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Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
2011 Jotting for 1966
Here are some of the photos that commemorate our 45th year. The Chaffees had visitors in Binghamton. Pictured are John, Barbi, Rajan and Phil.
A picture from two years ago was taken at the anniversary party of Deepak Dayal's son's engagement party - includes Cate, Ahmad Omair ('93), Deepak and Anne Robinson.
Cate and Jack visited Rajan in Denver in August of 2011.
There was a large WOSA group at the funeral for Cate's niece Rachel.
Notes from other classmates follow:
Claire Blickenstaff Beery: Hi Cate,
Thanks for making sure none of us fade from view. Here’s a brief update on me and my family.
I continue teaching Child Development at Santa Rosa Junior College and am Director of Parents Place at Jewish Family and Children’s Services. Oldest daughter Willow was married August 20 to Lew Summer in a beautiful outdoor wedding in Tilden Park above Berkeley, CA. Mama Claire’s jazz band provided some of the music. Willow also graduated this summer from Waldorf School training and is now working as a Waldorf preschool teacher.
Mira was awarded the prestigious 2 year Stegner Fellowship in poetry at Stanford University and is moving with husband Greg and 2 year old Tillie to live in Berkeley. Her first book of poetry has just been published by Kent State University and she is completing her PhD this fall too.
Zoe is in her senior year at San Francisco State University studying Broadcast Engineering and Communication Arts and loves living in the coolest city in the world.
Grandma is very happy about having all her kids and Tillie so close by again.
Richard Friedericks and Suzanne McCulloch Friedericks: Last April Suzy and Richard visited Portland, OR
during Spring Break to see their youngest granddaughter - Adelle Marie Nelson, their daughter Elizabeth's first child. Now we have six grandchildren; David, their oldest has a set of twins, Finley and Tsai, and another
little girl, Sylvie; Ethan has a Maya, now three, and Kai, almost one. It was a busy summer, too, visiting and helping out with each household. Besides that they helped move Etta McCulloch, age 96, from the house she'd lived in for 30 years into a retirement center a few blocks away. They also helped move Carl (age 90)and Betty Anne (88) Friedericks from one apartment to another in the center where they are living. They are back in Hong Kong starting another two year contract. Suzy teaches kindergarten and Richard teaches journalism, film, Web design and meditation at the high school.
Love and again MANY thanks! Mary Merchant Anderson
Sherry Sergeant Cox: Stephanie is getting married in mid-September so you can imagine we have been busy. In December Sarah finished her BS and continues to work for a PT clinic. Stephanie finished her BSN-RN in May, passed her nurse boards in June and started working full-time at the local county hospital in the ER.
A picture from two years ago was taken at the anniversary party of Deepak Dayal's son's engagement party - includes Cate, Ahmad Omair ('93), Deepak and Anne Robinson.
Cate and Jack visited Rajan in Denver in August of 2011.
There was a large WOSA group at the funeral for Cate's niece Rachel.
Notes from other classmates follow:
Claire Blickenstaff Beery: Hi Cate,
Thanks for making sure none of us fade from view. Here’s a brief update on me and my family.
I continue teaching Child Development at Santa Rosa Junior College and am Director of Parents Place at Jewish Family and Children’s Services. Oldest daughter Willow was married August 20 to Lew Summer in a beautiful outdoor wedding in Tilden Park above Berkeley, CA. Mama Claire’s jazz band provided some of the music. Willow also graduated this summer from Waldorf School training and is now working as a Waldorf preschool teacher.
Mira was awarded the prestigious 2 year Stegner Fellowship in poetry at Stanford University and is moving with husband Greg and 2 year old Tillie to live in Berkeley. Her first book of poetry has just been published by Kent State University and she is completing her PhD this fall too.
Zoe is in her senior year at San Francisco State University studying Broadcast Engineering and Communication Arts and loves living in the coolest city in the world.
Grandma is very happy about having all her kids and Tillie so close by again.
