby's, presence.

13


W

hen David Palmer ' 5 7 went t o Colby, milk and sandwiches at Park's Diner on Main Street were the answers to after-hours hunger attacks. Today students have more choices-among them the Burger King and Mr. Donut franchises Palmer and hi wife, Anne Burbank Palmer ' 5 5 , run on the site of the old Colby campus. The Palmers' fast food emporia seem to have person足 alities of their own. The Burger K i ng is one of the few places in town where local residents still seem comfort足 able chatting in French, and next door at Mr. Donut, professors and business leaders mingle with pensioners, tore clerks and letter carriers. Some regulars show up five time a day to drink coffee and meet fr iends. "I t's l ike the old comer store with the pot-bellied stove," Palmer said. Palmer's 1 3 -year-old Burger King was at the van足 guard of a renewal of College Avenue south of the railroad tracks. Former warehouses that have since been con足 vened into shops and offices include Railroad Square Cinema (by Ken Eisen '73, Gail Chase '74 and other ) and Waterville Family Practice ( includingJeffrey Lovitz, M.D. '70) . That small-scale renaissance reflects larger changes, both in Waterville and in the Colby alumni who have contributed to it. "Back in our day, people couldn't get out of Colby, couldn't get out of Waterville, couldn't get out of Maine fast enough," says Palmer, a native of Long Island. But after a decade and a half in big c ities as a corporate manager for Scott Paper and then Burger King itself, Palmer made the transition from the corporate office to the lunch counter. "We were very fortunate to get the opportuniry to come back to Maine and to Waterville," he say , though he and Anne have not lost their corporate instinct. They operate Burger Kings in four M aine town .

14

Colby , November 1 99 1


I

f you buy insurance in Waterv ille, the brokerage you deal with probably has Colby connections. Nowhere, though, are the t ies thicker than at the Main Street firm of Boothby & Bartlett. Boothby & Bartlett has written policies for the Col­ lege since the company was founded in 1 859. Father and son Arthur "Red" O'Halloran '50 and Daniel J. O'Halloran '80 are among four Colby alumni still active in the firm. (Robert Rowell '49 is recently semi-retired and Franci Bartlett, Jr. '56 is a third-generation alumnus whose father was also a Colby trustee. ) Red grew up in tiny Amherst, Maine, 25 miles east of Bangor. After erving as a Naval aviator during World War Two, he spent part of his student years on the old campus and finished up on Mayflower H ill. He's been with Boothby & Bartlett since J une of the year he graduated. For Dan, Colby was important from early childhood. He sledded on the the hill in front of the president's house, learned to play hockey in Alfond Arena and watched football on Seavems Field. When Dan graduated he took a job w ith UNUM in Philadelphia. ix years later he came home to Main Street to discover a new sense of satisfaction in hi insurance career. Dan says he enjoys writing all kinds of policies and dealing w ith clients on a more personal level. "In Philadel­ phia," he said, "you worked to make a lot of money. Back here, you try to work to do good for the local community." "Lots of people have lots of troubles," his father added. "We try to make it easier for them-that's the whole point of insurance." Like other alumni of h is generation along Main Street, Red O'Halloran l i ked it better when students spent more time downtown. But one a peer of hi relationship with the College has not changed. Colby remain a valued c lient.

I

I

Colby, November 1 99 1

15


I

t's late morning and Jon Jorgensen '88 i getting ready for the n lontime sanJwich trade with fresh supplies from around the corner (croissant ), New York (deli -style rye bread) and the world ( i mporreJ pate and brie). A fre h pot of Columbian Supremo is brewing and a different sort of brew, Pilsner Urquell, has just been re tocked. Among Colby's entrepreneur on Main treet, the proprietor of Jorgensen's Gourmet Goods is the new kid on the block. It was not precisely the career he had planned when he graduated from Colby and enrolled in a graduate program in Russian Literature at San Francisco State Univer­ ;ity. The young man who grew up in nearby China and attended Watervi lle H igh thought hi Colby degree was a ticket to the world. In tead he wound up bringing the world home. As the ight and ound ( or, more aptly, the mells and caste ) of San Francisco enveloped him, Jorgenson wondered if central Maine would support a purveyor of uch exotic foods and beverages. When retail pace opened up acros from Key Bank on Main treet in Waterville, it wa as if Jorgensen could mell that coffee brewing 3,000 miles away. Jorgen en and hi parmer, Alison Stoddart, opened the bu iness a year ago last summer. "We're doing better every month- teady growth ince the day we opened," he said. Colby profe or , alumni and student are among their regu­ lar patron . But the bulk of bu iness come from people like the fellow with the cleaning ervice who '.:lrops by for that special cup of coffee each morning r the retired airline pilot who orders smoked olives. Long-time resident say they never stopped ruing the demise of a wine and cheese hop that was open briefly in the 1 970s. One tell Jorgensen every time he comes in that she can't believe he's st ill open. "There' no way," she ays, "this place hould urv ive in Waterville."

16

Colby , November 199 1


A

llan L Rancourt ' 7 5 concedes he was probably born to be a banker, but it took him several years to reali:e it. When h is roommate at Colby took turns doing a bank internship on Main Street, Rancourt, a history major, shook h is head. "Why in the hell would you ever want to get into banking?" he remembers asking them. Then, hortly after he graduated, while he was work­ ing in con truction and trying to ettle on a career, Rancourt applied for a po ition at the Kennebec Federal Savings & Loan Assoc iation. The fact that he was a local boy who had done well at Colby impres ed the bank's president, and Rancourt got the job. The bank wa smaller then. When Rancourt wanted to open a personal checking account, for instance, he d i covered that he had to create a checking department first. Kennebec Federal's as ets have grown impressively in the ensuing 1 5 years, as have Rancourt's professional fortune -he's now rhe bank' president. But Kennebec Federal i still mall and local. Get your home mortgage there and you probably can be certain that's where rhe monthly payment will go for the next 25 or 30 year . The fast-buck escapades that led other S Ls astray in the '80 were never even a seriou temptation at Kennebec Federal, where you still have to how up in person to open a savings account-there's a policy against accepting wire tran fer . The pre ident's office i right off the lobby, and on Thursdays, when the bank is open until 7 p.m., Rancourt it at hi desk until c lo ing to answer questions or to pop out to greet a customer. Young as he i , Rancourt ha become the grand old man of at lea t one pha e ofWaterville banking. Whenever omeone wants to know what hap­ pened to any of the dozen-plus independent banks that u ed to operate in the Elm City, they usually call the ersrwhile hi tory major for the corporate genealogy.

Colby, November 1 9 9 1

17


F

or a good part o f the past century, the connection between the College and the City of Waterville has started at City Hall. First-term Mayor David Bernier '79, like a number of predecessors, including his father, Albert '50, is a Colby alumnus. Bernier, a Waterville attorney, still leans on h is Colby tie more than a decade after graduation. One of h is first acts after taking office nearly two years ago was to dismiss two top municipal officials, and Bernier ays hi decision followed consultation with Albert Mavrinac, hi former government professor, and Dean of the College Earl Smith. Even Bernier's intimate family conversations have a Colby air about them. In addition to h is father, h is mother, two i ters and brother­ in- law all matriculated on M ayflower H i l l . Bernier s a y he e e s t h e relationship between t h e city and the College a a functioning partnership, a two-way street. "There' a lot ofactivity between Colby and Waterville, but people don't always see it," he said. "The growth of the College and the growth of the city-you cannot separate the two. They're one and the ame." He notes that President Will iam Cotter, who serves with him on the board of the Mid-State Economic Develop­ ment Corporation, is but one of dozens of Colby faculty and alumni on various committees and commi ions. But while Bernier remains drawn to Mayflower H ill, the center of his l ife is now just off Main Street on Castonguay quare where, at City Hall, he take pain to represent all the resident of a city that serves as the commercial hub for region of more than 1 00,000 residents. "Waterville," its mayor proclaim , " is much more than a college town."

18

Colby, November 1 99 1


You don't have to be named

awfel to practice dentistry in Waterville. I t only seems that way. M ichael "M ickey" Nawfel '45 practices with hi son N ick at Common and Main Streets. Cousin Elias J . ' 4 and Elia R. Nawfel '44 have office on Upper Main. Another of Mickey's ons, M ichael, i a periodontist acros the river in Winslow. One cousin, Charles "Chick" awfel ' 3 7 , d id break the mold. He practices law at ilver and Main. The Nawfel family ha been a main ray of the city's proud Lebane e-American community for more than 80 years, since M ickey awfel' grandmother immigrated to the U.S. M ickey remember a Depression ch ildhood of poverty and hard work, but he also remembers the values that helped put all those Nawfel surnames onto profe sional signs around town. "Education," he says. "The same as Monday comes after Sunday-that's j ust the way it was in my family." M ickey wa the pri:e tudent. He was class valedicto­ rian at Waterville H igh, and h is whole family pitched in to help h i m get through college and dental school. He entered Colby in the fall of 1 94 l , attended clas es day and night non top for 1 8 months (often even day a week ) and then accepted an accelerated admi ion to Tufts Dental School. The war provided extra incentive. "It was really of a erious nature, because if you screwed up, you were in the service," he said. "Your life was at stake." "Colby's been good to me; it took me in," awfel aid. "In Waterville we're very proud to have a college like Colby in town." When awfel attended, "in town" meant down­ town, and he ays the Mayflower Hill campus has made Colby seem more remote. " Back in the '40 Colby student were part of Waterville-they were Waterv il le," he said. "Everybody came into town. Now, aturday night in Waterville is dead."

Colby, November 1 99 1

19


The payoff is the uncontained enthusiasm of a fifth­

grader who fa irly squeals with anticipation when her spe­ cial-order book comes in. lt' the gratitude of an aunt or uncle reporting that the book you recommended was perfect-the most favored birthday present. That-not the profit-is what makes staying open worthwh ile, says Carol Wynne '74, owner/manager of the Children's Book Cellar and Toy Loft. It's not that you can't make money selling books and toys. " I t would be so easy to sell all this stuff that's already advertised on Saturday morning T.V.," Wynne said, "but we don't stock things just becau e they're big sellers. We only take stuff that's consistent with the quality we want here. The ales reps come in and say to me, 'This one really sells,' and I tell them I don't care. They look at me like I 'm nuts." When she's in a cold panic making arrangements to play host to an author or stage a story hour, she wonders herself. She had never seen a chi ldren's bookshop until he went to San Diego with her fa mily in 1 98 7 . " [ came out of that tore and said, 'I would love to do something like this,' " she said. More than a dozen years as a mental health, substance abuse and rape crisis counselor had primed Wynne for a career change. ix months later, the Children's Book Cellar opened. Wynne and her employees screen 3,000-5,000 new titles each year and read every book they stock, preferably aloud to children. That and all the paperwork belies the seduc­ tive notion she once had of owning a little retail shop on Main Street. "[ figured I 'd come down here and get a little kn itting done," Wynne said. "I had no idea what I was getting involved in."

20

Colby , November 1 99 1


.

___

;�fl]_:

H

is fir t isit to Main treet so unnerved Harry Faust '70 that he d id not return for two year . Now hi hop, The FrameMaker , is a popular fixture there. "I wa lamenting how I would really like some bagels," recalls Fau t, a native of Lawrence, Mass. He and two other fre hmen ventured into a Main treet bakery and put in their order with the counter clerk. "Do we ha e a bagel?" she called to the back, clearly puzzled. "You mean one of those J ewish doughnuts?" her boss boomed back. A quarter century later, Faust miled gently, recalling the Main Street ofyore as he washed the plate glass windows of h is custom-framing busine at No. 46. "There was nothing," he ays. "There wa uch a feeling of insularity." At lea t two things have changed. One is Fau t's abil ity to see a d ifferent kind of diver ity than he was looking for in 1 966. The other is demographics, beginning with the in­ migration of people not unlike himself durino the '60s and '70s. "Educated people came lookin for a impler lifestyle, and with them they brought thing l ike bagel and opportu­ nitie for frame shops and an," Fau t -ay . In addition to running the hop, he coordinates a popular summer side­ walk art show that draw exhibitor from across the state. "There's no doubt that Waterville' downtown is chang­ ing," he aid. On the positive side, low rent allow Main Street to erve a an incubator for bu ine e uch as his own, Faust says, but a new mal l planned for Augusta is making Main treet entrepreneur nervou . "Whether or not downtown can survive remains to be seen," he says. And for all the progress, Faust laments, "You still have to drive to Portland for a good bagel."

Colby, November 1 9 9 1

21

-

:·.


E

very Monday, Wednesday and Friday, Gerry Boyle '78 reer from the upper left-hand comer of page two of the Central Maine Morning Sentinel. And three times a week, he has a wry to tell. Boyle u ually leaves the movers and shaker to the front page, focu ing instead on average (or not quite average) folk . He pec ializes in Waterville's seamy side, and his forte i the true tale. One week it' the chilling account of a I 3-year-old woman-child, defiant of her mother and the truant officer and proud of her new tat­ too --one for a rock star and another for a friend. The next it' the gritty derails ofa custody battle who e ult imate loser is a bewildered 7-year-old girl. Some journalists cant about social problems from the distance of a legislative hearing room or a government bureaucrat's office; Boyle works the trenches, reporting from local coffeeshop , police and courthouse corridors and rooming house stoops. His column about local people high l ight universal woes. "We've got plenty of column about nice people, people who are doing well," Boyle says. " [ think this is j ust real stuff-the way things happen to a lot of people around here. l k ind of want to shove it in people' face , make it real, maybe stimulate some action." Though Waterville doe not lack for material that gets down to ba ic truths about how people are coping-or not coping-with problems, Boyle says, the columns do not always come easily. "I t's a challenge," he says. "It's all there; it's j ust coming up w ith an angle." Boyle i married to Mary Foley Boyle '78; they l ive in China. At the Sentinel, he also writes editorials and coaches young reporters. Notwithstanding hi pa ion for gritty reality, he is about to branch out into fiction. The North Country Press in Belfast, M aine, will publish his fir t novel.

22

Colby, November 1 99 1


A

r rhe ilver Srreer Ta\'em, where Bruce For ley '79 i " a proprieror, there i s a Ludy Burger and a Pacy Burger o n rhe menu. Bur there i no Howard Burger. " ee, nobody knows me," ays Howard Miller '40 , with a big grin. 'Tm the power behind the throne." Ludy '2 1 and Pacy Le\¡ine '2 7 , Miller's uncles and hi partner in the Wm. Levine and ons haberdashery, are Colby and Main Street legends. M iller -ay he never planned to enter the business. "I wa going to go to law school," he recalls. But when he returned from World War Two there wa, a shortage of help and he agreed ro pitch in temporarily. Forty- ix years later, "the kid" runs the store. That is obviou during an interview interrupted o he can find a key for a maintenance man, approve a check for a clerk, advise a cu tamer on the right hade of gra 1 for a pair of dre hoe and di patch a ale woman to wait on someone in "rhe Colby Comer," a shrine to alma mater established by Ludy and Pacy. Hi uncle ( they are called 'rh boy " everywhere in town) till work a full day. "Ludy's our publicity agent," Mi ller said. "He knows all of the hi tory of this area and of Colby. Pacy's the port fan." When times required it, Levine' ran tabs for needy Colby students, tru tino that they would ettle account after rhey graduated and landed job . Almost all of them did. " I t made u feel good if we helped some of them out rhat way," aid M iller, himself an active alumnu who is presi­ dent of the Fifty-Plus Club. "We always get a big thrill when so many of them come down to say hello when they're in town."

Colby, November 1 99 1

23


Now, for the Weather

After Centuries of Stormy Scientific Rivalry and Buffeting from Farmers , Politicians and Generals, Meteorology Has Arrived-Maybe Just in Time by lames R. Fleming

T

o hundred years ago, weather watch i ng was more of a

tatist ics. Between 1 14 and 182 5 , the Army Medical Department,

iobby than a profession. But since then meteorology ha­

the General Land Office, the Academies in the state of New York and

een tran formed into a d iscipl ine re li ed upon by industry,

a group of college profes or in New England e tabli hed c l i matologi­

f us who turns to the rad io ,

c a l observing programs over increasingly larger areas of the country

agric u l tu re , the m i l i tary and every one

T V or newspaper eek ing a weather forecast. A l t hough we c annot yet-<md may neve r-under ·tand the c haot ic forces at work i n the atmosphere well enough to predict the

and pooled their information in centers l i ke Albany, Phi ladelphia and Wash i ngton. Most of the weather watcher i n the e sy terns were dedicated to

weather for more than the next few days , atmospheric c i nee has

the sc ient ific exploration of the New World.

come a very long way indeed. Recent concerns such as stratospheric

defend i ng i t reputation . For example, America was thought to have

ome were intere ted in

ozone deplet ion and global warm ing have placed the atmospheric

a much har�her c l imate than i ts lat i tude should support. They wanted

c iences a t the focus of nat iona l and i nternat iona l attent ion and

to prove, among other th in gs, that c l earing the forests could improve

demonstrated that we s t i l l have a long way t o go. In the 17th and 18th centu ries, isolated American d i arists, w i thout re l iable instruments, sponsoring i n t i tut ions or proper in­

the c l i mate, making va�t areas of America more ho p itable to European

ettler . Other , i n pired by d i coveries i n astronomy,

looked for the influence of the moon and other celestial bodies on the

struction, contributed to meteorological sc ience by keeping records

weather. S t i l l other

of the loca l weather and c l imate. The i r ob-ervation were l i m i ted to

between geography and disease. Considering that colon i al Europeans

their personal first-hand impressions, and thei r horizon was l i m i ted

had almost universa l l y taken ill whi le working i n hot c l i mates such

l i terally to their l i ne of sight-a few m i les at best. W i t h ut ob erva­

a I nd i a or the Canbbean, it i ea y to understand that, with Florida

t ional

tandards or i ns t i t u t ions tO coordinate and support their

were more interested i n the supposed l ink

and the va·t Loui iana Purchase to explore and settle, American

research, these weather d i arist could claim no erious attention from

were anx ious to understand the potential for h t, h um id weather to

European savant .

cause disease. Some of the e issues seem far removed from meteorol­

Enl ightenment ph i lo ophers such as Montesqu ieu and H u me had stressed the interrelation of natura l phenomena and human

ogy today. Yet every generation, i n part driven by ocial concerns, produces its own sc ient ific m i x .

endeavors, of c l imate and c u l tural affairs, of the scienc e and the

Beginning in 18 3 4 , t h e bitter d isputes among meteorologists

humanit ies. Thi outlook , although infl uential i n America, gave way

involved i n the "American torm controversy" attracted the atten­

t0 the quantify ing spirit of the late Enl igh tenment . Increasingly,

t ion, if not a l ways the admiration, of European

weather statistics were col lected both for their own sake and i n

debated issues included the cau e of torm , their phenomenology

c ienti ts. Hotly

support of p ra c t i c a l purs u i ts: Americans had land to urvey and et t le,

and the proper methodology for inve t igati ng them. Competing

crop tO grow and roads tO bu ild . Ameri c a was t o be t he proving

theories were developed by three prominent

ground for the prac t i c a l appl i c a t ion of knowledge.

Redfield, James Espy and Robert Hare. Although i t came to no c lear

dent ists: W i l l iam

Early in the 1 9th cent ury, while Thomas J efferson pre ided over

i nte l lec tual re olution , the storm controversy t i mulated an observa­

both the nat ion and i ts lead i ng sc ient ific assoc i a t ion, the American

t ional meteorological crusade that transformed meteorological theory

P h i losoph ical Soc iety, groups of private c i t izens and officers of the

and prac t ice.

federal government began to collect c l i ma t i c and phenological

24

I n 184 1 the first em igrant wagon train set off for California from Colby, November 199 1


Accu-Weacher, Inc.

Compwer-generated radar map of Hurricane Bob on its path thro11gh ew England. Using his Macinrosh compurer, a modem and a phone line , Flemin a can call up wemher informarion like chis from his atmospheric science classroom .

Mi souri. Ir wa followed by a ·ready stream of settlers and speculators rhar became a torrent wirh rhe Gold Ru h of 1 49. Thar year rhe mirhsonian mereorolooical project was inaugurated wirh 1 50 vol­ unteer observers. A decade later, ju r before the outbreak of rhe Ci"il War, the project could claim O\·er 600 ob en·er and reached ro the West Coast and into Canada, Mex ico and the Caribbean. Americans were on rhe mm•e, etrl ing region-; a climatically di\'er e a rhe California coa r and rhe Kan as plain and raking science wirh them ro the frontier in rhe form of climate urveys and ever more exren ive meteorological y tem . More rhan anything el -e, the mirh onian project provided a framework for obser\'ation: there were tandardi"ed instruments, uniform procedure and a ense of ·cientific unity extending beyond the normal reach of college and local scholarly oc ietie . Data emerged from the hadows of private d iaries to the l ight of publica­ tion. Volumes of reliable ob er\'ations ·panning the continent and the cenrury appeared. To increase knowledge of the atmosphere, the mithsonian spon ored original re earch on storms, cl imatic change and the winds of the globe; ro diffuse knowledge it published and di tributed eminal report and translation . lt wa America' grand meteorological crusade. o longer were a few isolated enthusiasts calling for weather observation ; hundred , eventually thou and , of organized ob erver were collecting them according ro a more or less regular plan. After the Civil War the badly damaged Smithsonian meteoro­ logical y tem wa gradually rebuilt, but it never regained its antebel­ lum ignificance or reputation. Congre created a federal tom1waming service in 1 70 under the U . . Army ignal Office called "Telegram and Reports for rhe Benefit of Commerce and Agricul­ ture." Thi nationwide y tem upplanred all other by 1 874, marking the end of the era dominated by volunteer observers. Wirh appropria­ tior..., of more rhan 500,000 annually, the signal ervice expanded rapidly. The ch ief signal officer oon found himselfat the center ofan electric intell igence network spanning the nation, w ith access ro Colby, November 1 99 1

national commercial relegraph lines and r o rhe military telegraph being built along rhe seacoast and into the frontier. During national emergencies he e\'en had a direct line ro rhe White House. The officers of hi- command served a- borh meteorological obsen·er and as a dome tic police force. To their mind , the rwo functions were nor exclusive. Ir \\"a a important ro pa s on new about rhe latest natural ha:ard-srorm on rhe Grear Lake , heavy nowfall on rhe rail l ine , locust hatchings and migration , floods and droughts-as ir wa ro report an I ndian upri ing or a rail \\"Orker ' trike. Each could disrupt rhe moorh conduct of rhe nation' bu ine By 1 90 the frontier was declared closed; few comers of the United tare had nor been "tamed." The ma sacre ar Wounded Knee, S. D., rhar year marked the effecti\'e end ro N ative American re i ranee to ettlemenr. An agricultural empire wa emerging on the great plain . With rhe Civil War now more rhan a generation past, Congre decided ro move rhe weather bureau ro rhe Department of Agriculture. oon rhe budget for go\'emmental meteorological er­ \·ice topped 1 million. The bureau employed 1 ,000 tarion atten­ dant (whose durie included reading instruments, launching bal­ loons and wiring dara ro Washington) in 1 97 and more than 2 ,000 by 1 9 1 2 . During World War One the orwegian polar front" theory ( the idea thar air mas e , like opposing armie , cla h wirh one another along a front ) revolurioni:ed rhe cience of meteorology. Increas­ ingly, military and private aviator demanded reliable wearher ser­ v ices. Re ponding ro the e opporrunitie , meteorology rook it place in academe in rhe 1 920s and '30 . For rhe fir r rime, students could speciali:e in the di cipl ine ar rhe uni\·er ity and oraduate school levels. Well-defined career path for graduate oon followed. oci­ etie and journals dedicated ro meteorology prang up acros the country. Becau e ofnew phy ical theories of armo pheric behavior­ and, increa ingly, becau e of new technologie of data collection and analy i -ir eemed that prediction of future armo pheric configura­ t ion wa now theoretically po sible. 25


Weather map showing converging wind /Jattems during a stonn , drawn in J 837 for che Joint Committee on Meteorology . ( From Meteorology in America, 1 800- 1 8 70 . ) During World War Twn the neeJ f o r worldwide support for mil itary a\'iaror� became acute for the fir t rime. During the war the Army Air orp� and the Navy trained arprnximately 8,000 weather officer at the nat ion's top universitie�. Per onnel of the Army' Air Weather ervice ( AW ) , an agency nonexistent in 1 9 3 7 , numbered 1 9,000 in 1 94 5 . Even after <lemobil i:ation the AW averaged ap­ proximately 1 1 ,000 soldiers during the cold war-about three times the number of emrloyee in the weather bureau-and it deployed many during the gulf war. The needs of an expanded military, commercial aviation and increa ed uni\'er ity research have sup­ ported the continual growth of the field. New technologie such a� radar and ate l l ite· found applications in both military and civil ian settings: radar can detect enemy planes, but it can al o be bounced off raindrop and hail tone· to provide a glimpse at the inner workings of clouds and storms. Satellites can be used as "eye· in the sky" for rying, hut they can also provide accurate and derailed pictures of the latest weather conditions ( cal led "now­ casting") as well a· remote sensina of the atmosphere over areas not covered by ground stations. In the 1 9 50 the advent of another revolut ionary technology, the electronic com purer, provided the tantali:ing possibility that the future state of the atmo phere could be calculated with precision for weeks or even month in ad\·ance. lt eemed that the goal of long­ term weather pred icti n wa within reach. A profes ional cadre of university-trained meteorologist knew more than ever before about the way weather behave . They had excellent in·rruments that rook preci�e measurements. The world wa getting maller every day, and weather data wa pouring in from around the globe. Who wa to say that once all the information had been sifted and boiled, a clear picture of the weather for the next week, month or even century might not emerge ? All that was needed were the init ial weather conditions and the equations that tell the model atmosphere how to change. Ir has since become obviou that the chaotic behavior of the atmo phere poses a seemingly in urmountable barrier to such long­ range prediction . But to busines leaders and government officials of the era, it must have seemed as if a genie wa about to grant the ultimate wi h. Still, computer model are extremely valuable in calculating th likely state of the weather for up to a week in advance. They are 26

e-r•ecially good in predicting the future state of the upper atmosphere where the motion are simpler, ince friction, moisture and the roughne s of the terrain can be neglected. kil led forecasters can use the output of these models ro improve their forecasts. Increasingly, computers are being used a laboratories ro model the behavior of the Earth's climate a human activity add green­ house gase and other pollutants ro the atmosphere. Most atmo­ spheric cientist now predict an unprecedented 3 to S degree Centigrade warming within 1 00 year . ome predict rising ea levels, inundation of lowlands and extinction of pecie a the climate warms rapidly, perhaps to temperatures not seen in the past 10 million years. Social cienti ts and policy makers are asking, "If what the cl imate modelers tell us is true-that i , if rapid global climate change is real-what should we do about i t ?" The an wer to this question is not at all clear but includes stringent raxe on carbon em is ions, an end to the use of chemicals that damage the ozone layer and better management of coa ral zones. Recently, humanists have joined the discus ion , a king, "What does this all mean for humanity and its relationship to nature?" In the second half of the 20th century, the atmo pheric sciences have participated in a technological revolution led by developments in aviation, satellites and electronic computer . The massive amount of information gathered or generated daily by ground rations, ship , airplanes, satell ites, radar installations and computer models find its way now to end users like me. A computer, modem and phone line in my classroom make it possible for students in my atmospheric science class to follow the weather around the world as it happens. But beyond being able to collect the information, it is far more important to know what it all means and how to apply that knowledge to the world's problems. The students in my class (overwhelmingly non-science major ) are preparing to join the ongoing public debates over atmospheric change. They are learning that the atmosphere i interdisciplinary-it belongs to everyone, not ju t the meteorolo­ gists. And those who know it well, love it be t and incorporate their learning and passion into their careers-in all fields-have the best chance of ensuring that there is fresh air to breathe in the 2 l st century. James R . Fleming is che auchor of Meteorology in America, 1 8001 870 (John Hopkins University Press , 1 990) .

Colby, November 1 99 1


FACULTY FILE Where th e Arts and Sciences Meet

W

hen J ame R . Fleming canva sed his "Introduction r o Science has disrensed se\·eral grants ro college- in recent year> to rromote the and Technology" course at Colby recendy, he discovered that two­ understanding of science and technology-related i -sues ::imong un­ third of those enrolled were soC1al c ience majors, one sixth were dergraduates. Fleming ·ay · he belie\·es Colby is the only college that majoring in the humanities and the final sixth were science majors. has used the loan funds to de\·elor a full-fledged -cience and "A - the amount of various kinds of knowledge has increased, technology concentration. there ha been a tendency toward speciali:ation and, in a sense, In Fleming, the rrogram has an energetic, articulate leader. He fragmentation," Fleming says. " ci-tech is an integrated, interdi-ci­ was an a ·tronomy maior at Penn rate and went on to earn two plinary tudy in which student from all majors can take cour-es on master'- degree---one in atmosrheric ,cience from Colorado tatc the humanistic and social dimen-ions of science and technology. Ir and one in the history of science from Princeton, where he also is less complete if people who think they are not interested in science earned his Ph.D. He says that as an hisrorian and a c ientist, he hore don't get invoh-ed." ro heir share and broaden discu -­ But they do. Thi year, 2 stu­ - LOn of critical issues in science and dent are pur u ing minor or inde­ technology. To that end, he has pendent majors in sci-tech tudies. instituted a camru -wide -c ience ome are -c ience major but mo t and technology colloquium series. are not. ci-tech studie minorsare This year, more than 1 5 reaker required to design and complete from Colby and other academic enior independent projects that in tirution will discus the effects demonstrate more than a ba ic technology has on the environment knowledge of ubj ec t area out ide (and thu on reople ) . Fleming also their majors. helped de ign and is a participant "When ou get to the level of in a symposium on "Humanistic the independent project," Fleming Perspe c t i ve on Armo r h e r i c Change" at MIT t h i s year, and he i s explains, "you are meant to nor j u-t at work o n a second book o n me­ dabble but to jump in, to integrate teorology--on c Ii mate change from your life w ith thi tudy." He cite the Enlightenment to the mid-20th everal tudents who have done century-and another on a 20-year j ust that, includino am harnik Mary Ellen Matava period in the hi tory of the U. '9 1 , who made a film for hi enior J ames R. Fleming Am1y ignal Office. project. This Scuff is Getting Deep, "The vi ion o f the [ c i -tech which examines conservation and tudie J program is to continue to suprly intellectual is-ue that are recycling effort at Colby, earned harnik an internship in documen­ intere-ting and imrortant and arnilable to the whole College com­ tary filmmaking with PB . Kri tin "Cricket" Girvin '90, who was munity," Fleming ay . "All have omething to contribute. We want Fleming' research a i tant, went straight from Colby to a Wa hing­ to how the rele\·ance of thi to every field of study." ton think tank to re earch global environmental change. Fleming is especially animated when he talk about the role "There's a practical intere t in the minor," Fleming say . "Pro­ humanists can play in d i c us ion of i ue more eemingly pertinent pective employer look clo er at an English major with a ci-tech to -cienti ·t , uch as global warming, environmental degradation and tudies minor. Mo t of the working world is highly tuned to the i ue nuclear weapon technology. "The general public is already aware­ we raise. The government, the private ector-they want people who and slightly alarmed-about the i ues," Fleming ay . "Humanist under tand high tech and technological i ue in oc iety." can unpack those fear- and look at the social dimensions of the The sc i-tech -rud ies program was inaugurated in 1 9 , and the problem . There i a trend to tart ro weave thing back together. fir t two student to earn minor graduated in 1 990. Five more ociologi ts are looking at the effect of climate on people. The next received diplomas la t year, and eight enior are partic ipating thi step sh uld be a renaissance ofhumani ts to tell u what it all mean ." year. The advi ory committee is compri ed of 20 faculty members I magine, Fleming ay , that current technology is an ocean. who offer at lea t one elective for the minor and who e specialtie c ienti ts are unk deeply in the water and are i olated by peciali:a­ range acros the curriculum, from Charle Ba ett in English to Henry tion. They tend to have narrow per pecti\·e . "But the humani t ," he Gemery in economics, Dale krien in mathematics and Tom Long taff ay , " hould every once in a\. hile poke their nose abo e the 1 ave in ph ilo ophy and religion. Original upport for the program came and ay, 'Hey, thi is an ocean! "' from the New York City-based Alfred P. loan Foundation, which Colby, No ember 1 99 1

27


BOOKS & AUTHORS An " Indispensable " Guide to American Politics

A

mericans have always been proud of their democracy with its free and fair elections but ambivalent about pol itical parties. I n his farewell address to the nation George Washington warned of "the baneful effect of the spirit of party," and to some extent, Americans have di trusted parties and politicians ever since. But professional politicians and tho e who ob erve them know that partie are indis­ pensable to American democracy. "A good party is better than the best man that ever lived," argued Speaker of the H use Thomas Reed at the end of the 1 9th cen­ tury. Many observers-looking at the difficulties involved in orga­ nizing effective national and tate partie in American politics to­ day-would agree. Effective parties are indis­ pensable to American democracy, and the study of party politics forms the core of American po­ litical cience. That study will be enhanced greatly by a new en­ cyclopedia edited by Colby gov­ e rn me n t professor L . Sandy M a isel w i t h as ociate e d i to r Charles Bassett o f t h e College's English Department. More than 2 50di tinguishedsocialscientists, lawyers, journalist and other ob­ servers of American politics have contributed 1 ,200 articles to this splendid two-volume edit ion. Publi hed as part of Garland's comprehensive eries of reference works in the social sciences, this encyclopedia not only belongs on the shelves of college and general I ibraries but also on the bookshelf of anyone with a seriou intere t in politics and a browser's delight in learning about American democ­ racy. What can you learn from an encyclopedia of parties and elec­ t ions ? J ust to stick with the articles under A for the moment, you can learn about alternative voting systems and the intricacies of the Hare Single Transferable Vote system ( ranking candidates in order of preference and transferring votes when candidates are eliminated ) , t h e Borda count (giving candidates points from one t o ten and summing points to determine the winner) , cumu lative voting (giving voters a fixed number of votes to di tribute among one or more candidates) and approval voting, in which elector can vote for as many candidates as they wish ( useful in a race with several contend28

ers) and the candidate with the most votes wins. You can discover that absentee balloting i increa ing, up to 8 percent in recent presidential contests. You can learn about Jacob M. Arvey, a Chi­ cago Democrat who preceded Richard J. Daley as Cook County Democratic Leader and who set Senator Paul Douglas and Governor Adlai Stevenson on the road to statewide political office. Y<Ju can learn about the abolition move­ ment of the past or about abor­ tion and anti-abortion politics of the pre em. You can learn about p a t r i c i ans l i k e Dean Acheson, the various Adamses ( Henry B., John, John Q., L. Sherman, and Samue l ) and Nelson W. Aldrich--or you can read all about Spiro T. Agnew. You can read about six organiza­ tions and three political parties t h a t beg in w i th American. (There are no articles on Lee Atwater or attack politics, but you can't have everyth ing . ) Ifyou are like m e , you might want to browse topically rather than alphabetically. I like to read about political ho ses, and my favorite (since I'm a native New Yorker) i Boss W illiam Tweed. There are separate articles on the Boss himself and on the Tweed Ring he created, as well as an article on Thomas Nast, a cartoonist who helped bring him down. I also found articles on Thoma C. Platt, a statewide Republi­ can party bos in New York, George Washington Plunkitt, a Demo­ cratic ward leader in New York City, the Tammany Boss Carmine DeSapio of Greenwich Village and Brooklyn's Meade Esposito. There is an article on Tammany Hall itselfand in the index, 4 7 other references to it. I also ran across an article on George B. Cortelyou, former Republican National Committee chair and holder of three cabinet offices, for whom a major thoroughfare I used to live on in Brooklyn was named. The encyclopedia is particularly strong on court cases involving parties and elections. Ever hear of Kusper v . Pontikes? It's a case in which the Supreme Court struck down an Illinois election law that prohibited anyone from voting in the primaries of different parties within 23 months. Are you conversant with Davis v . Brademer? In that ca e, the U .S. Supreme Court allowed the political gerrymanderC olby , November 1 99 1


ing of the Indiana tare Legislarure to stand on the grounds that it d id outh. You can read about Barbara A. Mikul k1 and the commi -ion nor violate the equal protection of the law o long as equal popula­ bearing her name, which sub tantially altered the way the Demo­ tion and nonracial discrimination standard were met. ( If you aren't cratic party nominates candidates for the presidency. quite certain of what gerrymandering involves, there is an article in There are articles on women in the abolitioni t movement, uch the G's that will an wer your questions. ) as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone, the GrinLke i ter , about Thi encyclopedia can bring anyone, even professional political early suffragette uch a u an B. Anthony and Carrie Chapman Catt and about Al ice Paul. founder of the ational Woman's Party. scientist , fully up to peed on current party case law and controver­ There i an excellent lengthy article on the woman suffrage move­ sies. You can also learn all about federal election law , from the ment, and you can read article on the ational Woman's Party, the Federal Corrupt Practice Acts of 1 9 1 0 , 1 9 1 1 and 1 92 5 , which had loopholes that made a mockery of effective regulation, through the National American Woman uffra e A ociation and the N ineteenth Amendment. There Federal Election Campaign Act of 1 9 7 1 and it amend­ are article on the ational Organi:ation for Women ments of 1 974, 1 976 and and other organi:ations such 1 979. Each law i dealt with as the Women' Equity Ac in a eparate lengthy ar­ tion League, the ational ticle. There is al o ample Women' Political Caucus, coverage of the case law Th i s e n cycloped i a n ot o n l y belongs on the the National Federation of involving the e tatutes, Democratic Women and the uch as the article on Fedshelves of col lege and general l i braries National Federation of Re­ eral Election Commission v . but a l so o n the bookshelf of a nyone publican Women. There i Massachusetts Citizens for a short article on the gender Life (holding section 3 1 6 of with a serious i nterest in po l itics and gap in voting that l wished the Federal Election Cam­ a browser's del i g ht i n lea r n i ng were much longer. paign Act of 1 97 1 invalid if The art i c l e s about it burdened the free peech about American democracy. women are heavy on fir ts: right of ome corpora­ Hattie Caraway, t h e first tions). woman to erve in the U. enate, occupying a "widow' seat" then You can learn about the movers and shakers of American defying party leaders and running succe fully for a pedal election politics across the entire pectrum, from Marcus Garvey, the leader and then for re-election for a full term-showing that a woman could of the Universal N egro Improvement A ociation, the largest mass defeat trong male candidates; Jeannene Rankin, the first woman organization of blacks in American hi tory, to media guru David member of Congre ; Rebecca Latimer Felton, the first woman to Garth, consultant to presidential candidates Eugene McCarthy and serve in the U. . Senate (for two day ); Bella Mo kowiu, the first John Anderson, New York Governor Hugh Carey and New York woman vice chair of the Democratic ational Committee and the Mayor Ed Koch ( with all ave Carey the ubjects of separate articles). first to direct national publicity for the party in the 1 920 ; Frances You can read about Bella Abzug, who held public office, and Gloria Perkins, the first female cabinet member, appointed in Franklin D. Steinem, who did nor (but who co-founded Voter for Choice and Roosevelt' admini tration; I vy Baker Priest, the first woman elected worked to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment ) . Natives of Maine to statewide office in California (after serving a Ei enhower's U . S . will be pleased to know that there are biographies ofJames G. Blaine, treasurer); Cry t a l Bird Fau e t , the first African-American woman Margaret Chase mith and Edmund Muskie, a well as of former elected to a U . . state legi larure; Mary Loui e mi th, the first woman Governor Kenneth M. Curri , one of the new breed of governors who to chair the Republican National Committee; Jane Westwood, the transformed the tare's governmental tructure. first woman to chair the Democratic ational Committee; J ane Thi may be the first encyclopedia to cover adequately the Byrne, the fir t female mayor of Chicago; and, of course, Geraldine contribution of women and minorities to the development of politi­ Ferraro, the first woman vice presidential candidate. cal partie . You can read about people like Bertha S. Adkins, who was cattered throughout the encyclopedia are a number oflengthy instrumental in improving the po ition of women in the Republican article , written by the d istinguished contributing editors, which party in the 1 940 and 1 95 0 , and Marion E. Martin, founder of the pre em the central concepts of modem political cience in the study Nauonal Federation ofRepublican Women's Club . You can read up of parties and election . These include article on the political on Fannie Lou Hamer and the M i issippi Freedom Democratic party, behavior of party voters in the electorate, with topics such as voting a forerunner of the de egregated Democratic state panie of the

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Colby, November 1 9 9 1

29


in congressional and presidential elections, the partisan coal ition in modem direct mail political fund-rai ing techniques, might rate an the electorate, party identification and the erosion of the Democratic article. Perhap most ignificant, with only two references to Hi pan­ advantage, the use of retrospective voting ( " let's look at the record") ics, two to Mexican-Americans and one to "Latino politic ians" ( with and the possibil ity that coalitions are becoming unm ored and a article on none of these topics), the encyclopedia gives short shrift dealignment of vot ing blocs with the parties is now occurring in the to the fastest growing egment of the American population. American electorate. Articles on parties as organizations include There are two nice touches for Colby alumni. Those of u who those on county party organizations, party organization in historical remember going to the Gabrielson lecture to learn about foreign perspective, party organization in 1 9th-century America, political affairs will appreciate the entry for Guy G. Gabrielson, former chair patronage, the recruitment and motivation of party activi t , the rise of the Republican National Committee ( 1 949-5 2 ) . There is also an of reform clubs, state party committee and state party leaders and the account of Gen. Benjamin "Beast" Butler (Colby 1 8 38), the scourge organization and activit ies of urban political machines. Articles of New Orleans during the Civil War-who, I hope, doesn't exem­ about running for office include finan ing congressional and presi­ plify the many Colbian who have served in the United States armed dential nomination , reforces. forming the president ial Th i is an extremely nomination process, writ­ "user-friendly" encyclopedia. ing party platforms, the role Ar the end of each article is ofpolitical consultant and a listing of u eful sources for the role of political action further inquiry and a "see committees. Articles on also" cro -reference to re­ the role of party in govern­ lated articles. The econd Scattered t h roug hout the encycloped ia ment include the gover­ volume concludes with 1 8 nance of Congress by par­ are a n u mber of lengthy a rt i c les useful appendices, including ties in the 1 9th century, li ts of all women, African that present the central concepts majority party leadership A mericans and H ispanic in Congress, partisan vot­ Americans who have erved of m odern pol itical scien ce in Congre s, all chairs of the ing in the contemporary i n the study of parties a n d elections. Democratic and Republican Cong re s, party leadership national committees, every­ s e l ec t i on in Congress, one who ha ever served as party rules i n Congres , governor of a state, all impeachments and removal of governors and party systems in the House and presidential party leader hip in the the sites for all major national party conventions. The et contain an legislature. excellent index, from James Abdnor (who defeated Senator George The encyclopedia includes several articles on the political McGovern in 1 980) to Phyli s Zito (daughter of Brooklyn Demo­ scientists who made great contributions to the study of parties, cratic party leader Meade Esposito). The index even contains the including V .O. Key and E.E. Schattschneider. Many other authors names of author of reference sources (though not the authors of the de erve some mention, so perhap in sub equent editions the ed itors article themselves). About all I would have wished to ee added might consider providing a single article on the study of party pol itics, would have been tables of cases and statutes. Even so, the way the e tracing in more detail the contribution of cholars such a James two volumes have been organized will help me in countle ways in Bryce and Moise i Ostrogor ki in the 1 9th century and Richard my own specialty (presidential pol itics) and hould be indispen able Hofstaedter, among others, in the 20th. to other political scientists and political commentators. There are only a few other topics I would wish to see added. Colby contributors include Anthony J. Corrado, Charles S. Perhaps an article on the party and judicial politics would be useful, Hau and G. Calvin Mackenzie from the Government Department, since ocial science research has shown that there are significant Harold J. Raymond and Robert S. Weisbrot from the Hi tory Depart­ difference in the decisions of Democratic and Republican judges in ment and Joyce McPhetre Maisel of the Dean of Student Office. All such areas as criminal sentencing and labor management law. The should be congratulated for their contribution to what i sure to be art icle on Mart in Van Buren m ight be rewritten to signal h is enor­ the standard reference work on partie and elections. mous influence ( along with Andrew Jackson) in developing the idea of two-party competition a a legitimate means of organizing party -Richard Pious '64 politics. Group such as the Democratic Leadership Council and Democrats for the '90s deserve separate articles. Unfortunately, so do Pious is professor, the Graduate Faculties of Columbia University. Louis Farrakhan and David Duke. Richard Viguerie, the creator of

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30

Colby , November 1 99 1


GIFTS & GRANTS Hugh es Grant Enhances Science Programs

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wide range of important reaching, research and support acrivi­ tie in the ciences at Colby will benefit from a fi\·e-year, J ,000,000 grant by the Howard Hughe Medical In titute. Curriculum develop­ ment, faculty and rudent development providing more research opporrunitie and community outreach programs were ·pecifically cited in the grant. "We are delighted," said L inda Goldstein, the College's director of corporate and foundation relations, who worked with members of the science faculty and the deYelopmenr taff to prepare Colby' propo al. "The·e are ju t the on of excit ing, innovative activities that forward-thinkino organi:ations like the Hughe In titute are in a position to encourage. The grant will provide key funding in four major areas: Curriculum development, which will receive 400,000 to­ ward the co t of relea e rime for faculty to work on curriculum, a limited amount of new teaching equipment in the biochemistry laboratory, collaborative research projects and the design of labora­ tory modules. The most obvious beneficiary of this additional sup­ port, faculty members say, will be Colby's emerging interdiscipl inary program in cellular and molecular biology and biochemistry. Faculry development, with 1 7 5 ,000 to help defray the co t of hon-term leave that will afford teacher the chance to join colleagues at major re earch centers, acquainting themselve with work at the cutt ing edge of their pecialtie and coming up to peed on the latest laboratory techniques they can incorporate in cour e work and research at Colby. With the speed of advancements

escalating year b y year, teachers o f undergraduate C lence , ay it is essential that they keep up with de\·elopments in their fields. Student development, with 200,000 to pon·or research project· on campu during the academic year and in the summer, provide travel fund· to allow students to present the ir findings at profe ional meeting and bring vi iring sc ientist to Colby to \\"ork with tudents. In recent year·, undergraduate · on Mayflower Hill have had the opportunity to gain hands-on research experience working in collaboration with faculty member and sometime par­ tic ipat ing at levels available only to graduate student at the major re·earch univer itie . Community outreach, with 2 50,000 to continue and ex­ pand innornrive programs \\"ith area public school de igned ro encourage interest and improve teaching in the cience . For the pa·r three years, largely as a re ult of an effort organized by As ociate Profe sor of Biology Jay Labm· under a grant from the Kellogg Foundation, the College ha· worked with local elementary and h igh school tudent and teacher . The Hughe grant will increa e the scope and intensity of this program, allowing schoolteachers to rake cour es at Colby and work with Colby faculty. In 1 99 1 , the Maryland-based Hughe Foundation im-ited 99 college to apply for grant and awarded 3 1 . 5 million to strengthen undergraduate science programs. Colby was one of44 college awarded funds. The l million grant was the largest made to a pri\'ate college ( tied only by Reed College ) .

