CLASS OF 1979 | 2016 | ISSUE 3

NEWSMAKER

JOSEPH WRIGHT ’79
Joseph Wright ’79

Joseph Wright ’79, MD, MPH, chairman of the Department of Pediatrics and Child Health at Howard University College of Medicine was recently elected to the prestigious American Pediatric Society (APS). Wright, as one of the nation’s leading pediatricians, has been recognized as an advocate for childcare, working to advancing pediatric research, developing educational opportunities for trainees, and expanding advocacy initiatives. For Wright, “Election to the APS is a special honor,” as membership provides a platform for him to further not only “Howard’s commitment to outstanding patient care and service to the community,” but also the missions of the numerous national advisory boards he serves on, including the National EMS Advisory Council (NEMSAC), the American Hospital Association’s Maternal and Child Health Council, and recently, as an Obama administration appointee to the Food and Drug Administration’s Pediatric Advisory Committee.

Greetings! A few of you have written in for the first time in many years—glad to hear from you!

On May 7, Nancy Katz Colman and David Colman’s middle child, Lily (Hampshire ’13), married Alistair Rée duPont in Philadelphia. Helping celebrate were cousin-by-marriage, Michael Kannan ’75, and Lew Gitlin. Lily works for David Zwirner Gallery in New York, and Alistair works for India-based banking firm, Avendus. Their youngest, Drew (Smith ’15), moved to Seattle in June; med school is on the horizon. Their eldest, Alex (Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts ’13), teaches in an after-school program in Philadelphia. David works in real estate, rehabbing and repurposing distressed urban properties for nonprofits and institutions. Nancy edits a publication for the Center City Residents’ Association. They enjoyed the wedding of Jeanne Cahn’s daughter, Rachel Sulsky.

After a 25-year hiatus, Doug Pavlak updated his status: “I continue to work as a neuromuscular specialist at the OA Centers for Orthopedics in Portland, Maine, where I am the head of the neurophysiology laboratory. I was voted ’Top Doc’ in my field by Down East magazine, thanks to my colleagues. I live in Falmouth, Maine, with my wife, Norma, and three of our seven children. The other four are grown and out of the house. Still trying to get one of them to go to Wesleyan!”

Rebecca Lyman lives in Seattle and owns a marketing and advertising agency called the Garrigan Lyman Group, glg.com. For 23 years, this strategic digital agency, with offices in Seattle, New York, and Boise, has been focused on delivering brand strategy, audience engagement, and digital delivery. She sees Kent Hellebust ’80 in Seattle, as they worked together, as well as Dr. Anne Peters, who is a rock star doctor in LA. Anne and her son, Max Votey ’14, visited her.

After becoming an empty-nester, and retiring from the corporate world, Ron Cooper took up photography. He found his photography class from J. Seeley at Wesleyan in 1977 fascinating. Not having picked up a camera in more than 30 years, he narrowed his interests to documentary, portrait, and travel photography. His images involve people and are made in the field with natural light. Ron had two solo gallery shows in Colorado, where he’s lived since 1996. You can see his photographs at ron-cooper.com.

For over a year, Lauren Steiner was the lead organizer in LA for Bernie Sanders and a delegate for Bernie at the Democratic National Convention, where, David and Nancy Colman so generously put her up in their lovely home. She organized Bernie delegates to protest the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) on the floor of the convention. Back in LA, she organizes protests on the TPP, fracking, the Dakota Access Pipeline and other issues. She writes for the LA Progressive and had articles published in Truthout, Truthdig, AlterNet, Common Dreams, and Nation of Change. “It is very rewarding to work with people of all ages from college students to senior citizens on all these vital issues, and I’d like to invite any likeminded Wesleyan folks to friend me on Facebook or follow me on Twitter @lauren_steiner.”

Daniel Morales is an MSW and works as a case manager coordinator for the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health. He has two daughters, Elizabeth, 25, and Melinda, 20, who are attending college. He is a Sabbath school teacher for the Hope Seventh-Day Adventist Church and the director of the Adventurers ministry for children ages 4-9 at the church. He is an avid volleyball player and reads as much as he can in his spare time. Daniel welcomes communiqués from friends in the 1977-79 classes at: dnjmorales@aol.com.

Gerard Koeppel writes that his book about rectilinear Manhattan, City on a Grid, won a New York City book award and he touched the gloved hand of possibly immortal fellow winner, Roger Angell. After a quarter-century of sharing his living arrangements with children, he and his wife, Diane, achieved empty nester-hood. Daughter Kate to USC; son Harry, a philosophy major/math minor, and a budding chef, aims to lead Boston College to a 2017 national sailing championship; and son Jackson continues in Detroit, (re)building the community one solar street light and one longtime resident at a time [soulardarity.nationbuilder.com].

Laura Tully writes in: “My husband, Robert Schneider, and I fled the arctic Boston winters and moved to the charming island of Alameda in the Bay Area last fall. I’ve found a wonderful congregation at First Unitarian Church of Oakland. I am looking for work as a team and leadership coach.”

Alan Saly documents the unrecognized efforts of transit workers at 9/11 with the Transport Workers Union. He is engaged in the traditional New York sport of sparring with a co-op board. He is pleased to see his daughter, Elaine ’09, in her third year at NYU Law School, preparing for a career in public defense.

Paul Landraitis is a founding member of the Seattle chapter of Conscious Capitalism. They had some great events, with conscious business leaders, Howard Behar (Starbucks) and Alex Thompson (REI). He just completed a certification program in Immunity to Change coaching with Bob Kegan and Lisa Lahey, and is looking forward to working to help more businesses and NGO’s become “deliberately developmental organizations.” He enjoys the great nature of the Northwest and hopes to see more Wesleyan folks.

Sean Barlow and Banning Eyre continue their Afropop adventures. Having won NEH funding for the 13th consecutive year, Afropop will be going to Nigeria to produce a four-part radio series in January. Home base is still Middletown, but no longer on campus, and the office is still in Brooklyn. It’s a crazy life, but hey, you’re only young once, right?

After losing his home, job, and community to the 2015 California wildfires, and his 20-year bodywork career for health reasons, Andrew Yavelow spent the last year wandering, relaxing, and recovering from those traumas. His goals are to find a new place to live (someplace green and beautiful, with short winters), and a new career (imagining himself in workplace wellness, and art photography). “Life is painful, hard, perplexing—and lovely.”

Gary Breitbord | gbreitbo@aol.com

Ann Biester Deane | abdeane@aol.com