Love to you and Jack,
Claire
Evelyn
Bryant Pitts: Dear Friends and Family,
Merry
Christmas from the Pitts! We hope that 2011 will have many blessings for all of
you. Here is a brief update on our
family:
Dan is in the
process of starting a new business: Rayne Clinical Nutrition, a pet food
company that specializes in whole ingredient/less processed therapeutic diets
available by veterinary prescription. He
has two partners, one in Australia and one in New Jersey who have a lot of
industry experience. He has been
traveling a lot to promote the new company at various veterinary conferences
and to get distribution & plant operations up and running.
Evelyn continues to teach math at
Washburn University in Topeka. Washburn
has arranged all her classes on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, to help with the
commute, and make it easier for her to attend KU basketball games during the
week J
Kevin married Jessica Morris in August. Kevin is currently working at Home Depot’s
headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia as a Pricing Analyst using his statistical
skills. Jessica works at In Harmony
Pediatric Therapy, where she uses her Music Therapy degree to help children
with special needs. We are delighted to
have Jessica in our family.
Michelle continues to work at Grosvenor Capital Management
in Chicago as an accountant. Her work
includes tax and financial accounting responsibilities. We are very pleased that she worked hard and
passed her 4th (and last) CPA exam in November. She continues to support KU basketball with
her boy friend Sammy and their many KU friends that live in Chicago.
Of course, Mom and Dad
miss having Michelle, Kevin and Jessica close.
However, we have been able to visit all of them, and they are all home
for Christmas, so that has been a blessing.
We hope that you all have
a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
Don Camp: I am retired from the US
Foreign Service and live in the Washington D.C. suburbs. I continue to
work on a periodic basis. I'll be in New York all this fall, as the South
Asia advisor at the US Mission to the UN. That job lets me stay in
touch with friends at the Indian, Pakistani, Nepali, and Sri Lankan missions in
New York and occasionally get a South Asian meal out of it. My wife Betsy
will be able to join me in New York part of the time this year, since we are
now officially empty nesters. In August, we took our daughter to the
Columbus College of Art and Design (a slightly smaller institution in the same
city as Ohio State University). She is a budding photographer and
thrilled to be in an environment of artists. Before I leave for
New York, I'm helping to plan the festivities surrounding the 50th anniversary
of the Peace Corps in late September.
Several hundred Peace Corps
volunteers who served in India between 1961 and 1972 will be in town for the
reunion (I was a volunteer in Tamil Nadu from 1970-72). Best wishes to
all Don Camp
Janet Edlefsen: Hi Cate,
Thanks, as always, for all you do to keep our class connected. I
hope we can make a reunion work before too much longer. Here's my brief
jotting.
My
husband Frank and I both work a 4-day week now, and enjoy spending as much time
as possible out on our boat. We keep the boat in Anacortes, about 80
miles north of Seattle, where we can quickly get out cruising in the San Juan
and Gulf Islands, and this year travelled farther north to a cruising area
called Desolation Sound. We're both healthy and doing well.
Linda Gamble McKendry: Hi Cathy...alias
Kate.....thanks once again for being our class secretary (mother!).
My
current news: Still primary care-giver for parents with the help of about 11
other people over each month, including my siblings who rotate one weekend a
month to come and stay where they are living. Jim bought a farm four hours
drive away and 'lives' there in our 5th wheel trailer each summer cleaning it
up and making necessary changes and repairs. We rent the land and our daughter,
Shelley Anne lives there with her mother. We still have four generations under
Mom and Dad's roof at least once a week as my daughter and her children pop
over from school. I have Self Managed Care funding from the Government and with
that I have a full time live-in foreign worker, who is a nurse. I am off
duty noon each day and still have a few clients I work with. Life is
interesting, challenging and very rewarding.
You
can edit any way you need to, Cathy to make it fit the required space.... Linda
Miriam Haqq Prabhakar: Dear Cate,
Always good to hear from you and keeping us all up to date.
My
eldest son, Joshua and his wife Josie are blessed with a son, Isaiah Aleem on
June 25th. It was a joy to be in the US for the birth, making me a proud
grandmother for the first time!! I returned back to Andhra Pradesh
mid August and am happy to back and working again.