Biology Professor Jay Labov demonstrates science-ori­ ented computer software as part of Colby's school out­ reach effort. Colby, November 1 9 9 1

31


Stressing Liberal Arts-And Crafts

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rarting in J anuary, Colby students wil l have the chance to acquire knowl­ edge of woodworking and metalwork­ ing as well as of the science and hu­ manit ies-thank to the efforts of a phy ician, the interest of an attorney and the memory of an outstanding young alumnu· who died four year ago. A new Jan Plan for eight student in each of these crafts has been fash­ ioned a a result fo collaboration among Dr. H. Alan Hume, College over eer and medical director, Irving Isaac on, prominent Lewi ton attorney, the Fi·her Foundation of Rockland, Maine, ;cind Colby admini trators. Hume, a long-time supporter of the College, became the medical direc­ tor at Colby la t year after retiring from private practice. He i · al·o an accom­ plished woodworker who has envisioned e rablish ing a program for students since Mary Ellen Matava he and his wife, Dorothy, decided to give the College their retreat on Snow Helping to get Colby 's newest Jan Plan off the ground are, from left , woodworker Mike Farmer, metalworker Pond, several miles from the Colby cam­ Bruce Davis , College physician H . Alan Hume , Irving Isaacson and woodworker Bruce Davis . pus in idney. Enter the Fisher Foundation, a charitable organization estab­ commemoration was reprinted in the final is ue of Colby Currents. ) li hed by Dean L. Fisher, whose Rockland-based company manufac­ Isaacson met Hume, v i ired the workshop a t what i s now called tures snowplow . Fisher's son Bill '80 went to work for the family the Colby-Hume Center in Sidney and decided to donate hi vintage bu ine after graduating from Colby and then set out on h is own, blacksmithing equipment to a metalworking program that would be a companion to the woodworking program established by the Fisher establishing Weatherend Estate Furniture, a firm specializing in Foundation grant. finely crafted casual furniture. Bill Fisher's pieces were featured in such magazines as House Beautiful and Home and attracted the The two men say they have long believed that learning a kill such a woodworking or metalworking ought to be one component of attention of trend-setting decorator , finding their way into fashion­ a liberal education. Further di cus ion with Dean of the Faculty Bob able e tares and even the display window at Lord & Taylor in N ew McArthur and Dean of the College Earl Smith e tablished the York. Then, in J une 1 987, Bill Fisher drowned when h is skiff capsized framework of a Jan Plan designed to provide even the beginner with on Penobscot Bay. a profic iency in either of the crafts. After conferring with Randy Helm, Colby's vice pre ident for Working with Colby's director of development, Eric Rolfson development and alumni relations, the Fi her Foundation fir t e tab­ '73, Isaacson and Hume have added liberally to the equipment li hed a College scholarship in Bill Fi her's name and then decided to already on hand and have recruited a faculty. Doug Wilson, director tum H ume' dream of a woodworking hop for collegians into a of metalworking at Maine' famed Hay tack summer arts center, will rea lity. After Bill Fi her's parents, Dean and Betty, and h is sister, over ee the completion of the smith' shop, create a curriculum and Alexsandra Cole , visited the H ume retreat, the foundation granted serve a Colby' fir t smithy. A pair of accomplished craftsmen from the College $ 1 5 ,000 over three years to establi h the program. the faculty of the Kennebec Valley Technical College in Fairfield, One foundation trustee especially interested in the project was Bruce Davis and M ike Farmer, will teach woodworking. And it seem I aacson, an avid metalworker who wanted to help e tabli h a similar likely that the J an Plan will also have two voluntary instructor -a program in h is pecialty somewhere in Maine. (I aacson is married to physician and an attorney bent on pa ing age-old kill on to a new J udi th Magyar I aacson, author of Seed ofSarah: Memoirs of a Survivor, generation. whose lecture during Colby's 1 990 Holocaust Awareness Week

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Colby, November 1 99 1


C O L B Y

ANNUAL OF

T HE

REPORT

PRE S IDENT

1 990- 1 99 1


THE

PRE SIDENT ' S

REPORT

Colby in the '90s

T

he 1 989-90 annual report celebrated the worldwide spread of democratic governments and Colby's far-flung international education programs. This past year was a time for introspection about the College itself and a time to focus on three interrelated developments: 1 ) the completion of the planning process that will help chart our course in the '90s; 2) the need to reaffirm the most fundamental of all educational values-freedom of thought and expression; and 3 ) our response t o a national atmosphere that has become ever more critical of American colleges and universities.

Looking Ahead

President William R . Cotter

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The planning process began in January of 1 990 and was completed 18 months later, in May 1 99 1 , when the Board of Trustees adopted the final report. The planning committees comprised nearly 1 00 faculty, student, trustee and staff members, and the study process included extensive consultation on campus and at alumni meetings throughout the country. The final report of the Planning Committee will be in the January issue of Colby. The principal conclusion of the report is that we enter the 1 990s building on great strength. Colby' national reputation for the quality of our faculty, our students, our physical plant and our programs has never been better. But at the same time, the study hows that we al o face significant financial hurdles and other obstacles as well. While we know that the average tuition increases in the 1 990s will be lower than in the '80s-and indeed, the 6.9 percent increase for next year is the smallest since 1 9 7 5-the board is convinced that we can continue to support our programs and balance our budgets. This i the fortunate legacy of a long tradition of fiscal prudence. Other colleges are cutting back expenses to eliminate deficits, but Colby has enjoyed 1 2 consecutive balanced budgets, and we do not foresee the need for the kinds of cutbacks that are being experienced at many of our peer institutions. In fact, we are in a situation similar to that described by Colby President Franklin Johnson in May 1 94 1 on the eve of that especially uncertain economic time. In proposing the budget for 1 9 4 1 -42, Johnson said, "We are not going to retrench a bit. There is not going to be any reduction in the number of faculty members, nor in any of their salaries, nor will there be a cut in the maintenance of the College. Many other colleges and universities are going to cut down on the number of the faculty and on salaries. Columbia, notably, will reduce all depart­ ment budgets 10 percent." Fifty years later, we, too, have been able to balance our budget and avoid such reductions, in part because we have continued the tradi­ tional administrative frugality that has characterized the College throughout its hi tory. While we can take pride in many accomplishments during the '80s and before,

The President's Report 1 990-91


the planning report includes a number of future challenges. We must: • continue to emphasize broad, liberal learning in the arts and sciences as well as stress international studies. Special challenges in the natural science and

in the advising system have also been identified. The faculty broadened the core program this year by adding requirements in arts, diver e cultures, literature, history and quantitative reasoning to the earlier requirements of English composition, foreign language and natural sciences; • maintain faculty salaries in the top 5 percent of comparable colleges; • continue to attract a student body of the same quality and increase the size by 25 over five years to approximately 1 , 700 students. The College ha

continued to receive more than seven applications for each place in the entering class despite the 1 980s contraction in the number of 1 8-year-olds. At the ame time, student quality and diversity (geographical, socio-economic, religious and ethnic ) increa ed. The demographic decline will continue until the mid-'90 , and this challenges our admis ions staff to continue their succes in still leaner times; • enroll approximately 90 minority students in the entering Class of 1 996. This would constitute about 20 percent of the first-year student and would continue recent progre s. In 1 979 there were eight minority freshmen, 2 percent of the incoming class; by 1 986 we had 1 9 , 4 percent of the cla s; and for the fall of 1 99 1 w e expect 4 5 students of color, 1 0 percent of the class. Despite that progress, we remain the least diver e of the NESCAC schools, and our alumni, students and faculty have all urged us to address this issue because the opportunity to interact with a diverse student body i an es ential element of a liberal education. Thank to a grant from the Xerox Foundation we will continue our summer institute for minority tudents who have completed their sophomore year in high chool; • increase the number of international students to approximately 7 percent of the student body; • add one and a half faculty or academic support positions per year for five years to increa e the scope of our offerings and to keep abreast of curricular changes

and shifting student demand; • expand the faculty resident program and reduce fall term temporary housing;

High school students from as far away as Los Angeles experienced a week-long incroduaion to a liberal ans education at the 1 99 1 Xerox Summer Institute . The students sampled life on the cam­ pus , participating in everything from discussions on how to finance a college education to using computers for word processing to recreational programs . The 1 99 1 contingent from Massachu­ setts included (from) Nora Sullivan and Teresa Dong. ln the back are LaVie Borde , Mark Allen and Ingrid Torres .

• strengthen class identity so as to foster additional pride

and loyalty in the College; • revamp College cultural and intellectual activities to

harpen the focus and increase participation; • construct a new wing for the Lovejoy social sciences and humanities building, a new admissions building ( re­

cently made pos ible by a generous naming gift from Peter Lunder '56 and his wife, Paula ) , a new physical therapy room ( made po ible by a challenge grant by Harold and Dorothy "Bibby" Levine Alfond '38 and to be named in honor of Carl Nelson) , a new art/music library and two new Bixler class­ rooms ( made possible by a challenge grant from the Kresge Foundation) and substantially renovate Keyes, the chemistry building, and build a central heating plant. When related repair work is completed in the next two or three years, we w ill have virtually elim inated the small amount of deferred main­ tenance that was estimated to repre ent le s than 2 percent of the replacement value of our buildings. In the next few years we will also need to build a new science building and renovate Arey, the biology building, but these proj ect will be depen­ dent upon outside funding and are not yet scheduled for construction; • extend the computer networking system throughout th campus. We expect to complete the academic building

The President's Report 1 990-91

P3


PRES IDENT ' S

Alumni Fund

1 987-91

ME S S AGE

(in $1 ,000,000s)

-----

Five-Year History of Parents G iving

$29 3 , 6 33

$300,000

$275 , 000 ------

$200,000 $ 1 75,000 $ 1 50,000 '87

'88

'89

'9 0

'9 1

$0

'86-'8 7

'8 7-'88

'88-'89

'89-'90

'90-'9 1

next year and hope to have the network into every student room by the end of the decade; and • augment the endowment at least to maintain and, we hope, to increa e the portion of the annual budget that it supports. To do so, the trustees agreed to reduce the endowment spending formula by one tenth of a percent per year so that it will decline from the current 5 percent to 4 percent over the next decade. We must also begin to plan now for a major capital campaign that will have endowment as it principal goal and will probably be launched sometime in the mid-'90s. This past year, in fact, set many fund-rai ing record and give u the confidence to begin planning for the next campaign. Among the 1 990-9 1 development highlights were: a $ 1 mill ion grant from the Howard Hughe Medical In titute to support our biosciences program, including outreach to local high school science programs; a $ 500,000 challenge grant from the Kresge Foundation for renovation and expan ion of the Bixler Building; a record Alumni Fund that reached $ 1 ,4 79 ,407 , a $229 ,000 increase from the previou year; parents giving ( including the special Senior Parents Endowment Fund) that reached a new record of $293,633, up 26. 7 percent; and total gift of $ 6,465 ,000, another new record. I would like to thank all of the tru tee , faculty, tudents, alumni and other members of the Colby community who gave so much time and creativity to the planning process. We have a better under randing of our current strengths and needs and, as a result, will be able to make future budget and related decisions in the context of a broader trategy.

Free Speech/Freedom from Harassment The second major issue, which was discussed last year on our campus and throughout the country, concerned the tension between unfettered free peech on the one hand and verbally harassing taunts on the other. An accompanying concern was highlighted by the Colby Republican Club through the spring semester and involves the notion of "political correctness." That term is used primarily by conservatives to attack what they con ider a campus atmosphere dominated by liberal values. Even though college campuses in general may have a somewhat liberal atmosphere, I am confident that every member of the Colby faculty encourages and would certainly defend the strong advocacy of contrary­ and even radically conservative-views.

P4

The President's Report 1 990-9 1


COLBY Through all of thi we must reconcile our firm and unwavering commitment to free speech with our strong desire to protect all groups and individuals, e pecially minority students and women, from verbal harassment. Educational institutions have a particular responsibility to create and main­ tain an atmo phere in which teaching and learning can take place. It i a well­ e tablished principle that order is required for meaningful discussion and that support for those who may feel vulnerable is necessary if they are to be fully part of the educational proce s. Speech that injures, embarrasse , silences or demean members of our community prevent their education and block them from full participation. On the other hand, the free play of ideas and unfettered dialogue are critical to the pursuit of truth, which after all is our fundamental mission. When we restrain speech we risk losing valuable insights. As John Stuart Mill observed, we have much to learn even from those whose opinions we despise. There is perhaps no final way to reconcile these two opposing force . But through campu di cussion of both the need for openness and mutual re pect and the importance of free speech, we hope to bring these central concerns to the forefront of everyone's con ciou nes . It is not possible to draw a bright dividing line, and while I would certainly protect free speech to the maximum extent possible, I do not believe peech should be used as a weapon to harass and injure others. A related concern, rai ed by such critic as Oinesh D'Souza in hi book Illiberal Education, is that college campuse are retreating from their traditional commit­ ment to tran mit We tern history and values and have replaced these with programs that "stress works on race and gender issues by Third World author , minority group members and women." It is true that the We tern canon ha been broadened to include new author ( mostly from the We t) who have been too frequently neglected in the past. But the curriculum at Colby and mo t other selective national colleges remain -appropriately, in my view-reflective of and dominated by cour es and syllabi that emphasize the United State , our history, our language, our culture, our governmental and economic system , our values and our tradition . Ce tainly, almost every department now offers some comparative studies of other nations and cul­ tures, but the great bulk of the collegiate offering are still very much American and Western centered. The traditional curricula or canon have often been too narrow, but they have not been replaced by a whole new ephem­ eral curriculum. They have simply been expanded through the inclusion of works by women, minority members and non­ Western authors previously not represented or significantly under­ represented. Colby's new diver ity requirement is an example of such expansion. The claim by O'Souza-who uses Stanford a his prime whipping boy-that " in practice, this meant that text such as Plato's Republic and Machiavelli's Prince would have to make way for such works as I, Rigoberta Menchu . . . and Franz Fanon's Wretched of the Earth" is imply hysterical hyperbole.*

IN

THE

' 9 0 s

One of the College's faculty residents-and a role

model who reinforces the notion that learning is not restricted to classrooms and the lihrary­ Assistant Professor of Religion Nikky-Guinder Singh often entertains informally in her apartment in Taylor. Like many other students, Elizabeth Thornton '92 , Washington, D . C . . feels comfort­ able dropping by for a soda and a chat.

* The Stanford freshman cour e has, since 19 0, been given in eight separate tracks in which the readings are elected by individual faculty members. Nevertheles , last year at least half of the tracks and fre­ quently all eight, included readings from Aristotle, St. Augustine, Marx, Freud, Woolf, Rousseau, Descartes, Machiave l l i, Aquina , Plato, Euripides, Dante, Luther, Montaigne, Homer, Sappho, Virgil, ophocle and Locke. In fact, only a small fraction of the track eemed to have introduced works by such noted author as Toni Morri on. Only one used I , Rigoberta, and all tracks taught Shakespeare and the Bible. This i hdrdly an example of a new "political correcmess" run amuck in higher education.

The President's Report 1 990-9 1

P5


PRES IDEN T ' S

ME S S AGE

Shown here are the architect's plans for the new Lunder Admissions House, which is under con­ struction on the east side ofMayf1ower Hill Drive oppposite Miller Library and the Eustis Building.

P6

·•

----

National Environment for Higher Education The third challenge affec ting Colby and our sister in titution is to respond adequately to the growing criticisms of higher education and to restore it to the top of the national priorities list. Colleges and universitie this last year have been accused of overcharging the federal government for research overhead co ts, misrepresenting graduation rates, hiding crime tatistic , inflating tuition and conspiring, in violation of the antitrust law , to defraud needy tudent . Each of the e accusations is misleading, but collectively they have, unfortunately, under­ mined needed support for postsecondary education. These charges come at a time when federal financial aid grants to tudents at colleges like Colby have already declined dramatically and when higher education has virtually disappeared from the national agenda. Indeed, President Bush's new "education initiative" i focu ed exclu ively on education through the 1 2 th grade and i silent about the need for corre pondingly trong post econdary education. One of our great international advantage i the strength and diversity of American higher education. Although the United States already educates a larger percentage of its citizens than any other country, recent studie project further dramatic growth in the demand for bachelor degree holder by the year 2000 to meet the require­ ments of an information-dominated labor market. Unless national policies are modified, we may, in fact, have a shortage of college-educated workers by the end of this decade. There are particularly difficult financial challenges for independent colleges. The co t gap between public and private institutions has grown from $ 1 ,800 in 1 975-76 to over $ 5,300 in 1 987-88, and federal Pell Grants have decrea ed by nearly 58 percent ( in constant dollars) from 1 980 to 1 988. An increasing percent­ age of the remaining Pell support is shifting from independent colleges like Colby to for-profit, proprietary in titutions. The reduction in federal support for Colby students has been dramatic. In 1 979-80 we received $436,000 in Pell Grants for 3 7 1 students. Thi year we received $ 1 86,000 for 1 30 tudents. This is an 80 percent decline in federal support, in real terms. M iddle- income families are being driven out of the Pell Grant program and must resort to loans. Consequently, larger numbers cannot afford private higher education and send their children to public colleges and uni ver itie , which now educate 80 percent of all students compared to 50 percent in 1 950 and about 20 percent in 1 9 30. During the last year I became vice chair (and chair-elect) of the National

The Presidem' s Report 1 990-9 1


COLBY

IN

THE

' 9 0 s

Association of Independent College and Univer itie , which repre ent more than 840 of the 1 , 1 00 independent college and univer ities in the United tate . I wa also named ro a nine-person national commi ion charged by Congre with reviewing the financing of po rsecondary education. ln both of those roles I hope to have the opportunity to present the compelling case for continued support of higher education and particularly of the independent sector that save taxpayers more than $ 1 2 billion a year and offer student real choice as well a significant access.

A

New Board Chair

I would l ike tO end thi annual report with a pecial word of thanks to H . Ridgely Bullock ' 5 5 , LL D. '91 , who served a s a n extraordinary chair o f Colby' Board ofTru tees from 1 983 to 1 99 1 . Among other accomplishment he co-chaired the Colby 2000 Campaign, which rai ed 30 million-more than all the previou Colby capital campaign combined; appointed the Tru tee Commission on Cam­ pus Life, which led to a radical and courageous transfom1ation of our residential system and the strengthening of our academic core; worked tirele ly in hundreds of trustee and other Colby committee meetings; opened his home to numerous Colby events; asked the important tough questions; insi ted on the highe t standard in all that Colby doe ; and guided the planning process that will take us imaginatively and oundly through the 1 990 . A a re ult, Ridge Bullock has helped make Colby a better place for all of us on the campu . Future generation of facu lty, students and staff will have good reason to look back on hi eight year of leader h ip with special and profound gratitude. I t was Ridge who ugge red to the other tru tees that a system of rotation for board chairs be instituted-even though the tru tees would have been quite content for him to erve indefinitely. We are all plea ed that he will continue as a trustee and so will give hi invaluable upport to Lawrence R. Pugh '56, who ha been elected to succeed him. Larry bring more than 10 year of experience as a trustee (and two year a an over eer) and has served a co-chair of the Colby 2000 Capital Campaign and chair of the Trustee Cammi sion on Campu Life. He was the unanimous choice of hi fellow tru tee and ha the imagination, experience and energy to lead u successfully in the '90s. We have a new planning report and a new board chair; a growing reputation and many important accomplishments; an extremely able tudent body; a clear set of challenges and talented faculty, tru tee , alumn i and staff to meet them. The '90 promise to be bright years for Colby.

H . Ridgely Bullock '55 (left) chaired the Board of Trustees from 1 983 to 1 99 1 . With more than 1 0 years of experience as a trustee , Lawrence R . Pugh '56 w as the trustees' unanimous choice to succeed Bullock as chair.

The President's Report 1 990-9 1

P7


PRESIDENT'S

R E P 0 R T ------ 1,1

Milestones Significant changes involving members of the Colby Commu­ nity in the past year include the following: Elected chair of the board: Lawrence R. Pugh '56, M.A. '82 . Re-elected vice chair o f the board: Gerald J . Holtz '52, M.A. '84, M.B.A. New trustees: James B. Crawford '64, M.A. '90; Robert M. Furek '64, M.A. '90, M .B.A.; Edson V. Mitchell III '75, M.A. '90, M.B.A.; Paul J . Schupf, M.A. '9 1 , B.A . ; John M. Seidl, M.A. '9 1 , Ph.D. Trustees re-elected to the board: Levin H . Campbell, M.A. '82, LLB.; Jerome F. Goldberg, '60, M.A. '89 , J . D. ; Paul D. Paganucci, M.A. ' 7 5 , J. D.; Richard R. Schmaltz '62, M.A. '76; Barbara Howard Traister '65 , M.A. '88, Ph.D.; W illiam D. Wooldredge '6 1 , M.A. '88, M.B.A. Trustees retiring from the board and new trustees emeriti: David Pulver '63 , M.A. '83, M.B.A.; Edward H . Turner, A.B., M.A. '83 , LH.D. '73 . New overseers: William L Alfond '72, director and vice president of sales (Athletic Division) , Dexter Shoe Company; David M. Childs, M .Arch., partner, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill; Jane Whipple Coddington '55, M.LS.; Peter G. Gordon '64, M.B.A., co-founder and chair, Crystal Geyser Water Company; Kenneth N. Hart '5 1 , LLB., senior partner, Donovan, Leisure, Newton & Irvine; F. Rocco Landesman '69 , D.F.A., president, J ujamcyn Theaters; Jean Pratt Moody '56, M .Ed.; Allan Van Gestel '57, LLB., partner, Goodwin, Procter & Hoar; Thomas J. Watson III '67 , M.A. '75, J .D., attorney at law; John R. Zacamy, J r. '7 1 , M.B.A., former managing director, Morgan Stanley & Co., Inc. Overseers re-elected: Curtis C. Harris, M. D.; Robert A. Lindgren, J .D.; William T. Mason, Jr. '47 , LL B.; C. Richard Peterson '60; Elaine Zervas Stamas '53. Overseer retiring: Frederick W. Valone '72, Ph.D. Faculty promoted to full rank: Arthur D. Greenspan, M.A. '9 1 , Ph. D.; Edward H. Yeterian, M .A. '9 1 , Ph.D. Faculty receiving tenure: Daniel H. Cohen '75, Ph.D.; Tamae K. Prindle, Ph.D.; Kenneth A. Rodman, Ph.D. Faculty appointed by the president to a named chair: Douglas N . Archibald, M .A. '73, Ph. D., Roberts Professor of Literature; Thomas H. Tietenberg, M.A. '84, Ph.D., Christian A. Johnson Distinguished Teaching Professor of Economics. Elected faculty emeriti: Frederick A. Geib, M.A. '75, Ph.D., professor of sociology; Colin E. MacKay, M.A. '73, Ph.D., professor of English; Robert E. Reuman, M.A. '69, Ph.D., Dana Professor of Philosophy. The Colby community was profoundly saddened by the deaths of two revered colleagues: James M. Gillespie, M.A. '69, Ph.D., professor of psychology, emeritus, and associate dean of students, emeritus; and Roger N. Metz, M.A. '85, Ph.D., professor of physics; and by the deaths of two distin­ guished Colby honorary degree recipients: William Montague Cobb, Sc.D. '84, and Burrhus Frederic Skinner, Sc.D. '84. At the l 70th Commencement in May, bachelor degrees were conferred on 450 members of the Class of 1 99 1 , and honorary degrees were awarqed to the following recipients:

PB

Ann Beattie, Litt.D.; H . Ridgely Bullock '55, M.A. '77, LL D.; Victor Almon McKusick, Sci.D.; Constance Baker Motley, LLD.; Margaret Chase Smith, M.A. '43 , LLD. ; and Thomas J. Watson, Jr., M.A. '69, L H . D. Thomas J. Watson, Jr., was chosen by the senior class as the Commencement speaker, and William L Goodman '9 1 was the class speaker. The class marshals were Cherlyn J. Neely '9 1 and Jessica R. Pelan '9 1 , and Amy Love Davis '9 1 was the Condon medalist. David S. Broder received an LL D. from the College as the 38th Lovejoy recipient.

Facts About Colby Faculty

All teaching faculty: 1 76 FTE ( 1 990-9 1 ) Ph.D.'s or terminal: 1 5 2 Tenured: 84

Salary Scales

( average for full-time faculty 1 990-9 1 ) Instructor: $ 28,2 1 8 Assistant Professor: $34, 2 6 1 Associate Professor: $43,530 Professor: $59,860 All Ranks: $45 ,804

Students

Full-time enrolled: 1 , 74 1 (Opening fall 1 990 ) Men: 864 Women: 877 Colby sons and daughters: 9 7

Majors o f 1 99 1 Graduates

Administrative Science 28 American Studies 2 8 Anthropology 4 Art 2 5 Biology 5 0 Chemistry 9 Classics 1 Classics-English 1 East Asian Studies 1 2 Economics-Mathematics 1 Economics 62 English 62 French 8 Geology-Biology 1 Geology 2 German 9

Government 82 History 3 5 Independent 5 International Studies 2 Mathematics 6 Music 1 Performing Arts 4 Philosophy 1 3 Physics 7 Philosophy-Mathematics 1 Philosophy-Religion 1 Psychology 34 Religion 1 Russian and Soviet Studies 4 Sociology 1 5 Spanish 1 3

The President's Report 1 990-91


-------

THE

YEAR

IN

NUMBERS

Geographic Distribution of Students

Alumni

Alabama 1 Alaska 2 Arizona 3 California 53 Colorado 1 2 Connecticut 1 69 Delaware 4 District of Columbia 1 0 Florida 9 Georgia 5 Hawaii 2 Idaho 5 Iowa 2 Illinois 30 Indiana 2 Kansas 3 Kentucky 4 Louisiana 3 Maine 2 1 5 Maryland 2 2 Massachusetts 563 Michigan 1 2 Minnesota 2 2 M issouri 7 Montana 1 Nebraska 2 Nevada 2 New Hampshire 82 New Jersey 5 2 N e w Mexico 2 New York 1 46 North Carolina 5 Ohio 43

19 ,500 alumni reside in 50 states, 66 foreign countries and two territories. There are 28 active alumni clubs across the coun­ try.

Oklahoma 1 Oregon 8 Pennsylvania 60 Rhode Island 50 South Carolina 1 Tennessee 1 Texas 1 2 Utah 3 Vermont 2 7 Virginia 1 3 Washington 20 West Virginia 1 Wisconsin 1 1 Wyoming 1 Bangladesh 1 Belgium 2 Brazil 1 Canada 6 China 1 France 6 Germany 1 Guatemala 1 Hong Kong 1 India 3 Japan 2 Malawi 4 Pakistan 1 Sri Lanka 1 Switzerland 1 Turkey 1 United Arab Emirates 1 U.S.S.R. 3

Financial Aid

In 1 990-9 1 over $9.5 million, including funding from all sources, was awarded to students. Approximately 39 percent of the undergraduates received grant aid from the College itself. Every student entering in the Class of 1 994 who demonstrated need-approximately 40 percent of the incoming first-year students-received financial aid. Grants ranged from $ 200 to $ 2 1 ,300. Colby also offers the Parent Loan Program. Eligible par­ ents of full-time students may borrow between $ 2,000 and $ 1 5 ,000 a year. Parents may repay the loan over 10 years at a fixed 1 0-3/4 percent interest rate. The option of securing the loan with home equity is offered.

Financial Highlights

Fiscal

Fiscal

1 99 1

1 990

Summary of Current Fund Operations

Revenues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Expenditures and Transfers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Net Income . . . .

$ 49,452 ,000

$

19,312,000 1 1 0,000

$ 46,520,000

$

16.176,000 44,000

Gifts and Bequests

Annual Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Capital . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Life Income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... In Kind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Total Gifts and Bequests . . . . . . . ..........

$

2,955 ,000 2,954,000 472 ,000

$

2, 1 7 1 ,000 1 ,440,000 1 ,0 1 8 ,000 115,000

6,552 ,000

$

5 , 1 04,000

rn,ooo

$

Colby Student Financial Aid

Number of Students Aided 6 70 Percentage of Students Aided 39% $ 6, 1 65 ,000 Scholarships . . ........ . . . . . . . . . Student Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636,000 Parent Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 970,000 Campus Employment ..... 731,000 Total Student $ 8,505 ,000 Financial Aid . . . . . . . . .

$

$

643 38% 5,957 ,000 582 ,000 866,000 6 1 8,000 8,023,000

Endowment and Similar Funds

Book Value as of June 30 . . . . . . . . . . . Market Value as of June 30 . . . . . . . . . . .

$ 73,61 8,000

$ 70,662,000

$ 78, 1 44,000

$ 7 7 ,682,000

$

5,903 ,000

$

6,294,000

$

6 , 1 3 3 ,000

$

6,5 73 ,000

Life Income Funds

Book Value as of]une 30 ........... Market Value as of June 30 . . . . . . . . . .

Tuition and Fees ( 1 99 1-92 )

Tuition: $ 1 5 , 7 1 0 Room: $ 2,750 Board: $2,600 General Fees: $ 7 50 Total: $2 1 ,8 1 0

T he President's Report 1 990-91

Physical Plant

Net Investment in Plant as of June 30 . . . . . . . . . . . Indebtedness as of ] une 30 . . . . . . . . . . .

$ 45,880,000

$ 43,643 ,000

$

$ 1 0,030,000

9,675 ,000

P9


S E P T E M B E R

J

n a tent our:side the bookstore at the beginning of the fall term , studenr:s flock to pick up the Macintosh computer equipment they ordered during the summer. Apple Computer student representatives Stephen Gorin '92, Westwood, Mass . , and Justin Sheetz '93 , Philadelphia, Pa. , prepare for the crowd. The camera catches a quick smile by happy COOTer Heather Post '94 , Plymouth , Mass . , early on the morning the group headed out . Elizabeth Montgomery ' 9 3 , Rockland , Maine , on saxophone , Kathleen Clark '9 1 , Newark, Del . , on flute, and FrancesVan Huystee '94 , West Hart­ lord, Conn. , on the piccolo are members of the pep band that helped rouse the home crowd­ and cheered the team on to three straight wins at the end of the season .

A P P E N D I X

A

The Corporation 1 99 1 -9 2 Corporate Name The President and Trustees of Colby College

Officers William R. Cotter, M. A . '79, L.H.D., J . D., Waterv ille, Maine, President

Lawrence Reynolds Pugh '56, M.A. '82, Reading, Pennsylvania, Chair of the Board

Gerald Jay Holtz '52, M.A. '84, M . B.A., Brookline, Massachusetts, Vice Chair of the Board

Robert Paul McArthur, M.A. '83, Ph.D., Waterville, Maine, Vice

Howard Dale Adams, B.A., M . A . '8 5 , Lake Forest, I l linois, Chairman of the Executive Committee, Crabtree Capital Corporation ( 1 994) Robert Newton Anthony '38, M.A. '59, M.B.A. '40, L.H.D. '63 , D.C. . 1 . 2, Waterville Valley, New Hampshire, Ross Graham Walker Professor of Management Control, Emeritus , Harvard Business School

Frank Olusegun Apantaku '7 1 , M.A. '87 , M.D., Chicago, I l linois, Surgeon and Medical Director, Emergency Medical Services , Jackson Park Hospital (Al. 1 993)

H. Ridgely Bullock ' 5 5 , M.A. ' 7 7 , LLD., ].D. 1 , New York, New York, President, Montchanin Management Corporation ( 1 993 ) Alida Milliken Camp (Mrs. Frederic E.), A.B., M.A. '64, L H.D. '79 2 , Ea t Bluehill, Maine

President for Academic Affairs and Dean of Faculty

Levin Hicks Campbell, M.A. '82, LLB., Cambridge, Massachusetts,

W. Arnold Yasinski, M.A. '90, Ph.D., Waterville, Maine, Adminis­

Judge , U . S . Circuit Court of Appeals ( 1 99 5 )

trative Vice President

John Gilray Christy, M .A . '84, M . A . , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Chairman, Chestnut Capital Corporation ( 1 99 2 )

Peyton Randolph Helm, M.A. '88, Ph.D., Waterville, Maine, Vice President for Development and Alumni Relations

Sidney Weymouth Farr ' 5 5 , M.A., M.B.A., Waterville, Maine,

Susan Comeau ' 6 3 , M.A. ' 8 7 , Wellesley, Massachusetts, Senior Vice President , State Street Bank and Trust Company (Al. 1 993 )

Secretary

William R. Cotter, M.A. '79, LH.D., ] .D., Waterville, Maine,

Douglas Edward Reinhardt '7 1 , M.B.A., Waterville, Maine, Associ­

President

ate Vice President for Finance and Treasurer

James Bartlett Crawford '64, M.A. '90, M.B.A., Richmond, V ir­ ginia, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, James River Coal Com­ pany ( 1 99 5 )

Earl Harold Smith, B.A., Belgrade Lakes, Maine, Dean of the College Janice Armo Seitzinger, M.A., Oakland, Maine, Dean of Studenr:s Parker Joy Beverage, M.A., Waterville, Maine, Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid

Board of Trustees Richard Lloyd Abedon '56, M.A. '86, J . D., Tiverton, Rhode Island, Chairman, Abed.on & Company ( 1 994)

PIO

Robert Alan Friedman, M.A. '88, M.B.A., Scarsdale, N e w York, Limited Partner , Goldman , Sachs , and Company ( 1 992)

Robert Michael Furek '64, M.A. '90, M.B.A., West Hartford, Connecticut, President and. ChiefExecutive Officer, Heublein, Incorpo­ rated ( 1 995 ) Jerome F. Goldberg '60, M.A. '89, J .D., Portland, Maine, President, Bramlie Associates ( A l . 1 994) The President's Report 1 990-9 1


S E P T E M B E R

William Howe Goldfarb '68, M . A . '85 , J . D., Avon, Connecticut, Principal, HRW Resources, Inc01·porated ( 1 993 )

Peter David Hart '64, M .A . '89, LLD. '85 , Washington, D.C .,

' 9 0

Robert Edward Lee Strider II, M.A. ' 5 7 , Litt.D '79, Ph. D.2 , Brookline, Massachusetts, President Emeritus, Colby College

President, Peter D . Hart Research Associates, Incorporated ( 1 993)

Barbara Howard Traister '65 , M .A. '88, Ph.D., North H ills, Penn­ sylvania, Professor of English, Lehigh University ( A l . 1 994)

Nancy Spokes Haydu '69, M.A. '86, M .C.R.P., Dover, Massachuetts ( 1 994)

Mary Elizabeth Brown Turner '63, M.A. '89, M.A., N ew York, N ew York, Publisher/Editor, Black Ma k Magazine (A L 1 992 )

Gerald Jay Holtz '52, M.A. '84, M.B.A., Brookline, Massachusetts, Parmer, Arthur Andersen & Co. ( 1 992 )

William Dunbar Wooldredge '6 1 , M . A . '88, M .B.A., Hudson, Ohio, Principal , The Carleton Group, Incorporated ( A l . 1 994)

Robert Spence Lee '5 1 , M .A . '7 5 , Bever!y Farms, Massachusetts, President, Hotwatt, Incorporated (Al. 1 99 2 ) Beverly Faye Nalbandian Madden '80, M.A. '86, M .A . , Wellesley, Massachusett , Vice President, Fideli lnvesr:ments (AL 1 99 2 ) Robert Allen Marden ' 5 0 , M . A. ' 6

,

LLB . , Waterville, Maine,

Faculty Representatives Henry Albert Gemery, Ph.D., Oakland, Maine, Dana Professor and Chair of Economics ( 1 994) To be determined September 1 99 1 ( 1 99 2 )

Attorney, Marden, Dubord, Bernier and Stevens ( 1 993 )

David Marvin Marson '48, M.A. '84, Dedham, Massachu etts, President, The New Can Company, Incorporated ( 1 993) Edson Vaughn Mitchell III ' 7 5 , M.A. '90, M . B.A., Basking Ridge, New ]er ey, Managing Director, Merrill Lynch & Co. ( 1 995 ) Paul Donnelly Paganucci, M .A . ' 7 5 , J . D., Hanover, N ew Hamphire, Retired Chairman, Executive Committee , W . R . Grace & Co . ; Vice President and Treasurer, Emeritus, Darr.mouth College; Chairman, Ledyard National Bank ( 1 995 )

Wilson Collins Piper '39, M.A. '59, LLD. ' 7 5 , LLB., Wellesley, Massachu etts, Of Counsel, Ropes and Gray ( 1 994) Lawrence Reynolds Pugh '56, M.A. '82, Reading, Pennsylvania,

Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer , VF Corporation

( 1 993) Robert Sage '49, M.A. '74, Newton Centre, Ma achu etts, Presidem, Sage Hotel Corporation ( A l . 1 99 3 ) Richard Robert Schmaltz '62, M . A . '76, Wyomi sing, Pennsylvania,

Executive Vice President, McGlinn Capital Management, Incorporated

( 1 995 ) Paul Jacques Schupf, M . A . '9 1 , B.A., Hamilton, N ew York, Porrfolio Manager, Steinhardt Partners ( 1 996) John M. Seidl, M.A. '9 1 , M . B.A., Ph.D., Houston, Texa , President , MAXXAM , Inc. ( 1 995 ) The President's Report 1 990-9 1

Student Representatives Karen Patricia Laidley '93 , Bernardsville, New Jersey ( 1 992 ) Jason Houston Soules '93, Bainbridge Island, W�shington ( 1 992 ) I 2

Former chair of the board. Life member.

Colby College Trustees Emeriti Charles Putnam Barnes II '54, M.A. '73, LLB., 1 973 - 1 98 1 Clifford Allan Bean '5 1 , M .A . '70, M.B.A., 1 970- 1 976 Susan Fairchild Bean '57, M.A. '76, 1 976- 1 982 Anne Lawrence Bondy '46, M . A . '8 1 , 1 98 1 - 1 987 William Lafrentz Bryan '48, M.A. '72, 1 9 7 2 - 1 978 Robert William Burke '6 1 , M.A. '8 1 , M.B.A., 1 98 1 - 1 987 John Lawrence Burns, M.A. '78, D.Sc., 1 978- 1 982 Clark Hopkins Carter '40, M.A. '65 3 , L H . D. '80, 1 965- 1 980, 1 98 1 1 989 Helen Dorothy Cole ' 1 7 , M . A . '35, D.S.S. '42, D.S.S., 1 93 5 - 1 94 1 John William Deering ' 5 5 , M .A . ' 7 8 , 1 978- 1 98 1 Mira Louise Dolley ' 1 9, M .A . ' 3 7 , M . A . , 1 9 3 7 - 1 942 Edith Eilene Emery '37, M .A . '60, M.A., 1 960- 1 966 Roderick Ewen Farnham '3 1 , M . A . '59, 1 959- 1 965 Hilda Mary Fife '26, M.A. ' 5 84 , Ph.D., 1 958- 1 964 Warren John Finegan '5 1 , M .A . '80, 1 980-1 989 Pl l


O C T O B E R

' 9 0

T

he Athletic Committee meet.s during Home­ coming Weekend (clockwise from left) : Gary Fitts ' 73 , Jennifer Curtis '93 , Donald Short '64 , Susan Conant Cook '75 , Elizabeth Savicki Carvellas '68 , Professor of Physical Educa­ tion Richard McGee a1u1John Avery '9 1 . The White Mules beat Bates, 9-3 , helped by the performance of Len Baker '92 , Warwick, Rhode Island. Baker played both fullback and linebacker in 1 990 , scoring four TDs, gaining 527 yards and racking up 60 tackle . Home­ coming Weekend In-ought together new trust­ ees and overseers : (front, l-r) : Robert E . Diamond, Jr. ' 73 , Andrew Weiland '64 , Mary Mabon Colonna ' 7 6 , James B . Crawford '64 , Joseph F . Boulos '68 , Reginald Blaxton '74 ; (back) : John R. Zacamy , Jr. ' 7 1 , George E. Haskell, Jr. '55 , Robert M. Furek '64 , Roger F . Dumas '60, Charles C. Leighton '60.

Rae J ean Braunmuller Goodman '69, M.A. '83 , Ph.D., 1 983- 1 989 Nissie Grossman ' 3 2 , M . A . '65, M.B.A., 1 96 5 - 1 970, 1 9 7 1 - 1 9 8 1 Eugenie Hahlbohm Hampton ' 5 5 , M.A. ' 7 2 , 1 97 2 - 1 978 Wallace Meredith Haselton, M .A . '7 1 , 1 9 7 1 - 1 9 7 7 , 1 978- 1 98 1 Doris Hardy Haweeli '2 5 , M .A . ' 5 2 , 1 95 2 - 1 958 J ean Gannett Hawley, M . A . '60, LH . D. '59, 1 960- 1 972 Philip William Hussey, J r. '53, M .A. '8 1 , 1 98 1 - 1 987 Clayton Weare Johnson '26, M.A. '65 , 1 965 - 1 97 1 Leonard Withington Mayo ' 2 2 , M.A. ' 5 7 , D . .S . '42 , 1 9 5 7 - 1 969 Rita Ann McCabe '4 5 , M .A . '66, 1 966- 1 9 7 2 , 1 973- 1 983 Lawrence Carroll McQuade, M .A . '8 1 , LLB., 1 98 1 - 1 989 Matthew Taylor Mellon, M . A . '44, Ph.D., 1 944- 1 959 C. David O'Brien '58, M .A. '75, 1 97 5 - 1 985 Bettina Wellington Piper '3 5 , M .A . '64, 1 964- 1 970 Kershaw Elias Powell '5 1 , M . A . '82 , D.M.D., 1 982- 1 988 David Pulver '6 3, M .A . '83 , M . B.A., 1 983 - 1 99 1 Patricia Rachal '74, M .A . '80, Ph.D., 1 983 - 1 986 John Franklin Reynolds '36, M .A. '7 1 , Sc.D. '78, M .D., 1 97 1 - 1 97 7 Alice Linscott Roberts '3 1 , M . A . '54, 1 954- 1 960 Henry Weston Rollins ' 3 2 , M .A . '62, 1 962- 1 968 Robert Converse Rowell '49, M .A . '6 1 , 1 96 1 - 1 967 Dwight Emerson Sargent '39, M .A. '56, M .A . '58, 1 958-1 964, 1 97 1 1 974 Raymond Spinney '2 1 , M.A. '46 5 • 1 946- 1 95 2 Russell Millard Squire, Sr. ' 2 5 , M .A . '48, 1 948- 1 9 5 5 Eugene Charles Struckhoff '44, M .A . ' 6 7 , LLB., 1 967- 1970 W. Clarke Swanson, Jr., M .A . '70, LL B., 1 9 70- 1 976 Arthur Totten Thompson '40, M . A . '70, M .B . A . , Sc.D. '69, 1 9 701 974 Sigrid Emma Tompkins '38, M . A. '70, LLB., 1 970- 1 976, 1 9 7 7 - 1 985 Edward Hill Turner, A B. , M . A . '83 , L H . D. ' 7 3 , 1 983 - 1 99 1 Peter Austin Vlachos '58, M . A . ' 7 7 , 1 97 7 - 1 980 J ean Margaret Watson '29, M.A. '65 , M .A . , 1 965 - 1 9 7 1 Esther Ziskind Weitman, M .A . ' 5 8 , M . Ed . , LLD. '66, 1 9 58- 1 9 7 3 , 1 974- 1 9 7 7 Ralph Samuel Williams '3 5 , M .A . ' 7 3 , M . B.A., L H . D. ' 7 2 , 1 9731 983 Robert Frederic Woolworth, M .A. '65 , 1 965 - 1 97 7 3 4 5

Died August 3 1 , 1 990. Died November 1 1 , 1 990. Died January 27, 1 99 1 .

