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The<br />

Fall 2010<br />

<strong>Stellar</strong> <strong>Learning</strong> <strong>Experiences</strong><br />

The Universe from Arecibo<br />

Connections in China<br />

Inspiration in Manhattan


CONTENTS<br />

A fall rainbow stretches across Oyaron Hill from Dewar Union to Anderson Center for the Arts.<br />

bECOME A FAN.<br />

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www.hartwickexperience.com


The<br />

Fall 2010<br />

Volume XLX: No. 2<br />

Features<br />

EDITOR<br />

James Jolly, jollyj@hartwick.edu<br />

ART DIRECTOR/GRAPHIC DESIGNER<br />

Jennifer Nichols-Stewart, nichols_stj@hartwick.edu<br />

FEATURE WRITER AND<br />

CONTRIBUTING EDITOR<br />

Elizabeth Steele<br />

COPY EDITOR/MAGAZINE PRODUCTION<br />

Kathleen Beach, beachk@hartwick.edu<br />

ASSOCIATE WRITER<br />

Christopher Lott, lottc@hartwick.edu<br />

CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS<br />

Jason Jones, Gerry Raymonda, Jamey Novick,<br />

Elizabeth Steele, James Jolly, Kira Delanoy,<br />

Ben Wronkoski ’11, NASA, and astrophoto.com<br />

EDITORIAL REVIEW BOARD<br />

Dr. Margaret L. Drugovich, President<br />

Dr. Michael G. Tannenbaum, Academic Affairs<br />

Jim Broschart, Institutional Advancement<br />

David Conway, Enrollment Management<br />

and Marketing<br />

Dr. Meg Nowak, Student Life<br />

Duncan Macdonald ’78, Alumni Relations<br />

Communications and Marketing Staff<br />

EDITORIAL OFFICE<br />

Shineman Chapel House, <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />

Oneonta, NY 13820-4018<br />

Tel: 607-431-4038, Fax: 607-431-4025<br />

E-mail: the_wick@hartwick.edu<br />

We welcome comments on anything published in<br />

The Wick. Send letters to The Wick, <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>,<br />

PO Box 4020, Oneonta, NY 13820-4018<br />

or the_wick@hartwick.edu.<br />

Letters may be edited for clarity and space.<br />

The Wick is published by <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>,<br />

PO Box 4020, Oneonta, NY 13820-4018.<br />

Diverse views are presented and do not necessarily<br />

reflect the opinion of the editors or official<br />

policies of <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>.<br />

www.hartwick.edu<br />

In this issue:<br />

2 From the President<br />

Dr. Margaret L. Drugovich reflects on<br />

reaching higher, working harder, and<br />

striving for more in service to<br />

learning.<br />

3 Board Enhanced<br />

Five new members join the ranks of<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s Board of Trustees.<br />

5 Cob House<br />

This unique student residence at Pine<br />

Lake is a study in sustainability.<br />

6 Strong and Vibrant<br />

The Class of 2014 shows <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s<br />

attraction for new students.<br />

7 Heard on the Hill<br />

Seven students explain why <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

is the perfect choice for them.<br />

8 Eight Thumbs Up<br />

With their varied interests and<br />

individual goals, Long Island<br />

quadruplets are a microcosm<br />

of the class.<br />

10 Out of This World<br />

Student-faculty collaboration in<br />

international astronomical project.<br />

12 Foothold in the<br />

Far East<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s developing relationship<br />

with China.<br />

14 Straight from<br />

the Source<br />

Stephen Green ’59 connects students<br />

with business and politics.<br />

16 I+III=<strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

Final decision: men’s soccer and<br />

women’s water polo remain Division I.<br />

22 Portrait in Philanthropy<br />

Claire and John Johnstone ’54, H’90<br />

give back time and again.<br />

24 Thanks for the<br />

Memories<br />

Highlights from Homecoming &<br />

Reunion Weekend 2010.<br />

News and Notes<br />

4 Campus News<br />

16 Sports<br />

28 Alumni News<br />

32 Class Notes<br />

42 In Memoriam<br />

44 Flashback


From the President<br />

Ever Closer<br />

to the Stars<br />

Photograph by Shannon DeCelle<br />

Ad Altiora Semper, our motto that dates to <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s<br />

founding in 1797. Ad Altiora Semper, a statement that<br />

means “Ever Higher.” Ad Altiora Semper, an idea that has<br />

guided generations of <strong>Hartwick</strong> students and faculty.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> is a place where people reach higher, work harder, and strive for<br />

more, all in service to learning. Our newest students will recall what I have<br />

said to them about true learning—that it happens in the space just beyond<br />

our personal reach. Sometimes we stumble forward in our progress, while at<br />

other times we leap, but always true learning happens in the tentative, hazy<br />

