CLASS OF 1951 | 2018 | ISSUE 1

Barney Kathan sent me copies of two extraordinary books he had authored over the past year-and-a-half. The first one, My Prospects: Growing Up and Growing Old in a Small Connecticut Town, detailed his journey through life from a small farm to his career in the ministry and beyond. He was involved in some of the major changes in his town, church, library, and school district, and was a leader in the town’s successful celebrations. Barney’s second book, American Holy Days: The Heart and Soul of Our National Holidays, provided an invaluable primer of the history and significance of America’s special days. Again, Barney goes into extraordinary detail about these special days and how they came about.

Chris DeGraff wrote from West Hartford that he and his wife, Sandy, had a family get-together for the Thanksgiving and the Christmas holidays. Chris was looking forward to hitting the slopes and had already bought his season pass. They thought about taking a trip to Europe this past summer, but decided against it because of the turmoil abroad.

Frank Hassell moved into a retirement residence at Bay Village in Sarasota, Fla. He wrote that he is no longer up for traveling, but fortunately family members are able to visit him. He reminded me that during our undergraduate years, he, his wife, and subsequent two sons, lived on campus, sponsored by his family and the G.I. Bill, which helped many of us. Frank is much older than the rest of us and at 95, still holds that distinction. Frank wrote, “Wesleyan was a very meaningful experience for me and I am grateful for the advantages I received. A gift to Wesleyan will be forthcoming after I pass on.”

Along with Frank’s note, I received word that Dean Egly, a fraternity brother of mine, had passed away on March 26, 2017. I’d appreciate hearing from any class members who received this magazine.

DAVID M. PHILIPS | davephilips69@hotmail.com
43 Cannon Street, Cranston, RI 02920-7620

CLASS OF 1950 | 2018 | ISSUE 1

Classmates: I regret to inform you that Bob Fithian died in June 2017. Bob was president of Delta Tau Delta, and the summer after graduation he and I toured Europe together. He was employed by Sears for 40 years, and lived in Marietta, Ga. He is survived by his wife, Becky, two children, and two grandchildren.

BUD DORSEY | margiedorsey5@gmail.com
121 Renegar Way #105, St. Simons Island, GA, 31522 | 912/638-5616

CLASS OF 1945 | 2018 | ISSUE 1

Noting my failure to submit notes for the December issue, Donald Dunn sent me an encouraging email urging me to stay the course, refute the arguments of advancing age, and keep 1945 class notes alive, if not well. And thus, the following fragments of Dunn-inspired musings on whoever remains a ’45-er.

May all your days be smooth as silk;

May all your nights be inviolate;

May all your cereal be crisp in milk;

May nothing clog your toilet.

I’ll probably never be famous,/ Or rich, or even well-bred;

I’ll likely amount to just nothing,/ So I guess I’ll go back to bed.

Those Celtic fairies are everywhere,/ And they see everything you do,

So you’d better watch yourself, classmates,/ Or they’ll lay a curse on you.

Friends like you/ Don’t grow on trees,

You’re always true blue,/ Always aiming to please.

I figure I’m lucky/ To call each of you “friend”;

You’re lallapaloozas/ … and like that … The End.

And, slán go fóill.

FRANCIS W. LOVETT | lovettfrancis@gmail.com

315 14th Street, Unit A, Windsor, CO 80550 | 907/460-9338

CLASS OF 1938 | 2018 | ISSUE 1

Class of 1938 Scholarship

Stephen Kovalsky ’18, Economics

Alice Catherine Swan ’21, Pioneer Valley, MA

Please write to your class secretary.

GRACE BENNETT, daughter of the late Walter V. Bennett ’38
8104 39th Avenue, S.W., Seattle, WA 98136

GRADUATE | 2018 | ISSUE 1

In June, Carl McDaniel MA’66, PhD’73 will be the featured speaker during Natural History Week on Star Island in New Hampshire. Carl is an experimental scientist and environmental educator.

Royal Hartigan PhD’86, a professor at the UMass-Dartmouth, completed a J. William Fulbright artist/scholar residency at the Kwame  Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Ghana. He toured with his Blood Drum Spirit ensemble and completed a film, We Are One, whose theme is connections among global, African, and American cultures through music. The film features Abraham Kobena Adzenyah MA’79, retired professor, and his ensemble features fellow Wesleyan grads, saxophonist David Bindman ’85, MA ’87, and bassist Wes Brown ’74.

Anthony Maulucci MA’89 taught two writing workshops at the San Miguel Writers Conference in February in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. The featured speakers for the 2018 conference included novelist Wally Lamb and poet Rita Dove. Speakers in years past have included Billy Collins, Gail Sheehy, and Naomi Klein.