Pl2

Overseers Harold Alfond, LH.D. '80, Waterville, Maine, Chairman of the Board , Dexter Shoe Company , Visiting Committee on Physical Edu­ cation and Athletics ( 1 99 3 ) William Lee Alfond ' 7 2 , Belgrade Lakes, Maine, Director and Vice President of Sales (Athletic Division) , Dexter Shoe Company ( 1 99 5 ) Reginald Glenn Blaxton ' 7 4 , M .Div., Washington, D.C., Special Assistant to the Mayor, Religious Affairs , Visiting Committee on Sociology and Anthropology ( 1 994) Jack Bober '64, M.B.A., New Vernon, New Jersey, Chairman, Autronex, Inc . , Visiting Committee on Music ( 1 993 ) Joseph Fred Boulos '68, Portland, Maine, President, The Boulos Companies , Vi iting Committee on Special Programs ( 1 993 ) E. Michael Caulfield '68, M .B.A., Madi on, New Jersey, President, Investment Services Group, The Prudential, Visiting Committees on Administrative Science and on Mathematics ( 1 993 ) David M. Childs, M . ARCH., New Yark, New York, Partner, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill ( 1 995 )

James Robert Cochrane '40, Laconia, New Hampshire, Board of Directors , Former President , The Seiler Corporation, Visiting Commit­ tees on Admis ions, on Career Services and on Physical Education and Athletics ( 1 994) J ane Whipple Coddington '55, M.L.S., Murray Hill, New Jersey ( 1 995 ) Mary Mabon Colonna '76, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Visiting Com­ mittee on Administrative Science ( 1 994) Judith de Luce '68, Ph.D., Oxford, Ohio, Professor, Classics Depart­ ment, Miami University, Visiting Committee on Classics ( 1 99 2 ) Robert Edward Diamond, J r . ' 7 3 , M . B . A . , London, England, Man­ aging Director, International Trading, Morgan Stanley & Co . ( 1 994) Roger Frederic Dumas '60, M .B.A. , Boston, Massachusetts, Invest­ ment Consultant , R. F. Dumas & Co . , Visiting Committee on Mathematics ( 1 994) John Warner Field, B.A., M.A. '60, Rye, N ew York, Management and Finance Consultant, Mine Hill Consultants Office , Visiting CommitThe President's Report 1 990-9 1


O C T O B E R

tees on Economic , on Administrative cience and on Publication-, Public Affairs and College Editor ( 1 99 3 ) John Warner Field, Jr. '66, London, England, Senior Vice President, ]. P. Morgan & Company , Incorporated, V i iring Committee on Computer ervice ( 1 99 3 ) Peter Geoffrey Gordon '64 M.B.A., M i l l Valley, California, Co­

founder and Chainnan , Crystal Geyser Water Company ( 1 995 ) Curtis C. Harris, M.D., Bethe da, Maryland, Chief, Laboratory of Human Carcinogenesis , Narional Cancer lnsritute, Vi iring Committee on Ea t A ian Studies ( 1 99 5 ) Kenneth N . Hart ' 5 1 , LLB., Pound Ridge, New York, Senior Parmer, Donovan, Leisure , Newton & Irvine ( 1 995 ) George Edward Haskell, Jr. ' 5 5 , M.A., Bo ton, Mas achusetts, President, Haskell & Company, Vi iring Committee on Economic ( 1 994) Ellen Brooks Haweeli '69, Greenwich, Connecticut, President, EBH Associates , Inc . , Visiting Committee on Women's Studies and on Development and Alumni Relation ( 1 99 2 ) Janet Gay Hawkins '48, Plandome, e w York, Visiting Committees on the Library and on Health Services ( 1 99 3 ) Susan Smith Huebsch ' 5 4 , outh Dartmouth, Mas achusetts, Real Estate Broker, Visiting Committee on Career ervices and on Phy ical Plant ( 1 99 3 )

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& Goldman, P.C. , Vi iting Committees on Phy ical Education and Athletics and on Development and Alumni Relation ( 1 992 )

Widecr , Slater

F. Rocco Landesman '69, D.F.A., Brooklyn,

ew York, President ,

Jujamcyn Theatres ( 1 99 5 ) Charles Cutler Leighton '60, M.D., Ambler, Penn ylvania, Senior Vice President, Merck, Sharp & Dahme Research Laboratories ( 1 994) Robert Alf Lindgren, ] .D., ew York, ew York Parmer, Rogers and Wells , Vi iting Committee on Mu ic and the Performing Arts, on Art and the Mu eum of Art and on Dining ervice ( 1 99 5 ) Peter Harold Lunder '56, Waterville, Maine, President, Assistant Treasurer and Director, Dexter Shoe Company , Vi mng Committee on Phy ical Plant, on Arr and the Museum of Art and on Phy ical Education and Atb letics ( 1 994) William Thomas Mason, J r. '47 , LLB., orfolk, Virginia, Attorney , Robinson, Zaleski & Lindsey , Vi iring Committees 0'1 African-Ameri­ can tudies and on Women'

tudie ( 1 995 )

Deborah Nutter Miner '6 , Ph.D., We twood, M a achu

en , Direc­ tor of international Relarions and Professor of Political Science , Simmons College , Vi iring Committee on Government ( 1 99 2 )

Jean Pratt Moody ' 5 6, M.Ed., Cape Elizabeth, Maine ( 1 995 )

H . Alan Hume, M . D . , Oakland, Maine, Medical Director, Garrison­ Foster Health Center , Vi iting Committee on Chemi try, on Biology, on Health ervice and on Women's Studie ( 1 99 3 )

C . Richard Peterson '60, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, Execurive Vice President, Sedgwick James & Co . , Inc . , Visiting Committees on Career Service , on History, on Phy ical Plant and on Public Affairs, Publications and College Editor ( 1 995 )

Sol Hurwitz, B.A., Rye, New York, President, Cammi ttee for Economic Development, Vi iring Committee on P ychology, on Publication ,

Peter C. Schwartz, LLB., G lastonbury, Connecticut, Parmer, Gor­ don, Muir and Foley, Visiting Committee on tudent Affair and on

Public Affair and College Editor, on Engli h and on Mu ic ( 1 993 )

Edith Kemper Jette, M.A. '62, Boston, M a achu ett , Co-founder, The Friends of An at Colby, Vi iring Committee on Art ( 1 993 ) Anthony Ferdinand Kramer '62, M.C.P., Burr Ridge, lllinoi , Senior Vice President and Treasurer, Draper and KrameT, Incorporated, Vi ir­

ing Committee on Performing Art and on Ru ian and Soviet Studie ( 1 993 ) Allan Jordan Landau ' 5 5 , LLM . , Boston, Ma achu etts, Attorney,

The President's Report 1 990--9 1

Development and Alumni Relation ( 1 992 ) George Irving Smith '49, Ph.D., Portola Valley, California, Geolo­ gist, U . S . Geological Survey , Visiting Committee on Chemistry ( 1 99 3 ) Gregory White Smith ' 7 3 , ] .D., Aiken, outh Carolina, President, Woodward/White, Inc . , Visiting Committee on American tudie , on Anthropology and ociology and on the L ibrary ( 1 99 2 ) Henry Joseph Sockbeson ' 7 3 , ] .D., Laurel, Maryland Direcring PlJ


N O V E M B E R

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R

esident Cotter presented gifts to David and Ann Broder at the Lovejoy Convocation din­ ner shortly before David Broder's talk in Lorimer Chapel. Broder, political columnist for The Washington Post, was the 38th recipient of the annual Lovejoy Award. Boost­ ers who never miss a match, Professors Don Allen and Charlie Bassett cheered the men's soccer team co a 1 2-0-2 regular season record and a 1 3 - 1 -2 record overal l , the team 's best season ever. Patrick Reed ' 9 1 , Potomac , Md . , and Robert Gramling '92 , Holde n , Mass . , control the action against Bowdoin. Ranked number one in New England and sixth in the nation , the Mules beatthe Polar Bears , 2 - 1 , in the first game of the ECAC tournament before succumbing to Williams in the semifinals . Attorney, N ative American Rights Fund, V isiting Committee on

M usic ( 1 993 )

Elaine Zervas Stamas ' 5 3 , Scarsdale, New York, Visiting Commit­ tees on M usic and the Performing Art , on Health Services and on Modem Foreign Language ( 1 99 5 ) Lael Swinney Stegall '62, M . . , W a hington, D.C., Director of Finance and Planning, Communications Consortium, Visiting Commit­ tees on Russian and Soviet Studie and on Women' Studie ( 1 992 ) M . Anne O'Hanian Szostak ' 7 2 , M .A. '74, Portland, Maine, Chair­ man, President and CEO , Fleet Bank of Maine, Visiting Committees on African-American Studies, on Women's Studie and on Career Service ( 1 993 ) Judith Prophett Timken ' 5 7 , Lafayette, California, Art Docent, Oakland Museum; Trustee , California College of Arts and Crafts , V isiting Committees on M usic and the Performing Arts and on Art and the Muse um of Art ( 1 992 )

Allan Van Gestel '57, LL. B., Boston, Massachusetts, Partner, Goodwin, Procter & Hoar ( 1 99 5 )

Diane Gerth Van Wyck '66, J .D., Brooklyn, N ew York, Senior Vice President, Taxes , American Express Travel Related Services, Visit ing Committees on Classics and on East A ian Studies ( 1 99 3 ) Thomas John Watson I l l '69, M . A . '7 5 , J .D., Wilton, Connecticut, Attomey-at-"Law ( 1 99 5 ) Andrew Jay Weiland '64, M.D., N ew York, N e w York, Medical Director and Surgeon-in-Chief, Hospital for Special Surgery ( 1 994) John R. Zacamy, J r. ' 7 1 , M.B.A., Rye, New York, Former Managing Director, Morgan Stanley &Co. , Incorporated, Visiting Committee on Career Services ( 1 99 5 )

Overseers Visiting Committees 1 990-91 Russian and Soviet Studies September 30-0ctober 2, 1 990 / M . Lael Swinney Stegall '62, chair; Mr. Eugene Huskey, department of political science, John B. Stetson University, consultant; M r. Anthony F. Kramer '62; Profe sor Barry cherr, department of Russian, Dartmouth College, consultant. P14

Chemistry October 28-30, 1 990 / Dr. George I . Smith '49, chair; Dr. H . A lan Hume; Professor Margaret Merritt, department of chemi try, Welle ley College, con ultant; Professor Stuart Ro enfeld '69, department of chemistry, Smith College, consultant. Administrative Science November 1-3, 1 990 / Mr. E. Michael Caulfield '68, chair; Ms. Mary Mabon Colonna '76; Profes or Walter Hecox, department of bu iness and economics, Colorado College, consultant; M . Beverly Nalbandian Madden '80. Sociology and Anthropology November 1 5-1 7, 1 990 / Mr. G regory W. Smith '73, chair; Reverend Reginald Blaxton '74; Profes­ sor David N apier, department of anthropology, M iddlebury College, con ultant; Professor Mark Gould, department ofsociology, Haverford College, consultant. Economics February 2 1 -23, 1 99 1 / Mr. Edson V. M itchell I I I ' 7 5 , chair; M r . Robert E. Diamond, J r. ' 7 3 ; M r . George E . Haskell, J r. ' 5 5 ; Professor Len N ichols, department of economics, Wellesley College, consultant. Classics March 1 7- 1 9 , 1 99 1 / Profes or J udith de Luce '68, chair; Profes or Arthur Robson, department of classics, Beloit College, consultant; Professor Carol G . Thoma , department of history, Uni­ ver ity of Washington, con ultant; Ms. Diane Gerth Van Wyck '66. Career Services April 23-2 5 , 1 99 1 / Mr. C. Richard Peterson '60 chair; Ms. Susan Smith Huebsch '54; Mr. Eugene Roach, director of the career center, Hamilton College, consultant; M r. John Zacamy, Jr. '7 1 .

Alumni Council Executive Committee 1 990-91 Victor F. Scalise, J r. '54, chair; Douglas S. Hatfield '58, vice chair; Susan Conant Cook '75, ecretary-rreasurer; R. Dennnis Dionne '6 1 , past chair of the alumni council; M ichael Franklin '63, chair of the Alumni Fund; Germaine M ichaud Orloff ' 5 5 , chair of the Alumni Hou e Committee; Donald J. Short '64, chair of the Athletics Committee; Forrest W. Barnes '56, chair of the Awards Committee; Albert F. Carville, J r. '63 , chair of the Career Services Committee; John B. Devine, Jr. '78, chair of the Nominating Committee; Eliza­ beth] . Corydon '74, National Club Coordinator; Scott F. McDermott '76, Special Projects; Solomon J. Hartman '67, chair of the Admi sions Committee The President's Report 1 990-91


w, ------- N 0

A P P E N D I X

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A Selection of Faculty Publications and Other Achievements Mark C. Aldrich, Ph.D., Visiting I nstructor in Spani h "Mas alla de Nil admirari and Aurea mediocritas en dos epi tola rencacentistas: el caso de Hurtado Mendoza y Boscan," presented at the Fourth Biennial Northeast Regional Meeting of the American Associa足 tion of Teacher of Spanish and Portuguese.

Anthony A. Anemone, Jr., Ph.D., As istant Professor of Ru sian Review of Brian Boyd's Vladimir Nabokov: The Russian Years , The Wilson Quarterly / Review of Konstantin Vaginov's The Collected Prose, The Slavic Review / "Carnival in Theory and Practice: Konstantin Vaginov and Mikhail Bakhtin," presented at the Fifth International Bakhtin Conference, Universiry of Manchester.

Charles W. Bassett, M.A. '80, Ph.D., Dana Profes or of American Studies and of English "The New Old West and the Old Old West," presented at the Maine Teachers of Language Arts , Portland, Maine. Miriam F. Bennett, M.A. '73, Ph.D., William R. Kenan, Jr. Profe or of Biology "ls There a Morning-evening Difference in Egg Production of Bloodworms, Strongyle Parasites of Equines?", in Chronobiology : Its Role in Clinical Medicine , General Biology and Agriculture, Wiley-Lis , Inc., 1 990 / Review of S.S. Whayn's The World of Insects, Appraisal / "Sea足 sonal Differences in Regeneration in Red-spotted Newts, Nowphthalmus viridescens," presented at the annual meeting of the European ociery for Chronobiology, Marburg/Lahn, Germany.

Pamela A. Blake, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Government and of Women's Studies "Directions in Femini t Theory: Displacing Po tmodemist Pa足 nache," presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, San Francisco, Calif. I "Feminist Theorie of Particular Selves: From Two to Many," presented at the annual meeting of the New England Political Science Association.

Robert Bluhm, J r., Ph.D., Visiting Assistant Profes or of Physics

"Particle Fields at Finite Temperature Form String Field Theory,"

Ph')-3ical Review D: Particles and Fields .

David B. Bourgaize, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry The President's Report 1 990-91

"Effects of Mutation in 4.SS RNA on Protein Synthesis in Escherichia coli," presented at the Keystone Meeting on Tran lational

Control, Tammaron, Colo. (coauthor M. O'Loughlin '90) / "Some Approache to the Study of Molecular Evolution," presented at the In titute for Advanced rudies, Univer iry of Malaya, Malay ia.

James Boylan, M.A., Assistant Profe sor of English The Planets, Simon & Schuster, 1990 / "God Save the Human Cannonball," produced and performed off-Broadway by Love Creek Productions / Reading at Johns Hopkins University.

Patrick Brancaccio, M.A. '79, Ph.D., Profe sor of Engli h and of Performing Arts "Studied Ambiguitie : Arthur Mervyn and the Problem of the Unreliable Narrator," reprinted in Criricism of Early American Fiction, Greenwood Pres , 1990.

Francis T. Bright, M.A., Vi iring Instructor in French "Language as Object: Gift-giving and Dialogue in Sceve and Pernette du Guillet," pre ented at the annual meeting of the Mountain Inter tare Foreign language Conference, Radford, Va.

Cedric Bryant, Ph.D., Assistant Profe or of English "The Orderline s of Di order: Madne and Evil in Toni Morrison' Sula,'' Black American Literature Forum / "Tilling the Garden: African足

American Women Writer at Work," presented at Women's Studies Colloquia, Universiry of Maine, Orono / "Inscribing Black Masculiniry in Gloria Naylor' Fiction," presented at the Maine Women's Studies Conference, Bowdoin College.

Michael D. Burke, M . F.A., Visiting Assi tant Professor of Engli h Review of Franklin Burroughs's Billy Watson's Croker Sack, of Richard Lederer's The Play of Words and of Michael Rothschild's Wondermonger, MaineSunday Telegram / "A troll along the Allagash," Down East.

Debra Campbell, Ph.D., A sociate Profe or of Religion "The Search for Structures: The Mobilization of the American Catholic Lairy, 1 930-1960," pre ented at the annual meeting of the Social Science History Association / "Beyond Pagan Babies: From the Regis College Mi ion Unit to the Regis Peace Corp , 1 942-1 960," PIS


D E C E M B E R

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Pr

ofessor of Economics Thomas Tietenberg was Maine Professor of the Year. The award was bestowed by the Council for the Advance­ ment and Support of Education, which honors one educator in each of the 50 states. Mahua Sarkar ' 9 1 , Calcutta, India, performs in the Page Commons Room of the Student Center during Divali , an Indian festival of lights . The Festival ofCarols and Lights in LorimerChapel, a colorful and popular community attraction , features a bell choir, a string choir, string quartets , a special chapel choir and classical music that lends itself to the holiday season. Erik Alberich '92 of Andover, Mass . , made the dean's list FINALLY!

presented at the Conference on Catholicism in the Twentieth Century, Center for American Catholicism, University of Notre Dame.

Murray F. Campbell, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Physics "Radiative Transfer Models for the WJ(OH) Dust Cocoon," presented at the conference of the Astronomy Society of the Pacific, the University of Wyoming (coauthors H.M. Butner, A. Dayal '90, D.F. Lester, P.M. Harvey and A.T. Pickering '85 ).

Arthur K. Champlin, M.A. '87, Ph. D., Professor of Biology "The Production of Mouse Embryos from Male and Female Ga­ metes Cryopreserved in Liquid N itrogen," presented at the Annual Meeting of the AAAS, Washington, D.C. (coauthors D.S. John ton and LE. Mobraaten) / "Cryopreservation and in vitro Fertilization with Mouse Sperm," presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Cryobiology, Leuven, Belgium (coauthors L E. Mobraaten, D.S. Johnston, A.C. Schroeder and J .W. Gordon) / "Use of Zona Drilling and a Fertilization Microdrop of Novel Configuration Overcomes the Barrier to Mouse Sperm Freezing," presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Reproduction (coauthors J. W. Gordon, A. Schroeder and L. Mobraaten) I "Development of a Fertilization M icrochamber that Spontaneously Concentrates Motile Sperm around Oocytes and Improves in vitro Fertilization," presented at the Annual Meeting of the AIBS (coauthors J .W. Gordon, M. Werner, A.C. Schroeder and LE. Mobraaten).

Daniel H. Cohen '75 , Ph.D., Associate Professor of Philosophy "Who, What and Other Essential Questions," Colby Quarterly / "The Word as Will and Idea: Semantics in Wittgenstein's Tractatus ," Philosophical Studies (Dublin) / "Wittgenstein and W. C. Fields," Ly­ ceum.

F. Russell Cole, M.A. '90, Ph.D., Professor of Biology "Characteristics and Food Habits of an Invading Population of European Rabbits in High-elevation Shrubland of Haleakala National Park," presented at the American Institute of Biological Sciences, San Antonio, Tex., and published in Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America (coauthors LL Loope, S.) . Canter '90 and A.C. Medeiros) / "Invasion and Control of the European Rabbit on the Island of Maui, Hawaiian Islands," presented at the American Institute of Biological Sciences, San Antonio, Tex., and published in Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America ( coauthors LL Loope, A.C. Medeiros and W.P. Minyard) I National Park Service Cooperative Research Grant.

Charles W.S. Conover Ill, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Physics "Calculations of the Binding Energies and Structures of Sodium P16

Chloride Clusters and Cluster Ions," Journal of Chemical Physics (coau­ thors N.G. Phillips and L. A. Bloomfield ) / "Alkali-halide Cluster Ions Produced by Laser Vaporizmion of Solids," Physical Review (coauthors Y.J . Twu, Y.A. Yang and L.A. Bloomfield) / Research colloquia pre­ sented at Middlebury College, Bates College and the Univer iry of Virginia.

Anthony J. Corrado, Jr., Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Government "Presidential Candidate PACs and the Future of Campaign Fi­ nance Reform," in Stephen Wayne and Clyde Wilcox, eds., The Quest for NacionaL Office, St. Martin's, 1 990 / Participant, Roundtable on the Changing Presidential Selection Process, at the annual meeting of the New England Political cience Association, Worcester, Mas . / "Hon­ ored in the Breach: The Rise of Pre idential Candidate PA Cs and Their Impact on the Federal Election Campaign Act," presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, San Francisco, Calif.

Anthony P. C unningham '80, Ph.D., Vi iting Assi tant Profes or of Philosophy "Liberalism, Egalite, Fraternite ?", ]oumalof PhilosophicalResearch / "Living Right & Living Well," Colby Quarterly / "Dirty Hands: Insight or l llusion?", presented at the Northern New England Philo ophical Association, Keene State College I "Alienation and the Impartiality Debate," presented at the Maine Philosophical In titute, Fairfield, Maine.

Guilan P. Denoeux, Ph.D., As i tant Professor of Government "We're Making Saddam a Hero," Portland Press Herald / "Saddam on Losing End of Devastating Three-way Gamble," Bangor Daily News.

Keith Devlin, M.A. '89, Ph.D., Carter Professor of Mathematics Paper pre ented at the Second Annual Conference on Situation Theory and its Applications, Kinloch Rannoch, Scotland / "The Logic of Information," presented at the Artificial Intelligence Seminar, Carnegie-Mellon University and at the combined 1 l th Conference on Computers and the Humanities and the 1 8th International Conference of the As ociation for Literary and Linguistic Computing, Arizona State University / "The Legacy of Alan Turing," presented at Okla­ homa State University / "Set Theory for the Real World," research seminar presented at Oklahoma State University / The feature address, presented at the Awards Ceremony for the American Mathematical Olympiad, held at the National Academy of Science, Washington D.C. I "Computers and Research at Four-year Colleges," Nonces of the American Marhemacical Society . The President's Report 1 990-9 1


D E C E M B E R

Suellen Diaconoff, Ph.D., Associare Profe sor of French; Residenr Direcror of Colby in Caen Program, 1 990-92 "Women in rhe Boudoir, or, Spatial Vulnerability in Magritre and Lado ," in Vera Adamanrova and Madeline Lennon, eds., Images of Women in the Arts, rudie in Modern Languages at Wesrern, 1 990 / Review of N ina Rattner Gelban's Feminine and Opposition Journalism in Old Regime France: Le]oumal des Dames and ofJean R. Joseph's Crebillon fils: Economie erotique et narrative, Diderot Studies I "Rewritings of Rape by French Women Novelist ," pre ented at rhe Northeast Society for Eighteenth-Century tudies, Amher t, Ma . / "Betwixt and Berween: Letters and Liminality," pre enred ar the Eighth lnrernational Congres on the Enlightenment, Brisrol, England. Priscilla A. Doel, M.A., A ociate Pr fes or of Portugue e and pani h "The Myth of rhe Doryman," presented at the meeting of the Norrheast Modern Language Associarion, Hartford, Conn. Michael R. Donihue, '79, Ph.D., As istant Professor of Economics "Merging Monrhly and Quarrerly Forecasrs: Experience wirh MQEM,"J oumalof forecas ting (coauthor E. Philip Howrey and aul H. Hymans) / "The I -LM Core of Three Econometric Model ," in Lawrence R. Klein, ed., Comparative Performance of U . S . Econometric Models, Oxford Pre , 1 990 ( coauthors Green, Hickman, Howrey and Hyman ) / "Using Mixed Frequency Data ro Improve Macroeconomic Foreca t of Invenrory Inve tment," pre ented ar the Internarional Symposium on· Inventorie , Budape t, Hungary (coaurhor Howrey) . Lee N. Feigon, M . A . '90, Ph.D., Professor o f History and o f Ea t A ian Culture and Language Review of Fang Lizhi' Bring Down The Great Wall: Writings on Science, Culture, and Democracy in China, The Boston Globe I "Gender and rhe Chinese rudent Movement," in Jeffrey Wa serstrom and Elizaberh Perry, eds., Popular Protest and Political Culture, Westview Pre , 1990. David W. Findlay, Ph.D., Assi rant Profes or of Economics "Relative Price Di persion and Unemployment," Journal of Macroeconomics (coaurhor John A. Carl on) / "Budget Deficit , Ex­ pected Inflation and horr-term Real lnteresr Rates: Evidence for the U . . Using Alternative Measures of Expected 1nflation," International Economic}ournal / "Expected Budget Deficit and Long-term Nominal Interest Rates: A Comment on Bovenberg," Scaff Papers, International Monetary Fund / "The Political Bu ines Cycle and Republican Ad­ mini trations: An Empirical Inve tigation," Public Finance Quarterly / The President's Report 1 990-91

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"The Maine Economy and rhe R-Word": oft Landing or Rece sion?", Maine Business Indicators / "Budget Deficits and Interest Rates: Reply ro Spiro," Scaff Papers, International Monetary Fund / "The Maine Economy and the R-Word: An Update," Maine Business lndicators / Review of Alan . Blinder's Macroeconomics Under Debate, Southern Economic Journal / "The Fisher Effect and Shorr-tenn Real lnrere t

Rates: ome lnitial Evidence Using Alternative Mea ure of Expected Inflation," presented at Federal Reserve Bank, Bosron, Ma . (coauthor Karen ] . Trenholme '89) .

Robert Fisch, Ph.D., Assi tanr Profe sor o f Mathematic and Com­ puter cience "Graphical Aids for Srocha tic Processe : Teaching wirh a Com­ puter in rhe Mathematic Cla sroom," pre enred at the Institute for Academic Technology, Research Triangle Park, N .C. / "Greenberg­ Hastings in One Dimen ion," presented at the Miniconference on Cellular Auromata, Cornell University / "Cyclic Cellular Automata and Related Proces es," Physica D / "Cyclic Cellular Auromata in Two Dimensions," in Spatial Stochastic Processes, Birkhauser, 1990 (coau­ thor J. Gravner and D. Griffearh) / "A Summary of Result about Cyclic Cellular Automata," in Mathematics ofRandom Media, American Mathematical Society, 1 990. James R. Fleming, Ph.D., Assi rant Professor of cience-Technology Studies Meteorology in Ame1ica, 1 800-1870, The Johns Hopkins Univerity Pre , 1 990 / "An Espy Nephelescope, Forerunner of the Wilson Cloud Chamber," Technology and Culture / "Hisrorians Probe Geophys­ ics in eattle," "Hisrory of Geophy ic " and ''The Hisrory of Climate Change" ( abstract ) , Eos: Transactions of the American Geophysical Union / "Science-Technology Studies Colloquium," NLANews / "The Changing Nature of Climatic Change," pre ented at rhe annual meet­ ing of the Hi rory of Science ociety, Seattle, Wa h. / "The Hi tory of Climate Change," presented at rhe meeting of rhe American Geophy i­ cal Union, Baltimore, Md. Kenneth S. Ganza, M .A., Zi kind Lecturer in East A ian rudie and in Arr "Influence and Intrusions of Painting Concept in Woodcut Book l llustration of the Ming and Qing Dynasties," presented at rhe annual meeting of the College Art As ociation, Wa hingron, D.C. Henry A. Gemery, M.A. '77, Ph.D., Dana Profe or of Economics "The 'Hidden Half of rhe Anglo-African Trade in the Eighteenth Century: The Significance of Marion Johnson's rati tical Research," Pl7


J A N U A R Y

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Margaret Lacey '9 1 , Cleveland Heights , Ohio, andJames "Jay" Heimbach '9 1 , Acton, Mass. , were members of the castofThe Vene­ t ian Twins. The commedia dell' arte pro­ duction was a big hit on campus and was selected to compete at the regional American College Theater Festival at the University of New Hampshire in January . Led by Grosse Pointe, Michigan's Edward "Ted" Lambrecht ' 9 1 , students encircled the Miller Library dome with yellow ribbon after the mid-January start of the war in the Middle East. Gregory Ore ' 9 1 , Philadelphia, Pa. , and Wanda Rodriguez '94 , Londonderry , N . H . , read in the Student Center in January during the Martin Luther King, Jr. , Birthday Celebration. Practicing on Competition Hill at Sugarloaf/USA is Alpine ski team member Lael Hinman '93 , Barrington , Ill . The women won the Division II champion­ ship for the fifth year in a row. in David Henige and K.C. McCaskie, eds., West African Economic and Social History (coauthor J .S. Hogendom) / "British and French Inden­ tured Servant Migration to the Caribbean: A Comparative Study of Seventeenth-Century Immigration and Labor Markets," prepared for the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population Confer­ ence on the Peopling of the Americas (coauthor James Hom) / Invited discussant, Canadian Cliometrics Conference, Queens University, Kingston, Ont. I Invited discussant, N BER Kansas Conference on Historical Labor Statistics, University of Kansas. Rebecca Gerber, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Music Review of Anthony Carver's Cori Spezzati , Schutz Society Reports : Newsletter of the American Heinrich Schutz Society / "The Golden Rose As an Inspiration for Fifteenth-Century Masses and Motets," presented at the New England Chapter of the American Musicological Society. Cheryl Townsend Gilkes, Ph.D., John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Associate Professor of African-American Studies and Sociology; direc­ tor, African-American Studies Program '"Until My Change Comes': Faith and Social M inistry in the African-American Baptist Tradition," in James D. Davidson, C. Lin­ coln Johnson and Alan K . Mock, eds., Faith and Social Ministry: Ten Christian Perspectives, Loyola University Press, 1990 / "To Sit and Die or To Stand and Live: Understanding A I DS and Responding Redemptively as Christians to Its Victims," Journal ofReligious Thought / "Historical Strengths and Contemporary Crises: Church, Family, and Social Change in the African-American Experience," presented at the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, Virginia Beach, Va. / "An Intersection of Gifts: Women, Culture, and the Sanctified Church," presented at the Center for African-American History and Culture, Temple University / '"Their Eyes Were Watching God': Religious Lives, Ethnic Community and Social Change," presented at the Ameri­ can Sociological Association, Cincinnati, Ohio / "Choosing Hope, Choosing Justice," presented at Martin Luther King, Jr., Program of Celebration, Suffolk University / "W.E.B. DuBois, African-American Women and the Science of Social Change," presented at Loyola University Social Science Division. Robert Gillespie, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English, College Editor "Going to the Dogs," in Michael J . Rosen, ed. , The Company of Dogs, Doubleday, 1990.

K. Frederick Gillum, M.A. '65 , Ph.D., Professor of History "Hans von Seeckt" and "Heinz Guderian," in Great Lives of History: Twentieth Century , Salem Press. P18

L Mary Ellen Ma

Paul Greenwood, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Biology "Secretion," in F.N . Magill, ed., Magill's Survey of Science: Life Science, Salem Press, 1 990 / "Calcium-binding Proteins ofNematocysts Located by 45 Ca-overlay," presented at American Society of Zoologists Annual Meeting, San Antonio, Tex. (coauthor M.L. Ackerly '90) . Peter B. Harris, M.A. '89, Ph.D., Profe o r o f English "The Loving Work of an Equilibrist: Forty Years of Richard Wilbur," The Virginia Quarterly Review / "Hunger, Hope, and Nurture: The Poetry of Michael Ryan, the Poets of the Chinese Democracy Movement and Maxine Kumin," The Virginia Quarterly Review / "Maidanek Visitation," Jewish Currents. Charles S. Hauss, M.A. '90, Ph.D., Professor of Government Politics in Gaullist France: Coping with Chaos, Praeger, 1990 / 'The End of the Cold War: Challenges for Peace Education," Peace and Change / "New Challenges" and "The Bomb, The Movement and the Future," Peace Review. Jan S. Hogendorn, M.A. '76, Ph.D., The Grossman Professor of Economics "Revolutionary Mahdism and Resistance to Colonial Rule in the Sokoto Caliphate, 1 905-6," Journal of African History (coauthor Paul Lovejoy) / "The 'Hidden Half of the Anglo-African Trade in the Eighteenth Century: The Significance of Marion Johnson's Stati tical Research," in David Henige and K.C. McCaskie, eds., West African Economic and Social History (coauthor H.A. Gemery) I Lo Sviluppo Economico { I talian translation ofEconomic Development [ 1 987] ) , Nicola Zanichelli Editore, 1 990 / "Informal versus Formal Moneys: The Le sons of African Experience," presented at the University of Pennsylva­ nia / "Land Tenure and Taxation in Early Colonial Northern N igeria: The Impact on Slavery," presented at the annual meeting of the Canadian Association of African Studies, Toronto, Ont. Yeager Hudson, M.A. '77, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophy The Philosophy ofReligion, Mayfield Publisher , 1990 I The Philoso­ phy of Religion: Selected Readings, gen. ed., Mayfield Publishers, 1 990 I Revolution, Violence, and Equality, The Edwin Mellen Pre , 1 990 (coeditor Creighton Peden) / Terrorism, Justice and Social Values , The Edwin Mellen Press, 1 990 (coeditor Creighton Peden) / "Thomas Paine: The Ideological Fruits ofRevolution," in Yeager Hudson and Creighton Peden, eds., Revolution, Violence , and Equality, Edwin Mellen Press, 1990 / "Democracy, Morality, and Economic Justice," presented at the Conference on the Ethics of Democracy for the Centre for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Allentown, Colo. / "The Most Fundamental of

The President's Report 1 990-9 1


J A N U A R Y

Kevin Rothstein

Human Rights," pre ented at the Seventh International ocial Philo o­ phy Conference, Colorado Springs, Colo. / "Two Voices from One Muse," "Knowledge and Reality," "The Humanity of God; the Divinity of Man" and "Moral Re pon ibility in a J ust ociety," pre emed at Gujarat Univer ity, Ahmedabad, India. Lloyd C. Irland, Ph.D., Vi iring A i tam Profe sor of Economics Contributions to Bodenman, Jones and tanturf, eds., Success Stories in Wood Produces Manufacwring, Penn State University, 1990 / "Maine' Changing Economy," in R.E. Serringer, ed., Changing Maine, Univer ity of outhern Maine, 1 990 / "Emerging Trend in Hardwood Markets," orthem Logger / "Generating Electricity with Wood: Where Do We Stand in the North?", Northern Logger (coauthor Lutz) / "Wall treet in the Wood ," Appalachia BuUetm / " ubstainability: From Theory to Practice," Mainewatch lnsritute. Patrice Franko Jones, Ph. D. , As i ram Professor of Economics and of International tudies The Brazilian Defense Industry, Western Pre s, 1 990 / "Latin Ameri­ can Defen e lndustrie ," pre ented to the inter-American Defense College / "Military Relations in Latin America," pre ented to the American University Program. David L. Keenan, Ph. D., As istant Profe or of Chine e Language and Literature "Piercing the Shadow of May 4th," pre ented at Grinnell College. Edwin J. Kenney, J r., M .A. '82, Ph.D., Profe sor of English "The P ychological Interpretation of Fairy Tales," Jung Center for Studie in Analytical P ychology, Brunswick, Maine. Susan Kenney, M.A. '86, Ph.D., Profes or of English One Fell Sloop, Viking Pres , 1990 / "The Death of the Dog and Other Rescues," in Michael J. Ro en, ed., The Company of Dogs, Doubleday, 1 990 / Fiction reading and "May Sarton' Journal and A Reckoning," pre ented at May anon, a Celebration, Westbrook Col­ lege / Visiting writer, Phillip Exeter Academy / Faculty, Writer at Work Conference, Park City, Utah. Gay Kempton, M .A.E., Visiting Instructor in Art An and Architecture Faculty Exhibition, University of Maine at Augusta / Maker's '90, a biennial juried exhibition, Museum of An, Bate College / The Mettle of Metal-An Overview of Contemporary American Metal mithing, Society of Arts and Crafts, Boston, Mas . / Camden Gold mith's A ociation Annual Invitational Exhibition, The President's Report 1 990-91

' 9 1

Marr argent

Harbor Square Gallery, Camden, Maine / Group Show, Etienne' , Camden, Maine. D. Whitney King, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry "A General Approach for Calculating Polyprotic Acid peciation and Buffer Capacity," Journal of Chemical Educarion (coauthor D.R. Kester) I "Determination of Fe( I I ) in eawater at Nanomolar Concen­ trations," Analytica Chimica Acta (coauthor J. Lin and D.R. Ke ter) / "Spatial and Temporal Distribution of Hydrogen Peroxide in the Equatorial Pacific Ocean," Transactions of the American Geophysical Union (coauthor R.M. Blanchard '90) / "Shipboard Determination of Iron ( I I ) and Iron ( I I I ) in Seawater: Evidence for Photochemical Cycling in urface Waters," Transactions of the American Geophysical Union (coauthor V. Elrod, K.H. Coale and K.S. John on) / "Can Adding Iron to the Ocean Reduce Global Warming?", pre ented to the Maine Section of the American Chemical Society. Gregory G. Kolden, Ph.D., A sistant Profe or of Psychology "Patterns of Proce and Outcome Relationships in the Early e sion of P ychotherapy," "The Proce s of Change Early in Psycho­ therapy: The Role of the Therapeutic Bond" (po ter) and "The Psycho­ therapy ervice Delivery y tern: Description and Comparison of Patients Seeking Outpatient P ychotherapy at Two Community Men­ tal Health Center " ( poster) , pre ented at The Society for Psycho­ therapy Research International Meeting, Lyon, France. Howard L. Koonce, M.A. '80, Ph.D., Professor of English and of Performing Arts Director, Gypsy ( Act 1 1 ) , Opera House, Waterville, Maine / The Earl of Gloucester, King Lear, and Angelo, The Comedy of Errors, The Theater at Monmouth, Monmouth, Maine. Carol Baker Libby, Ph.D., Assistant Profe sor of Chemistry "Effect of Deletion in the 0-glyco ylated Region on AspergiUus awamori Glucoamyla e," presented at the 20 1 t Meeting of the Ameri­ can Chemical ociety, Atlanta, Ga. Richard Daniel Libby '68, Ph.D., A i tant Profes or of Chemistry "Compound 1 Formation l a Partially Rate Limiting Proce in Chloroperoxidase-catalyzed Bromination Reactions," The Journal of Biological Chemistry (coauthor N icola Rotberg '88) . Thomas R.W. Longstaff, M . A . '84, Ph.D., Profes o r o f Religion "Gu h Halav in the Ancient Literary Source ," in Eric M. Meyers and Carol L Meyers with Jame F. trange, ed . , Excavations at the Ancient Synagogue of Gush Halav, Ei enbrauns, 1 990. P19


F E B R U A R Y

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L

ed by Adjunct Associate Professor of Per­ forming Arts Tina Wentzel ( third from left) , the Colby Dancers rehearsed for the spring dance concert. In the ECAC final against Emmanuel College , Rockland , Maine's Eliza­ beth Montgomery '93 fires it up. Moving in are teammates Elizabeth Cimino '92 ( left) Port­ land, Maine , and Kimberly Derrington ' 9 1 , Bethlehem, N . H . Colby won the seesaw thriller before a packed house , 73-70. Exchange stu­ dent Sylvine Baumeister, Selestat, France , Christine Kerrigan ' 9 1 , Minot, Mass . , and Christine Tucci/le ' 9 1 , Cos Cob , Conn . , had fun making crepes , then sold them prior to a basketball game to raise funds for the French Club .

Paul Stuart Machlin, M.A. '87, Ph.D., Profe sor of Mu ic Review of Garvin Bushell's]azzFrom The Beginning, Notes / Colby Camerata concert, Maine Public Broadcasting Network / Elected Na­ tional Secretary, Sonneck Society (American Music Association ) . George Calvin Mackenzie, M . A . '86, Ph.D., Professor o f Government "Richard M. N ixon," "Dwight D. Ei enhower" and "The Election of 1 960," in American Political Parties and Elections: An Encyclopedia , Garland Press, 1 990 / "Profe sionalism and Politics: Executive Recruit­ ment in Washington," in R.H. Perry and Janet Jones-Parker, eds., The Executive Search Collaboration, Greenwood Pre , 1 990 / "Military Sales and Legislative-Executive Relations," presented at the annual meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Atlanta, Ga. / "Con­ gress and President in Foreign Affairs," presented at the annual meeting of the New England Political Science Association, Worce ter, Ma . / Seminars on "Ethics in the Federal Government" for senior career officials of the U.S. Treasury Department. L. Sandy Maisel, M.A. '83 , Ph.D., Dana Professor of American Demo­ cratic Institutions "The Evolution of Political Parties: Toward the 2 l st Century" and "The Naming of Candidates: Recruitment or Emergence?" (coauthor) , in L. Sandy Maisel, ed. , The Parties Respond: Changes i n the American Party System, Westview Press J American Political Parties and Elections : An Encyclopedia, gen. ed. , Garland Press, 1 990 / "Legislative Workload," in The Encyclopedia ofAmerican Legislatures, Scribners / "Congressional Elections: Quality Candidates in House and Senate Elections, 1 9821990," in Ronald Peters and Gary Copeland, eds., Back to the Future: The United States Congress at the Bicentennial, M .E. Sharpe. Michael A. Marlais, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Art Grant from the Maine Humanities Council / "Claude Monet, Impressionism and Beyond," National Gallery of Art Summer Institute. D. Benjamin Mathes, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mathematics Completely Bounded TransformationsofH-operator Spaces, oper­ ator theory seminar presented at the University of New Hampshire / "Invariant Diagonal Operator Ranges," Michigan Mathematical Journal. Harriett Matthews, M.A. '84, M .F.A., Professor of Art Group show, Anita Shapolsky Gallery, SoHo, New York, N.Y. I Sculptors on Paper, Congress Square Gallery, Portland, Maine / One­ person show, Frick Gallery, Belfast, Maine. Marilyn S. Mavrinac, M .A., Associate Professor of Education and of H istory P20

"Secondary Agregees Teachers of the 1930 ," presented at the ocietyofWe tern French Historical tudie , University of California at anta Barbara. Shannon L. McArthur, M.F.A., Visiting Assistant Professor of Art Group show, Kneelan Gallery, Sun Valley, Idaho / Group Show, Ai ling Gallery, Hingham, Mass. James W. Meehan, Jr., M.A. '82, Ph.D., Profe sor of Economics "The Co t ofOrganization,"Journal ofLaw, Economics , & Organ­ ization (coauthor Scott E. Masten and Edward A. nyder '75 ) . Jane M . Moss, M.A. '90, Ph.D., Professor o f French "Marie Laberge' Deux Tangos pour wute une vie," presented to the American Association of Teacher of French, New Orlean , La. / "Quebec Feminist Writers," presented at Canada Day Conference, Plymouth State College / "Dramatizing the Di cour e of Female Deire," pre ented to the American Council for Quebec Studies, Chicago, I ll. I "Pere, fils et amants clans le theatre quebecois contemporain," pre ented to Northeast Modem Language Association, Hartford, Conn. I "Drama in Quebec," in Arnold Davidson, ed., Studies on Canadian Literature: Introductory and Critical Essays, PMLA, 1990 / "In Search of Lo t Intimacy: Mothers and Daughter in Women's Theater," Modern Language Studies J "A House Divided: Hi tory and Power in Madeleine Ouellette-M ichalska's La Maison Trestler, " Quebec Studies. Richard J. Moss, M .A. '90, Ph.D., Professor of Hi tory "Republicanism, Liberati m and Identity: The Case of Jedidiah Morse," Essex Institute Historical Collections / "Fir t Amendment I sues" in the eriesTheCourt and the Constitution, Bates College / "America' Founding Document ," pre ented at the Center for the Study of Founding Documents, Boston Univer ity. Randy A. Nelson, M.A. '90, Ph.D., Professor of Economics and of Administrative Science "The Effects of Competition on Publicly Owned Firms: Evidence from the Municipal Electric Industry in the U.S.," lnternational]ournal of Industrial Organization / "Differential Environmental Regulation : Effects on Electric Utility Capital Turnover and Emi sions," presented at the meeting of the American Economic Association, Washington, D.C. (coauthor T. Tietenberg). Robert E. Nelson, Ph.D., A sociate Professor of Geology "Rediscovery of Cicindela ancocisconensis Harri and Fir t Records for scutellaris Leconte Haldeman in Maine," Cicindela (coauthor James R. LaBonte) . The President's Report 1 990-9 1


F E B R U A R Y

James I. Northrup, Ph.D., Vi iting Assi tam Profe or of Mathematics and Computer Science "Pointwi e Quasi-Newton Methods," colloquium presented at Appalachian rate Univer ity / "Con trained Nonlinear Optimiza­ tion," colloquium pre ented at Arm trong State College / Review, "Function Finder," otices of the AMS. Jorge Olivares, Ph.D., A sociate Profe sor of Spanish " lntertext in Vicente Lefi.eros El garabato," pre ented at the Kentucky Foreign Language Conference, the University of Kentucky. Laurie E. Osborne, Ph.D., As istant Professor of English "Constructing Female De ire and the Female Gaze in the Dreams ofReinhardt, Hall and Papp," Shakesp are on Film Newsl.e.tter / "Attend­ ing to Women in the Renai sance," presented at the University of Maryland / "The Video Edition of Twelfth Night," pre emed at the conference of the hake peare Association. Adrianna M. Paliyenko, Ph.D., Assi tam Profe or of French "Rimbaud and Claude!: Literary Paternity and the Anxiety of Influence," Claudel Studies. James S. Pierce, Ph.D., Vi iting Profe sor of Art From Abacus ro Zeus, 4th ed., Prentice-Hall, 1 990 / "Beyond Geometry," Maine Coa t Artists Gallery, Rockport, Maine. Tamae Prindle, Ph.D., Associate Profes or of Japane e Review of "Natsume So eki's The Miner," Pacific Affairs / "A Longer Vacation," Harvard Business Review / "Can Women in Japanese Busine s Novel WearCinderella's Glass Shoes?", presented at the New England AAS Conference, Smith College / "Japane e Bu iness Novels as Language Text , ' pre ented at the Annual ATJ Thur day Seminar in conjunction with the AAS Annual Conference, New Orleans, la. Harold B. Raymond, M.A. '68, Ph.D., Professor of Hi tory Chapter in Melvin Lane, ed., Sprouting Seeds: Black Mountain Coll.e.ge, University ofTennessee Pres , 1990 / Sixteen articles in Sandy Mai el, ed., American Political Parties and E/.e.ctions: An Encyclopedia, Garland Press, 1 990. Scott H. Reed Ill, M.F.A., Assistant Profes or of Art "Triennale '90," International Print Triennale '90, Cracow, Po­ land / "lntergrafia '90," Katowice, Poland / Second Exhibit, Summer Inv1 ..ational Exhibition , Harlow Gallery, Kennebec Valley Art Asso­ ciation, Hallowell, Maine / Two-person invitational show, Harlow Gallery, Kennebec Valley Art Association, Hallowell, Maine.

The President's Report 1 990-9 1

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Saranna Robinson '80, Ph.D., As i tam Professor of Economics "Close Only Counts in Horseshoes, Handgrenades (and Forecast­ ing Money Demand ?)," presented at Bowdoin College, at the United States Naval Academy and at the annual meeting of the Southern Economics Association, New Orleans, La. Kenneth A. Rodman, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Government "Bargaining with the Instruments of Statecraft: Multinational Corporation and U.S. Economic Sanctions Against N icaragua and Libya," Business and the Contemporary World / "Review of Oran Young'

lnternational Cooperar.ion, American Political Science Review. Phyllis Rogers, Ph.D., As i rant Professor of American Studies and of Anthropology "Through a Gia s Darkly: The Algonkian Tribes as Mentors of the Occult," Social Science / "The American Indian Culinary Legacy," in the proceedings of the Schlesinger Library's Conference on the Chang­ ing Image of the Cook / "An Exploration of Native American Influ­ ence in a Short Story by Freeman," pre ented at the New England Modern Language Association Meeting / "A New Interpretation of the Actions of the Pilgrim' Indian Collaborator, Squanto," presented at Harvard University. Nicholas L. Rohrman, M.A. 77, Ph.D., Profe sor of Psychology "Self-Image, elf-Concept and Photography," pre ented at the meeting of the American Culture Association, San Antonio, Tex. Hanna M. Roisman, PhD., Visiting As ociate Professor of Classics "Eumaeus and Odysseus-Covert Recognition and Self-Revela­ tion?", Illinois Classical Studies / "Kerdion in the Iliad, Skill and Tricki­ ne s," Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Associa­ r.ion / "The Me senger and Eteocles in the Seven Against Thebes," L' Anr.iquite Classique; in Hebrew in W.Z. Rubinsohn, ed., and H. Roisman, as o. ed., Shalom Perlman Book, Thirty-Three Studies in Honor ofShalom Perlman, Tel Aviv University, 1 990 / "The Moral Structure of Euripides' Hippolytus," presented at the Comparative Drama Confer­ ence, Gainesville, Fla. / "Odysseus' Son," presented at the Classical Association of the Atlantic State , Georgetown Univer ity / "Eumaeus and Odysseus," pre ented at the Classical As ociation ofNew England, William College. Joseph Roisman, Ph.D., Visiting A ociate Professor of Classics and of History "Oedipu and the Tragedy of Croesus," presented at Comparative Drama Conference, University ofFlorida / "The General Demosthenes

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F E B R U A R Y

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A ttending the Black History Month concert by Inner Strength , the Boston University gos­ pel choir, are]orge Cabezas '93 , Bronx, N . Y. , Aliza Hernandez '93 , Queens Village , N . Y . , and Pamela Washington ' 9 1 , Washington , D .C . , who holds Christian, son of Gaynelle Peebles '93 , Nashua , N . H . Construction of the Davis Gallery , the new wing of the Bixler Arc and Music Center, was partly completed in February 1 99 1 .

and the Art of Mil itary Surprise," pre en red at The Classical Assoc ia­ tion of New England, W i l l iams College / "The Battle of Tanagra and Some Related Issues," pre ented at the meeting of the Classical Asso­ ciation of the Atlantic rare , Georgetown University.