space beyond certainty but within reach of our reason, at the edge of<br />

discovery.<br />

At <strong>Hartwick</strong>, we are particularly good at reaching into the uncertain space<br />

just beyond what we know. We challenge ourselves and one another to<br />

question, and push further. When we do this, we develop our rational<br />

thought and intellectual capacities, and celebrate to best effect the tradition<br />

of the liberal arts.<br />

• Alumnus Stephen L. Green ’59 challenges our students to know<br />

themselves and actively, passionately engage in the professional<br />

world; and<br />

• John Johnstone ’54, H’90 and his wife, Claire, invest in<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s future so that generations of students can be awed by<br />

the power of their own discoveries.<br />

These are just a few of the stories to be told about <strong>Hartwick</strong>. Collaborations<br />

among students, faculty, and alumni happen every day. Each time I see the<br />

work of an actress or musician, watch an athlete strain toward success, query<br />

a student over lunch about her recent ideas, or engage a faculty colleague in a<br />

discussion about his work, I am inspired. You would be, too.<br />

The dramatic image on our cover recalls the interface of our past and our<br />

present, and reminds me of the words with which I concluded my inaugural<br />

address in 2008: “Ad Altiora Semper—Ever Higher—continues to characterize<br />

our college, and our intentions, perfectly.”<br />

Best,<br />

This issue of The Wick offers many examples of how we reach into the space<br />

beyond our knowing.<br />

• Physics Professor Parker Troischt and his students work on the<br />

most powerful radio telescope in the world;<br />

• Business Professor Steve Kolenda, his students and recent<br />

graduates explore and engage an evolving China;<br />

2


CAMPUS NEWS<br />

Trustees Elect Five New Members<br />

Four alumnae and a close <strong>College</strong> friend bring perspectives from<br />

education, healthcare, public policy, and finance.<br />

Retired music teacher Elaine Raudenbush<br />

DiBrita ’61, of Baldwin, NY, taught at<br />

Seaford Junior High School in Seaford from<br />

1961-67 and Seaford High School from<br />

1989-99. She was an instructor at the New<br />

York State Music Camp at <strong>Hartwick</strong> for three<br />

summers and tutored piano for 15 years, in<br />

addition to directing and producing several<br />

musical productions over the past 36 years.<br />

DiBrita received a bachelor of science, cum<br />

laude, in Music Education from <strong>Hartwick</strong>,<br />

and earned a master’s in secondary education<br />

from Hofstra University. She is an extensive traveler and maintains her interest<br />

in theatre while balancing her time between swimming, gardening, and crafts.<br />

Betsy Tanner Wright ’79 is president and<br />

CEO of WCA Hospital in Jamestown, NY.<br />

She serves on the boards of the Healthcare<br />

Association of New York State (HANYS),<br />

the WCA, Chatagua County Health<br />

Network, and she is board chair of VHA<br />

Empire Metro. Wright also is president of<br />

WCA Services and Starflight Inc., and serves<br />

on the Quality Steering Committee of<br />

HANYS and the Community Services Board<br />

Mental Health Subcommittee. A Phi Sigma<br />

Phi sister, Wright graduated from <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

with a bachelor’s degree in Medical Technology, and she earned an MBA from<br />

William E. Simon Graduate School of Business at the University of Rochester.<br />

Wright lives with her family in Lakewood.<br />

John Bertuzzi is the former managing<br />

director of Goldman-Sachs, and is widely<br />

regarded as one of the world’s top energy<br />

traders. He joined Goldman-Sachs as a vice<br />

president for energy trading in 1997.<br />

Over the course of his career, he has held<br />

senior positions in energy trading at<br />

Lehman Brothers, Mitsui & Co, and<br />

Metallgesellschaft Corporation. He is the<br />

director of The Bertuzzi Family Foundation<br />

and nephew of Nick Lambros ’59. Bertuzzi<br />

has established a scholarship in honor of the<br />

Bertuzzi and Lambros families, and provided initial funding for the renovation<br />

of Binder Physical Education Center. He graduated from the University at<br />

Albany in 1976 and earned an MBA from the University of Michigan. A<br />

sports and boating enthusiast, he lives in Old Greenwich, CT, with his wife.<br />

