Class Notes
May/June 2011
by Tony Lavely
Despite the harsh New Haven winter weather in early February, 15
Class Council members met in Kroon Hall for our annual meeting. The night
before, we enjoyed dinner at the new Mory's (what a great look, especially
the Temple Bar) and a 1-0 victory by the men's hockey team over Harvard.
Much of the meeting agenda was devoted to initiating planning for our 50th
reunion in May 2014. Announcements will be forthcoming on committee
leadership positions and all classmates will be encouraged to get involved
in some aspect of planning. The other meeting highlight was a presentation
by our Urban Resources Initiative intern. Both
her presentation and a recent
New Haven Register editorial about URI are posted on our Website.
The Mory's Memorial Brick project continues
to build in number of bricks donated in the names of departed classmates. A
number of widows (Fred Hopf's widow, Sue, is
the most recent) have made donations, too. If you would like to make a
donation for a particular classmate or any departed classmate, please
contact
Chris Getman. Speaking of Getman, he emailed: "In January, Toddie
and I travelled from Valparaiso, down the coast of Chile, through the
Straits of Magellan, and around Cape Horn to Antarctica. There for 3 days,
up to the Falklands, back to Montevideo, ending in Buenos Aires." Chris
added: "Just saw the documentary, ‘Waiting for Superman.' Everyone should
see it. The New Haven school system has engaged in a progressive contract
with its teachers where merit matters."
Chas Freeman
added some of his publications to the Class Website "Publications"
section. He added: "Since withdrawing from chairmanship of the National
Intelligence Council (a job I had not sought and did not want) under heavy
fire from right-wing elements of the Israel Lobby early in 2009, I resumed
my position as chairman of the international business development firm,
Projects International."
In January,
Patrick Caviness toured Northern Thailand from his home on Koh
Samui. Pat also wrote a vivid recollection of his days boxing in Payne
Whitney with
Jack Cirie and
George Humphrey:
"Mention the reminisces if you like, but in an off-handed way. The comments
weren't meant to be taken too seriously. More the thoughts of an old man
looking back on his college days, sharing his boxing experience with good
friends." Later, Pat wrote about catching up with
Tom Barton:
"Recently I exchanged emails with Tom Barton, who was my roommate along with
Bert Cooper for the first 3 years at Yale. Tom
had some very good news about his own family (his daughter was at Yale and
is a fine physician in California) and much about his active singing life.
But he passed on some sad news about Bert Cooper who is in failing health."
Stephen
Greenblatt is John Cogan Professor of Humanities at Harvard and
has just written another book, Shakespeare's Freedom.
Ed Massey
has proposed another mini-reunion in NYC, this time to focus on the theme of
poetry (as we have done journalism and music before). Please let Ed or me
know if you'd like to participate as a writer/poet (e.g.,
Syd Lea,
a poet and finalist for the Pulitzer Prize). On a very different theme, Ed
emailed his regrets to the Class Council meeting: "Sorry to miss your
festive weekend. I write you from JFK about to fly to Salt Lake to ski all
18 ski areas in Utah, from Beaver Mountain near the Idaho border down to
cross country in Bryce's Canyon and, of course all the four great Canyons in
between (Ogden, Parley's, Big Cottonwood, and the glorious Little
Cottonwood.). In fact, that is where I will be on February 5, one last day
at Snowbird before returning that evening on the red eye."
Don Edwards
emailed: "Our class was represented by four Glee Club alumni at the gala
150th Anniversary and concert last weekend in New Haven:
Doug Griggs,
John Hanold, John
Henderson and myself. We sang in the 100th Anniversary Concert as
members of the Freshman Glee Club. More than 750 singers crowded Woolsey
Hall. And the very happy crowd filled Commons for dinner afterwards and
danced to music of the 40s and 50s. I got a sense that Yale's women students
and alumnae have made their peace with Yale's male heritage; when the male
glee club alumni opened with ‘Mother of Men,' the audience went wild. Doug
is preparing to retire from the faculty of Georgetown College in Kentucky,
where he recently won a prestigious award for excellence in teaching. John
Hanold is retired from a career at Honeywell but continuing accounting work
part-time in Turners Falls, MA. John Henderson came down from Essex to sing
and to watch two grandsons, ages 6 and almost 5, play hockey at Ingalls. I
am four years into retirement from my careers at Rutgers and The American
Boychoir School. Sally and I love going back to New Haven and staying in
Hamden with our daughter Jenny ('89), her husband, Ricardo Chavira ('95 MA),
and grandson, Alex ('25?)."
Bob Reum
emailed: "I continue as Chairman and CEO of Amsted Industries, an industrial
conglomerate. After a few years at Goldman Sachs in banking our two sons
developed a new spirit which has been the leading independent vodka over the
last two years. Recently they were sued for patent infringement after they
used some animated figures in Internet advertising proposed by their ad
agency. Naturally they called on the leading patent litigation lawyer in the
US, John Nathan.
John shocked the plaintiff by indicating that he and his firm Paul Weiss
were acting in a pro bono capacity for this small company. Not only
did John represent them skillfully, but he also got the case dismissed
without the company paying a penny to the plaintiff."
Buck Wilson
is being inducted into the Junior Achievement of Southern Connecticut
Business Hall of Fame in April. Wick Corcoran
weighed in supporting Chris Getman's January 2011 letter to the Yale
Alumni Magazine: "When I read Chris Getman's comments pertaining to the
inept [athlete] recruitment policy at Yale, I was not just troubled but
angered."
Joe Lieberman, who announced his plans to
retire from the Senate in 2012, created the "Bucket List Caucus" with this
comment: "It's not what we want to do before we expire, but before we
retire." I just returned from 10 days on Curacao with my family and will be
meeting
Paul Balser at the Atlanta airport tonight for dinner. A number
of classmates have reached out to find and support classmates in the Japan
earthquake/tsunami tragedy, e.g.,
Tony
Morris contacted
Yuji Noga. The Class Website and Yale
Directory are wonderful tools for finding and keeping in touch with
classmates. Please email with news as you live it or hear it.