"Ripples in the Pond: Narrative· of Change," pre ented at the Seventh Annual National Conference on Peer Tutoring in Writing, at Pennsyl­ vania rate Univer i ty, and at the New England Writing Centers Association Spring Conference, Keene tate College, N . H .

Sonya 0. Rose, Ph.D., As ociate Profe sor of ociology

John Santos, Ph.D., A s i rant Profe o r o f Economics

" ' From Behind the Women's Petticoats': Factory Act Reform and the Politics of Motherhood in Britain, 1 870- 1 87 8,"] oumal of Historical Sociology / Review of Annie Phi acklea's Unpacking the Fashion Indus­ try, American ]ounwl of Sociology / " 'Mary Had a Little Loom': Gender and the Politics of Labor in N ineteenth-Century England," presented at Comparative Studie in ocial T ransfonnationsGraduate Colloquium, University of Mich igan / "Rhetoric, Experience and Trade Union Politics: The Corton Weavers of Lancashire, 1 850-- 1 990," Compara­ tive Srudie in Social Transformation Faculty eminar, University of M ichigan / " 'As Bad As the Men If Not Wor e': Gender and Labor Politic in Cotton Powerloom Weaving, Lancashire 1 878," presented at the American Historical Association Annual Meeting, New York City / " 'Let England Blush': Protective Labor Legislation in England, 1 830- 1 9 1 4," presented at the Conference on Protective Labor Legisla­ tion in Comparative Per pective, Stockholm, Sweden ( coauthor J ane Lewis ) .

Dianne F. Sadoff, M . A . '88, Ph.D., Professor o f Engli h "Gender and African-American Narrative," American Quarterly / "Hy teria, Psychoanalysi and Narrative," presented at the Interna­ tional Conference on Narrative, N ice, France. / Guggenheim Fellow,

1 990--9 1 . Ira Sadoff, M .A. '88, M .F.A . , Professor of English "Money," North American Review / "Get Well Soon," The Agni Review / "[ Join the Sparrow " and "Sparrow Air," Virginia Quarterly Review. / "The Bath," "Now," "As a Child," Sewanee Review I "Seurat," in George Plimpton, ed., The Paris Review Anthology / "On Ph ilip Levine's The Names of the Lost," in Christopher Buckley, ed. , The University of Michigan Under Discussion Series, 1 990 / Readings at The Bread Loaf School of English and Maine Writers and Publisher Alliance, the University of Maine, Augusta.

Jean Sanborn, Associate Professor of Engli h, Director of the Writers' Center "Opening up the Canon of Student Writing," workshop presented at the Wyoming Conference on English / "Power, Politics and Peda­ gogy at the Birth of the Academic E say," pre ented at the Conference on Power, Politic and Pedagogy, the University of New Hampshire I P22

"The Rise and Fall in the Monetary Returns to a College Educa­ tion, 1 96 - 1 987," pre ·ented at the meeting of the We tern Economic A sociarion.

Steven E. Saunders, Ph . D. , A si rant Profe or of Music

The Complete Works ofStephen Collins Foster, mirhs nian Institu­ tion Pres , 1 990 / Review of Michael Collin and Elise K. Kirk, eds., Opera and Vivaldi, The Eighteenth Century: A Current Bibliography. Richard C. Sewell, M.A., Adjunct As ociate Profe sor of Performing Arts Arti tic director and producer at The Theater at Monmouth:

Comedy of Errors , The Liar, King Lear, Desert Fire, Beauty and the Beast and The Musicians of Bremen. L. Simon, M.A. '88, Ph. D . , Jette Profes or of Art " an Adrian de a ave y la escultura en el Alto Arag6n ( I ),"

David

]acetania. Nikky-Guinder S i n gh , Ph. D . , Assistant Professor of Religion "Sundari: The Paradigm of Sikh Ethics," The Toronto South Asian Gobind ingh' Idea of Durga in Hi Poetry: The Unfathomable Woman a the Image of rhe Unfathomable Transcen­ dent One: A Further Contribution to URAM Sikh Studies," in] oumal of Ultinwte Reality and Meaning, Un iversity of Toronto Pre s, 1990 / "The Other World in Thi World: An Indian Interpretation of the Ya mamba," in]apanese Religions, Kyoto, 1990 / ReviewoNidya Dehej ia' Antal and the Path of Love, Dialogue and Alliance / Review of Jay G. Will iams's The Riddle of the Sphinx, Univer ity Pres of America / " ikh My ticism and the Feminine Dimension," presented at the Maine Women'sStudies Conference, Bowdoin College / "Somerset Maugham' The Raz:or's Edge : A Western Interpretation of the Katha Upani ha," presented ar the International Conference on Tran cendence and Immanence, Elon College / "Seminal Dimensions of ikh Mysticism," pre ented at the National Institute of Punjab tudies, New Delhi.

Review / "Guru

Dale J . Skrien, Ph.D., As ociate Professor of Mathematic and Com­ puter Science "A M u ltilevel Simulator at the Regi ter Tran fer Level for Use i.n

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M A R C H

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A

ssociate Professor of Physics Murray Campbell uses an oscilloscope to teach the role of capacitors in electronics in his introductory physics course . Campbell is noted both for his scholarship and for his winning style of teach­ ing-a trait he shares with other members of the Colby faculty. The College emphasizes the importance ofstrong instruction in liberal arts­ including humanities and physical and social sciences-for all students.

an Introductory Machine Organization Class," presented at the 22nd SIGCSE Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, San Antonio, Tex. ( coauthor John Hosack).

ings / " iege Leaves One Man Wounded," Kennebec / "At 90," Black Fly Review.

Donald B. Small, Ph.D., A sociate Profes or of Mathematics

Distinguished Teaching Professor of Economics "The Economics Major:Can & Should We Do Better Than a B- !", The American Economic Review (coauthors Robin Bartlett, W. Lee Hansen, Allen C. Kelley, Donald ] . McCloskey andJohn J . Siegfried) / "The Poverty Connection to Environmental Policy," Challenge / "Man­ aging the Transition: The Potential Role for Economic Policie ," in Jessica Tuchman Mathews, ed. , Preserving the Global Environment: The Challenge of Shared Leadership, W. W. Norton & Company, 1990 / "Harnessing the Power of the Market to Enhance Environmental Protection," The Senior Economist I "Economics," in Liberal Leaming and the Arts and Sciences Majors : Vol. 2 , Reports from the Fields, Associa­ tion of American Colleges, 1990 (coauthors Robin Bartlett, W. Lee Han en, Allen C. Kelley, Donald ]. McCloskey and john J . Siegfried) / "Comment on Smith and Russell," in Ernst R. Berndt and Jack E. Triplett, eds., Fifty Years of Economic Measurement: The Jubilee of the Conference on Research on Income and Wealth , University of Chicago Press for National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc., 1990 / "Eco­ nomic In truments for Environmental Regulation," in Dieter Helm and David Pearce , eds., Economic Policy Toward the Environment, Oxford Univer ity Press, 1990 / Selected as 1 990 Maine Professorofthe Year by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education, Washington, D.C. / "Reductions in Emissions: Command and Control or Market Based Mechanisms," presented at the International Conference on the Economy and the Environment in the 1990s, Neuchatal, Switzerland / "Enforcement Issues in Designing Police to Control Global Warming," OECD Conference on Global Warming, Paris, France / "Two Innova­ tions in Environmental Enforcement: Private Enforcement and the Structure of Penalties," presented at the annual meeting of the Euro­ pean Association of Environmental and Resource Economists Stockholm, Sweden / "The Economics of Private Environmental En � forcement," presented at the Conference on Innovations in Environ­ mental Policy, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Mass. (based on a paper coauthored with Wendy Naysnerski '90) / "The Structure of Penalties in Environmental Enforcement," presented at the Conference on Innovations in Environmental Policy, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Mass. (based on a paper coauthored with Kathy Segerson) / "Marketplace Incentives for Sus­ tainable Development," presented at John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University / "International Examples of Eco­ nomic Incentive Policies That Work," presented at Coolidge Center

Directed NSF- ponsored CAS Workshop, the University of Den­ ver / "Computer Algebra Systems in the Preparation of Teachers," presented at the Third Annual International Conference on the Use of Technology in Collegiate Mathematics, Ohio State University / "Com­ puter Algebra Systems and their Impact on Teaching," presented at the MAA Northeastern Section Meeting, Framingham State College / "Computer Algebra Systems in High School Teaching," workshop presented at the Problem Solving in Mathematics and Science Confer­ ence sponsored by the Maine Department of Education / "Faculty Development Programs in the U e of Computer Algebra Systems as Teaching Tools," presented at the Joint Mathematics Meetings, San Francisco, Calif. / Calculus Reform, five-day short course presented at MAA's Rocky Mountain Section / Explorations in Calculus with a Com­ puter Algebra System, McGraw-Hill Publishing Co., 1990 (coauthor John Hosack) / "Calculus Reform-Laboratories-CAS ," MAANotes.

Wayne L. Smith, M .A. '83, Ph.D., Professor of Chemi try "Effect of Polyfluorination on Ring Inversion Barriers for Cyclooctatetraenes. Synthesis of Heptafluorocycloocra- 1 ,3 , 5 , 7 tetraenyl, Hexafluorocycloocta- 1 ,3 , 5 , 7-tetraenediyl, Heptafluoro­ tricyclo [ 4 . 2 . 0 . 0 2 ,S J o c t a - 3 , 7 - d ie n y l , and H ex afluorotricyclo­ [4.2.0.0 2 . S Jocta-3,7-dienediyl Transition-Metal Compounds. Crystal and Molecular Structures of [Fe(h-C5Rs ) ( h L heptafluorocycloocra­ l ,3 ,5,7-tetraenyl )(CO)z ] (R = H, Me), [[Fe(h-C5 H 5 ) (CO)zh( m 2 ( l h,5h)-hexafluorocycloocta- l , 3 , 5 , 7-tetraenediyl )), and [Mn( (3h)­ 5 heptafluorotricyclo[4.2.0.02 , Jocta-3,7-dienyl) (C0)5J , Organometa1lics (coauthors R.P. Hughes, R.T. Carl, S.J . Doig, R.C. Hemond, D.E. Samkoff, LC. Stewart, R.E. Davis, K.D. Holland, P.Dickens and R.P. Kashyap) / "Synthesis, Structures, and Conformational Dynamics of Dicobalt Complexe Con t a i n i ng the H ex afluorod idehydro­ cyclooctatetraene (Hexafl uorocycloocta-3 ,5, 7 -trien- 1 -yne) ligand. Crystal and Molecular Structures of [(Co(L)(C0 ) 2 )z (m 2 - 0 h,2h)­ CaF6) ] ( L = CO, PPh3, PPhMe2, PMe3 ) , Organometallics ( coauthors R.P. Hughes, S.J. Doig, R.C. Hemond, R.E. Davis, S.M. Gadol and K.D. Holland) .

Linda Tatelbaum, Ph.D., Assistant Professor o f English

"Avoiding the Rat Race," in The Harrowsmith Country Life Reader, Camden House Publishers, 1990 / "Moebius Poem," Pattern Gather-

The President's Report 1 990-9 1

Thomas H. Tietenberg, M.A. '84., Ph.D., Christian A. Johnson

P23


M A R C H

' 9 1

C oach Richard Whitmore leads Clim Wil­ liams ' 9 1 , Pittsfield, Maine , Todd Alexander '92 , War.erville , Maine, anJChristo/Jher Lahey ' 9 1 , Old Town , Maine , in cele/n-ating the basketball team 's 97-63 win over Babson and the squad's second straight ECAC title. Re­ hearsing for the Colby Symphony Orchestra concert in March are Hilda Westervelt '92 , Waterville, Maine , and Portia Walker ' 9 1 , Ellsworth , Maine . Kevin Whitmore ' 9 1 , Waterville , Maine, and Elizabeth Cimino '92 , Portland , Maine, display their ECAC Tour­ nament Most Valuable Player plaque s . Whitmore scored 25 points andpulled down 1 2 rebounds in the title game and was a Second­ Team All-America selection. Cimino scored 33 points in the women's final and also ln-oke Colby's single-season scoring mark with 5 1 7.

Se minar on Su rainable Development, Merriam Hill, N . H . / "Differen­ tial Environmental Regulation: The Effect on Electric Utility Capital Tumover and Em is ion . " pre ented at the Am rican Economics As o­ ciation Meetings, Wa hington, D.C. / "Balancing Environmental Pro­ tection and Global Economic lntere t ," presented at New York U ni­ versity Law School /Member of the U . S . delegation on a joint U .S./ Soviet Project on Environmental ecurity for the Oceans, Moscow / Discus ant, session on The Economics of Sustainability at the Ameri­ can Economic A ociation Convention, Washington, D.C. I Con­ tributor, Project 88-Round II , Incentives for Action: Designing Market­ Based Environmental Strategies, a pub Iic pol icy study ponsored by Senator Tim Wirth and Senator John Heinz.

James L.A. Webb, Jr., Ph. D . , Assistant Professor of H i toty

The Economies of Asia and Africa in the Inter-War Period, African Studies Review / "Mauritanian M igrations: The Evolution of the S uthwe rem Desert Frontier, 1 5 00- 1 7 00 ," panel Review of Ian Brown, ed . ,

on Early Sahelian History, at the annual meeting of the African Studies As ociation, Baltimore, Md. / Panel on Money in African Hi tory, at the annual meeting of the African Studies Association, Baltimore, Md.

Adam M. Weisberger, Ph. D., A i tant Profe sor of Sociology Review of Paul E. Zopf, Jr.' American Women in Poverty, Social Forces / "In Memoriam Ernst Toller," pre ented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological A ociation, Cincinnati, Ohio / Fulbright J unior Re earch Award for Federal Republic of Germany.

Christine M. Wentzel, M . A . , Adjunct A ociate Professor of Perform­ ing Art ( Dance) Maine Drama Council Weekend Workshops on Improvisation, presented to performing arts high school students at Skowhegan Re­ gional High chool / Artist-in-re idence to S.A.D. n=54, January 1 990.

Maureen C. Whalen, Ph.D., Clare Boothe Luce Assistant Professor of Biology "Ident ification of Pseudomonas syringae pathogens of Arabidopsis and a Bacterial Locus Determining A virulence on Both Arabidopsis and Soybean," The Plant Cell (coauthor R.W. Innes, A.F. Bent and B.J . Sta kawicz) I "Molecular Basis of Host Range and Specificity in Two Bacterial Pathogens of Tomato," in A.B. Bennett and S.D. O'Neill, ed . , Horticultural Biotechnology, Wiley-Liss, lnc., 1 990 (coauthor B.J . Staskawicz) / "Effects of Mechanical Impedance on Root Develop­ me nt," in J . E. Box and LC. Hammond, eds., Rhizoshpere Dynamics, Westview Press, Inc., 1 990 (coauthor L.J. Feldman ) / "Re istance to Two Bacterial Pathogen of Tomato," presented at the Fifth lntemaP24

rional ymposium of the Molecular Genetics of Plant-microbe Interac­ tion , Interlaken, Switzerland (coauthors A.Toms '92 , J. Raikes '90, F. Carland, D. Dahlbeck and B.J. Staskawicz) / "Characterizarion ofavrRxv: I ts Role in Re i ranee of Tomato to Xanthomonas campestris pv.vesicatoria," presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Phytopathological Society, St. Loui , Mo. (coauthors P. Antall '90, A. Toms '92, M. E. Hei ke ll '92, S. Conover, F. Carland, D. Dahlbeck and B.J . taskawicz) / "Resi tance in Tomatoagainst Xanrhomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria: Studies of the Avirulence Gene avrRxv. avr/hrp," pre­ sented at the Annual Meeting of the American Phytopathological Society, Sr. Louis, Mo. / National cience Foundation Re earch Grant.

Dexter C. Whittinghill Ill, Ph.D., A istant Profes or of Mathematics "Macinto h Software and the I ntroductory tatistics Course," pre ented at the Statistical oftware Sympo ium, Bab on College / "Optimality and Robustness to the Unavailabil ity of Observations in Block Designs," presented at the Joint Stati tical Meeting of the American Stati tical As ociation, EN AR, WNAR, & IMS, Atlanta, Ga. / "Optimality and Robu mess to the Unavailability of Blocks in Block De ign ,"]oumal of the Royal Statistical Society (coauthor Dulal K. Bhau mik ).

Lindsay B. Wilson, Ph.D., A sistant Profes or of History "Reflections on Teaching: Incorporating Aspects of the History of Medicine into the Western Civllization Survey," presented at the Center for the Study of Society and Medicine, College of Physician and Surgeons, Columbia University / "The Sirven Affair and Beyond: The Development of Medical J urisprudence in Eighteenth-Century France," pre ented at the annual meeting of the Society for French Historical Studies, Vancouver, B.C.

W. Herbert Wilson, Jr., Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Biology "The Foraging Ecology of M igratory Shorebirds in Marine Soft­ sediment Communities: The Effects of Episodic Predation on Prey Population ," pre ented at the meeting of tl1e American Society of Zoologists, San Antonio, Tex. / "The Effect of M igratory Shorebird Predation on Prey Abundance at Gray Harbor, Washington," preented at the meeting of the American Ornithologists Union, Montreal, Ont. Edward H. Yeterian, M.A. '90, Ph.D., Profe sor of Psychology "Corticothalamic Connections of the Superior Temporal Sulcus in Rhesus Monkeys," Experimental Brain Research (coauthor D.N. Pandya).

The President's Report 1 990-91


M A R C H

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C

A Selection of Student Achievements and Publications Watson Fellow ( 1 99 1 -92 )

of Zoologi t , San Antonio, Tex. (coauthor Professor Greenwood ).

Heather L . Hartshorn '9 1 , Government

Renee M. Blanchard '9 1 , Chemi try

I rael, Northern Ireland and U . .S.R. Conflict Resolution.

Senior Scholars Peter M. AntalI '9 1 , Biology, Che i try: Biochemistry

Molecular Genetic Analysis of the Interaction between the Bacterial Pathogen Xanthamonas campestris pv. vesicatoria and the Tornate Plant. Al o pre ented at the 1 9th Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Conference on Undergraduate Re earch in Biology. Todd L. Astor '9 1 , Chemi try: Biochemi try, Biology

The Effects ofTreating Females with Exogenou Gonadotropins on the Ultra rructure of Mou e Oocytes and Embryos. Al o pre ented at the 1 9th Annual Colby-Bate -Bowdoin Conference on Under­ graduate Re earch in Biology. Tristram C. Hussey '9 1 , Anthropology

Pollen Analysi of the Sepphoris Archaeological Site, Beit Natofa Valley, Lower Galilee, I rael. Magda L. Lacharite '9 1 , East A ian Studies

Bringing Japanese Manufacturing Systems to America: The Feasibility of Implementing Just-in-Time Production in the United State . Erika L. Mailman '9 1 , English

"Spatial and Temporal Distribution of Hydrogen Peroxide in the Equatorial Pacific Ocean," pre ented at the meeting of the American Geophysical ociety and publi hed in Transacnons of the American Geophysical Society (coauthor Professor King). Seth J . Canter '9 1 , Biology: Envirnnmental Science Concentration

"Characteri tics and Food Habits of an Invading Population of European Rabbits in High-elevation Shrubland of Haleakala Na­ tional Park," presented at the 1 9th Annual Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Conference on Undergraduate Re earch in Biology. Aditya Dayal '9 1 , Physi , Mathematic : Computer Science Con­ centration "Modelling the WJ(OH) Cocoon," presented at the NECU E Meeting for A tronomy Research Students at Mount Holyoke Col­ lege (coauthors Professor M. F. Campbell, H. M . Butner, D. F. Le ter, P. M . Harvey and A. T. Pickering '85 ) . Lynne Kathleen Garrity '9 1 , Biology

"Di chargeofNematocy ts I olated from Aeolid Nudibranchs," Hydrobiologia ( in press) (coauthor Professor Greenwood) . Travis R. Kline '9 1 , Biology: Environmental cience Concentra­ tion, Michael J. Shaugnessy, Jr. '9 1 , Biology: Environmental Sci­ ence Concentration, Geoffrey C. Stewart '9 1 , Biology: Environ­

Susan M. Willis '9 1 , Engli h

mental Science Concentration "A Clas ification of Northeastern Pearlands: Their Character­ i tics and Components," presented at the 1 9th Annual Colby-Bate Bowdoin Conference on Undergraduate Re earch in Biology.

Other Scholarly Achievement s

Deborah Lutton '9 1 , Performing Arts, An History

Caught Under the Sky: Poem . Adrienne Rich: The Emergence of a Female Poetic Voice.

Melissa L. Ackerly '9 1 , Biology

"Detection of Calcium-binding Proteins from Nematocy t of the Sea Anemone Metridium senile," pre ented at the 1 9th Annual Col y-Bate -Bowdoin Conference on Undergraduate Research in Biology. 45 "Calcium-binding Proteins of Nematocy t Located by ca­ overlay," presented at the annual meeting of the American Society

The President's Report 1 990-9 1

Reading the Book, enior project designed, choreographed and co turned by the author. J ulie L. Moran '9 1 , Biology

"The Effects of Electromagneti m on the Distribution of Leucocyte in Red- potted Newt , Notophthalmus viridescens," pre­ emed at the 1 9th Annual Maine Biological and Medical ciences ympo ium. P25


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Three faculty members were granted tenure in

1 99 1 : Associate Professor ofGovernment Ken­ neth A. Rodman heads the International Stud­ ies program; Dana fellow Tamae K. Prindle was promoted to associate professor of Japa­ nese; Daniel H. Cohen ' 75 , who has taught at Colby since 1 983 , was promoted to associate professor of philosophy . Colby 's lacrosse team overpowered Bridgewater State , 1 6- 2 , as Cap­ tain Margaret Mauran ' 9 1 , Providence, R . I . , continued her dominating play . A week earlier against Bowdoin, Mauran became Colby 's all­ time scoring leader with 1 67 goals and 50 assists. The team finished the season at 7-5 . Waterville native Senator George Mitchell speaks in Lorimer Chapel at the Senator George Mitchell Policy Forum on Global Warming. The event also featured Thomas E . Lovejoy of the Smithsonian Institution and Joan Martin Brown of the United Nations Environment Board.

Melinda C. Rohrman '9 1 , Psychology

"Saints, Scientists and Sex Differences: An Historical View of Western Psychology and Its Treatment of Gender Differences," presented at the meeting of the Maine P ychological A sociation, Portland, Maine. Michael T. Rooney '9 1 , Chemistry, and Robert N. Sibley '92 , Chemistry "A Continuous Flow Trace Metal Preconcentration System for Inductively Coupled Plasma Atomic Emission Spectroscopy," re­ search project with Professor King. Christopher N. Sabbey '93 , Physics, Mathematics

"Star Formation in W3," presented at the N ECUSE Meeting for Astronomy Research Students at Mount Holyoke College. Also presented as a poster in the Zone 1 Meeting of the Society of Physic Students at Bates College and at the Maine Physics Professors Meeting at the University of Maine at Orono (coauthors Professor Campbell, P. M. Harvey, D. F. Lester, H. M. Butner, N. J. Evans, L. G. Mundy and A. T. Pickering '85 )

"Chloride Ion Effects on Reactions Catalyzed by Chloro­ peroxidase," with Professor D. Libby. Lisa L. Churchill '92 , Geology: Biology

"Pleistocene Environments of Central Interior Alaska," with Professor Robert Nelson. Jill B. Collett '92, Economics, and Calbraith R. Wheaton '92 ,

Economics "Structural Propertie of the Colby Quarterly Econometric Model," with Professor Donihue. Heather M. Dowds '93 , Biology: Environmental Science Concen­

tration "Reproductive Costs in the Orchid Platanthera blephariglottis," with Professor Firmage. Laurie J. Girard '93 , Biology

"Determining the Function of Small RNAs in E. coli," with Professor Bourgaize. Cameron E. Howe '92, Biology: Environmental Science Concentra-

Samuel P. Sharnik '9 1 , English

tion

"This Stuff Is Getting Deep," film/documentary on recycling and the environment, Science and Technology Studies Program.

"The Impact of Exotic Species on the Native Fauna of the Hawaiian Islands," with Professor Cole.

Michael J. Shaughnessy, Jr. '9 1 , Biology: Environmental Science

Mary Beth Heiskell '92 , Biology: Environmental Science Concen­ tration, and Angela M. Toms '92, Biology

Concentration "Coral Reef Destruction in Florida's Coastal Waters: The MacArthur Project-a Case Study," presented at the 1 9th Annual Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Conference on Undergraduate Research in Biology.

Annual Senior Art Exhibit Ronald J. Barberan, Thomas J. Brown, Jr., Bradley A. Comisar, Paul L. Diamond, C. Evan Metcalf, Jr., George B. Moore, Kerry J. Morgan, Stacy A. Porath, Hilary G. Robbins, Gregory C. Smith.

1 99 1 Summer Research Assistants Robb A. Aldrich '94, Chemistry

"Determination of Hydrogen Peroxide in Seawater at Picomolar Concentrations," with Professor King. Tina M. Beachy '93, Chemistry, and Michael L. Genco '93,

Chemistry: Biochemistry P26

"Molecular Genetics of Disease Resistance in Tomato against Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria," with Professor Whalen.

Traci J. Marquis '92 , Biology

"The Biochemistry of Cnidae," with Professor Greenwood. Gunnar T. Proppe '92 , Music

"Composer Toolbox," with Professors Skrien and Hallstrom. Katherine A. Smith '92, Economics, English

"Should Monetary Policy Be Fixed or Fluctuate at the Discre­ tion of the Federal Reserve ?", with Professor Robinson. Crawford J. Strunk '93, Classics, Music

"Sacred Music at the Hapsburg Court of Ferdinand I I ," with Professor Saunders. Theodore von Wallmenich '92, Biology: Environmental Science

Concentration "The Effects ofCryopreservation on the Ultra tructure ofMouse Sperm," with Professor Champlin. The President's Report 1 990-9 1


A P R I L

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Kevin Roth tem '94

A P P E N D I X

D

College Prizes 1 9 9 1 Senior Marshal Cherlyn J . Neely and Jessica R. Pelon

Phi Beta Kappa Elected in Senior Year Elizabeth A. Ackroyd Robert A. Bock Sarah T. Brown Thomas J. Brown, J r. Jeffrey S. Bryant Dean S. Burnell Katharine C. Button A llen R. Carl on teven C. Collier Bradley A. Comisar Aditya Dayal Kimberley L. Derringron David M. Descoteaux Lesley J. Eydenberg G. Hunt Fisher M ichael W. Freret Lynne K. Garrity Marc J. Gilbertson Chri tine M. Goulding Su anna E. Gouw Robert E. Graml ich ) . Jeremy M . Grant George S. Hallenbeck Chri tine M. Hor t Tri tram C. Hu sey Jean M. Jacob Ernie M . Long Stephen T. Loynd The President's Report 1 990-9 1

Matthew F. Mackey Christine Macone Erika L. Mailman Richard P. Main Jane M. Maloney Terence R. McAllister Richard P. McCann Gretchen M. McCarey Katharine K. Merriman Cherlyn J. Neely Kathleen L. O'Neill Jes ica R. Pelon Beth W. Perry Linda G. Rossignol Katherine L. Roth Mahua Sarkar John A. ingleton Tamar C. Snyder Walter H. towel! I I I Ronald B. Thomp on Bonnie C. Van Der Sluys Juliette N. Varga David A. Vincent Clint B. Walker Amy E. Walter Andrew F. Williams A lan G . Yuod nukis Members of the Class of 1 992 elected as juniors (March

1 991) Jason 0. N ixon Karen G . anroro Hilda E. Westervelt

General Prizes Awarded to enior demonstrat足 ing strong qualitie of character and motivation, recognition by their contemporaries, superior academic performance and an expressed interest in a bu ines career. Class of 1 99 2: Jeffrey Chad Brown, Donna Lynn Burbank, Augu t Bradley Cenname, Curtis David Stevenson

George F. Baker Scholarship

Bixler Scholarship Awarded annually tO tap-ranking tudents, known as Bixler Scholars, in recognition of their academic achieve足 ments. The amount of each scholarship, which is not announced, is determined by need. Class of 1 99 1 : Robert Andrew Bock, Katharine Carroll Button, Steven Charle Collier, George Seward Hallenbeck, Jean Marie Jacob, Matthew Fau t Mackey, Richard Peter Main, Cherlyn Jane Neely, Je lea Rowland Pelon, Clint Byron Walker, Alan Greg Yuodsnukis; Class of 1 99 2 : Chantal Nathalie Begin, August Bradley Cenname, Jason Oliver N ixon, Alexandria Jennifer Peary, Michele Lee Rowell, Karen Grace anroro, Ashley N ichols Weld, H ilda Elizabeth Westervelt; Class of 1 99 3 : Kri Ann Balser, Tina Marie Beachy, Diane Decker, Kristine Anne Dema o, Daniel Benjamin Harris, Chri ropher Paul lannini, Henry Warren Kelly I I , Jennifer Anne Larsen, Brittany Elaine Ray, Christopher Norman Sabbey, Amy Loui e tickney Condon Medal Gift of the late Randall J. Condon, Cla of 1 886, awarded tO the enior who, by vote of c la smates and approval of the faculty, is deemed "t0 have exhibited the finest qualitie ofcitizenship and has made the mo t significant contribution tO the development of college l ife." Amy Love Davi '9 1

Available to qualified opho足 more , j uniors and eniors. The purpo e of these scholarship i to identify and encourage tudents of good character with trong aca足 demic backgrounds who have given evidence of potential leadership. Class of 1 99 1 : Dean tanron Burnell, Chri tine Marie Goulding, Ernie Michael Long, Stephen Thomas Loynd, Erika Lynn Mailman, Katharine Kilvert Merriman, Beth Wil on Perry, Mahua arkar, Charles A. Dana Scholarship

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Kristian Boynton '92 , Pembroke , Mass . , entertained fellow students on a rainy Earth Day in April. A 5k Run for Recycling and an educational fair on environmental issues rounded out the day . On a sunnier day , ex足 change student Sylvine Baumeister, Selestat, France , and John Cook ' 9 2 , Burlington , Conn. , enjoyed the coming of spring. Walter Henry Stowell Ill, Amy Elizabeth Walter, Andrew Fox Will iams; Class of 1 99 2 : Craig Harvey Appelbaum, Peter James Camey, Michelle Lee Corrigan, Pika Ghosh, Anne Kathryn Phipps, Margaret Annette Russell, Erika J uall Sayewich; Class of 1 99 3 : Sibel Akbay, Ari Maurice Dorros, Maria M ikyong Kim, Leif]ohn Merryfield, Barrett Leete Smith, Andrea Lynne Walker, Kristin Jane Winkler Arthur Galen Eustis, J r., Prize Awarded to a member of the junior class who, as an adviser to first-year students or as a member of the residence hall staff, has exhibited qualitie of integrity, leader足 ship, warmth of personality and concern for others. Brooke Danielle Coleman '92 , Kristin Lynn Short '92

Awards are made to the first-year male and female student who, "by their academic performance, the respect they command from their clas mates, and the constructive contribu足 tion they have made to life on the campus, have hown the character and ideals mo t likely to benefit society." Michael Jacob Antoniello '94, Tara Elizabeth Estra '94

Lelia M. Forster Prize

Presented by the B'nai B'rith H illel Foundations for outstanding leadership. Stephanie Beth Pulver '93

Hillel Honor Award

Lieutenant J ohn Parker Holden II Award

For student who exemplify the ideals of citizenship, responsibility, integrity and loy足 alty. Ruben Aquino Santiago '93 Given by the alumni ecretary and the dean of students to an outstanding junior man who exemplifies the qualities of friendship, individualism and leadership. David Shane Jorgensen '92

Kim Miller Memorial Prize

Given to a junior woman who, by her sense of purpose and service, has made significant contributions to the academic and social life of the campus. Jennifer Grace Alfond '92, Laura Lynn Weymouth '92 Lorraine Morel Memorial Award

Given to a woman with outstanding qualities. Catherine Will iamson Giles ' 9 1

The Jacquelyn R. Nunez Award

Awarded by the dean of Ninetta M . Runnals Scholarship students to an undergraduate woman for scholastic performance, well-defined educational objectives and community participation. Amy Fang '92 Student Association Service Awards

P2 8

Given by the Student

Government Assoc iation for service to the College for contributions made quietly and unobtru ively. Chri Stuart Flint '92, Nancy Marie Richards '9 3 , Tullio Nieman (staff) Given to the junior man who has "willingly assisted his classmates, promoted the be t inrerest of the College and maintained a superior academic average." Jerome Michael Hermsen, Jr. '92, David Robert Roderick, Jr. '92

Philip W. Tirabassi Memorial Award

Departmental Prizes James } . Harris Prizes (administrative cience)

Gary Wayne Ander-

on, Jr. '92, Debra Marie Stinchfield '92 Kimberly Lynn Derrington '9 1 , Gretchen Marie McCarey '9 1 , Tracy Jean Mungeam '9 1

Ernest L. Parsons Prizes in Administrative Science

Marjorie D. Bither Award (athletic )

Kimberly Lynn Derrington

'9 1

Donald P. Lake Award (athletic )

Marc John Gilbertson '9 1

Ellsworth W. Millett Award (athletics) '9 1 ,

Debra Ann MacWalter Sally Elizabeth White '9 1 , Kevin Martin Whitmore '9 1

N o rman R. W h i te A ward ( a t h l e t i c ) Cowperthwait '9 1 , Eric Samuel Russman '9 1

Katharine Budd

Patty Valavanis Trophy Award ( athletics)

Kimberley Lynn

Derrington ' 9 1 Webster Chester Biology Prize

Brian D. Monks ' 9 2 , Gretchen

Leigh Fisher '9 1 Alan Samuel Coit Biology Prize

Matthew Faust Mackey '9 1 ,

Juliette Nicole Varga '9 1 Thomas W. Easton Prize (biology)

Timothy Kyle Felt ' 9 1

Samuel R. Feldman Award for Premedical Studies

Bonnie Carol

Van Der Sluys '9 1 Mark Lederman Prize for Study of Medicine

Galen Hunt Fi her

'9 1

Mark Lederman Scholarship(s) in Biology '92,

Daniel Aaron Starr

Thomas Anthony Capozza '92

The President's Report

1 990-9 1


M A Y

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Receiving honorary degrees at Commence­ ment were: (front) Constance Baker Motley , Doctor of Laws; Margaret Chase Smith, Doc­ tor of Laws; Ann Beattie , Doctor of Letters; (back) H. Ridgely Bullock '55 , Doctor of Laws; Thomas ] . Watson , Jr . , Doctor of Humane Letters; Victor A . McKusick, Doc­ tor of Science. President Cotter is at right. Renee Michele Blanchard

American Institute of Chemists Award '9 1

Undergraduate Award in Analytical Chemistry Provencal '92 John B. Foster Memorial Prize in Classics Grant '9 1 Breckenridge Prize (economic )

David Paul

John Jeremy Martin

Je ica Rowland Pelon '9 1

Robert W. Pullen Prize (economics) '9 1

Katharine Kilvert Merriman

Christian Johnson Prizes (econom1c ) Colleen Mary Halleck '9 1

Willi Todd Leadley '9 1 ,

Andrew Blodgett Award ( performing arts)

Rebecca Rae Pea e '91

Gro sman '9 1 , David Christopher Leavy '92 William J . Wilkinson/Paul A. Fullam Prize (history) Dorogi '92

William J. Wilkinson Prize (history) Dean Stanton Burnell '9 1 , Christine Marie Goulding '9 1 , Katherine Louise Roth '9 1 , David Andrew Vincent '9 1 Harrington Putnam Prizes in German Craig Harvey Appelbaum '92 , Robert Andrew Bock '9 1 , Chri tine Marie Goulding '9 1 , Ingrid Esther Kristan '94

John Jeremy Martin Grant '9 1 ,

Colby College Chorale Award Portia Sterling Walker '9 1

Robert Edward Gramlich '9 1

Colby College Jazz Band Award

Mary L. Carver Poetry Prize Gregory loui long '92 , Christina Gwenn Thomp on '9 1 , Erika Lynn Mailman '9 1

Colby College Collegium Musicum Award Gouws '9 1 , Kimberly Marie Ereminas '92

Louise Coburn Prize Speaking Contest First Prize: Mark Denzer Radcliff '92 Second Prize: David Andrew Vincent '92 Third Prize: Thoma William Reidy '93

Ermanno Comparetti Prize (music)

Solomon Gallert Prize for Excellence in English '9 1

Alma Morrissette Award (music)

Hannibal Hamlin Prize Speaking Contest For First-year Students

First Prize: Jennifer I abel Rose Walker '94 Second Prize: Hung goc Dui '94, David Clayton Demeritt '94, Michael Edward Koester '94

Elmira Nelson Jones Prize for Creative Writing Christine lee Poolo '9 1 , KatherineAngela Rynearson '92 , Andrealynne Prochniak '9 1 Katherine Rogers Murphy Prize for Original Poetry Paul laninni '93 Geology Alumni Award

Chri topher

Carol Diane Rea '91

F. Harold Dubord Prize in Political Science O'Neill '9 1 Laurie Peterson Memorial Prize in Government

The President's Report 1 990-9 1

Kathleen Lucy Andrew I aac

Wind Ensemble Award

Sarah

Susanna Elizabeth ewdl Hewitt '9 1

Monise Rene Reed '9 1

Monise Rene Reed '9 1

Symphony Orchestra Award

Annie De Maria

Louis Charles

Sarah Newell Hewitt '91

John Alden Clark Essay Prize in Philosophy and Religion Fox William '9 1 The Religion Prize

Andrew

Alan Greg Yuodsnukis '9 1

Stephen Coburn Pepper Prize in Philosophy '9 1 , Andrew Fox William '9 1 William A. Rogers Prize in Physics amir Raj Shre tha '92 Paul Perez Psychology Award

Campbell Douglas Field '9 1 ,

George Seward Hallenbeck '9 1

For Excellence in Anthropology Richard Peter Main '9 1 For Excellence in Sociology '9 1

Richard Peter Main

Tristram Coffin Hussey '9 1 ,

Beth Wilson Perry '9 1 , Mahua Sarkar

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M A Y

' 9 1

An smiles at the end of the road to the bachelor of arts degree are Bonnie Van Der Sluys ' 9 1 , Trumbull, Conn . , and Adolfo Vaa! Neto ' 9 1 , Dorchester, Mass. President Cotter and Dean of the College Earl Smith were in on the Com­ mencement surprise , but not until this moment did retiring chair of the Board of Trustees H . Ridgely Bullock '55 realize he'd received an honorary doctor of laws degree .

A P P E N D I X

E

A Selection of Events 1 99 0- 1 99 1 Lectures Dana-Bixler Convocation "The U e and Misu e of Theoretical Models in Biology," Maureen Whalen, Clare Boothe Luce Assistant Professor of Biology, Colby Thirty-eighth Lovejoy Convocation columnist, The Washington Post

David S. Broder, political

The Kingsley Birge Memorial Lecture "Looking at Looking: Formulating a Critical Imagination," Dr. Charle Suchar, chair, department of ociology, DePaul University The Grossman Economics Professorship Lecture "Our Tax System Isn't Fair. Let's Do Something about It," Jan Hogendorn, Grossman Professor of Economics, Colby Phi Beta Kappa Lecture "Krakatau 1 88 3 : Chaos and Global Change," Richard S. Fiske, research geologist and volcanologist, the Smithsonian Institution Clara M. Southworth Lecture "Whimsey, Trolls and the Skewing of Land cape Art," John Stilgoe, Harvard University

"A Vi itor Christian A. Johnson Distinguished Lecture Series in the Soviet Union," Allan Meltzer, John M. Olin Professor of Political Economy and Public Policy, Carnegie-Mellon Univer ity The Annual Lipman Lecture Program "Back from the USSR: Bringing Yiddish Books to Baltic Jews," Aaron Lansky, direcror of the National Yiddi h Book Center The Ralph J. Bunche Distinguished Lecture "Blues on the Page: The Emergence of the Blues Poem in African-American Poetry," Robert Stepro, professor of African-American literature and studies, Yale Universiry

"A Living H istory of the Civil Rights Movement," James Farmer, founder of CORE Senator George M itchell Policy Forum on Global Warming, with Thomas E. Lovejoy of the Smithsonian Institution and Joan Martin Brown of the United Nations Environment Board P30

Pi Sigma Alpha Lecture "[ lands of Repression in a Sea of Freedom," Christian Potholm, Bowdoin College One Hundred and Seventieth Commencement Thomas J . Wat on, Jr., indu trialist, philanthropist, global leader Other Lectures "Nineteenth-Century Australian Women Writers," Susan Martin, Au rralian Fulbright Scholar / "An Anthropologist Looks at Big Science in Japan: Gender, Race and Class in Japanese Science Policy," Sharon Traweek, department of anthropology, Rice Univerity / "Reforms in Japanese Education," James Shields, department of social and psychological foundations, The Ciry College, City Uni­ ver ity ofNew York/ "Educational Reform in China," Bruce Reynolds, department of economics, Union College / "Perestroika in Educa­ tion: China, Japan and the U.S.S.R.," Gregory Guroff, deputy coor­ dinator, Pre ident's U.S.-Soviet Exchange Initiative, United tates Information Society / "Original or Reproduction in an Age of Appropriation," Garo Antresian, artist and teacher / "The Religious Use of Hallucinogens in the Life ofShamen in Napa!," Guenter Ro e, profe sor of p ychobiology, Bowdoin College /"Political Ergonomics: Democracy and Technology Design," Langdon Winner, science and technology studies, Rensselaer Institute / "Some Smell Sex Scents," Charle J. Wysocki, staff cientist, Moneil Chemical Senses Center / 'The Irish World View Today," John Murphy, Univer ity College Cork / "The Design of Small Molecule Modulators of Signal Trans­ duction," Marc d' Alarcao, department of chemistry, Tufts Univer ity / "[ Came, I Saw, I Conga'd: The Experience of Cuban-American Literature," Gustavo Perez-Firmat, professor of romance tudies and literature, Duke University / "Human Rights vs. Women' Rights? International Economic Development and the Law," Isabel Marcus / "Conrad Alone," John Halperin, department ofEngli h, Vanderbilt University /"Can We Watch Proteins at Work?", Thoma Pochapsky, department of chemistry, Brandeis Universiry / "The Case of the Disappearing Woman: Gender and Medical Terminology, 1 8801 950," Diana Long, University of Southern Maine / "Management Relations in Eastern Europe," Mirko Bunc, the University of Ma a­ chusetts at Amherst / "The La t Wilderne : The Arctic National

The President's Report

1 990-9 1


J U N E

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D

uring one of the warmest, most pleasant reunion weekends in recent memory , Evelyn Kellett '26 and Princess lead the CUt.ss of' 26 in the Parade ofClasses . Outdoor activities , from a lobster bake to impromptu softball games and a Fun Run, abounded over the weekend, and classmates also caught up with each other at dances and class dinners . The Class of 1 95 1 (right) shares its unique perspective .