Kathi Fragola Hochberg ’73 graduated<br />

from <strong>Hartwick</strong> with a bachelor of arts in<br />

French. As a student, Hochberg was a<br />

member of Delta Tau Omega, captain of the<br />

swim team, Student Senate representative,<br />

member of the French Club, and editor-inchief<br />

of the yearbook. She also studied abroad<br />

in Paris, Dijon, and Brittany. Hochberg<br />

earned her MAT in education and psychology<br />

from Manhattanville <strong>College</strong> and began her<br />

career at Harrison High School, where she<br />

taught languages. She chaired the Middle<br />

States Foreign Language Committee in 1995 and was honored with a<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> Meritorious Service Award in 2005. She retired in 2006. Hochberg<br />

lives in Harrison, NY, with her husband. She is a U.S. gold medalist in Ice<br />

Dance and is a gold/international-level judge. She also enjoys tennis, skiing,<br />

reading, and traveling.<br />

Margaret Mansperger ’07 graduated from<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> with a bachelor of arts in English<br />

and minored in Graphic Communications<br />

and Environmental Science and Policy. As a<br />

student, Peggy played varsity volleyball, was<br />

a faculty scholar, a WickWire caller, an active<br />

member of the Student Alumni Association,<br />

worked on her class gift committee, and<br />

graduated with <strong>College</strong> honors. She is the<br />

citizen outreach director and summer<br />

staffing director for the Fund for the Public<br />

Interest, and lives in Somerville, MA.<br />

3


CAMPUS NEWS<br />

Grants Enhance the<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> Experience<br />

Recent <strong>Hartwick</strong> institutional and faculty grants.<br />

Institutional Grants<br />

Robinson Broadhurst Foundation, $6,000: Scholarships<br />

for students from Stamford, Worcester, or Winchendon, MA.<br />

Greater Hudson Heritage Network, $6,923: Objects<br />

Conservation, Yager Museum of Art & Culture.<br />

Faculty Grants<br />

Mary Allen, Ph.D., Biology, $2,500: “Antibiotic Resistant<br />

Bacteria in the Upper Susquehanna River.” Otsego County<br />

Conservation Association, Oneonta, NY.<br />

David Anthony, Ph.D., Anthropology, $27,230:<br />

“Preliminary excavations at the Eneolithic settlement of Rozdol’noe, in<br />

the steppes of eastern Ukraine.” Leon Levy Foundation, NY.<br />

Zsuzsanna Balogh-Brunstad, Ph.D.,<br />

Chemistry/Geology & Environmental Sciences,<br />

$37,348: “Weathering Under Cover: Role of Biofilms in Mineral<br />

Weathering and Nutrient Uptake in the Mycorrhizosphere.” National<br />

Science Foundation ETBC Collaborative Research Program,<br />

Washington, DC, in collaboration with Washington State University.<br />

Richard Benner, Ph.D., Chemistry, $94,951: “Design and<br />

fabrication of a gas chromatographic system for separation and analysis<br />

of perfluorocarbon compounds used as atmospheric tracers.” United<br />

States Department of Energy, Brookhaven National Laboratory,<br />

Brookhaven, NY.<br />

Thomas Travisano, Ph.D., English and Theatre Arts,<br />

$6,000: “A new critical biography of Elizabeth Bishop.” National<br />

Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend Program,<br />

Washington, DC.<br />

Parker Troischt, Ph.D., Physics, $4,500: “The Arecibo<br />

Legacy Fast ALFA Survey.” Office of Multidisciplinary Activity,<br />

National Science Foundation, Directorate of Mathematical and<br />

Physical Sciences. ALFALFA Summer Stipend Research Award. This<br />

was a competitive process to receive external NSF grant money to<br />

support two students with summer stipends. The ALFALFA<br />

collaboration funds multiple institutions. (See page 10)<br />

Faculty<br />

IN PRINT<br />

Professor of Sociology Katherine O’Donnell recently published Weaving<br />

Transnational Solidarity from the Catskills to Chiapas and Beyond (Brill Press,<br />

The Netherlands). The book analyzes the grassroots, economic justice<br />

efforts (1998-2009) of three groups—two Mexican organizations, Jolom<br />

Mayaetik, Mayan women’s weaving cooperative, and K’inal Antzetik, NGO<br />

in the highlands of Chiapas, and an informal, international solidarity<br />

network. Central themes of O’Donnell’s book include solidarity, human<br />

rights, and social justice. The book features indigenous women’s voices as<br />

powerful in transnational justice organizing in the global south and north.<br />

Associate Dean and Director of U.S. Pluralism Programs Harry Bradshaw<br />

Matthews has completed a revision of his book Whence They Came: The<br />

Families of the United States Colored Troops of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, 1851-<br />