With
prayers,
Miriam
Rebecca Hill:
Although I only went to Woodstock in 10th Grade, I have great memories
and enjoyed seeing the pictures of classmates on Cate's page. I also
enjoy the group of Woodstock alumns that Steve VanRoy has organized in the
Dallas area (I live 65 miles east of Dallas) I was Rebecca Hill in those days,
a daughter of a great man - Lillard Hill - who worked in Delhi. I have
wondered what happened to Pat Riddle - Tom's sister and others an all others,
and have trouble using the web site with addresses of all) I was a social
worker, then became an Army Officer and retired from the Army, then became a
school teacher and volunteer for National Council for International
Visitors. For 7 years I helped take care of my parents before their death.
I now live on my 80 acres in eastern Texas and wish my children would have
children, but so for no luck.
Are
these the jottings you need.
What
stands out about the year I was at Woodstock was Nehru and Kennedy's
death. Our festivals were cancelled. I remember Sandy - who
had a short wave radio - coming down stairs to our room to
say Kennedy had been shot. We didn't believe her at first.
I
remember going swimming at the boys dormitory, and bracing myself for that
cold, cold, water. I also remember lovely walks behind the girls dorm
down to the pine forest and then to the rain forest. On Sunday's having so many
demerits I had to go to church with the teachers; toast made on Monday lasting
all week; collecting peanut butter from all the tables after breakfast for snacks
later; Kalia ringing the bell; Mr. Fleming the best biology teacher ever; reference
books in the common room that said to bleed a patient to cure cholera; waiting
in line for hot showers on Wednesdays; calling coolies to our dorm to send notes
at night; typing on ancient typewriters; climbing, climbing, climbing,
endlessly to many wonderous sited, Saturday's in town - wonderful; Quality's
coffee shop. The greatest young people - fun to be with, an enchanting time.
Frances
Hilliard Dawson:
It
is rather difficult to summarize a year!! I will stick to recent events.
Our
second grand-daughter, Kate, arrived in early August. Love at first sight.
Michael, who is still posted in Colorado Springs with NORAD came to Calgary.
where I was busy being grandma, to meet his newest grand-child. We drove back
to Colorado Springs seeing so much of interest and beauty on the way.
One
stop was Medicine Wheel, in Wyoming.
At 10,000 feet it is just above the tree line, where Michael indulged my
interest in the Alpine flowers and together we gloried in the magnificent
views. The strips of cloth and objects left by the faithful at this sacred spot
are reminiscent of other rituals: of Tibetan flags and petitioners at Lourdes.
The only sounds are the wind and birds. A suitable spot for a vision quest.
Affectionately, Frances Hilliard Dawson
Carlton Hoke: It seems that the main thing I have been doing this
year is designing and building sets. I
worked on Seussical the Musical and MASH for Hershey High School, Amahl and the Night Visitors, Seussical the Musical again, The Guys, and The Best Christmas Pageant Ever for the Hershey Area Playhouse, and
the children’s musical American Ideal,
Vacation Bible School props, and an adobe house for the summer Sunday School
program at our church.
Our big trip this year
was a Caribbean cruise to St. Thomas, St. John, St. Croix, St. Kitts, Antigua,
and St. Martin. We also took excursions
to New York City for our grandson’s birthday at the Natural History Museum, the
Philadelphia Flower Show, the Morris Arboretum, the Baltimore Aquarium, and
several trips with family and friends to my sister’s cabin on Pine Creek for
kayaking and relaxation. Our extended
family vacation this year was a week at Rehoboth Beach in Delaware.
Other activities included
being a Hershey Elementary Art Docent for their mini art museum, displaying my
pottery in the Hershey Historical Society Art Show, hanging the Milton Hershey
Student Art Show, teaching pottery and painting for the Hershey Summer School
enrichment program, and preparing photographs for my 94-year-old dad’s fourth
book, A Rich Mosaic.
At home we also managed
to refinish three bedrooms. We continue
to be well and enjoy being with our family in addition to all of our retirement
activities.
Marcia McKelvey
Olsen : Hi Cate.
We have had
a busy summer. My engineer
daughter has finished school to be a Dental Hygienist, and after two years is now ready to clean teeth and give shots.
I enjoyed having my cousins Janice and Ellen
Dobson here for several days, we drove up to Ft Collins to see those who
attended the WOSA reunion. Too bad there
were only three from our class there.
My daughter and I travelled to NY to see my
son and my grandkids. Ulysses is 3
almost 4, and Miranda, who is 1, such a fun age.