Wildlife Refuge," Riki Ott '76, habitat committee, United Fishermen · of Alaska / "Race, Class and Social Isolation in the Inner-city Ghetto," William Julius Wilson, profe sor of sociology, the Univer­ sity of Chicago / "Trace-level Chlorinated Organic Compounds in Drinking Water: An Analytical Chemistry Detective Story," Peter Uden, department of chemistry, the University of Massachusetts at Amher t / "The Reality of Child Sexual Abu e," Gayle Woodsum, founder and director of Looking Up / "Forest Restoration: N itrogen­ fixing Trees and Bacterial Symbiotonts," David Benson, University of Connecticut / "Developing a Television Network for Scientists," Gary Welz, pre ident, Science Television Company, New York / "The Story Behind 'Black-on-Black' Violence in South Africa," J ulie Frederickse, former public radio corre pondent in South Africa and currently with the Popular History Trust of South Africa / "United Germany: Problems and Per pectives," Walter J. Gerhardt, consul general of the Federal Republic of Germany / "The Representation of the Maternal Breast in 1 9th-Century Russian Literature," Jane Costlow, Bates College / "In Sight into Optical Detection of Trace Explo ions in Ground Water Using Fiber Optics," Rudolph Seitz, department of chemistry, University of New Hampshire / "Conserva­ tion of Maine' Critical Areas and Endangered Plants," Hank Tyler, director of Critical Areas Program, State Planning Office / "The Changing Role of the United States Government in the Develop­ ment of Computing, 1 943-1 990," Arthur L. N orberg, director, Charles Babbage In titute for the H istory of lnformation Processing, University of Minnesota / "New Atomic Emission Sources for the Direct Elemental Analysis of Refractory Solids," J oel Goldberg, department of chemistry, University of Vermont / "Clumps within Canopies: Hydrodynamics and the Ecology of Spacing," Amy John­ son, Bowdoin College / "Poverty and Realignment," Larry Mead, professor of political cience, New York University / A debate on welfare and poverty with Deanna Pierce of Wider Opportunity for Women and Profe or Larry Mead / "How Can You Help Someone You Know Who Has a Drug and/or Alcohol Problem?" and "The Effects of Marijuana," William Clark, medical director of the Addic­ tion Resource Center, Bath, Maine / "Dealing with Drug and Alcohol Abuse," Richard J. Corbett, medical director of the recovery program at M id-Maine Medical Center / "Under the Influence: The Pushing of Alcohol Via Advertising," Dr. Jean Kilbourne, internationally recognized authority on the media, addictions and sex roles / "QUI Enforcement: The Role of Maine's Secretary of State," officials of the Department of Secretary of State / "Hungary: A Personal PerspecThe President's Report 1 990-9 1

tive," Charles Gogolak / "�frican Americans and Labor Policy in the 1 990s," J ulianne Malveaux, economist, syndicated columnist and contributing editor, Essence magazine / "Attacking the Cichlid Paradox: In Through the Out Door," Douglas McElroy, University of Maine at Orono / "The Life of Malcolm X: Critique and Celebration," Andre Craddock-Willis, Boston College / "The Aborted Social Movements of the 1 960s," Bobby Seale, author and activist / "Glory: The Entire Story," Bernard Siler, Civil War re-enactor and historian / "Communication and Ants-Predator Behavior in Bats and Squir­ rels," William J. Loughry, Austin College / "Recalling the Courage To Sail: On Being a Radical Feminist Pirate in the 1 990s," Mary Daly, feminist / "Disturbing Identities: Shape-shifting Mestiza and Postmodern Llorona," Gloria Anazadua / "The Equivalent of Mitosis in Bacteria," Moselio Schaecketer, department of molecular biology and microbiology, Tufts University / "Can the Press Cover Itself ?", Maine Society of Professional Journalists J "Measuring Nonmarket Values of Coastal Pond Water Quality," Yoshi Kaoru, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute / "Behind Closed Doors: The Guayaquil Meeting According to Borges," Dan Balderson, Georgetown Univer­ sity J "The Economics of Marine Biodiversity," Mark Eisworth, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute / "The Gender Gap in Human Capital Accumulation in a Poor, Rural Economy," David Ross, professor of economics, Williams College / "The Genetic Frontier," . George Poste, vice president for research, Smith Kline Pharmaceuti­ cal Co. J "Artificial Stupidity: Formalization, Invention, Justifica­ tion," Garrett Barden, professor of philosophy, University College Cork J "Authority and Authenticity: Revisioning Harriet Jacobs and 1 9th-Century African-American Women's Fiction," Frances Smith Foster J "Life in Malawi," Chimwemwe Jere, Robert Kayesera and Ralph Chimenya, exchange students from Malawi / "The Native American Experience in Maine," Jerry Pardill, lieutenant governor of Maine / "Roman Oratory and the Conduct of Foreign Policy" and "Greek Culture and Roman Reaction," Erich Gruen, University of California at Berkeley / "Andy Warhol's Art Collection," Betsy Huberport / "From Colby to Kindergarten: A Male Feminist Perspec­ tive on Male Supremacy and Male Change in the '90s," Jo Lilore '90 J "U.S. Intervention in Guatemala: A Model for American Policy in Central America," Roberto Rodriguez of the Boston-based Central Presenta / "Scientists vs. the Press: Who 'Owns' Volcanic Disasters?", Richard S. Fiske, Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar, the Smithsonian Institution / "Campus Rape," Marty Mcintyre, the Sexual Assault Crisis Center / "Waste Recycling Reduction: Individual Choices," P3 1


J U N E

' 9 1

Ac

the awards ceremony during Reunion Weekend, Trustee Frank 0. Apantalrn ' 7 1 accepts a Colby Brick for his outstanding ser­ vice to the College . The weather was summery and, like the other reunion classes , the Class of '66 was out in force to enjoy the parade .

Denise Lord, Maine Department of Solid Wa te / "ls There a Democratic Future for West Africa?", Samba Ka / "Texts and Tech­ nics: Automobile , Knowledge and Society," Joseph Corn, Values, Science and Society Program, Stanford University / "The Mozart Requiem," Don Frankl in, department of mu ic, University of Pins­ burgh Readings Visiting Writer Series Grace Paley, hort tory writer, peace activist, femini t / Mary Ruefle, poet and author of The Adamant / Richard Russo, novelist, author of The Risk Pool and Mohawk / William Stafford, poet, National Book Award winner / Jay Parine, novelist and poet, author of The Last Station Music Music at Colby Series Portland String Quartet: music of Haydn, Surinach, Tchaikovsky / The Strider Concert: "Solid Bra ," mu ic from the Renaissance through Handel and Mozart to Gershwin / Colby Symphony Orchestra: Beethoven, Fidelio overture; de Falla, El Amor Brujo; Schumann, Symphony #3 , Rhenish / Colby Collegium Musicum: mu ic from Venice, works by Monteverdi, Marenzio, Gabrieli and others / Paul Posnak, piano, works of Bach, Schubert, Chopin, Gershwin and Fats Waller / Portland String Quartet: music of Mozart, K Gardner and Beethoven / Collegium Musicum: J .S. Bach, Schutz, Isaac, Senfl, Praetoriu and other / Colby Symphony Orchestra: Brahms and Honegger; with Colby College Chorale and the Colby-Kennebec Choral Society: Mozart, Requium K. 626 / The Colby ymphony Orchestra and the Colby-Kennebec Choral Soci­ ety: Bernstein, The Chichester Psalms, Mozart, Ravel, Copland and Rimsky-Korsakov / 2 1st Annual Festival of Carols and Lights Recitals and Midday Programs "An Afternoon of Music with Music Department Faculty, Associates and Friends" / Fall Student Recital / Laura Thielke, piano, and Michael Beattie, piano / William Ranson, piano recital / Shirley Macbeth, flute, and J udith Quimby, piano / Cheryl Tschanz, piano recital / Woodwind recital: Kathryn Phipp '92, oboe, Emily Chapman '94, clarinet, John Phipps '94, ba clarinet, Frances Van Huystee '94, flute, Gregory Rideout '92, French horn / Lee Humphreys and Jean Ro enblum, duo flute recital / Christopher White, saxophone, and Richard Share, piano / Suite for Flute and Jazz Piano / Moni e Reed '9 1 , cello recita l / Kathryn Phipps '92 and Claude Richter '92, lecture and recital Student Association Concerts mians

P3 2

Edie Brickel and the New Bohe-

Other Musical Events and Performances Al Delgardo Quartet, Latino jazz band / Hogaku: traditional Japanesese music / Colby College Wind Ensemble / Northern Russian Choru (Rus ian folk music and dance) / Jazz Band concert / "The Consummate Jazz Duo: Alice Menzietti and Don French," vocalist and piano arranger / Broadway Mu ical Revue / Mary Lou Lorde, acoustic folk mu ic / Coffeehou e concert : Willy Porter, andy River Ramblers Bluegrass Band, Randy Mauger, Anni Clark, Cindy Kallet, Eric Rolfson '73 and Jeff McKeen '76, Catie Curti , David Holmes / Concert in the Park, wind en emble and jazz ensemble / Divali: Indian festival of lights / Steven Wright, comedian / Colby Eight, Colbyette and Tuxedo Junction concert / Colby College Chorale, music of three centuries from three countries Exhibits "Americans and Pari 1 874-1 900" / Denni Pinette, recent work / Colby College Art Department Group Faculty Exhibit: Gay Kempron, Harriett Matthews, Shannon McArthur, Abbott Meader, cott Reed and James Thur ron Drama Performing Arts Productions ( faculty d irected ) "Close havian ," cene from George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man, Caesar and Cleopatra, and St. John / The Venetian Twins / Threepenny

Opera I Twelfth Night

Powder and Wig Productions ( tudent directed)

Love Letters /

The Elephant Man / Seduced / One-Acts Festival

Dance Dancers

Spring dance concert featuring "Light Part 1 5 ," Colby

Division of Special Programs Continuing medical education programs in addiction medicine, allergy and immunology, anesthesi­ ology, audiology, child abuse, diabetes management, emergency medicine, family medicine, foren ic medicine, liver di ease, ob ret­ ries and gynecology, ophthalmology, orthopedics, otolaryngology, pediatrics, surgical techniques and urology / Master Piano In titute, Church Mu ic Institute and the Portland String Quartet / Estate Planning and Tax Institute and the Institute for Management / Athletic camp in basketball, cheerleading, field hockey, football, running and occer / Great Books Institute / Various Maine group such as Maine Lung Association, Maine State Employees As ocia­ tion, Maine Chartered Life Underwriters / The Watson Foundation Fellows / Various conferences for Colby departments in admission , alumni relation , computer and mathematics The President's Report 1 990-9 1


ALUMNI AT LARGE FIFTY--PLUS 5 0+

Bill ing himself "assi tant class correspondent," Fletcher Eaton '39 writes: "Back in the spring, Marjorie Gould Murphy '3 7 , the usual proprietor of this column, wrote to ask that I cover for her jusr once because he needed time off to take care of some per onal business. Ofcourse I agreed. Who could refuse some­ one like Marjorie? But personal busine ? Uh oh, 1 thought. Mu t be something bad. An operation, perhaps. T h i n k ing d i s m a l thought , I bought her a get welt card. But no! The new wa joy­ ous; she wa to marry Ed Shuman '38 on May 4. I am ure I reflect the entiments of all 50-Plussers in wi hing thi wonderful couple the be t years of their live . Pinch-hitting for Marjorie i like climbing into the pulpit of a church where the regular pastor i much loved and a barn burner of a preacher be ide . And in my very first act I committed a mon­ strous blooper. Specifical ly, in my letter to all of you I referred to Marj orie as Dorothy [Gould Rhoades], her i terfrom the Class of 1 93 6. The letter made it ap­ pear that Ed wa marrying Dor­ othy. Right away, Nat Guptill '39 wrote to Ed congratulating him on getting married to either of them. And Portia Pendleton Rideout '34 wrote to give me a piece of her mind, a generous act that increased the power of my intellect by 1 00 percent. Naturally, I have given this outrageous goof much thought and have concluded that my mind is gone. Seeking an impartial opinion, I asked my dear wife and constant comfort, Nell, what she thought. he aid that from what he could ob erve there can be no other answer. o, armed with that useful information, dear reader, read on. For future reference, here are the que tions I ent to all of you:

Colby, November 1 99 1

1 ) Have you ever said o r done anything funny? 2 ) Name some­ thing that matter to you and tell us why; 3 ) If you could make a wish and have it come true, what would it be? 4) What is the most valuable lesson you ever learned? 5) Are you still working and, if not, what did you do when you were ? 6) Tell us about someone you knew at Colby and why the memory gives you pleasure; 7 ) What i s the most important way in which your life has been af­ fected by your experience at Colby? Your avalanche of answers was too voluminous to handle in Colby magazine, but Marjorie or I, or both, will find a way to get the result to you. Meanwhile, in this column I will try to cover as much as space will allow . . . . According to the J une 29 i sue of The Regional Sr.andard (Conn . ) , Crary Brownell ' 1 3 and his wife, Hala, celebrated their 75th wed­ ding anniversary at their home in Moodu , Conn., onJune 2 1 . Crary is 1 0 1 , Hala is 99. peaking on what make a marriage work, Crary says, 'I think people today are in the habit of giving up too ea ily. They don't stop to think things through enough; you've got to deal with both ides and get along with who you're with.' Dear Crary and Hala, you can never know the good you have done the re t of us by your in pi ring example . . . . Phyllis Sturdivant Sweetser ' 19 nearly knocked me out of my chair when she wrote: 'I remember you as a very young brother of my good friend and classmate Harriet Eaton Rogers ' 1 9.' I was 2 year old in 1 9 1 9. I dearly loved my i ter Harriet, and Mrs. Sweetser's letter affected my deeply. I remember wel l Mr . Sweet er' daughter, Ellzabeth '4 1 , and her husband, Elmer Baxter, also '41 . Elmer and Betty made it back to their SOth la t summer . . . . In remembering

someone who had influenced her life, Louise Tilley '23 cites Dean Ninetta Runnals '08 for her char­ acter, loyalty to Colby, fairness and competence. Loui e's room­ mate and lifetime friend, Lorena Scott ' 2 2 , concurs. Unfortu­ nately, both suffer from poor eye­ sight, and Lorena has been ill for over a year . . . . Vivian Hubbard Pillsbury '2 4 writes: 'At 91 years, 1 am stilt busy-with much help from my son, who lives with me. We do most of the work to keep our home tidy. When I worked, I taught high school math . ' . . . Philip Higgins '29 rates that Colb gave him an interest in many things and the knowledge to appreciate them. . . . In recall­ ing her long career, H e l e n Robinson Johnston '27 mentions 1 5 years as a social worker, 20 year as a teacher and work in a bank-all in the Waterville area. She retired in 1 969 and in 1 989 went to Daly Ciry, Calif., to be near her on Bill and hi wife, J ulie . . . . When I was in my early

M ildred's son, Wesley, Jr., lives in Arkansa , and her daughter, Mary Anne, lives in Tacoma, Wash. M ildred ha even grand­ children and two great grand­ children . . . . ln commenting on Colby's effect on her life, Ruth McEvoy '28 ays: 'It introduced me to new people, new ideas, new possibilitie . I can never cease to be grateful to my high school prin­ cipal, who was a Colby graduate and persuaded my father to end me there . ' . . . M irroring the thoughts of a lot of us, Charles Nealley '29 say he would like to get around and enjoy himself as he once did and to have his good eyesight back. He and Cecil Goddard '29 entered Colby to­ gether, roomed at Hedman Hall and w e re good fr iends . . . . Norman Palmer '30 wrote that my questionnaire was silly and that he hoped I had not had a hand in concocting it. Rereading the questions in the light of his comment I had to agree, and I went around with my head down for two days. Later, how­ ever, as the avalanche of answers pcured in, my perpective was restored, par­ ticularly when Margaret Higgins W i l l iams ' 3 8 wrote: 'Those are marvel­ ous quest ions-and I Marjorie Gould Shuman '3 7 know I'll till be thinking P.O. Box 1 0 2 , outh Sueet of better answers after I West Oneonta, NY 13 6 1 post them.' Because o 607 -432 -8936 many ofus remember him, I provide the following teen ( circa 1 930) I belonged to a from Prof. Palmer's letter: 'After my formal retirement from the model airplane club run by Wesley Marden, aviator, manager of Universiry of Pennsylvania in 1 979 (where I taught for 32 years Waterville Airport and friend to young people. I, with halfa dozen following 14 years at Colby with a leave of more than three years other kids, met weekly in his for active military service), I con­ kitchen, where his wife kept a tinued to teach at Penn until late ho pitable eye on u . She was Mildred Mac Cam Marden '27, 19 2.' He and his wife then moved who wrote to say, 'Had to let you to Washington state, where Dr. know I still remember you.' The Palmer has maintained a high fact that Mildred remembers me level of activity in local and na­ after 60 years touches my soul. tional affair . He ha continued

5 0-Plus

Correspondent

33


writing since his 'retirement.' Three of his books, bearing on the politics of the western Pa­ cific , have been published since 1 984. In the past decade he has traveled to the oviet Union and South Korea twice and to En­ gland, Turkey, l ndia (his 1 4th vis it ) , Bangladesh, Thailand and China. He plans to return to South Korea to spend two months as a v isiting professor at Kyung Hee University in eoul. 'So life goes on,' he says, 'and believe me , l am still learning and working. Aren't we all ?' . . . At 8 2 , Carroll Mcleary 'J 1 says he wants many more year w ith his wonderful wife and add that the most im­ portant thing Colby did for him was to prepare him for life . . . . ln a long letter, G. Alden Mac­ donald '32 tel l of founding, with two other , the accounting firm Macdonald, Page & Co. in 1 9 56. It was to become the largest firm of it kind in Maine. He and his wife pend their winters in Florida and ummers in Maine . They are avid golfers and trout fishermen and take at lea t one trip to La­ brador each year in search of tro­ phy trout. In J une he caught a 9 1 / 2 pound brook trout o n a fly a t Osprey Lake in Labrador. Both of the Macdonald children are mar­ ried and between them have pre­ sented their parents w i th six grandchildren, now aged 1 8 to 24 . . . . Portia Pendleton Rideout '34 writes: 'There i a mini-re­ unionof the gals of'34 each J uly­ first Tuesday after the 4th. There are usually about a dozen of us who meet for lunch and adjourn to the home of Eleanor Wheel­ wright Ness for a delic ious de sert and lots of gabbing.' Annie Tuck Russell, Peg Raymond Small, Peg Salmond Matheson, Greta Murray Connors, Lois Crowell, Barbara White Morse and Louise Williams Brown were among those expected at the last gathering . . . . George Mann '34 34

Wilson Piper '39

Headliners Wilson Piper '39 is among 2,2 1 1 attorney listed in the fourth, revi ed edition of The Best Lawyers in America, by Gregory White Smith '73 and Steven Naifeh.

Mileposts Deaths: Hazel M. Gibbs ' 1 7 in Augu ta, Maine, at 95 . . . . Elizabeth Whipple Butler '2 1 in Waterville, Maine, at 92 . . . . Mildred R. Collin '23 in Sanford, Maine, at 89. . . . Avis Newman Norwood '23 in Warren, Maine, at 89. . . . Beulah Cook Smith '24 in St. Peter burg, Fla., at 88. . . . Pearl Thompson Stetson '24 in Bangor, Maine, at 89. . . . Norton Rhoades '2 7 in Stamford, Conn., at 84 . . . . Louise Bauer '28 in Doy lestown , Pa., at 90. . . . John S. Parker '28 in Belfa t, Maine, at 87 . . . . Henry E. Tattersall '29 in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, at 83 . . . . Norbert Lanier '29 in Ware, Mas·., at 83 . . . . Maurice Krasow ' 3 1 in i lve r pring, Md., at 83 . . . . Frances Loughman Knight '39 in omerv il le , Ma s., at 7 1 . . . . Walter H. Reed '40 in Skowheg an, Maine, at 73 . . . . Alfred E. Brown '4 1 in Radnor, Pa., at 69 . recalls a cruise he made back in the '60s with a group of Colby, B a t es and B o w d o i n a l u m n i around some o f the Greek i lands aboard the Greek MV/Argonaut. A highlight of the cuisine was a native wine called Retsina, which was made with rosin. It tasted really terrible and originated back when the Turks overran Greece and tried to bring the population to its knees. George can't under­ stand why the stuff is still avail­ able. Among those hoisting their glas es on this trip were Wilson Piper ' 3 9 and h is wife, Peg. Skoal! . . . A sad note from Mrs. Abbie Hodges tells u s that her husband, the Rev. Deane Hodges ' J S , has been in a nursing home for a y e a r s u ffe r i n g from Alzheimer' disease. . . I n a con­ versation with me at the reunion in J une, Ruth Yeaton McKee

'3 7 said he wa nor one bit happy with what has happened to her beloved homerown ofWaterville. The Id Colby campus is gone, of course. The old Congregational Church and the Boy's Club across from it have made way for progres . And on and on. I'll bet most of you feel the ame about your hometown . . . . Nat Guptill '39 writes: 'At the Ramada Inn in East Hanford, I was to say grace at the annual meeting of the Men­ tal Health Assoc iation. J ust be­ fore goingon, I misrook the wim­ ming pool for the dance floor, due to difficulty with some new bifo­ cals, and fell in with all my clothes on.' Nat adds, 'I wa the only one in the room without a drink in hi hand . ' ( Sure, Nat. We under­ stand . ) . . . A letter from Arthur Thompson '40 read : 'The Class of 1 940 of Xi of Delta Kappa

Epsilon held its first annual re­ union this June at the summer residence of Dr. Prince D. Beach on Messalon kee Lake , North Belgrade, Maine. ln our thoughts were our depa rted brothers : Barnard Jordan, Warren Pearl, Charles Maguire and Alfred Timberlake. Members pre ent were Prince Drummond Beach, Col. USA ( Ret. ) , John Thomas Foster, MHA, Arthur Totten Thomp on, PE, and Richard Henry W h i t e , Cmdr. U S N ( Rer . ) . Colby visitors at t h e con­ vocation were George Beach '4 1 , Martha Rogers Beach '42 and Virginia Kingsley Jones ' 39. We remember well our college days . With respect for the past and hope for the future, we carry on . Hail Colby.' . . . Estelle Rogers MacDonald '39 and her husband, Roy, spent a t\vo-week vacation during J uly in the summer re i­ dence described above . Next door, George and Manha Beach kept them under surveil lance. Estelle still works as a reception­ i t at the Elihu White Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Braintree, Mass. Estelle has nine children, 10 2/3 grandchildren ( as of when I heard from her) and twogreat grandchildren. In a po t­ script, Estelle say that she and Roy had dinner and a pleasant e v e n i n g w i t h Kay G la z i e r Stevens ' 4 1 while in Maine . . . . At the beginning of the year, Wilson Piper intended to retire a a enior partner from hi law firm, Ropes & Gray, here in Bos­ ton. But he hasn't been able to make it happen. And why ? Be­ cause h is work wa piled to the ceiling. Wilson' usual efficiency in chopping h is way through mountains of work had been eri­ ously reduced by a broken wrist acquired while skiing last winter. 'Have you ever tried to ign your name with a cast on your writing arm?' he inquire ."

Colby, November 1 99 1


THE FORTIES 42

Chris Merrill Wysor ' rites: " Attent ion classmate · : T h i is an all point bulletin t o t h e Cla s of '42 . Your local com­ mittee for our reunion has been hard at work making exciting pre­ liminary plan for J une 4-7 , 1 992 . We will ha ve more tO t ell you in our next column. I n the mean­ t ime we need your cooperation and input. Plea e end ideas, sug­ ge t ions, memorabi l ia, photo , poems, etc. tO your corre pon­ dent, and I will ee that they get tO the right place . . . . E. Gilman 'Gil' Taylor writes that he ha been retired ince 1 97 a bu i­ ne manager of Dean J un ior College. He ay he never antici­ pated that he would work in the education field when he gradu­ ated from Colby. N ow he i a volunteer at Jordan Ho pita! in Plymouth, Mas ., and is also ac­ t ive in a e n ior men' group. He ay : '[ remain very active, have been married for 50 year- and am happy and healthy.' Good news, G i l . Hope to e e you at our reunion . . . . Barbara Holden, though ret i re d from teaching ince 1 9 2, i bu ier than ever and involved in many challeng­ ing activitie . he i a volunteer readerforthe blind, leads a French book group at the French Library in Bo rnn, ha developed a great intere t in genealogy and i an art lecturer a t the Mu eum of Fine Arts in Bo ton. 1 992 will be a bu y year for Barbara; she i not only looking forward to our re­ u nion but i already busy a a chairper on for the Towne famil reunion, which i tO be held in her area. Th i i not the rypical family reu nion, he says-it i the tercentenary of the alem witch­ craft trial , and rwo Towne i ter were hange d . Barbara i decended from one of them. Re­ earch tell u that for the mo t part it wa the strongest and brightest women who were acColby, N ovember 1 99 1

cu e d i n that hameful period of our country' hisrnry. Great to see you at the joint meeting of the outhwestem Maine A lumnae Assoc iation and South Central Ma achu ett Alumnae group in Newburyport this spring. Look­ ing forward to seeing you again in J une . . . . Clarence 'Doodie' Reid has retired from a very active and rewarding tenure in the educa­ tional field. Now he is enj ying the rural l ife ( 'all ea-on ' ) in the mountain of 'the good old tate of Maine,' where he continue tO be active in community affairs, serving as selectman, school board member, historical society mem­ ber, Ma on, Odd Fel low and Shriner. He al o ay he cut wood 'to keep the home fire burning' and builds bird feeders, hou es and clock . He wishe u tO know that he was not able to be at g�aduation in '42 becau e he was in the outh Pacific but hopes to 'make it' in 1 992 . . . . Lr. Col. Arthur G. Beach, Jr. is now retired from the U . . Air Force, where he served 23 years, prima­ rily as a pi lot. He and h is wife, Ann, have ju t moved from Aus­ tin tO Arlington, T exa . Hope tO see you both at our 50th, Arthur. . . . Alvin Jolovitz and his wife, ylvia, retired tO Portland, Maine, in 19 0 after working for the Ciry of ew York Housing Authority and Department ofHou ino Pre ervation and Development. They winter in Florida. Good to hear from ou, Alvin, and hope tO ee you and ylvia at our 5 0th i n June '92 . . . . William R. Conley ays he has retired from full-t ime ac­ countant to consultant. He has not been active in communiry or political affair , but he formed a family-owned and -operated cor­ poration. We hope you and your wife, Betty, will be able tO join u for our reunion."

43

"As you read this column in the ovember i ue of Colby , you may be intere ted tO know that as I wrote it, the ea t­ ern part of the United States was recovering from a record-break­ ing ummer-ha:y, hot and hu­ mid," notes corre pondent Elea­ nor mart Braunmuller. "Some of your clas mate met in August tO begin planning for our 50th reunion. I t i less than two years away, o put a reminder on the calendar for J une 3 -6, 1 99 3 . . . Betty (Wood '44 ) and Ronnie Reed have both retired. Ronnie volunteer a a driver for the Cen­ tral Vermont Tran portation Agency, is involved in the church mu ic program and the Montpe­ l ier City Band and i a guide in the Vermont tate House. He also note that he is chief gar­ dener and repairman at home. They were planning tO see more of the U nited tate last summer in their travel trailer. . . . Barbara Philbrick Mertz write that four out of five family members have attended Colby in one capacity or another, she as a graduate and her h u band and ons as ummer eminar participants. Her hus­ band, an ophthalmologi t, is semi­ retired, and Barbara hope they will get t0 their family camp at Three M ile Pond more often. . . . George '42 and Geraldine Fen­ nessy Parker continue to travel between ( or would it be 'among'?) their homes in Flourtown, N .J . , and Long Beach I land, .] . . and a Florida condominium. Gerry's l ife ound exhausting but enjoy­ able-playing bridge, bowling, aerobics, water exercise, bicy­ c l i ng , e w i ng , c o o k i n g a n d dancing! . . . We hadn't heard from George Popper for quite a while, so it is good t0 know that he and hi wife, though officially retired, continue tO work when­ e v e r po s i b l e . They vi i re d Merano, I taly, in 1 990 and were

going t0 the Canary I land la t spring. They now have three grand c h i ldren . . . . Ba rbara Brent Biedermann is a real e tate broker and note that her spare time is spent in volunteer work and extensive travel. In the la t two years he has been in China, Mexico, Ala ka, Florida and Cali­ fomia and on many crui es. he also gets to Colby events in New York from time to time. She and her husband pend time each year at their condominium in r. Croix . . . . Richard '4 1 and Vir­ ginia Farrand McDonald, now retired, enjoy l ife on H ilton Head I land. They have active grandon ; one, a communications major, worked for CB and 60 Minutes l a t u mmer, and a younger one wa cho en tO play on a U. . soccer team in France la t year and in Germany thi year. G innie say her spare t ime is filled with reading, charitable cause and genealogical research. . . . That's it for now. I hope tO hear from all of you oon."

44

"Well, it's that time aga i n ! " writes Louis Deraney . " How do you all expect your cor­ respondent tO write about our cla smates if you do not pitch i n ? I have exhau r e d all enlightening news and feel I would only be reporting what you may already know, so I ask-better yet re­ quest-that you top being ilent and let me know how you are coping. How about an update from Economu, Nawfel, Shiro, Joseph, Vigue, lgarashi, et a l ? W h e n l last v isited Waterville you all remained. I t help to be informed. M y predecessor in this job has tipped me off, and I relay her message to you: 'You do not have to climb Mt. Everest tO be in the new -j u t communicate . ' . . . Vivian Maxwell Brown had Don Butcher pay her a visit when 35


Correspondents he was in Hornell, N .Y. V ivian and her spouse enjoyed his com­ pany and the Browns extend an invitation to any orherclas mates who might be in the area. At the time, Vivian was secretary to the board of directors of the Hornell area Humane Society. She also worked at the Red Cros blood bank . Her daughter is a nurse at Coming Ho pita! , and her on i on the faculty at Coming Com­ munity College . . . . Jack T u m er ays, 'If al ive and well, plan to be back on the Hill for the 50th.' . . Gene Struckhoff is a community foundations coach. He help plan commun i ty foundations acros the country. Gene, a I recall, was practic ing law in Concord, N . H . , and now, in retirement, has ex­ panded nationwide. H i home base is Baltimore, Md . . . . John Roukema wrote from Ft. Lauder­ dale, Fla. , that he has retired from his accounting business to con­ centrate on golf and social activi­ t ies. He further states, '[It has been] my experiences in chool reunions, either at Colby or h igh school, that members were not friendly. They have their own class friends and do not socialize with others.' Well, we won't let that happen at our 50th, wi 11 we ? . . . Ralph Hilton retired in 1 986 after 24 years with Scott-Forsman Co. He now spends four and a half months a year in Florida near Cape Coral. Ralph's boast is that he reached the m i l l ion dollar mark in sales in 1 984. He and wife Jean have retained their Rochester, N . H . , address and are proud grandparent of three. . . . My wife and I visited our son and h is family in Mobile, A la. , last summer . . . . Consider the changes we have witnessed. We were in college before television, penic i l l in , polio shots, frozen foods, con tact lenses, Frisbees and the Pill. Closet were for cloth­ ing, not coming out of. For us, sharing meant togetherness-not 36

1 942 Marie Wysor (Marie "Chris" Merrill) RR 2, Box 1 90-B South Harpswell, ME 04079-9802 207- 7 29-6506 1 943 Mrs. Albert R. Braunrnuller ( Eleanor Smart) 1 1 5 Lake Road Ba king Ridge, NJ 07920 2 0 1 -766-3 586

1 946 Nancy Jacob en 3627 Nonhlake Drive Atlanta, GA 30340 404-934-9075 1 947 June Coalson (June Chipman) 1 29 Janelle Lane Jacksonville, FL 3 22 1 1 904-725-1 479

1 944 Louis M. Deraney 57 Whitford Street Roslindale, MA 02 1 3 1 -42 1 0 6 1 7 - 3 2 7 -4486

1 948 Katharine W. Jaffe ( Katharine Weisman) PO Box l l 3 Mill River, MA 0 1 244 4 1 3-229-8 1 7 1

1 945 Dorothy McCunn ( Dorothy Sanford) 8 Honey H ill Road Canaan, CT 060 1 8 203-824-7236

1 949 Anne Eustis (Anne Hagar) 3 1 5 Mirick Rd. PO Box 594 East Princeton, MA 0 1 5 1 7 508-464-5 5 1 3

computers or condom i n i um . Made in Japan meant junk and the term 'making out' referred to how you did on your exams. In our day, cigarette making was fash ionable, grass was mowed, Coke was a cold drink and pot wassomethingyou cooked in . . . . Keep the fa i t h and keep me posted."

45

Correspondent Dee Sanford McCunn writes: "The deadline has once again arrived, and l shall give you a rundown of re pon es I 've received . . . . A l o ng l e t t e r c a m e from B i l l Whittemore i n La Jolla, Calif. [see profile next page] . . . . Grace Keefer Parker lives in Port Wash­ ington, N .Y., and i director of ecumenical programs at Union Theological Seminary in New York City. She is gone 1 1 hours a

day, including three hours a day travelling to and from work. She expects to retire in January and spend time looking for ways to correct the systems that create homelessness, hunger, lack of health care, raci m and violence. Our thoughts are with you, Grace, and our hopes that you will make a breakthrough. Grace and her hu band, R ichard (pastor of the Methodi t church in Port Wash­ ington ) , spend their pare time sailing and enjoying v i its to and from their children and grand­ children. In recent year , Grace and Dick have enjoyed several t r i p s to Central and South America . . . . Naomi Collett Paganelli reports that she is slowly taking people up on their invita­ t ion to come and visit. She has taken several short trips to visit friend and relative , including one to see Joan Gay Kent and spend time in Joan's wimming

pool during the dreadfully hot summer. . . . Please keep the let­ ters and notes coming in! Hear­ ing from each of you is of interest to everyone."

46

N a n c y J a cobsen checks in with her first report. "The 45th reunion and this sum­ mer purred on contacts with people not heard from , " she writes . . . . "Your new reporter and her partner, Tex Radcliff, drove from their home in At­ lanta to the West Coast to watch the July eclipse. In Arizona they visited Hilda Robertson Lyons and her husband, Gil, who live high in the mountains outside Phoenix. Over a sumptuous lunch at the Lyons' Fountain H i lls home, everyone caught up on new . The Lyons' daughter Karen, who lives in New Hampshire, had j ust presented them with their third grandchild, a girl, to 1oin her two brothers. Their other daughter, Alison, is an engineer and lives with her husband in California. H i lda is treasurer of the local Herb Society. She and Gil feed deer, an assortment of birds and even coyotes in their back yard . . . . The other news came from Lois Loudon Cutler '45 . She is now living in El Paso, Tex . , where one daughter i . When he moved to try out the Southwest, she took training as a re piratory therapi t. She ha a new career and a new life. Lois sent some grand photos of her vacation with her children back East . . . . We hope Margaret Lancaster Simoneau i feeling fit after her spring surgery . . . . I t means a lot a t th is time o f life to catch up with you all, says this Southern reporter, even if it has been awhi le. So do write."

Colby, November 1 99 1


He 's Not the Retiring Type G

eneral Atomics promoted him to the new position of senior scientific advisor. He undertook four round-the-world lecture tours. He received his 1 2th patent and applied for a 1 3th. He went to Australia to address a conference on the use of neutron radiography to treat advanced brain tumors. And he fired the 70th and mo t powerful version yet of the Transient Research Isotope General Atomic (TRIGA) reacror he helped develop. AU told, W illiam L. Whitt more '4 5 figures it has not been a bad year for anyone, let alone a man who turned 67 in September. At an age when many people are well into retire­ ment, Whittemore will have none of it. "I joined thi company 35 years ago, and I've had four chances to get out in the last 1 0 years," Whittemore said a few weeks ago during one of the occasional ojourns he and his wife, Alice, spend at their home in La Jolla, Calif., "but I resisted them all because, frankly, I 'm having too much fun to retire." A native of Skowhegan, Maine, Whittemore earned his doctorate from Harvard and worked at the Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York a a member of a team of physicists who developed a nuclear reactor using uranium zirconium hydride, a fuel that seems accident-proof. "We've proved that time and time again," Whittemore said. "We've actually pulsed the reactor deliberately to create the equivalent of an accident with no adverse re ults. This sort of fuel will with tand enormous tran­ sience and just laugh it off." The reactor has been especially important in medicine and industry and has allowed developing nations to traverse the nuclear frontier. Medical applications of nuclear technology are of special interest to Whittemore. He and a former Colby roommate, surgeon Philip Boyne '46, have collaborated on a number of ignificant research papers. More recently, boron neutron captive therapy Whittemore helped devise has been responsible for some dramatic advances in the treatment of brain cancer. In 1 970 Whittemore helped show the U.S. Army why a

Colby, November 1 99 1

powerful new propellant did not seem to produce more effective rifles. U ing neutron radiography, he was able to trace the pattern of powder burns down to the tiniest of time measures, an augenblik, and determine that the new propellant wa actually operating opposite to its intended effect. "What we di covered," Whittemore recalls, "was that the new propellant wa so power­ ful it set up a shock wave that retarded the bullet' speed." The rewards of his long career have been numerous. In 1 987 he represented the United States at a United Nations conference in Geneva on the peaceful u es of nuclear energy; the govern­ ments of Saudi Arabia and Egypt asked him to participate in technology transfer conferences in Riyadh and Cairo; and two years ago, he went before the National Academy of Science to present a summary history of research reactors at an international ymposium on 50 years of nuclear fission. Bill and Alice (pictured above) have literally traveled through Life together. He has installed and activated reactors at 70 sites in 23 countries on five continents, and she has accompa­ nied him. "The joke around here is that it's in my contract," he said. "She has to come." Perhaps their most bizarre experience, Whittemore ay , came in Korea in the spring of 1 960, when tudent riots led to the overthrow of President Syngman Rhee. "Our hotel was just opposite the American embas y, where ten of thousand of students were demonstrating," he aid. "We were locked in. The next morning, the Morning Sentinel earned a headline, "Colby Man Shot in Korea." My mother was still al 1ve then in Skowhegan, and she was very upset until she read the story. It turned out there wa another Colby man on busine in Korea in the same hotel. He had gone up onto the roof and been hit by a tray bullet. I never met him, didn't know he wa there until I gor home and spoke to my motl1er. What a chance coincidence! " Bur then again, t o Bill Whittemore, i t must eem like an awfully small world.

37


47

" I r was grear hearing from Bob Lucy," says correspon­ den r J une Chipman Coalson. "He pend ix month in Forr Pierce, Fla. , and six month in Lce, Ma s. What could be better? l n J une he pent two weeks in Fallbrook, Cal if., where his younger son, Bob, owns and is pre ident of Del Rey Avocado Packing House and Groves. H is oldest granddaugh­ ter, Martha, graduared from Wil­ l iams College in J une. he was captain of rhe women' ba ket­ ball and rugby reams. H is daugh­ rer Sarah '72 is a school librarian in Keene, N . H . , and reaches col­ lege at night. Bob work in the summers for the Boston Sym­ phony Orche tra ar Tanglewood runn i ng the V I P rent. If any Colbians visit Tanglewood next summer they should be sure to stop by and v isit him . . . . Rachel Allard Ward is stilt teaching and enjoying school. Her chool par­ t icipated in an exchange program with a school in Leningrad last year, entertaining about 1 5 fac­ u lty members and students. She hopes to go to the Soviet Union next year in an exchange. Her class earned a whale watch day­ trip and named two humpbacks who e markings have not previ­ ously been sighred. Last ummer Rachel, Jerry Costello Griese­ mer, Joan Hunt Banfield and Emily Gardell Hueston had a r e u n i o n at Ma rge Maynard Englert's home in Connecticut and had a great time . . . . Dorothy Cleaves Jordan wrote that she met Ray and Mary Campbell Koze n , Bud '48 and Louise Boudrot Phill ips and Helen Jacobs Eddy for lunch at the Cannery in Yarmouth, Maine, in J une. Isn't it great that Colby grads keep in touch with each other ? If others of you have get­ together , plea e write me . . . . Jeanne Snowe Ainsworth is re­ tired as an administrative assis38

Mileposts Dearhs: Bradford G. Francis ' 42 in Wolfeboro, N .H . , at 71 . . . . John C. Harvey ' 4 2 in Medford, Mas , at 71 . . . . Gor­ don A. Richardson '42 in Stonington, Maine, at 70. . . . Patricia Cotting Shively '45 in Analomink, Pa. , at 68.

tant with CCH Computax. She is moving to Oceanside, Calif., to be near her daughter and two grandchildren. Her on lives in Seattle. Jeanne has three grand­ children-two girls and a boy. . Gloria Chasse Ryan and her husband went on a three-month world cruise on the QE ti after he retired. Both enjoy working in the garden and taking college course . . Richard Reid is re­ tired and enjoys playing golf and doing volunteer work at the Uni­ versity of Alabama. He is also very involved in genealogy. He ha two ons; one is in. advertising in Alabama, and the other work with a graphics company in Or­ lando, Fla . . . . Margaret Harper Howard is retired as a p ychiatric therapist. he now does volun­ teer work in a center for grieving children. Her daughter Mary was with the 1 3 th Evacuation Unit from Madison, Wi . , and was sta­ tioned on the audi Arabia/Iraq border during Desert Storm. She reports that it was a very enl ight­ e n i ng e x p e r i e n c e . A n o t h e r daughter, M a rgare t , l i ves i n Winslow, Maine, and son Charles lives on M t . De ert Island . . . . I hope you are all making plans to artend our 4 5 th reunion in June."

48

Kay Weisman Jaffe ends her appreciation to the Alumni Office "for getting an­ other batch offill-in form· out to another third of our class. The

following fine few responded . . . . Helene Foster Clancy writesfrom Arlington, N .J . , including the sad report that her hu band ha died ofcancer after 'many happy years' rogether. Yet the tone of her note was rruly positive. he till enjoy working fu ll time and mentioned plan to attend the U.S. Tennis Open with the New York Colby Club. Her calendar al o included the pecially c i rcled vacation dates when she and her hospital admini tratordaughter from Cali­ fornia and her more local engi­ neer son will be together at a Camden Lake cottage . . . . From N ew Haven we learn that Harvey Koizim is teaching a course called 'Shelter for the Homeless Work­ shop' at Yale Law chool and pre iding over a non-profit group thar builds and manages low-in­ come hou ing. He got away from it all during a vacation in the Pacific North.we t and reported that his on, now about J ack Benny's perennial age, has given him two grandchildren., aged 3 and 6. He also has a daughrer, but unlike the resr of u who may hope for a fir t or another grand­ child, he is looking forward to rhe birth of his second son in 1 992. Although he does nor mention a wife in hi life, omeone mu t be bearing this burden. We certainly wish them all wel l ! . . . Two ort of interrelated communique ar­ rived from Raymond Webster and Milly Schnebbe Riordan. Poor Ray is bemoaning 'getting c:aught by the IRS,' who actually,

to his surprise, seem to know where Wiscasset is. The infernal service brought him out of retire­ ment. He spends time in Maine's be t weather work ing on old houses to pay the revenue and spends six months in the South in h i Airstream. Re: family, he notes 'just the two of us,' which, he writes, 'sounds like a song title.' Perhaps he could compose the whole tale of woe as a C&W ballad that j ust the two could sing and sell tosave theirbacks. M il ly, on the other hand, notes that he i keeping her c l ients out of trouble with the I R and New York I ncome Tax Bureau. She doesn't seem to have time to rest, but if anyone needs a great condo in Somer , N .Y., he hasoneavail­ able. She didn't mention avai l­ ability, bur she d id describe a son and two daughrers as one bach­ elor and two bachelorettes-late '20 and early '30ish, 'all trying to find their way in thi wicked world.' . . . Charles R. DeBevoise checked in from Basking Ridge, N . J . , to tell ofrecent wine-tasting and enjoyment of gourmet cook­ ing on a visit to France with Mrs. C.R. DeB. ( no doubt ) . Much t ime was pent in the Dordogne area (checking up on the ancestors ?). He's still working and has two daughter and a son, Charles I I , o r Charlie. Three grandchildren complete hi family, especially ince co mopolitan daughterJane and spouse adopted a litt le Chi­ nese girl. . . . A long and lovely letter from Marion ' Midge' Sturtevant Atwater, summering in Chri tmas Cove, Maine, with husband Samuel 'Ship' Atwater, described how busy they are since h is retirement nine years ago. Travels have taken them through A fr i c a , E n g l a n d , S c o t l a n d , G re e c e , T u r k e y , I s rae l a n d Egypt-and bare boating (good­ ness ! ) in the British Virgin Is­ lands many times. Their high tech and artistic children are prolific Colby , November 1 99 1


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Colby,

ovember 1 99 1

and keep them b u y . Their Digi­ ral son has two young 'uns and one on the way, with competing I BM daughter 'expecting' next spring. Marine artist John, the youngest, is now mainly at Mys­ tic Seaport Gallery ( for all you collectors) but has had h is work twice on the cover of Yankee and Conneccicuc magazine and a cover and article in American Arcisc. Ship is active in Colby Alumni Fund drives. . . . You who have not written for a few years owe us wordy ones at least a few lines."

