CLASS OF 1962 | 2014 | ISSUE 3

Carl Crossman writes that his successful 1991 book, The Decorative Arts of the China Trade (published in 1991) is being translated into Chinese by the Commercial Press of Beijing, a distinguished press founded in 1897. He says the book had great reviews all over the world. He attended book openings in London, Hong Kong, New York, Boston, and Salem, and writes, “After several trips to the Orient over the past years I have to wonder if I would attend a book signing there.” The book is actually his second book on the subject. He says his 1972 book “had a great review in the New York Times, sold out in a month, went through three further editions, and was picked up by the Book of the Month Club, one of the few art books they ever did.” Addressing retirement, he said, “For an old Yankee whose family came over to New England in the 1630s, living in Florida was not what I had in mind.”

John Hazlehurst writes, “Just as I may have been the last of our class to join the reality-based community and get a job, I may be the last to retire.” He still is working as a full-time reporter and columnist for the Colorado Springs Business Journal and the Colorado Springs Independent. He reports that he and Karen have six kids, 18 grandchildren, and a great-granddaughter scattered around the globe—Maine, Massachusetts, Ohio, Kentucky, Las Vegas, and Tahiti. He says he keeps fit “with long bike rides through the high country, most recently the Copper Triangle, an 80-mile ride over four mountain passes.” He writes that he is looking forward to the 55th Reunion in 2017, and asks, “How did we get this old, anyway?”

Morrie Heckscher has retired from the Metropolitan Museum of Art after an illustrious career there of 45 years. However, they didn’t let him go completely. He is curator emeritus, with an office, and he says he’s involved in “a number of interesting ongoing projects.”

Dave Hedges and Ann moved from Canandaigua to Fairport, a suburb of Rochester, “to be closer to all the city has to offer,” with winters in Ft. Myers. A new knee was scheduled “to replace the one I originally injured playing freshman football at Wesleyan. Old age caught up with it.”

Jon Scheinman offered a Tweet-sized summary of “the whole picture since 1962”: “U. of Ill. MD, resident pediatrics and fellowship pediatric nephrology 1962–1971; academic pediatric nephrology, U. MN 1971–1983; Duke U. Medical Center 1983–1993; Virginia Commonwealth U. 1993–1999; tenured professor U. Kansas 1999–2009 (from which I was ‘proudly’ removed for whistleblower activities on behalf of faculty rights), and president KS Conference AAUP; took part time “Locum Tenens” physician substitute positions in pediatrics and pediatric nephrology 2009–2012 in ME, NC, NH, OR, VA, and WA); 70-plus publications and 20-plus chapters; Retired 2012, but continuing in intermittent telemedicine; other activities include gardens, very frequent tennis, extensive travels with partner Anita, visiting children and grandchildren in N.C. and Pa., and windsurfing in Outer Banks of N.C. from our house in Avon on Hatteras Island.”

DAVID FISKE | davidfiske17@gmail.com

Intern at the Wesleyan Office of Communications for Spring and Summer 2015. Currently working towards meeting the requirements for an Economics and Government dual major. A Wesleyan Posse Veteran.