We were there for the US Tennis Open and
Hurricane Irene. We did see one day of the Open and did have some rain and
wind, but where my son lives, North Manhattan, the hurricane
wasn't a big issue like some had.
I am expecting my oldest brother, Bill
McKelvey, to be here the end of Sept. He mostly works in Europe, so it is
always great to see him.
I pray all are well and in good health. My
best to all, Marcia McKelvey Olsen
Bill McVicker: After leaving Woodstock
in 1965. My family returned to the US in 1966, Marin County, Calif.
In the fall of 1969 I
enlist in the Navy to avoid the draft, and served three years as an electronics
technician. I settled in San Diego after I got out
of the Navy in 1973, and found work in the electronics industry. Went back to church, learned of God’s plan
for man, and entered into a covenant relationship with Jesus the Christ. I met my wife in the church and after two
years I knew she was the one for me, she knew sooner, and we married in January
of 1975. For the next twenty five years
I did electrical contracting as we home schooled our kids, took in foster
children, and adopted 11 out of the many that we parented in foster care. During that time we moved from San Diego to Nevada City, Calif.
Where we now live on five acres a few minutes from town.
We birthed seven
children, 6 boys, 1 girl. Adopted 11; 7girls, 4 boys, and are still fostering
kids today; 3 in foster care. Seven are still at home.
2001 I went back to
college to get a Master’s degree in psychology to be licensed to practice
marriage and family therapy. Just last
month I completed the state requirements to qualify for the state exams and am
waiting to take the final exam. I expect to be licensed within 4 months.
My wife, Kathleen, and I
started a non-profit counseling agency about 5 years ago. It is slowly growing,
see it on the internet- www.touchedbyachild.org
Finally, the wonderful
stage of life now, as many of you also know, are the grandkids; 6; 2 boys, 4
girls with another, boy, due in February, 2012. It’s wonderful hearing from all of you. God bless, Bill McVicker
Mary Merchant Anderson: Hi Cathy,
Thanks for your faithfulness in doing this for so many years ! In a nut shell
adapt or delete as you see fit: We have 3 children and 7 grandchildren all
within 3 miles of us! We enjoy taking them camping with us up north! I work
fulltime as a school nurse at a large diverse inner city elementary school. We
are involved in ministry at our church-especially missions/trips/girls club and
seniors.
Love and again MANY thanks! Mary Merchant Anderson
Ruth
Morris Paige: I retired from my
job at Wright State University this summer and we celebrated by visiting with
Rajan at Philip and Susan DeVol’s wonderful home, Crow Park. Harvey and I began
our “retirement adventure” with a birding trip to the Highlands of Ecuador
where we saw 22 species of hummingbirds at one sanctuary. We then spent 8
days visiting 9 islands in the Galapagos and ended with a 4 day, 35 mile trek
in the Andes of Peru to explore the “Little Sister of Macchu Pichu.” The
trek was arduous (I averaged a little over 1 mile/per hour) but we were
rewarded by exploring the ruins with just our guide and three other
trekkers.
We
plan to be in Boulder this weekend to visit with Rajan as we are driving to our
son’s wedding in California. We’ll be back in Yellow Springs by the end
of September and would welcome visitors to our Village.
David Rugh: Hi Cate-Thank
you so much for herding we cats into doing our homework. We just need
a prod or two; sometimes a little wrap on the wrist can bring back Woodstock
disciplinary reminders. If you want quicker replies from me in the future,
please use dave.rugh@juno.com (using rughcrd@juno.com goes to Ruthe who has to
reroute the message all the way across the room!)
So here's my short story
for the spring and summer of 2011:
Dave Rugh is enjoying
retirement after 34 years of doing research on Alaska’s whales. Currently
construction projects consume his time, including sculpting a 55ft woodshed and
building a 3-story addition to Ruthe & Dave’s home on the Olympic
Peninsula. Also there have been excursions onto the sea ice north of Barrow,
AK, to count bowhead whales; to the NOAA office in Silver Spring, MD, to
receive a Distinguished Career Award; to Lancaster, PA, for a nephew’s wedding;
and to little Gabriola Island, BC, for another nephew’s wedding (Chris Green
’90 married Erin Orr, with Carol Rugh Green ‘60 and Kim Rugh Bergier ’69
attending).