49

Anne Hagar Eu tis writes: "l thought that by now I would have joined all of you in the retired ranks, but such is not the case. I was prevailed upon to run for another term-my fourth -as town rrea urer, but I still intend to retire on September 30, 1 99 2 ! However, the town now ha an executive ecrerary, so for the first time in nine years l have ufficient backup that I can take a three-week vacation! Lon and l will be driving our camper to Colorado to vi it our son and then up to Montana to explore G lacier ational Park . . . . I read in the Worcester Telegram and Gazette of the death of Jean Desper Fitton's husband, Larry '42, on J une 7. Jean's father also died recently at 93 years old. Our heartfelt sympathies to you and your family, J ean . . . . Alex Ri­ chard reports that he has made a good recovery from a mild stroke uffered one and a half year ago. He has retired for the fourth time, this t ime from the M aine rate Legislature after five term ( 1 0 years). Alex report proudly that h i wife, Shirley, has recently re­ ceived the Outstanding Alum­ nus award from Husson College and was elected to the H us on Sports Hall of Fame. Presently erving on the college's board of

tru tee and chair of its executive committee, she received an hon­ orary doctorate at graduation cer­ emonie in M ay . . . . A rc h i e Rellas has moved from hi office of 19 year to a new location in Pasadena, Calif. Th i move and the marriage of hi daughter in J une 1 989 are 'milestones [that] give one a sen e that time has really gone by.' Archie and hi wife have found it 'rewarding to l ive in the mall town of South Pa adena, where tradition and value are kept alive and where we can participate in these [com­ munity and political] activities.' . . . Barbara Becker Sullivan is another Hedmanite heard from­ for the first time ever! Barbara, who live in East Greenwich, R . l . , ha t w o grown children and n o grand c h i ld re n . Her daughter graduated from Colby in 1 98 3 . In 1 9 7 Barbara had open heart sur­ gery, which has slowed her down sligh t ly but not noticeably. I would gather from what she write that her biggest regret i that he's played golf for over 40 years and ha 'never been able to obtain a single-digit handicap ! ' . . . Geol­ ogist George I. Smith is still work­ ing for the U. . Geological Sur­ vey w ith no plans for immediate retirement. A heart attack in Oc­ tober 1 990 lowed him down a bit, but he still has several projects he want to finish up. 'G . l . ' and w ife T eruko, who is a certified physician's assistant, live in Cali­ fornia. They have a combined family of five 'kids,' the youngest being 2 1 and the olde t 3 2 ! ' G . I . ' served two terms a an over eer a t Colby from 1 9 4- 1 990 i.n the Math Department and the Geol­ ogy Department. A third term in the Chemistry Department was cancelled due to his heart attack. H e has enjoyed foreign travel, mo dy on job-related matters­ three weeks each in China in 1 98 7 , Tibet in 1 9 and Turkey in 1 990.'' 39


THE FIFTIES 50

"John Harriman, one of several classmates who Ii ve in California, writes that he had a grear rime at our 40th reunion," n o t e s cor respond e n t N a ncy Ricker Sears. "Under ' recent changes in your life,' he lists the b irth of John Bystrom Harriman, a most welcome change. He and Terry hope to continue to travel to new and different places in their retirement years. . . . Jeanine Fenwick Starrett and her hus­ band, Peter, retired in 1 988 and have been traveling to distant and exciting countries, most re­ cently Russia. Last fall they were in England and Scotland with Elderhostel. They also plan a trip through the Panama Canal and one to Machu Picchu. Jeanine has had a teaching career and srill subs occasional! y. She pends her free time hik ing, swimming and searching for petroglyphs, which are carving on rocks-and yes, I had to look that one up in the d ict ionary. J eanine a lso serves as a li teracy volunteer. . . . Sybil Green Reichek, another retired teacher ( English and Lati n ) , is liv ing in Cranbury, N .j . , with her husband, Morton, who is a re­ tired editor and writer for Busi­ ness Week. She writes that their fir t grandc h i l d , Ian M ichael Reichek, wa born in 1 989. Sybil leads cour es in film and litera­ ture in Cranbury; the Reicheks wintered in Florida and were look­ ing forward to making a trip to I rael that was postponed because of the war in the Middle East . . . Dale Avery Benson, a retired Connecticut realtor, writes that she and husband Robert moved to Virginia Beach, Ya., in 1 989 after 35 years at the Un iversity of Connecticut, where Robert was a professor. A of last December, they were expecting their sev­ enth grandchild. Other grand­ ch i ldren then ranged from 1 1 years to 3 months-a nice variety 40

of ages, abilitie and interests. Dale says, 'As the days hurry by we realize more and more the brevity ofl ife and the importance of making each day count.' They were sorry to have missed the 40th reunion and uggest that a l ist of tho e who plan to come be included in correspondence to the cla - . . . . Herbert Perkins, an­ other Virginian, lives at a place cal led Harrowing Point in Ma�on Neck. ounds like a name that m ight hav an interesting back­ ground. Herb work- in financial management for the fed e ral govern ment . . . . Fred '49 and Grace Rutherford Hammond live in Wellesley, Ma s. She is a l ibrarian, and he is a research scientist. ounds interesting; send us more news, Grace . . . . Regular readers of Colby will remember the feature about Myron 'Pinky' Thompson and his contributions for the benefit of the Kame­ hameha chool in Hawai i . . Richard Bowers is a social activ­ ist and writes passionately about limiting population growth and about peace issues. He write from Route I , Box 28 in Delancy, N .Y., and would be glad to send you information . . . . Beverly Holt Wiegand wrote about her job as administrative a istant at a small church in Seattle. She lost both her husband and her mother in 1 990 bur keeps busy with family and friends. She has two grown sons; one works in the Guam of­ fice of Delatte & Touche and the other i a Napa, Cal if., teacher who also writes for and part ici­ pates in local theater. . . . My space is used up, and rhis bring u j ust about to the bottom of the stack of letters that you good people sent me. Please keep the new coming o we don't lose our readers ! "

51

New correspondent Harl and Eastman wri tes from Springvale, Maine: "This column and perhaps rhe next two or three will draw on re ron e to Warren F in egan ' s 40th reunion que tion­ naire. After reading 50 or more, l have no doubr rhat the Class of '5 J has taken the world in it striJe . Barbara Jefferson Walker recently took two trips to Lat in America, trekking through Bo­ li via and Peru on one and through A rg e n t i n a and Ch i l e a few month� larer. La·t ummer he planned a mission trip to Ghana to live with villagers and work in a remotehospital. . . . Almost ev­ eryone has gone to ome distant corner of the world . Stephen Berkl ey 's travels have taken him to Europe, including the Ea rem Bloc countries. J im Tabor makes it a point to go somewhere abroad every year. Dan Hall, who i still teaching history at Lynnfield H igh, ha - al o taught in faraway Zambia and Z i mbabwe. Clifford 'Bump' Bean' vacations have included New Zealand and Ta­ hiti. Robert and Helen Palen Roth frequent Au tralia, where rheir on Mark is working. Dick Kaplan ha toured the ight of Be ijing and Hong Kong, and Sam Brown ays he has been every­ where except Antarc t ica . . . . Frank Gavel is assistant princi­ pal at Brookfield High chool in Connecticut. He has served the Brookfield school d istrict for 3 5 year . . . . Nary Leighton Robert­ son is a school p ychologist in Newport Beach, Calif., and re­ ports that her five children have so far pre ented her with eight grandchildren . . . . Bill Heubisch is a credit consultant in Ana­ heim, Calif. . . . Bob Brotherlin i semi-retired and divides his time be tween Li tchfi e l d , I l l . , and Sarasota, Fla. . . Nadeen Fin­ berg Liebeskind is child care d i ­ r e c t o r at the Tuscon, A r iz . ,

Y.M.C.A. after living i n Israel for 1 8 year . . . . Ernie Fortin, gen­ eral manager wirh New England Telephone, rerired after 40 years wirh rhe company and i living wirh his bride in Dover, Mass. Congra t u l a t ions to both of you . . . . Vivian Bryant is erv­ ing as a pa tor and evangelist in the Rochester, N . Y . , area. Vivian and his wife,Joyce Wallace Bryant ' 5 2 , are breathing a sigh of relief now that their four children are on their own after completing a combined 28 year of col lege eJucation! . . . Jean MacDonald Peterson i finally making the adj u tment to the Californ ia lifestyle after being raised in New England. he l ives in Aptos and is office managerfor her husband' Al arch itectural prac tice. Mirken i as ociate publisher of the Abbeville Pres after having been pre ident of Crown Pub­ li hers and vice chairman at Ran­ dom Hou e [see profi le next page]. He erves on the boards of New York's Beth Israel Medical Cen­ ter and the Merchant Bank of New York . . . . Bob Lee s t i l l manufactures electric heating e l ­ ements and takes partial credit for the gradual rise in the Earth's temperature . . . . On a ad note, our heartfelt sympathy goes to Allen Torrey on the untimely death of h is daughter, Meg Torrey Crain '82 . . . . Paul Kilmister con­ tributed thi jewel: 'Somehow, a an old hi tory major, I keep think­ ing, What would we a the class of ' 5 1 have thought of a group of "old folks" wandering around Mayflower Hill with button iden­ tifying them as Colby ' 1 1 ? I some­ how feel my reaction would have been that people who graduated six years prior to World War I could not po sibly be relevant to the ' 50s, or how does anyone live thatlong?Time doe changeone's perspect ive. ' "

Colby, November 1 99 1


52

Barbara Bone Leavitt rings in \\"ith a poem:

The norice arrii>ed from Colh)· , It's newsletter rime again . Howei.·er, when checking my files I find noching w write for m)' pen '

An Entrepreneur at Heart The year wa

1 943, and rhe young man had j ust claimed a coveted pot in the freshman class at ew York City' pre tigiou Stuyve-am High chool when he di covered rhat wartime constraints had placed tuyve ant on a pl it chedule. Fre hmen had no cla e until after lunch. oon after the eme ter tarted, rhe young ter heard hi uncle ay he could not get reliable help in rhe tockroom ofhis publi hing company. "All rhe boy- are in rhe army," the uncle, at Wane! , complained. "Uncle ar," the young man remember piping up, 'Tm a boy, and I ha' e ome time." And that i how Alan B. M irken '5 1 began a career that i- till going trongnearly a half-century later. Mirken pent four happy and productive years at Colby and returned to the firm, Crown Publi hing, after graduation. He tarted in the production department and eventually partici­ pated in every a pect of the operation before becoming pre ident and chief executive. Crown and its ub idiarie became three ucces ful companies in one-a hot hardcover publi her rhat developed -uch commercially ucce ful author- as Judith Kranu, Jean Auel and Martha Stewart; a popular di-counter rhat filled bookstore bargain tables aero s the country with low­ priced editions of previou ly is ued works; and a profitable direct-mail marketer. Mirken and hi- a ociate old rhe company to Random House nearly four year ago, when Crown wa till at the top of rhe game. "Ir wasn't rhe money," Mirken ay . "It was ju t time for us to ell. The industry wa ju t getting to the point when it wasn't fun anymore." Expensive bidding war-, he explain , were committing publishers to illogically high advances and diminishing the value of what he and Crown did be t: build a ucce ful publi hing empire by cultivating and developing author . Although Crown had nor involved it e lf in rhe rat race and had not lo t any of its own tars, Mirken ay , "I could ee the day coming," He became a vi e pr idem at Random Hou e, where he -rayed for 1 7 month before moving to Abbeville Pr -, which pecializes in art books uch a rhe three-volume An Across America, Ii ting for 42 5 . "I gue - you could ay I am ju r an entrepreneur at heart," M irken ·ay . Mirken and his wife, Barbara, have two grown daughter. They are rhinking about abandoning their uburban home in Ro lyn, Long I Land, for a Manhattan apartment. M irken pleads guilty ro enioying the glamour that attend major figure in the publishing indu try and ay he 1 rill in do e touch with all the authors he helped develop. At a rage when a number of Colby clas mate have retired, M1rken i a font of new ideas. "Abbeville has publtShed everal wonderful, large books at about 90," he say of one project. "One contains all of Norman Rockwell' 332 Saturday Evening Post covers, another' a book of Audubon prints and rhe rhird i of Currier and l\•e prints. I got the idea of producing the books 4 by 4 inches quare a mall, affordable reference works for 1 0.95." The high chool fre hman who once a ked hi Uncle at for a morning job till has ome time to devote to an industry he has helped shape for 4 year·.

Colby, November 1 99 1

"Ir is a good thing Chappie will ne,·er ee rhi poem," she writes. "Howe,·er, it doe gi,·e a mes age. Asourreunionquestionnaire will be coming our I shall not send one now. 1 plan to send our more postcard -please respond. If you don't hear from me, please drop me a line . . . . Caroline Wilkins McDonough and her husband, Dick, had a wonderful 3 5rh anni­ versary ce lebration. They re­ newed rheirvow and a gala party, planned by their children, Li a '8 1 , David and Philip, was held at their home. It wa great to see Chuck '53 andJanice Pearson Anderson there."

53

Corre pondent e l­ son Beveridge exr�nds "congratu­ lation to all of you turning 60. It is hard to believe that thi is happening . . . . Ross Holt writes that he i working at the Coa tal Workshop in Camden, Maine. H is hobbie include doing water color , collecting old bottles and jogging. Both of his children are married, and he ha two 'outtand ing' grandchi ldren. Sandra Thompson Cyr ay 're­ tirement seems to agree with us here in Fort Kent, Maine. Our only problem this year is that the moo e are coming out of the woodsro shareourroad and yards. o. 1 on, Jon, teaches the only macroeconomic high chool cour e in rhe tate; no. 2 on, Peter, vi ired audi Arabia wirh the Maine ational Guard as a tanker navigator; no. 3 on, Bob, northeast regional manager for 41


Correspondents Measurex Computer ; J ulie, only daughter, is the oncology coun­ selor at the New England Baptist Hospita l. ' . . . Judy Schiff Sokoll gives the following review of what she has done ince Colby: 'After l i vi ng in Massachu ens, Con­ necticut, New York and Texas, we've been in Vienna , Va., for 2 1 years. Got an M.L.S., was school l ibrarian, freelance indexer. Now with Fairfax County publ ic li­ brary system, first as children' , now adult, reference librarian. Monthly book reviews for School Library Journal are fun . On a re­ cent trip to New Zealand and A ustra l i a , l partic ipated in a torytelling event that included storyteller from down under. I t is one ofrny favorite activitie . Oth­ e r i nc l u de u s h e r i n g at the Kennedy Center's opera house and at Wolftrap, the only U.S. national park for the performing arts. I swim almost daily and a;:n learning to love golf. Hu band M i lt, when not an I BM analyst, i a softball umpire uprerno. TI1at means he's never wrong! Susan, 3 2 , is a computer programmer; Steve, 2 1 , is a physic ian-both fine people ( objectively noted ) . I saw Bobbie Weiss Alpert for sev­ eral hours, J an ( Pear on ' 5 2 ) and Chuck Anderson for an over­ night and Judy Mayer Schneider for a weekend-grand v isits but too short. I 'd love to see/hear from others . ' . . . J ane Bailey Strete writes from Cambridge, Mass.: 'Sixty's great. Feeling more and more as if there's more and more to life. I write, do ome part­ time consulting in writing and slowly tone up at the health c lub, all the while wondering proudly how I spawned a woman lawyer, a computer programmer and a corn­ pu ter network designer.' . . . Pe­ ter Salmon writes that he is 'still in Watertown, N .Y. Elly and I have raised four children, all mar­ ried and gai nfully employed . Turning 60 means our 40th re42

1 950

N ancy Sear (Nancy L. Ricker) 3 1 Sweetwater A venue Bedford, MA 0 1 7 30 6 1 7-275-7865

1955 Ann Ingraham (Ann S. D i l l i ngh am ) 9 Appletree Lane Manchester, ME 043 5 1 207-622-0298

1 95 1 Harland Ea tman P.O. Box 276 Springva l e , M E 04083 207-324-2797

1 95 6 Mr . C. MacDonald Grout (Eleanor Ed munds ) RD 3, Jone Road Gouverneur, NY 1 3642 3 1 5-287-3277

1 952 Barbara Leavitt ( Barbara J. Bone) 2 1 Indian Trail Scituate, MA 02066 6 1 7-545-4374

1 95 7 Brian F . 0 1 e n 4 6 W a hington Drive Acton, MA 0 1 720 508-263-9238

1 95 3

J . Nelson Beve ridge 1 34 Border Street Coha et, MA 02025 6 1 7-383- 1 7 1 2 1 954 Marlene Jabar ( Marlene E. Hurd) 1 1 Pleasantdale Avenue Waterville, ME 0490 1 207-87 3-44 7 1

union i s coming u p soon-hope to be there ! ' . . . Please start think­ ing about attending our reunion in J une 1 993. Write cla s presi­ dent Dick Hobart w i th your thoughts and ideas on j ust how you would like to celebrate this big event."

56

"It won't be easy to fi ll Hope Palmer Bramhal l's shoes," writes new corre pondent Eleanor Edmunds Grout. "She has done an outstanding job, and I will rely on her good advice . . After our 'extraterrestrial reunion' ( Hope's expression ) , she and her

1 95 8 Andria Kime (Andria H. Peacock) 73 7 Turnpike Street Stoughton, MA 02072 6 1 7 -344-84 1 9 1 959 Su an Frazer

(Susan K. Fetherston) 6 Bellevue Place M iddletown, CT 06457 203-346- 8 1 3 7

husband, Peter, had a wonderful summer of good sail ing weather and even ventured as far a Nan­ tucket from their u ual Maine sailing haunts . . . . J ust after we returned home to yI via Lake and were basking in the glow of the best 3 5 th reunion ever, I received a phone call from Jackie Huebsch Scanda l io s , who is s t i l l i n Atherton, Cal if. W e have kept in touch through Christmas card but had not had a conversation in many a year. As we compared notes on careers, children and grandchildren, Jackie told me that he has her own tax business. Her husband, John, manages to find time to take the whole family

sailing. Their most recent trip was to the Aegean ea and Greek i land in June with their family as crew. No wonder J ackie missed the reunion-but he hopes to make the 40th . . . . The folks in my office said that I hould go back to Colby and Maine more often, that they don't believe the report of sunny blue kie and warm Maine days and that they wish I 'd shut up about the beauti­ ful campus, the Sarno et Resort, the golf game with Joan Wil­ l i a ms M a r s h a l l and Don Buonomo, Hurricane Island na­ ture walk and a wonderful vi it with many friends . . . . Listening to stories about all the place our classmates have traveled recently was fun. A partial l ist include Paula and Peter Lunder' Euro­ pean adventure, which included Denmark, Germany, I taly and witzerland. Our new class presi­ dent, Jean Pratt Moody, and her husband, J i rn , have been to Mexico and Ireland and took a boat trip from Rome to Yugo la­ via. Neil t inneford '57 men­ tioned that he was in Beij ing ju t three weeks before the student upri ing. We're glad it was be­ fore, N e i l ! Abbott and Nancy Hubbard Greene have plan for a lot of travel, too. 'Why not,' ay Abbott. 'With a free 1 ifetirne pass on TWA to anyv,rhere in the world, Chri tma hopping in Madrid i a pos ibility ! ' Diane ( c h nauffer ' 5 7 ) and Larry Zullinger have a d ifferent mode of travel, having enjoyed four bike trips in Europe. The be t one, they say, was Munich to Vienna. Larry retired after 30 years in the tee! indu try and has a second career in industrial real estate. Diane has ju t gotten her real estate license; they both enjoy that bu ines . The Zullinger live in Gladwyne, Pa . . . . Katharine 'Katie' Coon Dunlop wa at re­ union-looking exact! y the same. It was '56 all over again. he i

Colby , November 1 99 1


very bu y with her own real estate bu ine in Armenia, .Y. I had fun comparing note with her because I am in real estate in Gouverneur, N .Y . . . . We really are a great clas , and Hope was righ t---our 'extraterre trial' re­ union was out of this world. We were all sorry that more class­ mate couldn't enjoy the won­ derfulgathering ofold friends and classmate o ably organi:ed and orchestrated by Dave Sortor, asi ted by hi wife, Rosie Crouth­ ainel Sortor and various and un­ dry friend . There were o many que tion about those who were not at the reunion that in the nex t few week l'll be ending out ome que tionnaire . Plea e help me help all of u keep in touch by writing or call ing me anytime. I am looking forward to hearing from you, and 1 am already look­ ing forward to our 40th J U t five hon year away."

57

Brian 01 en writes: "Plano ing i underway for our up­ coming 3 5 th reunion, and by the time you read th i we hould have a pretty good idea of the expected turnout. Let's go for a record­ breaker thi time and have the largest group ever! If you have not returned your que tionnaire there's till time, notwith rand­ ing the Ocrober 1 deadline on the form. . . . ews from overseas: Bethia Reynolds Morris wnte of her bu y l ife in Helensburg, cor land . Du nbartonsh i r e , Bethia i married to John Morris, a enior profe sor at the Uni verity of trathclyde, and ha three married daughter . Bethia ha been in the U.K. for nearly 30 years, cotland for 2 2 , and he now keep bu y with a cancer re earch fund-rai ing group, a w e l l a a land pre ervat ion group . . . . Charlie Twigg write from j us t down the road in

Colby, November 1 99 1

Wellesley that the real estate market ha 'redefined when I will retire ! ' Charlie i married to the fonner Lia Bel:er '5 anJ has four grown children. He also notes that daughter Charmaine ' 7 has joined the family business ince her graduation from Colby, and she w ishes he would re t i re . Charlie has worked for many years in the office building develop­ ment field in Manchester, N . H . . . . I t ' quite a jump to movefrom Elmira, .Y., to Mobile, Ala. , but that' ju t what Ed Lagonegro has done-most succe fully, I might add. Ed i enior \·ice pre i­ dem at lngall hipbuilding, Inc. in Pascagoula, Mi . ( Ye , that' the company that trie ro get all those contract away from Bath Iron Work ! ) Ed and hi wife, J udy, ha\·e two daughters in col­ lege (TCU and the Uni\·er ity of Alabama) , and he spends much 01· his free t i me on the golf cour·e . . . . Charlie Smith writes from Cambridge that he i not ret ired and says, vehemently, 'never ' ' Charlie is in the rehabili­ tation, re toration and market­ ing ofold building in Boston. He sray fit w ith tennis and i· in­ volved with some activitie at Trinity Church in Bo ton . . . . 1 was delighted to hear from Karl Honsberger that all i well with him in Amher t , N . H . Karl wouldn't mind if he were retired, but he still run the All rate agency on l O l A inAmher t. Karl and hi wife, Pamela, have three grown children (with few excep­ tion , I gues all our children are grown) . . . . Carol Fisher actu­ ally admits to being retired-good for her! Carol wa a staff a ociate with the Che apeake & Potomac Telephone Companie when he decided to call it quit . From the I i t of her volunteer re ponsibili­ ties, it ounds as if she i working harder than ever: ecretary of the Homeowner' As ociation board of trustee , officer of a major

Maryland museum, member of the county hi toncal ociety and \"Olunteer worker in hi toncal hou es. ounds like Carol ought to go back to work and get a little time off1 • • • Lot more new to come in the upcoming columns, and my thanks to all of you who ent in the questionnaire earlier and are now responding to the reunion material. I haven't for­ gotten you; I just need about four column to cover everyone (we ·hould finish in the May is ue, just before the reunion). Till next time."

58

A n d r i a Peacock Kime write : "Congratulations are in order for Ellie Fortenbaugh de la Bandera. he received her master's in panish translation from Rutger· la t May and worked with Uruguayan writer Christina Ross. Ellie tran lated Ro ' work for her thesis and will be publi h­ ing that and future short -wry tran !ation . he wrote, ca ually, 'Anorher neat thing that' hap­ pened i that l wa profiled in the 1 99 1 -92 Who's Who in rhe East. It' undoubtedly due to the great expo ure l get in my job with the Admini nation Office of the Court of .J . ' . . . R i c h ard Campbell hail from Phoenix, Md., where he i group vice presi­ dent and president of hardware and home improvement for Black & Decker. Dick i pa t pre idem of the company' Canadian diviion. He and hi wife, Carolyne Jean, have four children and a grandchild. They vacation in the 'old-fa hioned' state ofMaineand are planning to move back there in 1 99 2 . We will look forward to eeing them at our 3 5th reunion! . . . Peter Doran' on planned to attend the Univer iry of Maine on a ba ketball cholar hip thi fall. Raising a 6'9" on i an ac­ complishment in itself! I think

he beat out Beryl Scott Glover's son in height. Can anyone beat 6'9" ? Pete ha been profe or and chair of the Department of Hu­ man, Health and Family rud 1e at the Univer ity of Maine m Farmington. In J une he re 1gned a chair to return to the commu­ nity health faculty full time. He will be on abbatical lea\'e from January to June 1 992 to tra\·el and srudy on the We t Coa t and in Hawa i i , ew Zealand and Au tralia. Lois, of cour e, will be with him. What an opportunity! . . J im Bishop' brief note aid he's been very busy writing and publishing. He ha a new book out, Legends and Leagues of che Verde alley. He al o has a con­ tract to write a book about Ed­ ward Abbey-Requiem for a Lone Ranger. We wi h you well with all your endeavors. . . Carl and Debbie Robson Cobb say their move to Seattle 'ha reju\'enated us. Exploring the Pacific North­ west is an unending experience of phy ical grandeur and beauty.' However, the Cobbs do plan to retire on Cape Cod. Deb is VP and CRA officer for the Fir t In­ ter tate Bank ofWashington. Carl i a ho pita! administrator. They keep in touch with Sara Stewart Johnson. The la t correspon­ dence from Sara wa from Ha­ waii. he took a year off from teaching in Bend, Oreg., after her mother' death to take care of the hou e, etc., in Kamuela. Her pre­ retiremern wa very brief; she ended up teaching English, folk­ lore and children' literature part time at Hawaii Preparatory Acad­ emy. 'Retirement wa brief but great! Read 23 book and painted about a dozen bad watercolor , mosrly onthe beach.' . . . Cynthia Fox Dancer i program director/ therapist for a re idernial depen­ dency/co-dependency treatment facility. Her new po ition, with more re pon ibilitie , has given her a chance to go back ro chool, 43


which she find· exciting. She and her husband, Dick, attended the Florida School ofAddiction Stud­ ie as we l l as a conference in D.C. 'Life has been very fulfill ing and rewarding. I have grown person­ ally and profc sionally. l strongly believe that add ict ions, includ­ ing alcoholism, are diseases and should be treated instead of pun­ ished. People suffering from these disea e have the right to quality, professional rreatment. Some of my efforts have been to help pro­ vide quality assurance to the [Florida] cert ificat ion process.' . There's more news to come. l hope to have a newsletter out to you oon. Please don't wait for a questionnaire if you have some­ thing you'd like to share with our c las . I t doe n't have to be excit­ ing travel, news of promotion or of the welcome ( ?) retirement. Some of us are struggling from day to day, but we st i l l have a story to te ll. We all make up the great Clas of 1 9 5 8 ! "

59

"Once again l take to my handy word processor to hare what l have been able to learn in the past couple of months about a few of our classmates," w r i tes c orrespondent Su an Fetherston Frazer. "Jack and Bar­ bara Hunter Pallotta are al ive and well in Mahwah, N .J . Jack is senior vice president of Guardian Life I nsurance in New York. Jack says that he 'never made any at­ tempt to like New York,' and he likes to read and write on the train during the 90-minute com­ mute from Mahwah. Jack and Barbara keep fit and busy with golf, sai ling and tennis, and J ack runs about 25 miles a week. Bar­ bara is head of the volunteer unit at nearby Ridgewood Hospital. They recently had a fine time on a trip to the Maine coast, suspect­ ing that there might be ome44

George Lebherz, Jr. '5 2

Headliners George Lebberz, Jr. '5 2 was named associate justice of the Massachu ens District Court. . . . Arnold Bernhard '57 wa elected vice chair of the University of Bridgeport (Conn . ) board of trustees.

Newsmakers Edward Cawley '52 and hi son Pete '88 were profiled in a long article in the Lowell (Mass.) Sun upon Pete' return from duty as an F- 1 4 pilot in Operation Desert Stonn. Pete Cawley i a third-generation Colbian-hi grandfather wa White Mule football tandout Edward D. Cawley ' 1 7 . . . . Michael Farren '59 was the subject of a feature article in the Lynn ( M a s. ) Daily Evening Item for his work at the helm of the Pease Development Commi ion, the agency charged with convert­ ing the former Pease Air Force Base into a commercial airport.

Mileposts Deaths: Barbara Wyman Anderson 'SO in Ponland, Maine, at 62 . . . . Emil R. Eilertsen '50 in Setauket, N.Y., at 66 . . . . Martha Apollonio Hillman '50 in San Rafael, Calif., at 62 . . . . Philip H. Bangs '5 1 in Martinsburg, W.Va., at 65.

thing to see and do there besides sit on a rock and drink beer! They plan to relocate to serious golf country in the South in seven years or o . . . . Margie Ander­ son Ferguson would not agree withJack about New York. Margie is widowed and works there as manager of pric ing for Bri t ish West I ndies A ir. Her job requires extensive travel to the Caribbean, which she loves, espec ially when it means going to Trinidad and Tobago. ln fact, he aid that if she had any leisure time she would travel even more. She thoroughly enjoys liv ing in N ew York and

tries to take maximum advantage ofall the city has to offer. She says her life is hectic and unpredict­ able-and that's the way she likes it . . . . l had a terrific letter from Ed Goldberg of Newton, Mas . Two of Ed's four children are re­ cent Colby graduates. Mo t of his career has been spent in the fi­ nancial world, divided between banking and the inve tment busi­ ness. He says he 'rode the back of a tiger wh ile working at Drexel Burnham Lambert during the go­ go years of the '80 .' He recently became affiliated with Donald­ son, Lufkin & Jenrette in Bo ton.

Ed reports long-term involvement with local hospitals and environ­ mental groups and says he has worked with Technicon, Jsrael' leadingschoolofengineeringand science. l n recognition ofhi con­ tributions, Ed recently received an honorary degree from Tech­ nicon. He say he ha given up running for cycling and equita­ tion and is looking forward to a econd 50 years as good as the fir t. . . . Mike Riordan lives in New Canaan, Conn., and works with Bob Nielsen. Mike had the time of hi life in J une when he went to France with three other guys. They toured Normandy ex­ ten ively, taying in bed & break­ fast inns. M ike said what l already knew-those places are fabulou . They went to Chartres, where they saw one of the world's most beautiful cathedrals. In Paris they found some of Ernest Heming­ way' old haunts, went on the bateaux-mouches ( s ightsee ing boat that cruise the eine-their name is a minor mystery) and learned to ride the Metro . . . . La t ummer my hu band and I drove to Andover, Mass., and had a lovely lunch with Gay Fawcett and her mother, as well as Geor­ gia Johnson Manin's mother and two of Georgia's children, who were there for the summer. The little lip of paper in my fortune cookie said 'Your dearest wish will come true.' Since mo t of them already have come true, l had to think about what that might be. Well, it certainly would be nice to look in the mailbox and see a big pile of letter from some of you folks telling about recent events in your lives. Com­ plete biographies are not nece sary, nor is it necessary to have broken ome world record. All you have to do is sit down and jot off a few line to let us know you're in touch. That's all for now."

Colby , November 1 99 1


THE SIXTIES "Last ummer I was 60 lucky enough to be a 'roving re­

porter' and got to earrle," ay correspondent Kay White. "On Bainbridge Island I talked with Karen Kennedy Yearsley, who was enjoying a more lei urely life since leaving her job a a book­ keeper for a store on the island. She and her husband have four kids and live on ix acres in a very beautiful part of the world. Karen is espec ially enjoying her 1 0month-old grandchild . . . . I al o called Jack Sinton on the same island, but he and his wife were away for the weekend . . . . l n August 1 w a in Philadelphia and called Don Williamson to catch up with h im. Don i director of re earch for the National Liberty Corp. insurance company and like many of us i enjoying hi first grandchild . . . . Charles Leighton is administrator of laboratorie for Merck, Sharp and Dohme, which means that he travel a great deal, since the pharmaceu­ ticals company has project all over the world. Charlie i al o a Colby overseer and will be part of the team that review the Biol­ ogy Department, looking for way to update and improve it . . . . Ed Burke has joined Fir t New Hamp hire Bank as a commercial lender. Ed and Betsy ( Perry '61 ) l ive in Fremont, N . H . . . . Hope you all had a good summer. Send news."

62

Linda N icho lson Goodman writes: "New wa re­ ceived of the appointment of William Barnett as a claims man­ agement/lo control consultant at J .H . Alben International In­ surance Advisor , Inc . in the Bos­ ton area. Prior to joining J .H. Albert, Bill, a re ident of West­ ford, Mass., worked for a national hotel chain in New Hampshire Colby, November 1 99 1

and a major regional brokerage firm in Boston . . . . Anne Tick­ nor McN eece and 1 talked on the phone la t ummer. Anne now has a step-granddaughter whom she and her husband, Bob, were able to cuddle and coo at when they took a trip to the We t Coa t in April. According to Anne, that experience is a marvelou one, full ofwarm feelings that you Long to duplicate in a return vi it . . Most of us have received Patricia 'Patch' Jack Mos her's 30th re­ union letter reminding us that five years have sped by since our 2 5 th and seeking input and assis­ tance for rekindling the joie de vivre of our college days. J une 57, 1 992 are the dates to remem­ ber, when the Class of '62 will come togetherfor good conversa­ tion, wonderful food and drink nd the warm memories that old friends hare. I t' not too early to think about setting those days aside, to make ome phone call to others who might want to at­ tend but wonder about who else will be there and to gear up for making the trip to beautiful May­ flower Hill and mid-Maine. You'll be revi tal ized after your first glance and the good times will flow effortle sly. ound too easy? Patch would love to hear from you if you want to help with the planning. . . . Another letter/ questionnaire will be on it way to you shortly, since I have few­ if any-updated anecdotes about the live , foibles and fortunes of my classmates. Jay and Peter (you know who you are ) , send some­ thing soon! "

63

J o- A n n W i ncze French writes: "I'm once again reading through all the response to my questionnaire of la t fall. I realize that by now most of your news is almost a year old, but it' still very current as regards the

attitude we have and the lives most of us are leading. We seem to have our lives in order and our priorities straight. There's defi­ nitely an emphasi on family and children, with ome time left over to contribute to numerou com­ munity and other worthwhile project , many of which will in­ fluence the next generation in very po itive ways. . . . One per­ son who has very ucce sfully managed career, fam iiy and ' pare' time is Nancy Reynolds Jensen. Nancy and her hu band, Rodger, were married a year ago April and now have a combined family of four ons: Jeff, 19, Jon, 26, Kris, 1 7 , and Larry, 26. (Why do we have such old children?) ancy is a marketing communications manager, and Rodger is the man­ ager of field operations for the city of Palo Alto, Calif. ancy and Rodger traveled to Cancun and Cozumel la t year and then took Jeff and Kri to Hawaii for Thanksgiving week. Nancy and Rodger both travel for business. Nancy i al o on the board of directors of the Rubicon Chil­ dren' Center, where abused chil­ dren who are wards of the court are treated. Nancy and her family enj oy camping, water-ski ing, now skiing and lots of other ac­ tivitie . Because ofherownexpe­ rience, Nancy i also a great pro­ moter of mammograms. She says the procedure saved her life­ and we're all very thankful for that. Congratulations on your re­ covery, Nancy! . . . I don't know where we're going to find Tom Thomas next year. He plans to take off all of 1 992 as a 'sabbati­ cal' from regular life so he can workfor a liberal presidential can­ didate and travel extensively. Since Tom has his own travel agency, he's constantly traveling anyway. At the time he wrote this letter, his next trip wa to England and Tanzania. Did you ever get to the Ngorongoro Cra-

ter, Tom? Tom and wife Patricia Raymond Thomas '65 have three kid , Robert '88, who i now at Columbia grad school, Rebecca, who graduated from Dartmouth, and arah, who is at Colby- aw­ yer. ln hi spare time, Tom is doing some acting. Last fall he appeared in Early One Evening ar the Rainbow Bar and Grille. Last year Tom was elected president of the Buck County ( Pa . ) His­ torical Sociery. He al o volun­ teer for the Peace Valley Narure Center, the Central Buck Fam­ ily YMCA and the Pebble H ill Church. Does anyone want rn run Tom's travel agency for 1 992 ? . . . Another of our class­ mate paying Colby tuition again is James Lapides. His on, Mat­ thew, i pre ently a Colby stu­ dent. James and wife Lucy al o have a daughter, Emily, I S . Jame is branch manager and senior vice president of Prudential-Bache Securities in ew Haven, Conn. Lucy pends her t ime as a home­ maker and registrar of voters in Hamden. James says he used to coach a lot of Little League, and now he chauffeurs hi daughter to tennis tournaments. He likes to vacation in Florida and al o play a little tennis . . . . There' more news to come in my next column."

64

"Bob Dyer has ent the most informative collection of letters and articles for my en­ lightenment," says correspondent Sara Shaw Rhoades. "You may remember the notation in the March i sue of this mag that Bob hadreceivedoneofthe first Maine Educator awards, a grant of 2 5 ,000. This wa the result of his innovative programs for teach­ ing technology to his ixth grad­ ers. ince 1 974 his cla es have been making conference calls to famous people, conducting inter-

45


views, taping the conversations forfurther tudies and writing let­ ters before and after each call. Research into the celebrity' field of interest is conducted prior to phoning. Actors, authors, a lin­ gu i t, a UFO expert, illustrators and pilot have been interviewed, along with spons figures and sena­ tors. Such interdisciplinary ac­ tivity is what motivates Bob-as well as hi students. He' involved in SClST AR, a satellite series featuring inventors of the 20th century; in the Regional Student Weather Network, a project in­ volving meteorological explora­ tion through local and National Weather Service data to develop cientific thinking, interpretation and networking skills; and in the GAIA Cros road project, a cur­ riculum using satellite imagery to teach c a r tography, eco logy, oceanography, history, geography and analysis. Bob has been teach­ ing for 27 years and is till excited about it. What a treat ro hear from him! . . . My latestquestion­ naires are beginning to trickle back. It' always special to hear from someone who has been quiet for a long time. K itty Hartford Huntley's reply was a nice ur­ prise. Kitty is a real estate agent in East Boothbay, Maine, and finds her work both vocation and avocation. She reports that recy­ cling is alive and well in her lo­ cale, but the town government is struggling. She writes, 'We do l ike the idea of keeping every­ thing local, but it's hard getting folks ro commit to boards and committee . I served on the town's affordable housing committee for a year but burned out after every­ one else did. Very frustrating; hands tied by the state ! ' . . . An­ other nice surprise wa hearing from Gloria Shepherd, who is a guidance counselor in New York City. She writes: ' During the school year, 1 00 percent of my time and energy is spent on my 46

occupation. The ummer is my time for daily painting, an activ­ iry that I have always enjoyed immen ely. In J uly 1 989 I went on a wonderful painting trip ro England with Karen Eskesen and her organization. I have fond memories of our excursions to Stonehenge, Sal isbury, Bath, York and Stratford-on-Avon, where we painted in Shake­ speare's garden ! ' . . . Coinc i ­ dentally, I also heard from Karen thi month. She pend half of the year in Denmark and half in Florida and reports that both place have good recycling pro­ grams. In response ro the ques­ tion about budget cuts, he writes that 'in Denmark the education budget was overinflated and seem more rea onable now. In Florida, I think, education is doing okay in our area ( Broward County ) . It seems to be services to the aged that are being cut back or that were alway in trouble and don't get help.' Karen is an artist, vol­ unteers at church and school, teaches art and some rehabilita­ t ion and keeps house and garden in good hape . . . . Attention all of you who send out Christmas letter : Put me on your li t! My address, although no longer at the foot of this column, is ome­ where in these pages. You'll have to look for it-some sort ofalumni game."

65

Richard Bankhart writes with news from academe: "Jim Quirk has a new position as professor of computer science at Kentucky Wesleyan College. He invites those who pass through the Owen born, Ky./Evansville, Ind., area to look him up (log in, J im ? ) . . . . Ken Gray is at Penn State Un iversity as 'professor in charge of vocational and indus­ trial education. ' He says, turn ing philosophical, 'Recent surgery has

Alden

Wilson '69

Headliners Edward J. Burke '60 was named vice president and commercial lender at Fir t New Hampshire Bank. . . . Alden Wilson '69 received the 1 99 1 Social ls ues Resources, Inc. Intellectual Freedom Award from the Maine Library Associa­ tion, Maine Educational Media As ociation. A executive director of the Maine A rts Commission, Wilson took a strong stand against the eizure and planned de truction, on the U .S./ Canada border, of an allegedly ob cene Walter Chappell photograph.

Newsmakers Sally Walker Simpson '60 was appointed interim prin­ cipal ofWestfieldSchool inGlen Ellyn, Ill. , for l 99 1 -92 . . . Bi­ ographer and political analyst Doris Kearns Goodwin '64 was keynote speaker for Centennial Graduation Weekend at an­ other alma mater, South Side High School in Rockville Cen­ ter, N .Y. . . . Richard Davis '65 received the presidential citation from the board of director of the Independent In ur­ ance Agents of Ma achusett after retiring as a board member. Davis was al o elected 63rd pre idem of the Needham (Ma s . ) Rotary . . . . Richard Bishop ' 6 6 wa appointed principal of Sacred Heart High School in Waterbury, Conn . . . . Charles Levin '67 was installed as president of Temple Beth Shalom in Needham, Mass . . . . Sari Abul-Jubein '69 is back in busi­ nes at the Casablanca restaurant in Cambridge, Mas ., ac­ cording to a paean to the once-doomed eatery in a recent Boston Globe. After being c losed for 16 month due to a renewal project, the Casablanca wa reopened by Abul-Jubein and a cadre of invesrors. " I t 's about time," the Globe said . . . . Rocco Landesman '69 is among three proud new owner of the Kenosha Twins, a minor league baseball team . . . . Barbara Klingerman Morgan '69 wa honored for academic excellence by the Rutgers Univer ity School of Law when she received her j uris doctor degree in May . . . . Edward Woodin '69 was named to the board of tru tee of the Maine Audubon Society.

Mileposts Marriages: Lynne Davidson '64 to Jame King in East Hampton, N .Y. Deaths: William Rollins '60 in Natick, Ma . , at 52. Colby , November 1 99 1


Correspondents 1 960

left me with an apprec iation for what each day bring . ' . . . Linda Wakefield-La Rou l i ves in Poughkeepsie, N . Y . , and has earned a CA. . in educational admini tration. he i a full-time instrucror in the Engli h Depart­ ment at the tate University of ew York/Dutches County campus . . . . Margot Luu Ott Ii ts herself a 'housewife and profes­ sional volunteer.' he is the leader of two G irl cout troops in M iddletown, .J . , and the activ­ ity coordinator for 30 more in the region. he and her hu band, Gary, have been on camping, white-water rafting and canoe­ ing trips in their motor home. 'In tead of my garden, l pend my time cultivating three children, aged 1 4, 12 and . ' . . . Peter Mudge in Raleigh, N .C, claims he' ' emi-retired' and doing lots of woodworking for Habitat for Humanity. I believe that means he' working hi hands raw with [former] Pre idem Carter. From the jet et: Judy Eyges i a travel agent with Metro World Travel ervice in Washington, D.C She will be in Hawaii as you read thi . he report a trip to the Greek i land of antorini-'lived in a volcanic cave.' he aw Eliot Terborgh and John Cornell on rec ent trips . . . . Col. J e rr y McElroy h a transferred to Lan­ gley AFB in Virginia from the Pentagon. He's director of bud­ get for Tactical Air Command. 'Thi summer crewed on an An­ napoli to Newport race but didn't bring home trophies.' . . . Pam Pierson Parziale Ii t herself a 'potter.' Apparently this i not j ust an occasional a htray! She chair the We t Virginia Com­ mi ion on the Arts and recently participated in a National En­ dowment for the Art review panel. An author, she em a copy of the January 1 990 i ue of Ce­ ramics, with a feature article on ycamore Pottery, the business Colby, November 1 99 1

1 965

Katherine P. White 1 22 8 andringham Way Birmingham, Ml 480 1 0

Richard W. Bankart 20 Valley Avenue uite D2 We twood, J 07675

3 1 3 - 646-2907

20 1 -664-7672

1 96 1

Penelope D. Hill (Penelope Die u ) 2 unny i d e Lane New Fairfield, CT 06 1 2 203-746-3223 1 962

Linda Goodman ( Linda H. N icholson) Femwold Heights Farm 96 Lynch Hill Road Oakdale. CT 06370 203-848-0469 1 963

Jo-Ann W. French Uo-Ann Wincze) 64 S. Parkview Drive Aurora, OH 44202 2 16-562-9925

1 966

Ru ell . Monbleau 3 Lovejoy Road Milford, H 0305 5 603 -673-5508 1 967

Mrs. Ro A. Dean (Susan R. Daggett) 2930 1 . 1 1 4th Street Scottsdale, AZ 8 5 2 55 602-585-03 1 3 1968

Barbara E. Bixby 12 Eighth treet Bayville, NY 1 1 709 5 1 6-628- 1 597

1 964

1 969

ara Rhoades (Sara K. Shaw) 76 Norton Road Kittery, ME 03904

Anna T. Bragg (Anna E. Thompson) PO Box 267 61 South Main treet Wa hbum, ME 04786

207-439-2620

she and hu band Ren own. 'We will u e about even rons of clay before the year i out,' he ays. Their pottery is on exhibit at the cultural center in Charle ton, W.Va., and they are planning everal large exhibitions this fall and winter.''

66

R uss M o nbleau write : "Your new corre pondent i off to a roaring tart. Four days to deadline, one till vacation, cooking birthday meal for Joyce (who i n't home yet at 6:45 ) and halfway through the column, the computer goes ber erk, deletes the entire text and flashe at me for over an hour before finally calm­ ing down. Do you think it was

omething l said? o, here we go again . . . . Our 2 5th reunion wa quite an event. Over 1 00 class­ mate made the trip for at lea t some of the weekend . After checking my predeces or' awe­ some record , l can confirm that there were 24 members present who had not been heard from in at least five year . A tremendous vote of thanks to Kay McGee Christie-Wilson and her com­ mittee for producing uch a won­ derful event. ext time, though, order all large and extra-large thirts. ot all of u run mara­ thon and have the ame bodie we left chool with. The per i tence award goe to Stu Want­ man, who wa working the crowd right and left throughout the Pa­ rade of Cla e to gain the Cla s

of '66 the di tinrnon of making the highest reunion cla gift m school hi tory. Th1 wa a tre­ mendou achievement and the result of a great deal of hard work . . . . Anne Ladd Carlson recently made news in the Chelmsford, Ma . , area, where she was lecruring and demon crat­ ing sample methods of learning conver at ional panish and French. Anne was noted for ha\'­ ing over 20 ) ear of experience de igning language program . . . . Joy Reinelt Adams report that her daughter Heather has entered the Univer ity of Hart­ ford. Joy and her husband of 2 3 years, Duane, teach social tudie in outhington, Conn. Duane was just honored a teacher of the year. Under change in her life, Joy li t her deci ion to pend la t ummer at home after many um­ mer of travel in Europe and this country. One hoped-for change, he ay , is that Colby will finally tart calling her Joy in tead of ancy. he dropped the ancy 40 year ago and wishes Colby would follow ult. Joy report that she stays in contact with Margie Malcolm, who works for the United Nation setting up U. meetings all over the world. . . . Sue Stout Baker ha relocated to alt Lake City. Daughter aomi, 1 7 , is a high chool enior and other daughter, arah, 1 6, is a junior. ue has been teaching college history and when he finds the time, like to ki in the Uinta Mountain (I received a little geography lesson here-I thought all those peak were in the Wa atch range ) . We di cussed how being educated in the East doe not prepare you for the ex­ perience of deep powder, a ' ki Urah' trademark . . . . Gregory Chabot i living in ewburyport, Mass., in a restored antique cape built in 1 7 30. Greg describe h is career a 'checkered,' tarting out as a high chool teacher, moving 47


Higgins Makes a Career of Giving G

eorge "Bud" Higgins I l l '69 is master of a domain that many

people hope they will never see-the emergency room at the Maine Medical Center in Portland. As chief of emergency services for Maine's largest hospital, Higgins manages a staff of 1 00 and a $7 million budget, and he sees to it that the 45,000 to 50,000 people who visit the emer­ gency room each year receive prompt, first-class treatment. Higgins seems to thrive in the high-stress atmosphere where, as he puts it, "from moment to moment your whole life can change." He says the pace, the variety and the challenges make his specialty one of the hottest in the country. Emergency medicine, Higgins say , "rums people on be­ cause you really have to know a lot about a lot of things. You apply it daily. You diagnose and treat almost simultaneously in many cases, so you get this immediate gratification of seeing what you've applied work or not work. Right now, emergency medi­ cine residencies are among the most competitive. In the good programs, which take six residents a year, they might get 2,000 applications. Those of WI who love it are exhilarated by what we do." The bustle of an urban hospital is a far cry from H iggins' roots in tiny Bass Harbor, Maine, a fishing village on Mt. Desert Island. He is the son of a Bangor businessman who "dropped out" to become a lobstennan, but he says he always knew his parents expected him to go to graduate school-they thought he would make a good marine lawyer. Maybe, he says, "but one government course changed my mind. It just wasn't me." A biology course he took in his freshman year to fulfill Colby's science requirement set him on the path toward his evenrual career. ''That." he says, "speaks to the value of a liberal arts education, where you go in and sample things and something turns you on." He followed Colby friends he admired from Mayflower Hill to medical school at Tufts. H iggins has been associated with Maine Medical Center since his earliest days as a doctor. He went from Tufts to an internship at the Portland hospital, and he resisted pressure to go to a "more academic place• for his residency. He practiced internal medicine for four years in a town clO&e enough to Portland ro allow h im ro moonlight in the MMC emergency

48

room. In 1 98 1 he was offered a full-time staff position at the hospital, and six years ago, after a nationwide search, he was selected to fill his current po ition. Now he spends about a quarter of hi time seeing patients-the rest i taken up w1th adminiscrative dutie and with research (he has published on such diverse topics as advances in the treatment of heart attacks and the effects of red tide on human ). At 44. Higgins says he feels that he is ju t entering the mo t productive years of hi life. "I want to know that l am applying those years in a constructive academic way," he ays. "For me that boils down to a residency-the ultimate would be to train a superb group of emergency physicians and then let those guy and women loose into our state and our society and let them perform." Residency programs cost about $ 1 million a year to operate, and Higgins says he i confident that MMC will eventually get the money together to make hi dream a reality. But, he says, "it' a huge monetary hurdle. So if it cannot come about here, I'll either elect to go omewhere where l can do that, or I'Li be content to continue to improve the quality of this particular department, which is excellent and gening better." He ays he also wants to expand his role in research. "1 come in every day excited about the potential of what we're doing. This very day I've learned of three or four thing we're doing with computers that are going to change our patient care." Notwithstanding his time-consuming professional duties, H iggins emphasizes the imponance of family time for his staff and for himself. ( H is wife, Cheryl Moriarty Higgins '70 is a third­ generatton Colbian. They have three children; a fourth, their son Jamie, was killed in a car-bicycle accident in 1 985). One of the side benefits of hospital work, he say , is the fact that once a shift is over, it's over. "When I was in private practice I never, ever, ever was able to leave my practice unless I was out of state. Here, when you turn the key when you leave, you Literally leave it as a going concern with your colleagues. Your whole other life await ." H iggins ay he'll be in emergency medicine until he stops practicing. "There's a lot of heart in this, a lot of passion. I can't imagine not doing it."

