CLASS OF 1977 | 2016 | ISSUE 3
It was great to receive so many requests for our 40th Reunion dates in 2017. Please note Reunion is scheduled for May 25 to May 28. As they say, book early and often. On to the notes:
Carol Cooper will be teaching a class at NYU’s Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music this spring. This is in addition to her teaching journalism duties at the Manhattan Center for Science and Mathematics.
Iddy Olson is going back to grad school to get her executive coaching for organizations certificate; she very much enjoys learning from school, as well as making new friends and colleagues.
Doug Hauschild will be taking to the stage at the Asheville Community Theatre’s production of Sweeney Todd in North Carolina. He plans to be visiting family in Connecticut this Thanksgiving.
Hope Neiman sends salutations from the Tuscan villages, enjoying a two-week vacation through Spain and Italy. As many of us have been considering retirement spots, Hope has, true to form, taken action, and is purchasing a home on Vashon Island (near Seattle). As a true sign that this was meant to be, it is located on S.W. Wesleyan Way. The setting bears a striking resemblance to the Italian hilltop villages she is experiencing.
Joan Goldfeder sent her son, Eli, off to college and is making her plans for Reunion.
Keith Stern, a former client of mine, is celebrating his 20th year as rabbi at Temple Beth Avodah in Newton, Mass. He celebrated 36 years of wedded bliss with his wife, Liza. Keith’s assessment: “Getting here was hard, I ain’t gonna lie. But worth it? No doubt.” His children all appear to be a source of great pride: Jonah ’05 is in Brooklyn, along with his wife and two children. Aaron ’11 is attending the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. Molly ’14 lives in San Francisco and is working for the Jewish Federation. Keith’s non-Wesleyan kids, Sara and Zoe, are doing fine, too.
Mark Slitt went on a trip to China through the Hartford Jewish Community Center. He dusted off his freshman year Mandarin textbooks to re-learn Chinese. His trip included stops in Beijing, Xian, as well as Jewish communities in Harbin, Kaifeng, and Shanghai.
Micha Balf sent along a reflective note from Israel, with regards from Rachel, which certainly had a focus on numbers (with an eye to our 40th Reunion). The Balfs are enjoying their 33-year tradition of celebrating Saturday night dinners with now four generations of family and of 34 years of Kibbutz life since their arrival 40 years ago. I was thrilled to hear that Rachel and Micha have registered to vote in the U.S. elections. The American elections provide an added perspective of how tough the political situation is in Israel, as much as one may find the situation here troublesome.
Marcy Neuburg chimed in from Milwaukee; she is a new grandmother and plans to visit Bob Rees soon while visiting her newest family member. Marcy got married to Wayne Oldenburg. Though she may not like it, the idea that she could be referred to as Mrs. Wayne Neuburg Oldenburg is quite something. Marcy is reducing her work hours and travels extensively. Highlights have been fishing trips to Cuba and British Columbia.
Paul Jacobsen and Marcia Israeloff have moved to Bethesda, Md. Paul joined the National Cancer Institute as its associate director. Marcia practiced law in New York and Connecticut before joining Paul in Tampa. She volunteered at Title I schools, Trinity Café, and the American Cancer Society, and will undoubtedly seek new opportunities in the D.C. area.
Always happy to hear from Paul Meisel. Paul’s son, Peter, works in player health for the NBA. Peter and Paul have collaborated on a number of children’s books, with Paul doing the illustrations: Good Night, Bat! Good Morning, Squirrel! (Boyd Mills Press) about the unlikely friends with different sleeping habits was released in September. Stinky Spike the Pirate Dog and Stinky Spike and the Royal Rescue (Bloomsbury) will be available in March.
Robin Curtiss won a bronze medal (men’s veteran’s division) at the National Marathon Canoe and Kayak Championships in Northfield, Mass.
Sue Guiney alerted me to the fact that I will not be able to visit her and husband, Don, in London, as they have taken up residence, half-time, in Martha’s Vineyard, Mass. (closer to home for me). Winter months will be spent in Cambodia. Sue and Don have married off both sons: Noah is in law school in California along with his medical school-studying wife; Alex and fellow actor wife have moved to New York City. Sue won an international Freedom Through Literacy award. She is working on her last novel in her Cambodian-based trilogy, as well as her poetry collection.
That’s all for now from Lexington. Given the speed in which time passes, it will be in no time that we gather together in person for our 40th Reunion. I very much look forward to next May.
Gerry Frank | Gfrank@bfearc.com