Class Notes
January/February 2004
by Tony Lee
I'm normally a "small is
beautiful" kind of guy. I drive small cars and live in a relatively small
house. I grow some of our food in a backyard vegetable garden. I take
Gandhi's admonition seriously: "Live simply so others can simply live." But
in looking at our 40th Reunion, I'd like to throw the small is beautiful
concept out the window. For this event, Fat Albert reigns supreme. Big is
beautiful, and bigger is better. I hope every classmate will attend. The
more classmates sign up early, the greater likelihood fence-straddling
classmates will show up to see old friends. June 3 through 6 in New Haven is
going to be a lot of fun. Be there!
Bob Hilgendorf sent the following in October: "It was a lonely and nostalgic
weekend for us as we watched the leaves fall and the balloons fly, and
remembered the mini-reunion one
year ago in Santa Fe. Maybe next October we can do a mini-mini for anyone
who missed attending or wants to come back. Thank you for your notes of
appreciation, pictures, and good spirit. Ling and I treasure the memories."
As do all of us who attended.
Francis Snyder wrote: "I just returned from one of the most rewarding
teaching experiences of my life: a one-month stint at the Center of Studies
and Research at the Hague Academy of International Law, where I was director
of the 2003 session on food security. I led a research group of ten
outstanding young lawyers from around the world. Otherwise I am a professor
of European Union Law at the Université d'Aix-Marseille III in France and
centennial visiting professor at the London School of Economics. For the
past years, I have also spent a good deal of time in China, including
helping to establish an Academy of International Trade Law in Macao to train
young lawyers and academics from the Asia-Pacific region and increasingly
from Europe. I would be interested in catching up with classmates based in
France, London or China."
Sam Goldberger: "I have taken retirement from full-time instruction at
Capital Community College in Hartford, CT but will continue teaching on a
part-time basis. I recently took my first trip to Israel and participated in
a project of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAND) to
build a center in an Arab town on the West Bank devoted to exhibits on house
demolitions by the IDF."
From Peter Yerkes: "I took early retirement from the Port Authority last
December, giving me a revenue stream and health insurance. I was lucky
enough to get a part-time job with the National Commission on Terrorist
Attacks, aka the Federal 9-11 Commission, which is looking at how 9-11
happened and ways to prevent such attacks. I was at the World Trade Center
for both attacks, in 1993 and 2001, so this is something I have strong
feelings about. I have a second role as Mr. Mom, which is a lot harder than
I thought. After 12 years as a stay-at-home mother, my wife Liberty is
finishing her Master's Degree in Decorative Arts and preparing to return to
the workforce as an appraiser. So I take care of a lot of the family stuff
involving daughter Isabel 16 and son Harry 13. Change is good."
Michael Nagel reports: "Good News, New News! I am extending my stay in St.
Petersburg as Senior Adviser to the Russian Venture Capital Association and
would welcome any classmates to visit me in Russia's most beautiful city."
Tom Susman's wife Susan Braden was confirmed after a 15-month process to be
judge of the Court of Federal Claims. They are both thrilled. Bill Taylor's
son Brian is a naval aviator and was on the aircraft carrier Abe Lincoln
when President Bush flew out to the ship.
Bob Lamson is Sr. Vice President and Managing Director for the "Beyond"
business initiative of Salton, Inc (of George Foreman Grill and Juiceman
appliance fame). Beyond is a new line of "connected home" products featuring
home-networking capabilities based upon broadband internet access and
wireless in-home communications.
From John Hanold: "Since our move a year ago to Turners Falls MA we have
spent most of the time supervising the fix-up of a house considerably older
(125 - 130 yrs) than the one we had in Albuquerque. Mimi and Jon McBride visited last fall on their way to VT and saw it in an early and unimpressive
state; I'm glad to say it is much nicer now. Andy Burrows and Tupper Brown live within a half-hour drive of us, and we've shared a garden with Tupper
during this past summer. Phil Lochner has been picking off sections of the
Appalachian Trail in VT and since our house is only 20 min. south of
Brattleboro it is a natural jumping-off point for those expeditions. Pete
Igoe and Dave Turner joined us for one segment. We've hiked in steady rain,
beautiful fall weather, even in snow on the upper elevations near Killington
Peak — damp, lacy flakes on evergreen limbs, very artistic. Under conditions
of exertion we don't talk much, just engage in parallel observation of
trees, swamps, rocky trails, and fauna. We aren't as fast as some of the
other hikers we encounter but we enjoy doing this. I'm grateful for a chance
to re-connect with people I spent a lot of time with in college."
I'm sorry to report that Trevor Cushman died July 9, 2003 after a 2-year
battle with brain cancer. Prior to his illness he was executive director of
the Louisville Ballet and had similar positions with the Hartford and Salt
Lake City Ballets. See the In
Memoriam piece.