Colby , November 1 99 1


on to running a bilingual course sponsored by B U , completing some work toward his Ph.D., then becoming creative director for an advertising agency, and now, for the past three years, a free-lance copywriter. Greg has two daughters, Hillary, 1 6, and Michelle, 2 2 . Michelle is a stu­ dent at the University of Denver and was married in April. Greg shares his home-and, he says, his busine.ss dec is ions-with . Merlin, his cat. Greg reports that his business is booming. Hmmm, I wonder if Merlin does any consulting . . . . My thanks to Bob Adams, who has retained his pho­ tography hobby and sent me a picture of the Tau Delts at re­ union. 'These are ome of my brothers,' 1 said as I showed the photo to Joyce. 'You guy got prob­ lems,' was her initial reaction. Hey, I never said I was Peter Pan. Joyce trie to keep me somewhere close to reality, a tough chore for her sometimes . . . . As I did with this column, I'll be periodically tracking down the shy and the lost by phone. You can save me this time by dropping a line when you get the chance. Then maybe the AT&T and MCI guys will get off my porch. Regards."

67

" S andy Miller Keohane writes that she and her husband are both devoting time to their store, Earthly Possessions, in Milton, Mass.," reports corre­ spondent Susan Daggett Dean. "They have celebrated the store's second anniv.ersary with a new garden room that sounds delight­ ful. . . . Ro s and I are planning to leave here around the first of April next year. We will fly to A toria, Oreg., and bicycle from there to Waterville in time for the 25th reunion of the Class of '67. Needless to ay, one of us is on a new phy ical fimess proColby, November 1 99 1

gram. W e will be meeting my mother, N atalie Mooers Daggett '42, who will be attending her 50th reunion. My mother's fa­ ther, Wilmer Mooer , was also a Colby graduate (Class of' l 4 ) . . . . Please write if you have any news of family, work or your plans to return to Colby next J une. I'm looking forward to seeing many of you there. lfl don't survive the bike ride speak kindly of me and have a great time at the reunion! "

68

"Another summer ambled a long here on Long Island's sleepy north shore,'' writes correspondent Barbara B ixby. " My cross-the-street neighbor, Ralph Carli le Lewis, brother of Richard Scudder Lewis, once again orchestrated a fabulous Vil­ la e Church chicken barbecue, to the delight ofBayville. Ralph's and Richard's parents, happily re­ tired and engaged in philan­ thropic endeavors in and around their native Oyster Bay (every time [ pick up a local paper I see their names or pictures or both ), informed me when I wa chatting with them at the Memorial Day parade that Richard's corpora­ tion, establi hed many years ago, continue to thrive in Manhat­ tan . . . . Fred '65 and Hope Jahn Wetzel of Kingston, N .H., are proud of daughter Lindsey, 1 7 , a high-honors student at Phillips Exeter Academy . . . . V irginia and Thom Rippon are busy with philanthropic work (Thom chairs the board of the local Ronald McDonald House ) , academics (Virginia is an English professor at Penn State and Thom has been elected to the Pennsylvania Hu­ manities Council) and family (three sons). I like the sound of Thom's address: One Barn Farm, White Springs, PA . . . . Peter Swett sent me an incredible photo of a beaut iful and e laborate

wooden sleigh he built. l sent it to my brother-in-law, Tim Coolidge, of Ipswich, Mass. ( no relation to Hester Coolidge Clapp of the same town) , who has a family history of similar, amazing New England artisanship. Pete and Jody own and operate Doughty Falls Photography in N orth Berwick, Maine. Their son Billy is 1 1 . Pete extends his best to all. I wonder ifthere are other 'scratch' golfers like Pete among us-he says every time he hits the ball he cratches his head and wonders what he did wrong . . . . Arlene Marmer Wilson serves on a tech­ nical advisory committee that is writing regulations under the Massachusetts Endangered Spe­ cies Act. Her own company, A.M. Wilson Associates, I nc. ofOster­ ville, Mass., keeps her busy as principal environmental planner. Arlene has two grown (collegiate) daughters, Diane and Catherine. . . . Judyand Richard Riemer'en­ joy being part of Colby's remark­ able growth.' In his real estate career, Richard's great satisfac­ tion has been in contributing to Colby. Attachment to one's alma mater seems to run deep in fami­ l ies. My legendary father, a Dartmouth 'Deke,' Cornell alum and past president of the Massa­ chusetts Medical Society, in fol­ lowing his own schools' progress over the decades, has also watched Colby go from good to better to one of the very best."

69

Anna Thompson Bragg writes: " I hope everyone from the Class of 1 969 had a great summer and was able to get lots of rest or at least a change of pace. My family enjoyed many hours of swimming and water skiing at our camp on Madawaska Lake . . . . Joan Flounders Boesch is living in Newton, Conn., and is chap­ lain at a large Catholic nursing

home in Trumbull. She combines that j ob with being chaplain at a prison camp for women. J oan earned her master's degree in theological stud ies from the Maryknoll School ofTheology in 1 987 and has been involved in pastoral care for the past two years. She probably has lots of interest­ ing stories to tell. Be sure to come to our next reunion, J oan. . . . Kristen Kreamer is now living in Philadelphia after moving from Portland, Maine, two years ago so her husband could attend gradu­ ate school. She is an oncology nursing specialist and works at the University of Pennsylvania hospital. Last November Kristen and her husband adopted their baby son, Adam, who was born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Re­ public. Adam has changed her priorities a bit (babies have a way of doing that! ) , but Kristen is still involved in professional organi­ zations for oncology nursing. En­ joy your son! . . . A very interest­ ing report came from Carol Swann-Daniels, who is living in Union, N .J . Carol and her hus­ band, Jeff, have started their own computer consulting business, Daniels Consulting Service. They offer shopping escort service for computer buyers, installation, training and system maintenance. Prior to starting the business, Carol spent 20 years teaching handicapped children and their teachers. She says, 'Success comes slowly in special education, but when it is achieved it is extremely satisfying.' She is especially proud of a special education computer program she has worked hard to establish . . . . After writing about these interesting ladies it is quite humbling to look at my plans for the day. I am heading out to pick raspberries and then will make jam. Oh, well. My children will be happy!"

49


THE SEVENTIES 7 2 " ls our reunion on your calendar?" asks correspon­ dent Janet Holm Gerber. "June 5- 7, 1 992. Please plan on it­ and get involved in the planning if you can. Write to me, if you haven't already, about the l ikeli­ hood of your attending and/or helping. This will be the fir t re­ union I 've attended-after hear­ ing for years of the great times had by all, of the tremendous effort by the College to ensure success and of the energet ic children's program. This always gets rave reviews; the kids are busy with their own fun from morning till night . For you New Englanders it's an ea y getaway. Being further away, I expect we'll make at least a week-long trip of it, meandering along the coa t afterwards. How about i t ? Make that weekend 'firm' on your agenda . . . . J im Colburn was wed last spring to Peggy Amon in Vail, Colo. J im is a commercial real estate appraiser; Peggy is an art­ ist . They l ive in Fort Collins, Colo. We're very happy for you, J i m . . . . Deirdre Fitz-Gerald Sockbeson's husband, Henry '73, recently became a Colby over­ seer. They live in Laurel, Md., and escape to the Rocky Moun­ tains or to their boat on the South River, which feeds into Chesa­ peake Bay . . . . I 'm late in report­ ing on a great and lengthy trip Judy Moreland Spitz, her hus­ band, Bob, and their three boys took to Norway in the summer of 1 990, including a 'hair-raising' but spectacular mountain jour­ ney in a rented van. . . . Another marriage to report--Sally Barker married Steve Hamburg, a pro­ fessor of environmental studies at the University of Kan as, where Sally lectures in the Art Depart­ ment. ally and Steve are build­ ing a post and beam house in the White MountainsofNew Hamp­ shire, where they spend summers. 50

Sally's own art is shown through­ out the country, and she gave a lovely description that I 'll share: 'Although I am till weaving, it i very nontraditional. 1 weave and dye with nylon monofi lament (fishline ) , so the work is very gossamer and transparent, cap­ turing qualities of l ight at differ­ ent times and places. It is very large (4' x 1 2 ' , 5' x 20' ) and envi­ ronmental in scale to encompass the viewer. 1 am pre ently look­ ing for commissions for public spaces, which 1 used to do before graduate school but in traditional t apestry . ' . . . Linda Howard Lupton is mothering her young daughter, Caitlin, and along with Ron '7 1 , she's seeing a home ad­ dition and all the related projects to conclusion. Their home at the end of a dirt road in Wiscasset, Maine, sure ounds appealing. . . . Speaking of appealing, Tim Wil­ liams, who live in Sharon, Mass., with wife Margaret and new baby Gordon, shared two 'treasures' with us. One is his Christian faith, which he described thoughtfully. The other is h is woodstove: 'Its cheery warmth, the delightful smell of wood smoke, the healthy outdoor exerc i e of gett ing a winter's supply of wood, the sav­ ings on fuel oil costs, the use of a natural resource that would oth­ erwise be wasted, etc . , all com­ bine to make this a treasure. "'

73

Anne Huff Jordan makes it short and sweet: "Apolo­ gies to Kevin and Eileen Bums Higgins for the misinformation in the last column. Congratula­ tions to them on the arrival of their first child, a son, in April."

74

SteveCollins writes:

"Bev Crockett Brown writes that

even in Cambridge (not England,

not Massachusetts-Cambridge, Maine ) 'life is a continual crisis.' She's office manger fort he oil & Water Conservation Di trict, and husband Sam Brown is a logger. They've got two sons and a basset hound. 'Became a Baha'i-has helped me recognize the unity of the world. Helped tart local re­ cycling program and Earth Day '90 in Dexter, Maine. Wondering what Scott Smith is up to,' he writes . . . . Carol Todd Sabas­ teanski checked in from Bruns­ wick, Maine, last spring. At the time she had two toddlers and a baby due. She' president of Fi­ nancial Institutions ervice Corp. 'I have worked at this company 1 1 years and was promoted to president last month,' she re­ ported. Husband Frank is a self­ employed contractor. . . . Over in South Portland, Maine, Thomas MacVane is also a pre ident-a self-employed lobsterman and president of Old Cove Lobster Co. Last spring Tom reported that he had two stepsons, two daugh­ ters and a son due in late August. . . . Gail Monica How­ ard writes from Colleyville, Texas (outside Dallas), to say that she became Gail Monica Dent March 10, 1 99 1 when she married War­ ren Thomas Dent in Connecti­ cut. W ith her Australian hus­ band he got an instant family -four stepdaughters ages 1 3 to 2 1 , all away at chool-and got to travel down under four times la t year. 'Snorkeling on the Great Barrier Reef i wonderful! ' she wrote . . . . From the international desk: Phil DeFord check in from Hong Kong, where he's execu­ tive vice president at Security Pacific Asian Bank. He's been in Asia nine years ( Indonesia and Thailand before Hong Kong) and had two kids along the way. 'Hong Kong's a long ways away, but l 'd be plea ed to see people who come through,' he said . . . . Bob Dia­ mond has been three year in

London, where he's managing director and head of international fixed income trading for Morgan Stanley. He has three kids and travels frequently to Japan and around Europe. A a Colby over­ seer he even gets back to Maine a couple of times a year now."

76

"It's time to pass the baton," outgoing corre pondent Pam Came writes, "but before I do, I'd like to let you know how much 1 enjoyed receiving your letters. I 'm extremely proud of being a ociated with such a tre­ mendous group of people, and I 've loved haring orne of your hopes and d reams . . . . Mark Tilton writes from Manchester, Conn., that he i a teaching in­ tern in the Waterbury school sy tern. At the ame time, he's get­ ting a master's in education at the Univer ity of Bridgeport. Mark and hi wife, J ill, have a young daughter named Sierra Mae . . . . Martin Hubbe is a paper tech­ nologist (chemist ) with Interna­ tional Paper. He and wife Liz Barrett Hubbe '80 have two chil­ d ren, 3 - year-old A l l e n and Gerilyn, 1. Martin is very in­ volved with his family ( their lat­ est trip wa to the Virgin l lands) , and h e also spends time running, Hudson River sailing and partici­ pating in peace demonstra­ tions . . . . Jan Barber Ferguson teache high school French. She and hu band Keith and their kids, Matthew, 7, and Abby, 5, live in Mered i t h , N . H . . . . J an e t Gorman i pre ident of her own company, Chandler A sociates, which provides advice on insur­ ance c laim by temporary and part-time workers to insurance carrier . She is al o very involved in women's rights. Janet has a daughter, Courtney Merrill, who is 6 . . . . Heather Finney Eng i a research analyst in the area of Colby , November 1 99 1


Linda Frechette '79

Headliners Tom Sidar '72 was promoted to vice pre ident for creative development at LL. Bean in Freeport, Maine . . . . Edward Snyder '75 wa the authorofa recent Wall Street]oumal Op-Ed piece outlining the pro and con of adopting the "Engli h rule"-whereby losers of lawsuits pay winners' legal fees-in American court . . . . Linda Frechette ' 79 was elected pre ident of the Maine Public Relations Council.

Newsmakers Margaret Swanson '70 was named director of planning and development for Chatham, Ma . . . . Edward Hanna '7 1 wa appointed executive director of P ychiatric Care Associates in Pennsylvania. . . . Michael McGlynn '72 is eeing the revolution in eastern Europe from the inside a a Peace Corp volunteer in Czecho lovakia. His life change was the ubject of feature articles in the Weymouth (Ma s.) News and the Quincy Patriot Ledger. McGlynn ay he hopes to bring America' pastime to the Czechs-the long-time coach packed 50 baseball cap . . . . "For Pollock Biographers, Sweet Vindication" ran a recent Washington Post headline over a tory about Gregory White Smith '73 and Steven Na·feh, White's collaborator on a Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of Jackson Pollock. "You don't c lebrate instantly," White told reporter Judith Weinraub after winning the literary prize. "lt stay a part of you, and every time your mmd starts to wander you get this incredible balloon of sati faction and accompli-hment. That' the way l felt about the book, too." . . . Jeff McKeen '76 produced and narrated a erie ofprograms on Maine'smusical traditions that aired on the Maine Public Broadcasting Sy tern in September. . . . Lowell Libby '77 was appointed head of the Upper School at Waynflete chool in Portland, Maine. . . . Madelyn Theodore '77 i head of marketing and leasing for the asset management division of Finlay Commerc ial Real Estate in Hooksett, N . H . . . . Sam Koch '79 wa named head coach of men's soccer at the University of Ma achu etts/Amherst . . . . Margie Wharton Noonan '79 i parking facilities manager for the Boulo Management Co. in Portland, Maine.

Mileposts Births: A daughter, Emily Anne Bailey, to Christi Pope '74 and Stephen Capaldo '74 . . . . A son, Peter Blanker Aspinwall, to Sue Blanker '7 5 and Mike Aspinwall. . . . A son, James Stephen, to Stephen and Celeste Keefe Wesner '75 . . . . A daughter, Annalise 0., to Patricia and William "Sandy'' Welte '77 . . . . A on, James Willard, to John '78 and Susan Raymond Geismar '79 . . . . A son, William Lewi Bradford, co Lewi Gilman and Helena Bonnell-Gilman '78 . . . . A daughter, Anna Katherine, to Robert and Betsy Sandin Bush '79. . . . A son, Andrew Mad en, to Thomas '80 and Maria Macedo Dailey '79 . . . . A son, Alex, to Jonathan and Joyce Glassock Haines '79 . . . . A daughter, Katherine Louise, to Edward and Sarah Russell MacColl '79 . . . . A son, Matthew Alexander, to John and Barbara Croft Spillane '79 . . . . A daughter, Emily Margaret, to Joanne (Lynch '80) and Benjamin Thorndike '79. Marriages: John Koons '72 to Susan Hawkes in Sidney, Maine . . . . Ron Majdalany '73 toJane Laning in Great Barrington, Ma . . . . Carol Houde '75 to Stephen Gronberg in ashua, N . H . . . . Robert Southwick '77 to Debra Linnell in South Orleans, Mass . . . . Angela Mickalide '79 co Alexander Alikhani in Lewi ton, Maine . . . . Paul Kazilionis '79 to Laurie Scott in Dark Harbor, Maine. Deaths: Stanley Parsons '7 1 in Southington, Conn., at 42.

Colby,

ovember 1 99 1

liver transplantation. Heather, husband J ames and ch ildren David and Robin are living in Pittsburgh, Pa. She has also been involved in choral singing, which has reawakened her musical in­ terests while her violin gathers its 1 5 th year of dust . . . . Norman Marsilius is an architect in Fairfi e ld , Conn . . . . Robert Anderson is in management for a medical group. He and wife Tricia are in California, but bu iness brings him back East. Bob men­ tioned attending a Colby basket­ ball game at Amher t in January and running into Scott Smith and Rob Kahelin. Candy Campbell has her own public re­ lations firm in Great Falls, Va., and spends much ofher time rep­ resenting 'underdogs and liberal causes.' She and husband Robert Morris have a daughter, Lindsay Campbe l l Kenin, age 5 . Wendy Swallow Williams is a professor at American Univer­ sity in Washington, D.C., follow­ ing a six-year job as a reporter at The Washington Post. Wendy i married to Fred Williams, and they have two children, Joey, 3 , and Geoffrey, 2 . They are active in Quaker Meetings in Wa hing­ ton and work with political ac­ tion committees. She also had a short srory published in a literary magaz i ne in 1 9 88 . . . . Carl Witthoft '77 writes from Acton, Mass., where he's doing sy terns analy is for Adaptive Optics Asociates. He and wife Julie, a pe­ diatrician, have two children, Alexandra, 4, and Luke, l . . . . Andy Dennison is living in Colo­ rado Spring , Colo., with Toni George. He's currently writing science curricula for m iddle schools and writes about skiing for the local paper on the side."

78

Susan G e rnert Adams extend thanks "to the 1 3

51


people who responded to the re­ cent questionnaire. (Where are the rest of you ?) All the news comes from the East Coa t, where I uspect most of us are clustered with the exception of Les Mor­ gan, who is in Bangladesh, Sam Cremin in Singapore, Lisa Wil­ son in Barcelona, and Robert Underhill, who's pitched his tent in London . . . . As for the New Englanders, Doug Kaplan writes from Cape Elizabeth, Maine, that he is an attorney and once worked as a staff assistant for Sen. Adlai Stevenson. This year his wife, Anne, gave birth to their second ch i ld , Lisa, who along with Samuel, 3, has proven to be a handful. When asked if he was involved in any political causes, Doug replied, "Are you kidding? Ask me again when I 've had some sleep." . . . Speaking of sleeples nights, Ronni-Jo Posner Carpen­ ter and her husband, John '80, are juggling 3-year-old twin boys Scott and Robert and newborn Alison, who joined the family this past May in North Yarmouth, Maine. Super mom Ronni-Jo tu­ tors math on the side and still manages to find time for tennis, biking, skiing and gardening. . . . In neighboring Falmouth, Maine, Susan Pollis reports that she and husband Ted Reed '80 are ex­ pecting baby No. 1 this month. Susan continues her work in real estate and now serves as a con­ sultant to a J apanese com­ pany . . . . A little further down the road in Kennebunk, Maine, Tim Hussey and his wife, Marcia, are also expecting a baby, but this is baby N o. 2-a year ago little Hannah Hussey came into the world. She'll soon have company. Tim works at the 1 56-year-old family-owned Hussey Seat ing Company and enjoys sailing and skiing . . . . Jana Kendall Harri­ son writes from Leominster, Mass., that she's a fu ll-time mom and part-time parent coordinator 52

Landing Maine's Future "T 1 hink of the

planet as an airplane," ays Kent Wommack '77, executive director of the Maine Nature Conservancy. "You can lose rivets on an airplane and keep flying. On a planet we lose rivets, but if we lose too many the whole system gets thrown off balance. No one knows how many you can lose before the plane crashes." Wommack is in the business of tightening loose rivets as fa t as his fingers-and the nonprofit organization's bank account-permit. Since 1 981 he has brought more than 79,000 Maine acres under protection. That is 87 percent of all the land the Mame Conservancy has protected in it 35-year existence, and the purchases were made during a time of rapid land development in Maine. "The frenzied speculation in the '80s real estate market drove land prices through the roof," Wommack says. "We had to outbid well-financed real estate developers then." The recession has stemmed the rise in prices but has also meant that the Conservancy has less money to spend. "A lot of people who supported us in the past can't support us now due to economic hardships. We can accomplish thing only because 1 4,000 members contribute their time and resources to help us do it. There are foundation and corporate [grants], but the vast majoricy of our income comes from people like you and me." Those who have sat across the negotiation table from Wommack say he is a tough bargainer who doesn't give up until he has the deal he wants. In May 1 990 the Con ervancy nailed down its largest acquisition co date: 40,000 acres of prime wilderness and shorefront land, including a potential peregrine falcon reintroduction site, purchased from Diamond Occidental Forest, Inc. The bargaining took 18 months, and in the end the Conservancy, on behalf of the Land For Maine's Future Board, paid $2 million less than market value for the land. When he arrived at Colby in the early 1 970s, Wommack thought he was destined for a career in law. But along the way he encountered religion professor Gustave Todrank and a course called "Cultural Euthenics," which examined the ways people interact with their environment and how well-being can be enhanced through environmental changes. "That course strengthened my interest in and commitment co doing something I could believe in," Wommack says. "I wanted to come out of Colby and work in a field I would enjoy and where I could give back to society what had been given to me." He joined the National Park Service and worked in the Everglades and in Washington's Olympic National Park, then taught for a year at the Ocean Park Environmental School in Maine. He entered the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies in 1 980, designing his own master's program in environmental conflict resolution and management. During the summer he served as an intern with the Maine Conservancy, and he has been associated with it ever since. Last April, he was named the organization's executive director after serving as associate director and chief operating officer. "I t's an extraordinarily satisfying job," Wommack says, "because it's very tangible. At the end of the year you can literally walk on your successes.

Colby , November 1 99 1


at the Leominster elementary school where her husband, Rob­ ert, is a teacher. They have three children who, at the time Jana wrote, ranged i n age from 2 months to 7 years . . . . Bob Woodburyseems tobe doingwell as national dLrector of investment services for Met Life, having paid h is dues at Great Northern Paper Co. , EG&G and Parker Brothers. He and h is wife of l 1 years, Cathy, live in Hamilton, Mass., with their two children, Amy, 7, and Mary, 3 . . . . " I almost made a career of the N av y , " con fessed Gary Winer, but he recently got hold of himself and became a software engineer. Judo and che s occupy his spare time, but his main fo­ cuses are his wife, Donna, and his two girls, Marci, 3 , and Jenny, 1 8 months. The W i ners l ive i n Acton, Mass. . . . And finally, two of our c lassmates are islanders. Susan Jacke Littlefield is holed up on Block Island, R.l., with her husband, Christopher, and their two children, Abigail, 7 , and Stuart, 5. Once upon a time Su­ san was an environmental educa­ tor, a fisherwoman and commer­ c ial gardener, but these days she's peddling honey mustard, bees­ wax candles and the like a t Littlefield Bee Farm. Donna Long C umme n s sends word from Martha's Vineyard, Mass., that she, too, has two children, Taryn, 6, and Jessica, 18 months, and she works full time as assistant vice president at the Martha' Vine­ yard National Bank, where she started as a teller 1 3 years ago. . . . As for myself, I'm still churning out stories for Primetime Live and recently played in the New York Regionals of bridge. Don't ask me how I did . . . . I n the first o fm y two informal polls, five of the above were in favor of U .S. involvement in the gulfwar. Three were not-make that four ( me ) and five abstained. And the second poll confirmed my worst Colby, November 1 99 1

Correspondents 1 970

1975

Robin Cote (Robin C. Armitage) 45 Hayes Avenue Beverly, MA 0 1 9 1 5 508-922-8874

Susan Wuest (Susan C. Gearhart) 65 Country Downs Circle Fairpon, NY 1 4450 7 1 6-223-1 967

197 1

Nancy Austin ( Nancy Hammar) 29 Irving Stree t #5 Worcester, MA 0 1 609 508-797-47 1 1 197 2

Janet Gerber (Janet Holm) 1 1 1 1 2 Broad Green Drive Potomac, M D 20854 301 -299-6240 1 973

1976

Noel Stella (Noel Barry) 28 Stuart Place Westfield, MA 0 1 085 4 1 3-562-5629 1977

Lisa Rapapon (Lisa M. Tripler) 2 Tall Pine Road Cape Elizabeth, ME 04 107 207-767-2406 1978

Anne H . Jordan (Anne Huff) 36 H illcrest Road Medfield, MA 02052 508-359-5025

Susan Gernert Adams 1 5 5 E. 93rd St., Apt. SD New York, NY 10128 2 1 2-860-8020

1 974

Emily M. Sprague (Emily M. Grout) 758 Gotham Street Watertown, NY 1 360 1 3 1 5-788-5 1 1 9

1 979

Stephen B. Collins RFD 3 Box 6600 Oakland, ME 04963 207-465-3870

susp1c1ons. No one is watching my show on Thursday nights, even when L . A . Law is in reruns, but at least the parents in our clas tell me they're too pooped by 10 p.m. to watch TV. Please send in the questionnaire if you haven't already."

79

"In one of the most thorough responses to the now infamous questionnaire, Daisy Dore writes from W i nthrop,

Maine, about her busy life and career as psychotherapist and con­ sulting guidance counselor," notes correspondent E m i l y G rout Sprague. "She shares this busy l ife with husband Jeffrey Janell, who is the Waterville area direc­ tor of Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Kennebec Valley. Together they are making big contributions to the well-being of youth in that area. They have also adopted a beaver family that took over their back yard. Daisy says that she can still get up Mt. Katahdin more

quickly than many of her friends. Should we consider that a chal­ lenge? I 'd love to climb Katah­ din! . . . Eugene Crawshaw writes from Venice, Calif., that he i deputy district attorney in Los Angeles. He says h is fimess ac­ tivities include hang gliding and boogie boarding and that he would welcome visitors. It sounds as if he has adapted to the fast­ paced Cal ifornia lifestyle ad­ equately . . . . Geoff Emanuel wrote from Portland, Maine, that he was considering relocating to the West Coast but not Califor­ nia. He mentioned that he may go into business for himself and move to Seattle. Let us know what you've decided, Geoff. . . . Ruth Anderson-Kulman is a clinical psychologist in private practice with her husband, Randy Kulman, in Rhode Island. They are the proud parents of sons Scott, 4, and Seth, 2 . . . . I re­ ceived a wonderful letter from Elizabeth Armstrong. She was writing from Japan, where she and her husband, Erik Lofgren, have been for about a year and a half. Erik was thf:re on a fellow­ ship at Nagoya University, and Elizabeth was teaching at a j unior college for women. Elizabeth has a master's degree in J apanese lan­ guage and literature and has been working on her performance tech­ niques in rakugo, the traditional Japanese art of oral narrative. Elizabeth and Erik expected to be back in the U.S. last J une to be­ gin work on their doctorates. . . . Anne Leudemann Hunt writes that she is the editor of Surviving Together, a journal on Soviet/ American relations, and is thrilled to finally be using her Russian (she majored in Soviet studies at Colby and earned an M.A. in i nternational education from George Washington University) . She and husband Tim Hunt '80 are the parents of Colin, 3. They live in Arlington, Ya." 53


THE EIGHTIES 80 "I'm happy to be the bearer of particularly good news this month," begins correspon­ dent Patricia Valavanis Smith. "Many f you learned around re­ union t ime last year that Pam Haury Cunningham and her fam­ ily and friends were in the midst of an arduou search for a com­ patible bone marrow donor to combat Pam's leukemia. A suit­ able donor wa located in Janu­ ary, and Pam received the trans­ plant in March in Boston. When l spoke to her in late J uly, she aid it's been a 'long, slow proces ' that has included two extended returns to the hospital. However, Pam said she's 'taking it one day at a time' and savoring each step toward a return to regular activi­ ties. I know l speak for everyone in wishing her continued progress. . . . Brenda Bowen, a children' book editor in New York City, is engaged to Rich Goodman, a newly published author. Wh ile in Bologna, I taly, for a spring con­ ference, Brenda met up with Carol Sly, and the two traveled through northern I taly for a few days . . . . Linda Davis was pro­ moted to a major account man­ ager at H e w l e t t - Packard i n Burlington, Mass. She's now han­ dling JWP Information Systems, a major computer company that recently acquired BusinessLand. Linda said her experience at H-P has now come full circle-this is the account that she worked on when she joined the company after graduation . . . . Rod Mar­ shall, who last year was an attor­ ney in New Hampshire, is now working in Czechoslovakia as the legal advisor to the privatization minister. He's associated with a O.C.-based firm and is serving as a broker/agent for U.S. compa­ nies doing business in Czechoslo­ vakia . . . . Betsy Morrell is l iv ing in Westport, Mass., and manag­ ing a law fi rm in Tiverton , 54

R . l . . . . Liz Martin Hutchison is in her econd year of a master's degree program in architecture at Rensselaer Polytechnic In titute. . . . Paul and Joanne Shannon O'Donnell bought a house just over a year ago in Fairfield, Conn. Joanne i keeping busy at Fleet in New Haven as a vice president for commercial lending dealing with mid-sized companies . . . . Stork news: Jan Follansbee Binda and husband Dave are the proud parents of their fir t child, Julia Marie, born June 7. Jan plans to return to the National Assoc ia­ tion of Manufacturers regional office in Lexington, Mas ., as a senior district manager . . . . An­ other first-ch i ld-named-J u l ia­ bom-in-June is the daughter of Mark and Bev Nalbandian Mad­ den . The Maddens are now living in Wellesley, Mass., and are gear­ ing up for more house-hunting this winter . . . . Others with baby news inc l ude Joanne Lynch Thorndike and Ben '79 ( their third child, Emily, born in May) Bill and Mary Lou Eckland Jack­ son ( their second, J oshua, in March ) , David and Julia Green­ wood Kreutz ( their second, Gretchen, in February ) , Karen Starkey Webber and Chris '79 ( their third, Tyler, in April) and lain '82 and Ann Albee Hoefle ( their first, Colin, in July ) . "

81

Beth Pniewski Wilson writes: "Our 1 0th reunion turned out many ofour classmares, spouses and offspring from all comers of the country and be­ yond. Thank you everyone for coming and making the reunion a succe s. Those of you who d idn't come were m issed, but 1 996 will be here before you know it! . . . I see Alex Sutton (a.k.a. Christy Gauss) on the commuter rail to and from Boston quite of-

ten. She is working at the Boston law firm of Choate , Hall & Stewart and is saving up to buy a farm. In the meantime she is cul­ tivating a wonderful garden in Concord , Mass. She tells me Bonnie Turnbull is teaching fifth grade in Colorado prings, Colo. , and will be writing a new curricu­ lum for social studies. Alex also keep up with Ellyn Montgom­ ery. El lyn, who works at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute , just finished building a house in North Falmouth, Mass. She en­ joys windsurfing. . . . I also run into Adam Levin quite often on the streets of Boston's financial district. Adam has been leasing commercial space in Boston . . . . That's all the new I have for now. I expect my mailbox to be overflowing with news during the next few months. Please call or write me with any news about yourself or classmate ."

in touch with each other and to maintain the ir ties to Colby. Many of us remember occasions when Meg was the catalyst for a get-together or the source of in­ formation about classmates. Meg was the Model Pledge for Sigma Kappa, a bright student and a successful businesswoman. She was also an avid skier, sailor, trav­ eler and nature-lover. But more than for her many academic and professional accomplishments, Meg will be remembered for her kindness and for her commitment to the things that were most im­ portant to her-family, friends and the spirit of giving, particu­ larly of one's time and energy to other . We will miss Meg tre­ mendously-now, at our 1 0th reunion and always. Contribu­ tions in her memory may be made to the Margaret Torrey Crain cholar hip Fund in care of the College."

82 "It is with deepest regret that I report the death of

"This column is the second in­ stallment from my still-heaping pile of questionnaire responses," Emily continues. "The final chap­ ter will appear in the form of a holiday newsletter. So please be patient as I try to include every­ one's news . . . . Jody Holmes Bachelder sent a newsy note fill­ ing me in on the nine years since we graduated. After six years in Boston, Jody and her husband, Todd, were excited to return to Maine in 1 988. They are restor­ ing a Victorian house in Hallo­ well. Jody is a full-time mother, proud to report that her second child, H illary, was born on April 1 1 , joining older brother Sam. Jody passed on news of Kathleen Shea, who is working at Strawbery Banke in Portsmou th , N . H . Kathleen recently traveled to Yugoslavia to visit her sister, who is serving with the Peace Corps. . . . Rebecca Badger Fisher has

Margaret Torrey Crain," writes

correspondent Emily Cummings. "Meg died suddenly on July 22 in Hanover, N.H., from a coronary ailment. On behalf of the Class of 1 982, I would like to extend our deepest sympathies to Meg's hus­ band, Andrew, her family and her many friends. As we struggle to deal with the shock of Meg's death, we also pause to reflect on and celebrate her life. Family and friends speak of her numerous ac­ compli hmentsand recall hertre­ mendous impact on their lives, and Colby roommate and close friend Lisa Clark Bureau speaks eloquently and accurately of Meg's close relationship with Colby and her classmates. The word Lisa chooses to best describe Meg is 'glue.' She wa the means for classmates and friends to keep

Colby , November 1 99 1


changed coasts and now write from Cre enta, Calif. Becca says she would 'love to be in touch w ith anyone in the Lo Angeles area for guidance, company or anything.' Becca received her M . B.A. from Bentley and is pur­ suing several leads in her job earch in the L.A. area, and hus­ band Paul is employed at the Jet Propul ion Laboratory in Pa a­ dena. In between interv iews, Becca ews and does needle­ work. . . . Amy Blitz writes from Cambridge, Mass., where she is a Ph.D. candidate in political ci­ ence at M IT. Amy switched from economics to political science after returning from a trip to the Ph ii ippines during the 1 986 revo­ lution. Her ma ter's thesis on the pre coverage of the Philippines won an award from the Woodrow W ilson Center for International Scholars. Aside from her aca­ demic pur uit , Amy scull on the Charles and enjoy creative writ­ ing and photography. She also finished the 1 989 Boston Mara­ thon . . . . Ross Brennan says he' having a great time living in D.C., where he works with the EPA analyzing and writing water pol­ l u t ion regu l a t i ons . . . . J e f f Brown invite anyone in the Pittsburgh area to call and/or visit. He and hi wife, Jessica, were expecting their first child in Sep­ tember. Jeff was promoted to brand manager of Aquafre h and n e w oral c a re prod u c t for Smithkl ine Beecham. He had new of Helen Dooley Jursek' new son, Kevin Dooley, and re­ pons that Greg Keenan i a ' fu ll­ fledged' docto r do ing a fellow­ ship in Philadelphia . . . . Joyslin Bushman Bain and husband Pe­ ter have a son, Peter Bu hman Bain, born July 2 2 , 1 990. Lin is living in Brookline, Mass., and teac h i n g arr at the Dexter Schoo . . . . Laura Gagliano Nordstrom and hu band Ken have purcha ed a townhou e in Colby , November 1 99 1

A Designing Aluinna C

ynthia Auman '80, who is not given to displays of oucward calm, seemed especially intense and effusive. "I just got an exciting fax from Brazil," he announced. "It was from the president of a company l've pitched. He's interested. I think the timing is right." Timing, Auman has learned in the 1 1 years since he left Mayflower Hill, counts a great deal. Combined with undeniable ambition and ability, it has helped her land what used to be called a "glamour job" as director of marketing for Gianninoto Associates, Inc., a New York-based firm that de ign packages for products in this country and abroad. When he isn't scouring the city for a new jazz spot or practicing her French at a favorite bi tro, "Cynnie" is flying to Chicago or Europe, promoting new business for a firm that specializes in "image-driven produc ts . " "The sin products,'' Auman explains. "Liquor, beer, cigarettes." Such products comprise the major league of the package design field, Auman add . They sell more because of image than because of quality or ta te. "The per on who buy a pack of Marlboro is making one sort of statement, the person who asks for a pack of Dunhill' quite another," she said. Auman departed Colby with a degree in English and a passion for French honed during a j unior year in France. Where did she go off in search of her career? New York? London? Paris? Lanca ter, Pennsylvania. It was near her hometown ofWyomissing, and the Fulton County Opera House needed omebody to handle public relations. Three years Later, Auman moved on to a Lancaster-ha ed ad agency. "I loved the opera house,'' Auman said, "but I discovered that non-profit in titutions aren't very profitable for their workers, either." he found an easy route to New York a an in-house PR woman for the Vanity Fair lingerie line of Wyomissing-based VF Corporation. But the excitement of the Big Apple oon gave way to the reality of the job. "l was writing copy for the hangtags on bra ieres," he aid. "One night after seven month" I had a moment of epiphany. I walked out onto Fifth Avenue and decided I wasn't completely happy doing PR. I t was a cary thing to realize, all alone in New York on this new job." She answered a want ad placed by the Plumb Group, accepted the challenge to create a bogus marketing campaign ("I didn't know what a marketing campaign wa , o 1 came back in with a campaign for the Plumb Group it elf.") and was hired a director of marketing. Auman sold ideas to Apple, Polaroid and DuPont, among others, and then was lured to her current firm. "I love my job, brainstorming with designers, finding creative inspiration for projects, meeting with marketers and helping them sell their products," she said. "I reached career heaven when I was itting in Cognac, d iscussing package de ign strategie with top marketing men-in French! " A n active Colby volunteer since graduation, Auman i now advi ing Colby o n a project to retool the look of its brochures, weatshirts and such. "You have to think of packages as three­ dimensional, tactile things," she says. "You not only ee them, but you reach out and touch them. And to understand how important a part de ign plays in our hves, all you have to do is look around the room you're in. The desk you're sitting at, the phone you're speaking on, the computer you're u ing-all of them and everything else you see was designed by someone."

55


Shrew bury, Mass., near her fam­ ily and three college-age step­ children. Previously, Laura spent six months in Puerto Rico work­ ing for Citibank; she is now a senior marketing consultant with New England Life in Boston. Ken is a marketing executive for Sun L i fe of Canada. A fo rmer Colbyette, Laura enjoy singing with the local chapter of the Sweet Ade lines. She stays fit with ae rob i c s , c y c l i ng and rac­ quetball. . . . Denise Glennon was married on J une 1 5 to Gary Haubold, with Beth Ellis Taut­ kus and Colleen Plourde Harvey serving as bridesmaid . Denise received her M . B.A. from Duke in 1 986, and her career in inter­ national banking included travel to Bogota and Medellin, Colom­ bia. Denise was living in New York and working a an assistant vice president at Sumitomo Bank but planned to move to New Jer­ sey after the wedding. She is a runner and cyclist, she sews, and she is 'still taking piano lessons.' . . . Ethan Guiles has moved from Maine to southeastern Massachu­ setts to take a new po ition in environmental geology . . . . lngri Gundersen Lombardi has a new baby boy, Sigurd Gundersen, born last March. In addition to caring for her family, Ingri tries to at­ tend regular classes and enjoys cooking I talian food, baking and music. Her recent travels have included trips to I taly and W is­ consin (for a family reunion ). . . . James Haddow reports from Standish, Maine, that hi family now includes his wife, M ichelle, 1 -year-old son. J immy, golden re­ triever Puck, barn cat Smokey, one rooster and two hens. James, an attorney, has opened a law firm that provides legal research and writing to other attorney . M ichelle is resident overseer of Marrett House, a properry main­ tained by the Society for the Pres­ ervation of New England Antiq56

uities. James, too, had a recent family get-together, spending two weeks traveling through Scot­ land . . . . Leanice Hart van den Enden and husband Adrian live in College Park, Ga., where Lea is a high school French teacher. Lea hoped to enter graduate school this fall."

83

"The last issue of Colby was devoid of a column for the Clas of 1 983," correspon­ dent Sal Lovegren Merchant note . "What was the problem? What is the class correspondent's excuse? urely she cannot blame the economy or her former em­ ployer or her family or the Maine weather. Certainly it was not state or government budget deficit problems and shutdowns, the plight of the spotted owl and the on-again-off-again nature of Hol­ lywood marriages. Actually, it appears that the Class of 1 983 has not been communicating. No let­ ters arrived in the mailbox up in Maine. I did have a phone call from Ellen Sokoll (a Boston banker on quick vacation in Ba Haba ) , but hers wa the only one. Somehow, our lives are so busy and tangled that we've forgotten a special l ink to how we got where we are today---COLBY. Attend­ ing the August 2-4 , 1 99 1 re­ union workshop and solicitation training weekend, I experienced firsthand the excellent challenge that Colby presents students and graduates. The challenge comes years after the last tears fade and we've handed in that last paper. To go out into the real world and succeed is our goal. And ours and all other classes have done j ust that. I may not be hearing from you because you are busy suc­ ceeding. Success, remember, can be measured by monetary gain or the length of your title. But it

goes a lot further, too. Personal success is achieved day to day, and each of us can tell about such seemingly small personal suc­ cesses. Maybe that's why I have n t heard from you. You may feel that what you do is not worthy of print or that there is so much to tell that you did not have time to write it all down. Ah-but that weekend on campus was invalu­ able for those alumni, faculty, taff and student attending. We com­ municated our common link to the school. More importantly, we identified the need to perpetuate what the College doe for tu­ dents. We discussed financial giv­ ing and our reunion planning. But both only lead to the com­ mon denominator of the class­ mates themselves. We-and all other cla ses---can share through constant communication. Let us report our succes e (and failures) and learn from them. I hope we can in pire each other to higher ground and higher goals. The older classes need us a much as we need them, and we all need Colby. Fortho e ofyou with little children at home, they may need Colby someday, too. W ill we be able to tell them of the wonder that i on Mayflower H ill? Will we be able to remember giving back some of our own experi­ ences? Colby gave so much to us that we can only now realize by sharing together. I 'll implore again: please get in the habit of writing me and ending photos. I 'd love monthly notes or post­ cards. J ust input my addres in your PC so its diary will prompt a letter. When we look back in another 1 5 years, we will have a lot to be proud of if we take the time now to communicate. And by the way, I do have other ex­ cuses for not writing a column, but we do not need any of them!"

84

"Hi all," writes cor­ respondent Amy Carlson. "I 've moved from Cambridge to Chapel Hill, N.C., to get my M.B.A., and I probably could have used some help from those of you who have been successful at avoiding accu­ mulating stuff. . . . l n herrespon e to the questionnaire, Deborah Sleeman said that her fiance, Yuri Davidoff, forced her to throw away most ofher stuff when they moved to Mountain View, Calif. Ac­ cording to Deborah, 'It was pain­ ful, but it worked.' Deborah also wrote that he enjoy the sense of achievement she gets as a sales engineer for Furon, Flo-Med Prod­ ucts, which makes custom silicon parts for the medical indu try, but she admitted that staying ahead of a rapidly growing in.du try can be tressful. . . . In review­ ing other notes and questionnaire respon es for the column, I was impressed by how many of you are involved in the field of educa­ tion. Sam Staley i an instructor in economics at Wright State Univer i ty and is studying public policy and management at Ohio State. Sam ha just finished a book on drug policy and urban economic development that will be published i � 1 992. He i also in the process of starting a non­ profit education and research in­ stitute, the Urban Policy Research Institute. At the close ofh is ques­ tionnaire he added, 'Gue s what ? I'm busy.' I wasn't surprised . . . . Tom Underwood asked that I let everyone know that he was mar­ ried in. J une 1 990 to I abellaJack­ son. He also received h is master's from the H arvard Graduate School ofEducation la t J une and is currently working for the Bos­ ton Foundation, where he review grant proposals from area non­ profit organizations . . . . Susan Palmer Stone love working as a language teacher and alumnae events coordinator for Greenwich Colby, November 1 99 1


Academy. Recently, she married Jon tone and moved into a new house in New Canaan, Conn. Sue's solution to a regular fitness routine? Yard work . . . . Cathy Altrocchi Waidyatilleka ( she use Tilleka) i an English teacher at the lolani School in Hawaii. She met her husband, Nandi, while they were both volunteer­ ing with the Peace Corps in ri Lanka. Cathy says she loves the rich mix of culture in Hawaii and added that the longer she lives there the more she appreci­ ates the i lands . . . . Melissa Rihm Thibault lives in Boca Raton, Fla. , with her husband and 4year-old twins. Missy works for the Unity School a the manager of their library and computer re­ source center. She is currently working on her ma ter' in l ibrary science and in her spare time work to promote awareness of the right of adoptees to their birth records. . . . Steven Smol­ nik is director of the language laboratory at Connecticut Col­ lege. The best part of his job is 'practically being my own bos ' and the wor-t is 'actually wanting to work at lea t six days a week! ' Steve added that h e l o es weight j ust trying to keep up w i t h him elf. . . . Elizabeth Newell i the directorof the leadership pro­ gram of the Central Park H istori­ cal Society. She gets a great deal of sati faction haring her enthuia m with tudents who need self­ e teem enhancement and is con­ cerned about the disparities in education in the New York City public chool . . . . That's all for now. Plea e be sure to note my new addre . Better yet, why not drop me a line today?"