Associate Editor Cynthia Rockwell
crockwell@wesleyan.edu | 860/685-3705

Basil John Moore

Basil John Moore, 84, professor emeritus of economics, passed away March 8, 2018. Moore, who received his BA from the University of Toronto and his PhD from Johns Hopkins University, came to Wesleyan in 1958. He retired in 2003. Moore is renowned as the progenitor of the “horizontalist” analysis of endogenous money (an approach to money creation that states that reserves be provided on demand at rates set by central banks, rather than being managed by central banks). His publications include Horizontalists and Verticalists (1988), and Shaking the Invisible Hand (2006), and his ideas have shaped post-Keynesian economics. Professor of Economics Richard Grossman, said: “Basil Moore was a passionate challenger of economic orthodoxy. I met him during my first day on campus (we were both on our way to a freshman advising meeting) and he immediately suggested that we have lunch—mostly, I think, so he could evangelize someone fresh out of graduate school to his horizontalist view. Although I was never ‘converted,’ Basil’s gentle persuasion made me rethink a lot of what I held true about economics.” Moore is survived by his wife, Sibs; his daughter and his three sons, as well as his three Rhodesian Ridgeback dogs.

David Schorr

David Schorr, professor of art, died on June 16, at the age of 71. Schorr received his BA from Brown University, and his BFA and MFA from Yale University. He arrived at Wesleyan in 1971, and has taught a wide range of courses including printmaking, drawing, graphic design, and calligraphy. He received the Binswanger Prize for Excellence in Teaching in 2015. Shorr’s career as an artist and designer was also broad-ranging. He provided illustrations for numerous books (including Parallel Lives, by Professor of English emerita Phyllis Rose, and Distinguished Professor of Literary Translation Norman Shapiro’s translations of La Fontaine’s fables)as well as hundreds of literary portraits for The New Republic, and had an active practice as a painter and printmaker. “David was an incomparable raconteur who loved bringing people together around art and conversation,” said his colleague Jeffrey Schiff, professor of art. “He was a dedicated teacher, who cared deeply about his students and the fullness of the educational enterprise, and did much to shape the studio arts at Wesleyan.” Schorr is survived by his niece, Sarah Schorr ’99; his nephew, Max ’03; and his sister-in-law.

Donald B. Meyer

Donald B. Meyer, professor of history emeritus, passed away May 27. He was 94. Meyer served in the U.S. Army from 1943-1946 and received his BA from the University of Chicago in 1947. He earned his master’s and doctorate from Harvard University, where he taught for two years. He arrived at Wesleyan in 1967 from UCLA. Meyer was a social and intellectual historian who published three books and numerous articles over his career. “He was an expert in offering a vigorous challenge to prevailing views, especially about sectors of our society that figured much too little in our history,” says colleague Nat Greene. Meyer also served as one of the founding organizers of Wesleyan’s American Studies program. The Meyer Prize was established in 1991 to recognize deserving history majors for honors theses in American history. Meyer is survived by his wife, Jean Meyer; his sister; his children and their spouses and partners; and his five grandchildren. 

Peter M. Frenzel

Peter M. Frenzel, Marcus L. Taft Professor of German Studies Emeritus, passed away on May 20, at the age of 82. Frenzel arrived at Wesleyan in 1966 after receiving his BA from Yale, MA from Middlebury, and PhD from the University of Michigan. He served on virtually every major committee and in administrative roles, including associate provost, dean of arts and humanities, and chair of German Studies. He was a carillonneur, overseeing Wesleyan’s carillon bells, and played the glockenspiel with the pep band during football games. In retirement, Frenzel served on the advisory board for the Wasch Center for Retired Faculty and was editor of the Center’s newsletter. Frenzel was one of the foremost experts on the German Minnesang tradition of lyric- and song-writing. “Peter loved music in its more modern expression, as well, often sitting down at his piano for an impromptu riff or chasing the perfect Wagner Ring around the globe, visiting what seems like every operatic venue from New York to Sydney,” says Herb Arnold, professor of German and letters emeritus. Frenzel is survived by his wife, Laurie Neville Frenzel; his daughter and her partner; two grandchildren; and his brother. 

Daoud A. Haroon ’73

Daoud A. Haroon died on Feb. 24, 2018. At Wesleyan, he majored in music and was an artist-in-residence in African American music. Since 1955, he performed and recorded as a jazz trombonist and African and Middle Eastern percussionist. He later earned a master’s degree in history from Texas Southern University. He had a career as an American history professor and later founded the Avicenna Library of The Islamic Education Center in Houston.