'nuff for now, yes?
In admiration,
Dave
Judy Scheuerman Bender’s husband Larry is in remission from
colorectal cancer still and doing well.
They are enjoying retirement on Hat Island (Gedney Island on the map) where they have been for 10 years now.
They are enjoying retirement on Hat Island (Gedney Island on the map) where they have been for 10 years now.
Phil
Schoonmaker: Cathy...here's
Schoonie news...my little book (only 126 pages) of 16 short stories and
vignettes from my India years, Mish-Kid Mosaic, will be available
on Amazon.com within the next few weeks. There's quite a bit of Woodstock and
TCK stuff in the book; I'll let you know when it can be purchased.
I'm
again working with Steinway retail in Boston and doing piano teaching and
technical work on the side. I've left the ministry paradigm for good and will
not return...I was always too attracted to the good of it and too repulsed by
the bad of it. I live alone now but that, too, is changing...
My
best to all our class family...Schoonie.
Sherry Sergeant Cox: Stephanie is getting married in mid-September so you can imagine we have been busy. In December Sarah finished her BS and continues to work for a PT clinic. Stephanie finished her BSN-RN in May, passed her nurse boards in June and started working full-time at the local county hospital in the ER.
On 17 Sept she will marry John Toombs who works as a
cartographer for the U.S. Army at Ft. Sill. My mom, June Sergeant,
continues to decline with her Alzheimers but is still at home in
NE. Steve continues with Red Cross and I try to keep track of
everyone, am busy at church with choir and Bible Studies, went to El Paso on a
mission trip and am still studying Spanish. As you can see I
didn't quite make the 3-4 sentences(ha!), cut whatever you need
to. I've talked to Linda Gupta several times earlier this year but
no one else for awhile. I really wanted to get to Colorado but couldn't
fit it in with the wedding plans, a trip to Nebraska for my
great-aunt's 103rd birthday in July and then the trip to El
Paso. Hope you have a great fall.
Karen
Smyres Wolner: Despite a
broken right wrist (Karen) and a torn right hamstring (John) the
year has been good to us. We welcomed our first grandchild, a beautiful
little boy, the day before Father's Day. We couldn't be more in
love! He is such a delight to us as well as to his parents, our son Jason
(tech teacher) and his wife Lisbel (CPA/accountant). They
recently purchased and extensively renovated a home in Sea Cliff, Long
Island.
Daughter Kim and husband Caleb are established at their jobs in
DC. Kim works for Vista/Americorps as a trainer of volunteers and Caleb
works for the Peace Corps. We were encouraged when both departments
received continued funding from our somewhat disfunctional government!
Our one great sadness is the state of my mother, Mary.
Her Alzheimer's has developed to the degree that she no longer remembers her
children or grandchildren although she still seems to recognize my dad,
Bob. She is in full time care. The retirement community they live
in has continual care and Dad is able to visit her daily as his cottage is
just a block away. We "children" visit frequently.
Paul Spottswood: This summer I
have continued to work at the United Health Systems hospitals as an
anesthesiologist. I did a mission trip to Rivas,
Nicaragua
in May and a mission trip to Guiamaca, Honduras in July. Lydia continues
to be a moderator on an on-line forum for parents with children with eating
disorders and leads the Buildings and Grounds Committee at the church as we
renovate our old building and prepare to add a large addition. My son
Mark has accepted a job as an Asst. Professor of Law at the Florida State
University Law School, my daughter Erin is working on her PhD at Cornell
University in Ithica, N.Y. and my daughter Jayne is finishing her masters at
DePaul University in Chicago and works full-time as a social media director for
Kemper Insurance. We are busy and blessed!
Again,
thank you for your many years of labor for us and for Woodstock.