85

Mary Alice Weller­ Mayan write : "Wendy Neville Kraunelis took a job in the peronnel department of Georgia Colby, November 1 99 1

Power Company i n January de­ livering and implementing new products throughout the organi­ zation. She had been doing a great deal of traveling with an interna­ tional consulting company and is glad to be settled. Wendy bikes, runs ( including some l Ok ) and play competitive tennis year round with the Atlanta Lawn and T enni Assoc iation . . . . Stacey Kessel is a full-time student at Ke!logg Graduate School of Man­ agement at Northwestern Uni­ ver ity. She had worked for Digi­ tal Equipment and was once their credit manager in New Zealand. . . . Todd Lachman graduated with an M . B.A. from Kellogg in J une. I n Augu t 1 99 1 , he started work with Procter and Gamble in Cincinnati, Ohio, as a brand asistant in the marketing depart­ ment . . . . Carolyn Gibbs Leary i usy with her new daughter, Sarah Elizabeth. Carolyn has fin­ ished recording her first ablum of original contemporary Christian music, titled River of Life, which is now available. She hopes to go on a concert tour as soon a things settle down with the baby. Keep u informed, Carolyn. . . . Betsy Holt highly recommends mar­ riage! he married John March (whom she met while carpooling to work) in May 1 990. Betsy is a financial consultant and is trying to finish her M .B.A. She ays she enjoys traveling around New En­ gland more than studying . . . . Michelle Linder spent the um­ merof'91 in England-first work­ ing at Lloyds of London and then tudying at Oxford Universiry. Michelle hopes to pursue a career in international business follow­ ing graduation from Wake Forest with an M .B.A. in May 1 992 . . . . John Karoff lives in Boston and works in commercial property and construction management. He enjoys building furniture, skiing, swimming, runni ng and bik­ ing. . . . Christopher Lebherz an

attorney, spends his free time play­ ing golf, ski ing, v isiting with Colby friends and hugging his wife , Romi . . . . Brian James moved from Portland, Maine, to New York City in January, 1 990. In NYC he experienced the be t and worst of our society. Brian considers New England his home and is currently looking for an inve t ing pos ition in Boston. Cooking, volunteering at a soup kitchen for the homeless and go­ ing to the theater are just a few of the th ings that keep Brian busy . . . . Rick Anderson is open­ ing an insurance agency and pends h is time working on his house and gathering antiques. . . . Bruce Hickey graduated from Georgetown Law in 1 98 and i currently practicing in Bo ton. He took a trip last year to Innsbruck, Berlin and Munich with Ted Jenkins '84, Rob Fast '84 and Chris Parker '86. They went bobsledding and brought back some ofthe Wall . . . . Cindy Jeck Davis received her Ph.D. in cardiac pharmacology from Co­ lumbia University in May. She and her husband, Jeffrey, are moving to Germany for two to three years. He will be working a an equities analyst at Deutsche Bank, and Cindy will have a reearch position at the Max Planck Institute for Experimental Cardi­ ology. . . . Maria Morgan Grill married Christopher GrillonOc­ tober 6, 1 990. They l ive in Arrowsic, Maine. Maria had been working in a graphic design tu­ dio in Bath but decided it was time for a change and is present!y looking for a job in a c lassroom w ith special-needs c h ildren. Maria recently visited Don and J ane Hastings Brackett i n Albion, Maine. They have a new son, Rurik Samuel, born April 9, 1 99 1 . He is a beautiful baby, and Jane is doing great . . . . I have been doing some personal genet­ ics vs. environment research. This

summer I met, for the first time, the woman who gave birth to me and gave me up for adoption. The reunion was enlightening, and I have learned a great deal about myself by looking to my past. I n addition, I have been elected to the board of directors of the local Habitat for Humanity. We hope to have our first family in their home by the holidays. Keep your fingers crossed! It has been great hearing from you all."

86

"While vacationing in Kennebunkport, Maine, last summer, I had the chance to re­ lax and enjoy 'life in the slow lane,' " writes Gretchen Bean Lurie. "Quite a change of pace from my daily West Coast rou­ tine of chasing after a very active 1 -year-old. Home full time now, I 'm keeping busy with Hunter and all his act ivities. But I can only be half as busy as Andrea and Joey Marcoux, as they be­ came parents to twin daughters, Erica and Lauren, in J une . . . . Other proud parent of 1 99 1 in­ clude Kevin and Joyce Sutton Anderson, Tom and Lynn Bella­ vance Wehner and Brent and J il l Stasz Harris. (Unfortunately, I don't have all the details on these newcomers, but congratu­ lations and best wi hes to every­ one. Enjoy every minute with your little ones ! ) . . . . And now for some news from other bu y clas mate . Valerie Claff entered Rhode Island School of De ign this fall, where she's working on a master's in fine arts, specializing in painting . . . . Mark Leondires graduated from medical school and moved to Portland to begin his residency in OB/GYN. He was also promoted to captain in the Army Reserve last spring. . . . Holly Harris received her M.A. in social work from the Univer57


Headliners Fidel Fajardo-Acosta '82 is the author of The Serpent in the Mirror, a collection of poetry published this year by The Edwin Mellen Press . . . . Janice Sandeen '83 was named chair of the wood/furniture program at California College of Arts and Crafts' School of Fine Arts. One of Sandeen' piece , He loves me . He love me not, was shown in Augu t at the Franklin Parrasch Gallery in New York as part of a national juried exhibition, "Furniture of the '90 . " . . . Stuart Krusell '85 was appointed to the Massachusetts Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission by Gov. W illiam Weld.

Fidel Fajardo-Acosta '82

Newsmakers Cate Talbot Ashton '80 was promoted to as ociate director of career service at Colby . . . . James Elmore '80 is an associate in vascular surgery at Geisinger Medical Center in Danville, Pa . . . . Richard Schaub, J r. '81 was named vice pre idem of sales and marketing at Dolly, Inc. in Tipp City, Ohio . . . . Scott Vandersall '8 1 wa elected to the Beta Gamma Sigma national honor society at Bo ton University, where he eamed an M . B.A. in May . . . . Walter Judge, Jr. '82 was admitted to the bar in Mas achusett and Maine and i an associate in the litigation department of Nutter, McClemman and Fish in Bo ton. . . . Shoshana (formerly Susan M.) Perry '83 is the first full-time rabbi of Congregation Beth El in Bangor, Maine . . . . The Nashua, N.H., Sunday Telegram caught up with Charles Morgan, J r. '84 recently for an article about h is career as a et de igner in Ea t Coast regional theater . . . . John Gagne '84 joined hi father, Robert Gagne, in a dental practice in Waterbury, Conn. . . . Kelli Crump '85 joined the property management di vi ion of Saunders Real Estate Corp. in Boston . . . . Robert Loynd '86 was promoted to captain in the Marine Corp air wing . . . . Ann Thayer '86, erstwhile member of the Colby wood men' team, was profiled recently in the weekly Maine Times. Thayer is a hydrogeologist and an outdoor enthusiast who, according to a coworker quoted by the paper, "commands the undying respect of everal driller , who might be con idered pure-bred chauvinist " . . . Christopher Van Home '87 has a better idea. His Washington, D.C.­ based company, the CVK group, ha branched out from its usual line (summarizing depositions and briefs for law firms) to waiting in line. The company offers a place-saving service, mainly for lawyers and lobbyists who don't want to cool their heel waiting for the doors to open on congressional hearings.

Mileposts Births: A son, Andrew Madsen, to Maria ( Macedo '79) and Thomas Dailey '80. . . . A on, Joshua Edward, to Bill and Mary Lou Eckland Jackson '80 . . . . A son, Derek, to Matthew '80 and Susan Reese Krevat '82 . . . . A daughter, Julia, to Mark and Beverly Nalbandian Madden '80 . . . . A daughter, Emily Margaret, to Benjamin '79 and Joanne Lynch Thorndike '80 . . . . A son, Joshua Taylor, to Bruce '82 and Ellen Reinhalter Shain '81 . . . . A daughter, Courtney, to David and Victoria Sneff Schulte '81 . . . . A daughter, Ramsay Eliza, to Scott and Judith Greene Stewart '8 1 . . . . A daughter, Kelsey, to Eric '81 and Lynette Home Stinneford '83 . . . . A son, Samuel Holt, to Donna Holt '82 and] im Archibald . . . . A son, Jonathan Edward, to Allan and Diane Therrien Lamper '83 . . . . A daughter, Sarah Anne, to Cathy and Greg Marco '83 . . . . A son, Tyler Blake, to Gavin '86 and Amy Russell Murphy '84 . . . . A son, Charles Jensen, to Wanda and Douglas Terp '84. . . . A son, Maxwell Patek, to Kim '85 and Rachel Brandzel Rogers '86 . . . . A daughter, Anna Elizabeth, to Donna and Peter Westervelt '85 . . . . A daughter, Lindsay Claire, to Kevin and Joyce Sutton Anderson '86 . . . . A daughter, Tess Elizabeth, to Andrew and Betsey Burrell Feamley '86 . . . . A son, Keegan James, to Chris and Jessica Flood Lietz '86 . . . . Two daughter , Erica and Lauren, to Andrea and Joey Marcoux '86 . . . . A daughter, Rachel Alexandra, to Stephen and Deidre Boothby Carter '87 . . . . A daughter, Maria Griffith, to Mary Griffith '87 and Oscar Bayton. . . . A daughter, Molly Catherine, to Jeff and Mary Federle Porter '88. Marriages: Janet Thacher '80 to Jeffrey Silva in Milford, N . H . . . . Duncan Alexander '82 to Carolyn Salafia in Quechee, Vt . . . . Deborah Dohan '82 to John Strek in Harwich Port, Ma . . . . Geoffrey Ballotti '83 to Leslie Ann Engels in Osterville, Mass . . . . Catherine Coleman '84 to Thomas Mullen in Barrington, R.l . . . . Wendy Male '84 to Scott Latshaw in Lunenburg, Mass . . . . Nicole Adams '87 to Timothy McCrystal '84 in Marshfield, Mas . . . . Christopher Lebherz '85 to Romi Herr in West Falmouth, Mass . . . . Susan Fleck '86 to David Oberg in Haddam, Conn . . . . Michael Marra '86 to Maria Formisano in Barrington, R.l. . . . David Bullock '87 to Christine Finch in Riverside, N. Y . . . . Lydia Kelley '87 to Thomas Nelson in Summit, N .J . . . . Marguerite Schoolfield '87 to Stephen Compton in New Haven, Conn . . . . Heide Schmaltz '87 to Jeffrey Lasher in Darien, Conn. . . . Demetra Giatas '88 to Peter Anderson in Portland, Maine . . . . Eric Vander Mel '88 to Eleanor Gaffney in Centerville, Mass . . . . Peter Beebe '89 to Karrie Quante in Hollis, N . H . . . . Lucie Bourassa '89 to John Dvorak '89 in Augusta, Maine . . . . Toni Fredette '89 to Bruce Frech in Waterville, Maine . . . . Deborah Murphy '89 to Matthew Chisholm in Nashua, N .H . . . . Robin Trend '89 to Maxie Baughan in Princeton, N .J . Deaths: Margaret Torrey Crain '82 i n Hanover, N.H.

5

Colby, November 1 99 1


ity of Chicago in J une. ow she i prac t ic i n g fam i l y therapy there . . . . Nancy Gould received her M.B.A. from Babson College and is currently in her econd year of a financial management program with Lockheed Sander in ew Hampshire . . . . Bob and Beth Schwartz Kenney have re­ located to Virginia, where Beth is teach ing p ychology at Ran­ dolph-Macon College and Bob i fini hing hi Ph.D. . . . Margaret ( Davi ' 5 ) and Andrew Maley are rudents at UConn and are l i v ing in Orange, Conn . . . . David Wilson i a c laim supervior with Amica lnsurance in New York . . . . Lisa Rydin graduated from Harvard Law chool and j oined the tax department at Goodwin, Proctor and Hoar this fall. . . . Carolyn Kuenne Jeppsen is l iv ing in our nation' capital, where he works fora law firm . . . . Deb Pernice Duffy can al o be found in Washington, D.C. he is with the Environmental Pro­ tection Agency . . . . That' all for now, but I hope to hear from many more of you oon. Until our next feature, best wi hes for con­ tinued happine and succe ."

87

Correspondent Lucy Lennon writes: "Greeting , cla ! I'll make a deal with you-I 'll do my part if you do you.r . I promise to continue to fill thi column with lots of exciting news if you help me out by ending me some! This i ue' column i filled with new from letter I've received­ thank you all for writing and con­ gratulations on your graduations, bu ine es, marriage and chil­ dren . . . . Carol Hani, who gradu­ a ted from the Un iver ity of Pennsylvania' School of Social Work in May with an M.S.W., wrote me a while back ( orry for the delay, Carol! ) and filled me in on quite a few classmate : Colby,

ovember 1 99 1

Sheryl Reynold i s living in

Belmont, Mas . , and is working for IDC in Boston. Edie Bernhard i living in Manhattan and man­ aging a variety of projects, in­ cluding hydroponic tomato farm . Sharon Ducey is working at the Harvard Medical Center and i al o working toward her M . B.A. Alison Como i living in ew Hamp hire and planned to begin grad chool thi fall for her M .B.A. Jeff Norton completed his ec­ ond year of medical school at Hahnemann University in Phila­ delphia and began his clinical training in March. Dave Sullivan i in Hartford working for Con­ necticut ational Bank. . . . ew­ lywed Lydia Kelley Nelson \ rote me recently to let me know that he and husband Tom, who i econd vice pre ident in the pri­ vate banking division of Chase anhattan in ew York City, bought a house in Wilton, Conn. Lydia, who i till with theChubb insurance company, is working a a per anal line appraiser ofhigh­ value home in We tche ter County. . . . Mary Griffith i back in thi country for a while. Her husband, a captain in pain' air force, i rationed at Little Rock A ir Force ba e in Arkansa . Mary had a bu y March- he had a baby girl, Maria, on the 5 th and moved from Zaragoza, pain, to Arkansa on the 23rd. Mary had to leave her real e tate job in pain because of the move, but they have offered her a promo­ tion and a new office when he return . Mary was contemplating a return to school (part time) this fall. Mary clo ed her letter by aying that in August of '90, he ran into Lawrence Peir on at J FK Airport, where the realized they were on the ame flight back to Madrid. Lawrence i working in Madrid and enjoying Euro­ pean life . . . . Ted Greve Lis de­ cided to 'break down and take the first teps to becoming an active

alumnu ' by writing to me with new of what he' been doing ince graduation. ( He al o ex­ pre sed a desire for other cla- mates to do the ame. ) Ted at­ tended grad school at the University of Maryland and was legislative assistant for Congre man Thoma C. Sawyer ( D­ Ohio ) . He ha since mo\'ed back to Massachusetts, where he co­ owns Chri ty' upreme Piz:a in Reading with Tom MacGregor. He and Tom have al o joined with Ted' uncle to open Premier V ideo and Pi:za uper tar in Danver . Ted believes that Pre­ mier i the fir t video tore to offer fre h pan pizza within the tore itself. While the video tore has only piz:a, the store in Read­ ing i a full-menu sub hop, and Ted wrote that they are thinking of adding the 'Colby ' to the menu. ( How about kitchwitche too ! ) . . . . Fray Crease, who i getting married to Barry Boyce in December, used the 'What' ew' coupon (found in her Colby maga­ zine) to let u know that he re­ cent! moved from Boston to California. Fray and Barry own a company that run natural hi tory trip to the Galapago I lands. Fray starts graduate chool in the fall at Mo Landing Ma­ rine Laboratorie . . . . Holly James Creech wa married in Augu t of '90 to David Creech in Yarm outh, M a i n e . ome of Holly' attendants were Ali on Como, Carol Hani and maid of honor Sue Bl is s, who recently became engaged to Dan Cohen ' 9 and plan to be married next Auou t. Holly wrote that ue graduated from uffolk Law chool in the pring of '90 and i working at a law firm on Beacon H ill. Holly live in pringvale, Maine, and teaches cience at Ma ssabe ic H igh chool i n Waterboro. . . . In clo ing, I'd like to ay that I wa plea antly ur­ pri ed by a phone call from my

freshman roommate, N icole Adams McCrystal, la t night. icoleand hu band Tim McCrytal ' 4 were married la t Memo­ rial Day weekend and have re­ cently moved into a house they had built in Mar hfield, Ma . Tim is an attorney for Rope & Gray, a firm in Bo ton, and icole i working for Medi tech in Can­ ton a an applicattons con ultant for their software. It wa great to hear from icole-if anyone else get the urge to call or write to me and fill me in on what' new, please go right ahead! Don't for­ get we have our fifth reunion to plan for (June 5-7 , 1 992 ) ! We'll probably be having a meeting in late fall or winter for anyone who wants to help, o keep an eye out for any news."

88

"Recently I received a po tcard of pink ca ino from La Vega ," corre pondent Emily Isaacs report . "Who do 1 know who would ever go to Las Vega , I thought. It turned out to be Dean Schwartz, who reported that he and Peter Weltchek were tra\'eling arou.nd the U . . all sum­ mer before going off to law school ( Dean ) and bu ine chool ( Pe­ ter ) . Dean reports: 'We won enough money in La Vega to fi nance our graduate school educations ! ' . . . Monika Chas wrote her fir t letter to thi correpondent: 'I left YC inJ uly l 9 9 for Portland Maine, where I got ajob with an environmental con­ ulting firm. After one year I regretfully left to attend graduate chool in Montclair, .J . , in en­ vironmental policy and manage­ ment. I ll be here forever. It's a long haul-[going to chool] part time [in the] evening and work­ ing full time. I mi Maine but love m clas e .' he al o aid he was learning lots of interesting bits of information about the en59


Correspondents 1 980

vironment that don't make the news. Unfortunately, she didn't remember to tell me what any of those were! . . . Mary Shepard DiSandro writes to say that she, her hu band and her new dog, Magnolia, are moving into their first house. Mary is still teaching at Moses Brown, where she also coaches field hockey and lacrosse. . . . Andrew Mcintosh writes to tell of his not-so-recent marriage (back in 1 989) to Lisa Ramsden '9 1 . In 1 990, Lisa and Andrew added another member to their fam ily, Christopher W i l l iam. When not babysitting, Andrew writes, 'l enjoy the air-condi­ tioned offices of Keystone. Be­ tween shuffling papers, I act as an investor services rep for our mu­ tual fund shareholders and bro­ kers.' While not constantly thrill­ ing, Andrew's job at Keystone should keep him busy until times are better economically and he can go to graduate school. Until then, he serenades the pigeons and ducks on the Charle with his bagpipes . . . . Dave Rosen writes from Syracuse Univer ity, where he thinks about-and maybe writes-his master's the­ sis in philosophy . . . . Sue Jacob­ son is living in D.C. and working for the most talked-about televi­ sion tation, CNN . According to Sue, Kris Scholl is in grad school and is doing very well. . . . Vickie Caron and Ken Ginder are both finishing law school this spring. These last pieces of news come from Mary Federle Porter, who was still working hard in Colby's Alumni Relations Offi ce while she and her husband looked for­ ward to their first baby, Molly, born in August . . . . After two years of teaching Spani h and coaching field hockey and la­ crosse at St. Andrew's School in Delaware, Mel Brown planned to lead a group of students to Spain last summer to visit Madrid, Barcelona and Seville . . . . Ellen 60

1 985

Patricia V. Smith ( Pa tricia Valavanis) 6 Hammond Wa y

RD 2 , Box 1 49

Andover, MA 0 1 8 1 0

Camden, DE 1 9934-96 1 1

508-4 70- 1 484

302-697-01 42

1 98 1

Beth A . Wilson ( Beth Pniewski) 1 O xbow Road Wayland, MA 0 1 778 508-358-2845 1 982

Emily E. Cummings 2 1 Temple Street #5 Boston, MA 02 1 1 4 6 1 7-723-267 1 1 983

Sarah Merchant (Sarah Lovegren ) HCR 6 2 , Box 244B M t. Desen, ME 04660 207-244-3678 1 984

Mary A. Weller-Mayan (Mary Alice Weller)

1 986

Gretchen A . Lurie (Gretchen A. Bean) 2606 S an Marcos Drive Pasadena, CA 9 1 1 07 8 1 8-356-7538 1 987

Lucy T. Lennon 9 W ellstone Drive Ponland, ME 04 1 0 1 207-772-7 1 27 1 988

Emily J. Isaacs 29 Graves Ave., A pt. 1 N onha mpton , MA 0 1 060 4 1 3- 586-2443 1989

Amy E. Carlson 605 J ones Ferry Rd. , #RRS Carrboro, NC 275 1 0

Deborah A. Greene 38 Sorrel Road Concord, MA 0 1 742

9 19-942-4982

508-369-6978

Meigs wrote after realizing that it

had been three years and she had not yet contributed to the col­ umn. She remarks, 'Time flies when you are floundering around in life.' Ellen is living in Somer­ vi lle, Mass., with Heidi Kam­ persal, Patty Rush '87, Wendy Lessard '90 and Max the cat. Ellen is working for Calvin Klein Fi­ nancial Company as an accounts receivable supervisor, and Heidi i an associate editor at Houghton Mifflin in Cambridge. Ellen plays softball with J ulie Karas and Mary Mc Hugh; the three of them miss their old teammates, Elena Stamoulis andJaynie Holman '89, who are roommates in Arling­ ton, Va . . . . I look forward to hearing from you soon."

89

Correspondent Deb Greene checks in from Alaska. "Soon," she writes, "I will be back home pursuing that ever elusive, well-paying and intellectually timulatingjob that perhaps I will find but no doubt will be hope­ lessly unqualified for. . . . At any rate, many thanks to Forsyth Kineon, Mary LaPointe and Anita Terry, who all sent long letters last spring with more news than I could possibly fit in one column . . . . I have more marriage statistics, and I'm getting a bit worried to find myself in the single minority. Chris Tierney plans to marry Tammy Lynn Keyes on J une 8 next year. Past weddings i nc lude N a n c y Delorey to Stephen Cox on Martha's Vine-

yard and Jennifer Pattison to M ichael Gilvar in White River Junction, Vt. I heard via the Sea Semester grapevine that class­ mate and shipmate Chris Legault i engaged, finally squelching ru­ mors of an SR on board and mak­ ing his B watch proud. Kirsten Sherman is engaged to Bob Murray '88 . . . . Cathy McMich­ ael Devore and H passed their first anniversary with flying col­ ors and are currently living in Connecticut . . . . Darran Han­ son took time out from the beach on Martha's Vineyard to tell me of his busy schedule as best man for John Dvorak's and Lucie Bou­ rassa's J une 1 5 wedding. Darran is working on his M .A.T. in Latin and spent the ummer studying in Rome. Carpe diem! . . . Ca­ milla Johanson sent me news from Switzerland, where she moved after graduation. She's been work­ ing at a variety of jobs: operating the switchboard at the American embassy, substitute teaching and working in a bakery, hotels, etc. Thissummershe worked a a tour­ i t guide on boat tours, and she plans to spend the next two year a a residence counselor at a board ing school in Salzburg, Austria. . . . Melinda Pittis lives with Susan Scott in New Jersey and commutes to Manhattan, where she has a counseling job at the N .Y. League for the Hard of Hearing. She spends her nights volunteering in an adult literacy program and singing with the Choral Arts Society of N .J . . . . I couldn't make it back from Japan in time, but I hope some of the Seattle crowd caught the world premiere of dreams made flesh, a play written by Kerri Hicks and directed by Mark Cosdon, which was produced last March. Bravo! . . . The Wheaton College maga­ zine profi led 1 968 graduate Katherine 'Kit' Pfeiffer, who is ho t of a music program on the Maine Public Broadcasting NetColby , November 1 99 1


THE NINETIES work . tay t u ned for more news . . . . Mark Taylor '90 wrote to say how urprised he was to see so much of hi last letter to me in print, leaving me no choice but to print this one, too. After pass­ ing up a job leading bike tour in Paris, he returned ro New York and landed internships with New York Care , helping the home­ le , elderly and underprivileged and with the Black Filmmakers Association as a production assis­ tant on the set of Sublet. This he calls the mo t exciting place he has ever worked, and he is look­ ing into a career in film . I'm sure we'll be seeing hi name in the credit of many future flick . I'd like ro add, Mark, that you d idn't include enough go ip in your let­ ter-name , l need names! . . . Anita Terry isstillatColby in the AdmissionsOfficeand keep bu y with all those applications, with thought of grad school and with traveling around preading the good word about Colby ro pro­ spective frosh. She also wrote, and l quote, 'Don't tell anyone, but 1 am dating a Bowdoin grad who works in their admis ions office.' Anitaobviou ly places too much trust in her clas secretary. l felt it was my duty ro let every­ one know what k ind of people we have working for our alma mater! Tim Burton al o raffed that of­ fice but is now at Bo ton Univer­ sity in their graduate creative writing program, their rop choice among all applicams--no surpri e to any of us. 1 have ro agree with Anita that we'll all be paying big bucks for h i books someday. . . . Meg Christie, long a part of the Portland contingent, i till at the Spurwink School and daz­ zling the theater crowds with her tap dancing skills. She performed in the Lyric Theater production ofMy One andOnly in Portland."

90 "Well, came through for me this time, Dan Spurgin

sending me a lot of information ab ut our cla smates,"writes cor­ respondent Deb Adams. "Since Dan has a much better ense of humor than 1 do and a style all his own ( and let' be honest; who would want Dan' style ?), 1 am going to include excerpt from Dan' letter, and l hope it brings some of you as many smile as it brought me. 'Fir t,' he say , 'congrat to all of those loyal '90 folk who fini hed out in '90.5 or

'9 1 , just ro make sure they didn't get cheated on any tiny bit of the Colby ed. Rumor has it that the 90 . 5 ( December) grads were mo tly l i sten ers to Colby' WMHB . . . . One such 90. 5 gent, Roger "Dodger" Blankfein, i on an archaeological dig in Kaneone, Hawaii. I think the heat is getting to him-he sent me a letter on dinosaur stationary and kept talking about meeting Holly from Land of the Lost. For a few weeks he actually snuck off to the gulf war, and he sent me a po t­ card aying: "SCUDs suck." . .

,-----------------,

What's New? hare your new and view with your cla mates! Have you traveled recently, changed jobs?What'sexciting about your current job ? Have you been married recently or moved to a new area or a new home? Do you have a book to recommend ro other readers or movie pan to pass along? Please write in the blank and send it to the Alumni Office for forwarding to your cla corre pondenr.

Clas Year _______ Address _________________ City/State/Zip _______________ Is this a new addre s?

D

L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _J Colby, November 1 99 1

Chicago has been a veritable hot­ bed of'90 activities. Visited Chi­ rown three times this past year. rayed with Paul Brule, who i working with troubled k id and reading too much Erich Fromm in his free time-this guy i going to be a philosophy teacher yet. H is partner in do-gooding is Re­ becca Hennan-she is attending med school and working her brain off. Ah, ometimes it's not so hor­ rible being out of school. . . . l was caught in a train trike and Elaine Kaufman (a fellow St. Louisian) volunteered (okay, l forced her) a space to sleep for what turned out to be a couple of evenings. he's doing the parale­ gal thing, and go h, golly, what a view of Chi-town from her office. The partners come to her for ad­ vice. Elaine and l met up with Sara Hurvis for lunch and a beer later on. Sara was doing well and enjoyed the Billy Goat Gruff lunch pot where Saturday Night Live got the inspiration for the "chee eburger, c heeseburger, cheeseburger" skit. Went ro the Art Institute of Chicago with Chandra Goldsmith. She had just gotten back from l iving in Santa Fe and is heading to the Univer­ sity of Penn ylvania tosrudy land­ scape architecture. We both agreed that seeing American Gothic was like going back to the Midwest all over again (ahhh ) . . . . Doug Hall-what a n enjoy­ able enigma-has been trekking the country in a neato white truck. He al o lived in anta Fe for a bit and i now back in Boston keep­ ing its c it izens on their toes. I think he's a waiter. . . . Also in Boston are Joci Jones and Erika Goldberg. Joci i a researcher at a law firm and love her job-she aw fit to visit u Seattle folk thi pa t J une. Erika was linging fish while she interviewed for jobs. That paid off- he was hired to be Maury Pavich' per onal assis­ tant on his television show. Lucky 61


Erika . . . . Cathy Palmer has moved back to Anchorage, Alaska, andshe'ssellingthe world on her Alaska home. She has a fabulous job with the Anchorage Chamber of Commerce and as of late has acqu ired an eye for condos . . . . Micheline Hagan and Rebecca Block '92 stopped over for three days at my place. They were heading to Alaska to seek their fortunes and planned to head back down to San Fran­ cisco at the first hint of Alaska cold. 1 t was a fantastic vi it for all involved, and Seattle is till re­ covering from our antics . . . . Fi­ nally and least-whittle owe me ! I 'm an unemployed bum or a writer, depending on whether your talking to my mom or read­ ing a job application. The only sentence my niece can say is, "Uncle Dan is finding himself." I 've been in Seattle a couple of months now living on my own.' . . . I hope you found Dan's letter entertaining and informative. I have just a few more bits of news about our classmates. Beth Poole has been in London for the past year and is tak ing graduate courses. She has really enjoyed i t b u t i s looking forward t o return­ ing to San Francisco. . . . I ran into Ed McCabe at graduation. He's still playing in a band and wondering why Butch Labrecque has yet to call him, since we hear Butch is also living in Boston. . . . Kenneth Eglinton wrote with two pieces of news. One, he is working in Dracut, Mass., as a sales representative for E. Butter­ worth and Co. Second, he is en­ gaged to Wendy Westman '92 ; their wedding date is set for next August 29. Congratulations! . . . Kenneth tells me that Paul Apple is attending the University of Kentucky Law School this fall, and Marc Winiecki is still in North Carolina with Teach for America . . . . Bill Busineau is in Haiti working with the Peace 62

write with any information you have on our classmates. A special thanks to Dan Spurgin." Robert Scott '90

91

Headliners Robert Scott '90 is playing hi guitar in concert through­ out the U.S. and will play a four-week concert eries in India in J anuary. He recently joined the faculty of the Beechw od Community Life Center in Mas achusetts.

Newsmakers M. Holly Peirce '90 and Shauna Blanchard '9 1 are erving with the Peace Corp , Peirce in Bolivia and Blanchard in Cameroon.

Mileposts Marriages: Karen deforest '90 to James Jarosz '90 in

Keene, N .H .

Corps, and Erika Dresser is work­ ing for the Corps in Cameroon, Central Africa . . . . Carrie Linn is in Beverly, Mass., as an admin­ istrator and part-time teacher at Shore Country Day School. . . . An anonymous source wrote to inform me that Andrew Rhoades has just pa sed his first anniverary at Loral Aero pace, located at the M I T laboratories at Hanscom Field . . . . Pete McEl­ roy is working for the health de­ partment in Lincoln, Maine. . . . Mehmet Darmar was work­ ing in Michigan and is now in graduate school. . . . Jim Rey­ nolds has left Macy's for a job in a law firm . . . . Paul Tolo is work­ ing for a software publisher in Danbury , Conn . . . Graham Powis is with Fir t Boston in New York City (Graham, do you al-

ways have to be No. 1 ?) . . . . Randy Yarlas is in the financial

a id department at Johnson & Wale College in Rhode I land. . . . Brian Clement has moved to Portland, Maine, and is selling stocks for Tucker, Anthony . . . . Jason Shulman switched jobs in New York City and is now work­ ing for Kornreich-AP! (and the best thing about the job is the toll-free number) . . . . Plea e

"Now that a new crop of Colbians is overrunning the halls of Dana, it ha finally hit us that we are indeed alumni and won't be returning to Mayflower Hill--except maybe for Home­ coming," notes Brad Comisar. "l'm certain manyofushave been enjoying the new freedom and excitement of graduate status­ new jobs, apartments, friends, cit­ ies, travel-while other mi the security of dorm rooms, meal plans, allowance and the chance to leep late. Wherever you tand, your classmates and I want to know all about you: where you are, what you are doing, the people with whom you have kept in touch, how your life has changed since you to sed your tassel on Miller lawn in May. As our corre­ spondent, it i my job and my privilege to keep everyone up to date on what's happening in our classmate ' lives. But I can't do it alone-the class column needs you and your news! o take a minute to drop me a few lines. The more letters I get the more new there will be, so don't pro­ crastinate ( this isn't college ! ) . I also hope everyone will make it up to Colby in the near future and will send me a full report. And finally, congratulations on mak­ ing it through four years at Colby. Best of luck to everyone in our fir t year out."

Correspondents 1990

1 99 1

Debbie Adams A sistant Basketball Coach Boston University, 285 Babcock St. Boston, MA 022 1 5

Brad Comisar 235 Dellwood Avenue Dayton, OH 454 1 9 5 1 3 -299-4368

Colby, November 1 99 1


OBITUARIES Margaret Torrey Crain, Class of 1 982 President hip fund has been established i n her memory. Contributions may be sent to the Margaret Torrey Crain cholarship Fund, Colby Col­ lege, Waterville, ME 0490 1 .

Physician, Teacher

Margaret Torrey Crain '82, a bu ine s­ woman and active Colby volunteer, died J uly 22 ofa heart-related illness in Hanover, N.H. She wa born in Concord, Mass., and was a graduate of We ton High chool. At Colby he was a member of the igma Kappa sorority and wa an admini trative sciences major. She earned her M.B.A. with honor from Boston University in 1 990 and was a member of the Beta Gamma Sigma honorary ociety. She served Colby in many capacitie after graduation, including serving a treasurer of the Colby Club of Bo ton. At the t ime of her death she wa pre ident of her class. She was also an active member of the Junior League of Boston. he wa employed a a manager of marketing ystems at the Eaton Vance Man­ agement Company in Boston. Prior to joining Eaton Vance, he worked for four years at Fidelity Management Trust Company and for two years at Trinity Investment Management Co ration. She i urvived by her husband, Andrew Crain, her parent , Helen and J . Allen Torrey ' 5 1 and two sisters. A scholar-

Colby, November 1 99 1

Louis Langman '24, a physician and teacher of obstetrics and gynecology for over half a century, died in Sagaponack, N .Y., on July 28. He was born in New York City and graduated from Camden ( Maine) H igh chool. At the College he wa a member of the Glee Club and was a pre-med major. He left Colby after three years to study medicine at Columbia Univer iry, and his residency in obstetrics and gynecology was served at Sloane Hospital for Women in New York City. From 1937 to 1 95 6 he wa a vi iting phy ician at Bellevue Hospital, and from 1 949-56 he was an arrending physician at University Hospi­ tal, also in ew York City. He served a a commander in the U. . aval Re erves dur­ ing World War Two and was released to inactive duty in 1945. After the war he took up a teaching po t as as i tant clinical profes­ sor of OB-GYN at New York Univer ity Medical School, and in 1 95 4 he was ap­ pointed a sociate attending phy ician in his specialty at White Plains Hospital and St. Agnes Hospital. He wa a member of the pecial Committee on Infant Mortality of the Medical ociety of the County of New York and the Metropolitan Medical Advisory Committee of Planned Parenthood, and he received a grant from the National Research Council for c linical investigation into cancer of the uterus. He was a fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine and the American College of urgeons. In 1 990 he was among a small group of alumni receiving undergradu­ ate degrees from Colby after leaving the Col­ lege in good standing and subsequently earn­ ing a graduate degree. He is survived by his wife, Beverly, and four children. Contribu­ tions in his memory may be made to the Louis Langman Scholarship Fund, Colby College, Waterville, ME 0490 1 .

Syndicated Puzzle Writer M. Norton Rhoades '27 , a high chool teacher and admini trator who wrote cro word puzzles and cryptograms for national publications, died on July 3 in Stamford, Conn. He was born in Belfast, Maine, and prepared for Colby at Belfast High chool. He majored in Latin at the College and was a member of the Kappa Delta Rho fraternity, the track team and the debating and chess clubs. He was elected to Pi Kappa Delta and Phi Bera Kappa. After graduation he took a job teaching Latin in Stamford, Conn., where he lived for 64 years. He worked in the Stam­ ford School system for 38 year , retiring as principal ofRippowam High chool in 1 965. He served as pre ident of the tamford Board of Representatives for two years and as acting mayor for one year, and he wa a tru tee of the Stamford Public Library. For many years he constructed word puzzles for The New York Times, New York Herald Tribune, Simon and Schuster, Pocket Books and various syndi­ cates. He is urvived by his wife, Ann De Salvo Rhoades, a son, David '58, a daughter, Carolyn Rhoades Carotenuti, four grandchil­ dren and one great-grandchild. Other rela­ tive who attended Colby inciude his daugh­ ter-in-law, Sheila Campbell Rhoades '5 , and two cousins, Donald '33 and Roger Rhoade '35.

Guidance Pioneer Walter H. Reed '40, one of the "grand­ father of guidance" in Maine, died on Janu­ ary 1 5 in Skowhegan. He was born in Greenvi lle, Maine, and was educated at Jackman High School and Kents H ill School. At the College he wa a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity and the International Relations Club, he played basketball and ten­ n i and participated in track and cros -coun­ try, and he was a member of the College band. He served with the Army A ir Corps in I taly during World War Two as a bombardier/ navigator. He began hi career in education at Stratton ( Maine ) High School, serving a

63


a principal there, as well as in the Maine towns of Farmington, Madawaska and Bingham. He initiated the guidance program at Farmington High School in 1 948 and was its director for 1 6 years, going on to establish a similar program in Bingham in 1 968. He retired in 1 974. He was a member of several education associations, was a selectman in Bingham and was a registered Maine Gu ide for 40 years. He is urvived by his wife, Margery Lier Reed '40, two children and four grand­ children.

Former State Legislator Gordon A. Richardson '42, who served four terms in the Maine legislature, died in Stonington, Maine, on September 4. He was born in Rockland, Maine, and graduated from Rockland High School. At Colby he was a member of the band, the Glee Club, the Debating Club and Delta Upsilon fraternity and was active in Powder and W ig. He was treasurer of R. K. Barter Canneries, I nc. in Stonington for many years and was president of Atlantic Avenue Hardware, I nc. from 1 9 5 5 until h is retirement in 1 98 5 . He was active i n the Stonington PTA and Methodist Church and was a member of the town's Republican Committee, which he chaired for several terms. He served in the Maine House of Representatives from 1 962-70 and was a mem­ ber of the Sea and Shore Fisheries Commis­ sion, the Education Committee and the In­ terim Legislative Study Comm ission on Mandatory School Districting. He was prede­ ceased by a daughter, Betsy, and is survived by his wife, Bettina Barter Richardson '42 , a daughter, Sally R. Rice, and two grandchil­ dren. H is father, the lateJohn M . Richardson, graduated from Colby in 1 9 1 6.

Directory Editor Josephine "Jodie" Scheiber '47, editor ofthe CongressicmalYeUow Book,died in Wash­ ington, D.C., on April 4. She was born in New York City and graduated from the High School of Music and Art there. At Colby she was a member of Cap and Gown and the camera club. She served as chair of the Con-

64

cert Board, as secretary to the International Relations Club and as features editor of the Echo. She was on the staff of the White Mule humor magazine, was a member of the stu­ dent government and Outing Club boards and earned numerals as a member of the Women's Athletic Association. After gradu­ ation she worked as a reporter for the Daily Mirror in New York and as assistant director of the New York Civil Liberties Union. In 1 962 she moved to Washington, D.C., where she worked for the House Committee on Governmental Operations and the House Select Committee on Intelligence until 1 976. After seven years as a free-lance editor and researcher for various government and non­ profit organizations, she became editor in chief of the Congressiollfll Yellow Book, a quar­ terly guidebook to the House and Senate, and held the position until her death. She is survived by a brother.

Language Professor Vincent A. Serpa '56, a professor of Romance languages at DePauw University, died May 1 7 , 1 990 in Indianapolis, Ind. He was born in New Bedford, Mass., and pre­ pared for college in the New Bedford school system. At Colby he was a member of the Newman Club, the Spanish Club and the Cosmopolitan Club and was elected to the Phi Sigma Iota honorary society. After gradu­ ation he studied at the University of Madrid, Spain, and he received hi master's in Span­ ish from M iddlebury and his Ph.D. from the University of Kansas, where he was a graduate instructor. He taught at Williams College . before joining the DePauw faculty in 1 963. During h is career at DePauw, he taught Span­ ish and Portuguese and was campus represen­ tative of the Barcelona Program, serving as its director in residence in 1 985. He chaired the romance languages department from 1 980 to 1 98 5 and was interim d i re ctor of the McDermond Center of Management the fol­ lowing year. He coauthored a Spanish text­ book and was a member of numerous profes­ sional societies. He is survived by his mother, Jeanne Serpa, and a sister.

Businessman, Civic Leader Stanley T. "Sandy" Parsons '7 1 , a civic leader and co-owner of a Plainville, Conn., automob ile dealersh ip, d ied J u l y 1 7 in Southington, Conn., from injuries sustained in an auto accident. He was born and edu­ cated in Hartford, Conn. At Colby he ma­ jored in business and was a member and v ice president ofKappa Delta Rhofratemity. While still in high chool he began working at the family auto dealership, Parsons Buick, and he was v ice president of the company when he died. He wa past president of the Plainville Rotary Club, the Plainville Chamber ofCom­ merce and the Central Connecticut Buick Dealers Association. He served on the board of directors of the Connecticut Automobile Trade Association, was a corporator of New Britain General Hospital and was a director of the Colonial Bank/Bank ofBoston. In March he was named the Rotary's Paul Harris Fellow in recognition of his community service. He is survived by his wife, Mary Polanski Parsons, a son, Jacob, his mother, Esther MacBride Parsons '39, four brothers and a ister.

C O L B Y Volume 80

Number 5

Colby is published five times yearly for the alumni, friends, parents of tudents, sen­ iors, faculty and staff of Colby College. Address corre pondence to: Managing Edi­ tor, Colby, Colby College, Waterville, ME 0490 1 -4799.

Colby Staff: Edward Hershey, director of communications , executive editor; Sally Baker, managing editor; Nora L. Cameron, associ­ ace editor, graphics and design; Mary Ellen Matava, associate editor, photography; Rob­ ert Gillespie, College editor; Bonnie Bishop, creacive director Contributing P hotographers: David

Wilkinson (front cover, insidefrontcover}, Rhett Weiland (bookstore photos)

Contributing Reporters: J i l l Moran '93 and Rebekah Mitchell '9 1

Colby , November 1 99 1


This holiday season, the Colby Bookstore features quality Gear for Sports , perfect for casual weekends. l. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.

The Clipper-waterproof poplin, navy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -XL 66.9 5 , XXL 7 1 .95 The Victory-navy or purple, nylon taffeta ... .................. XL $49.95, XXL 5 5 .95 The Navigator-black or dark green, 1 00% waterproof nylon . . . . . . . . . . . -XL 39.95 Mohair V-neck-gray weat with navy trim . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -XL $31 .95 Gear Polo-navy polo shirt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . -XL 29.95, X X L 3 2 .95 Corduroy hat-white, navy, gray or royal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . M-XL 1 2 .95 Baseball hat-navy, one size fits all . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.95

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C OLB Y

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To order any of the gifts on these page s , call 1 -


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HOLIDAYS

Sport the Colby seal ::ilb · pennant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . olbv bra l i en_e plate h )Ider . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

2 .9 5 1 4.95 lby alumni bump r ·ucker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .95 o l b y port <m offee muo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.95 olb · golf ball , orange, ye l low, white per -rack ( _ ra iding hrand) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . o l ) i l igree k e ) t g . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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7.95 1 .5 olb alumni hra·· key rag . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.95 o l b ) m u l e key r a g . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ................. UO ) l h ) � a l k e ) ra g . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 95 u h l e o l d a h ioned . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.5 Be,·erage g la.s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 .95 !\porhecary j a r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4.95 �port mug . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.95 Large eram1c tem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 7 . 5 ! 10 1 ceramic seem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . ..... . . . . . $ 5 . 5 o e e mug . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .95 ................................. 1 1 . 5 79.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 79.0

Add "Colby" to Champions ' best 30

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L 4 1 . 0, X L 44.00 pant , c ba le, gray, na\

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29.95

\\ eave e re \\ neck, gray, cobalt, navy

S-XL : 3

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hort, gray or navy . . . . . . . .

XXL 4 1 .00 XL 23 .00

I I Ch.1mp1'n re\"tl"'e "'eave will hrink approximarely one •�e

4 35.

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Pureha e 1me ,1ze larger than vou would

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ormally wear.

1 00% nylon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I )()% n y l n . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

R o d w . v J acker.

Outfitted by rhe Colby Book.store, Laurie Girard '9 3 . Michelle Severance '94, Justin heer: '9 3 , Meli a Campbell '94, Ingrid Kri tan '94 and Jon Blau '94 are ready for class.

L 45 .95 XL 29.95

Wear Genus' new Colby Collection R<. ver-.

\\ e· \'e crewneck

app l i que

3

with embroidered

. . .......... ......

XL 4 5 . 9 5 , XXL 50.00 3 0.00 42.50

rew neck, med. weight . . . . . S-XL Z i ppered ere\\ neck wearshirr, na y . . . . . S-XL 1rural wearer m 1 00% cotton, navy trim,

37 H igh 39

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l.[l'W l)f \'-neck . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

40.

Pullove

41

1 00% nylon 1acker,

wearer mmmed

XL 4 1 .9 5 , XXL $4 1 .9 5

zippered hood

XL $38.50

ere neck, applique . . . . S-XL 5 0.00

And don 't forget the kids! 42 Gear i n i<le out rewneck . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , M , L $ 1 9. 5 0 ol ) crewneck T-sh irt, navy trim 43 Inf nr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.95 44

:::::::::::::::::: ··��:�� ���c�· ��:L·:::::::::::::::::::::::::: hirt

rhle t ic hooded wear . M, L . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8.95 mohair crewneck , navy or green trim

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Youth

4 5 (J<-'46

Youth , M, L . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2 1 .95 olby College rugby hire, rubber buttons

�:�:: �t. i •••••· •·••••·• · •••·••··· ·· ·· ····· · •• ··· •••• il rn · ·

Call for informatio n. Wt <.arr) everal products for newborns.

, 72 7.. 5 06 or use the enc losed order form.

Brittany, 6, Timm , 5 , Derick, 9, (back) Pamela, 7 , Angela, 5, Tamamie, 4, Eli:abeth, 5, (front) rake a break for the camera ar Little Tyke Day Care in Win low, Maine.



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