Affectionately, Paul
Betsy Taylor: Cate,
Thanks so much for snail mailing your last news re/ Woodstock classmates! Sorry you didn't have my current email... I'm attaching several photos plus this news:
Thanks so much for snail mailing your last news re/ Woodstock classmates! Sorry you didn't have my current email... I'm attaching several photos plus this news:
It's great to keep
up-to-date on classmates through Cate's good networking! I spent much of
the summer writing a memoir of my parents (Mary & Carl Taylor). I
would love to hear from any of you with memories or photos to help feed my
writing. Please 'friend' me on Facebook -- & here's my website...http://vt.academia.edu/BetsyTaylor
Betsy
Taylor
Helke (Wolff)
Ferrie has recovered
from nearly a year's sickness caused by EMF radiation; this affected especially
her thyroid and caused cataracts. A public campaign against the source, finally
identified as coming from a Smart Meter attached to her house without her
knowledge, the removal of that device and other remedial action against EMF
pollution, and successful treatment for radiation injury has now restored her
health and eyesight. For her published material on this and other medical-legal
issues she wrote about over the past year, go to www.kospublishing.com. Helke and her husband Robert of 41
years hosted the wedding of their oldest granddaughter
Miranda Brar who this summer married a Pakistani businessman (born in Canada)
named Asad Naeem; their second granddaughter Ysolt Brar, class of 2010, has started pre-meds at
the University of Toronto. After what Miranda and Ysolt witnessed the EMF
damage to their grandmother, they were successfully weaned off cell phones and
only use landlines. Daughter Bronwen (class of 1989) is still working in
Mussoorie for MGVS.
Cheers, Helke
Ruth Yoder Dyal: Ruth and
son Jon had an incredible, nostalgic journey back to Woodstock summer of
2010. Meeting with Cate and Jack in Delhi, and together finding Dolma in
her Tibetan Antique shop was a highlight. The most overwhelming moment
was learning of the tragic death of Dan Terry while we were visiting the school-old
memories flooding back. I thank everyone who offered suggestions and
contacts for Jon's research term in Poona. He truly had a fabulous
experience, although the "electronic medical records" he was promised
were available never materialized! Jon is now in his third year of
medical school at John's Hopkins-considering specializing in
Epidemiology/Public Health. Jamie is finishing a Masters in Bio-Ethics at
U. Penn, and currently applying to medical schools for next fall.
Jim had a hip replacement this spring, which slowed him down for a little while, but he has now recovered completely. This summer I went with a delegation of Ob/Gyns invited by People to People to China and Shangri-La (an autonomous region of Tibet). They have made remarkable advances in reducing Maternal and Infant mortality-but certainly at considerable price, especially in Tibet. The spirit there remains strong. In Shangri-la, the residents get together every evening from @ 700-900 to sing and dance in the town center. They assured us they do this all year 'round, for themselves, not for the tourists. The elderly seemed to enjoy it particularly. It is the time they get together, socialize with friends, etc. They said they look forward to it all day unless it is just snowing too hard! I am still doing both Obstetrics and Gynecology, and doing associate clinical teaching for students from FSU medical school. We just hired a new partner, who was one of the first students we helped train. The Ob hours are becoming a little more of a strain, but it is hard to give up. I suspect I will continue for quite a few more years-especially with 2 kids still in school! I always enjoy reading about all of you and hope to see you soon. Let me know if you are ever in Sarasota-we would put you up in the blink of an eye! Much love, Ruth
Jim had a hip replacement this spring, which slowed him down for a little while, but he has now recovered completely. This summer I went with a delegation of Ob/Gyns invited by People to People to China and Shangri-La (an autonomous region of Tibet). They have made remarkable advances in reducing Maternal and Infant mortality-but certainly at considerable price, especially in Tibet. The spirit there remains strong. In Shangri-la, the residents get together every evening from @ 700-900 to sing and dance in the town center. They assured us they do this all year 'round, for themselves, not for the tourists. The elderly seemed to enjoy it particularly. It is the time they get together, socialize with friends, etc. They said they look forward to it all day unless it is just snowing too hard! I am still doing both Obstetrics and Gynecology, and doing associate clinical teaching for students from FSU medical school. We just hired a new partner, who was one of the first students we helped train. The Ob hours are becoming a little more of a strain, but it is hard to give up. I suspect I will continue for quite a few more years-especially with 2 kids still in school! I always enjoy reading about all of you and hope to see you soon. Let me know if you are ever in Sarasota-we would put you up in the blink of an eye! Much love, Ruth
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