1995. The revised edition has been donated to 25 state and university<br />

libraries and complements Matthews’ 2008 book, African American Freedom<br />

Journey in New York and Related Sites, 1823-1870: Freedom Knows No Color.<br />

Associate Professor of Music Diane Paige published a review, “Richard<br />

Chalupaty, Antal Doráti and the joy of making music,” in the August<br />

edition of Fontes Artes Musicae.<br />

Associate Professor of Philosophy Stefanie Rocknak will soon publish<br />

“Hume’s Negative Account of Induction” in Just the Arguments: 100 of the<br />

Most Important Arguments in Western Philosophy (Wiley-Blackwell).<br />

Professor of Biology Stanley K. Sessions has authored Chapter 1 of The<br />

Philosophy of Evolution (Yash Publishing House). In the chapter “What would<br />

Darwin think?,” Sessions addresses some of the most important topics in<br />

the philosophy of evolution and the advancement of science, including the<br />

question of why the vast majority of scientists are atheists, and the<br />

significance of the human genome project.<br />

The paper “Proper Rainbow Ramsey Numbers” by Professor of<br />

Mathematics Gary E. Stevens and Kaitlin Woskoff ’10 has been<br />

accepted for publication in Congressus Numerantium. Stevens’ paper “Almost<br />

Asters Are Splittable” also has been accepted for publication in Congressus<br />

Numerantium.<br />

Associate Professor of Philosophy Jeremy Wisnewski has published two<br />

new books. Understanding Torture (Edinburgh University Press/Columbia<br />

University Press) and 30 Rock and Philosophy, which Wisnewski edited,<br />

(Wiley-Blackwell Publishing).<br />

4


Cob House is a<br />

Study in Sustainability<br />

With its rounded walls and curved roof, <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s Cob House at Pine Lake<br />

looks like it belongs in the Middle Earth. In fact, this unique adobe-like<br />

structure is student housing and an example of sustainable construction.<br />

The Cob House is 505 square feet and features a kitchen, bathroom,<br />

living/dining room, two sleeping nooks, and wireless Internet. With wall<br />

widths of 16 to 20 inches, it is warm in the winter and cool in the summer.<br />

The Cob—a mixture of clay, sand, straw, water, and earth—was made on-site<br />

from local materials. Inside, hemlock and pine floorboards were milled in<br />

Portlandville, about 12 miles from Pine Lake.<br />

The slate roof comes from a Delaware County dairy barn and a number of<br />

windows are reused thermo panes. The kitchen cabinets are made of barn wood<br />

left over from the building of Strawbale House at Pine Lake, and the<br />

countertops in the kitchen and bathroom are made of old Arnold Hall<br />

chalkboards. The kitchen sink was once used in a campus science lab.<br />

“Our Cob House is unique not just from the standpoint of student housing,<br />

but also from the fact that it was designed and built by students as part of a<br />

Religious Studies course,” says Dr. Brian Hagenbuch, Director of the Pine<br />

Lake Institute for Environmental and Sustainability Studies.<br />

The Cob House began as part of “Architecture of the Sacred,” taught by<br />

Associate Professor of Religious Studies Sandy Huntington. Gerrit Gibbs<br />

’05 and Peter Hussey ’05 are former students involved with the original<br />

building and completed the project as independent contractors. Gibbs<br />

specializes in the construction of alternative, sustainable dwellings. Dan<br />

Morse ’97 coordinated the <strong>College</strong>’s and Pine Lake’s efforts on the Cob<br />

house.<br />

President Margaret L. Drugovich presented keys to the house to Madeleine<br />

Jayson ’11 and Kendall Roberts ’11. Jayson and Roberts are not just the first<br />

occupants of the Cob House, they helped build it.<br />

“The Cob House is a most special place to live,” says Jayson. “The atmosphere<br />

is extraordinary. Not many college students can say they live in the woods in an<br />

Earth House that they helped build.”<br />

5


CAMPUS NEWS<br />

Class of 2014:<br />

Strong and Vibrant<br />

“The demand for <strong>Hartwick</strong> is huge. More students, very strong students,<br />

are looking for what we offer,”says David Conway, Vice President for<br />

Enrollment and Marketing. “<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s commitment to ‘being the best at<br />

melding liberal arts and experiential learning’ is valued. The results show in<br />

this Class of 2014, and look even better for next year’s freshman class.<br />

This college has a proud history and future filled with promise.”<br />

The facts<br />

[Snapshot of the<br />

Class of 2014]<br />

The increase is due, in large part, to a clearer, more<br />

compelling articulation of what <strong>Hartwick</strong> is, and<br />

what makes it different. It is a shared understanding<br />

of the <strong>College</strong>—not only in the marketplace, but on<br />

campus, among the alumni, and in the community. It<br />

is what President Margaret L. Drugovich calls<br />

“living our story, then telling our story.”<br />

“We’ve shown the reality—that <strong>Hartwick</strong> is a strong,<br />

vibrant, innovative institution,” says Conway. “We<br />

talk about the ways that <strong>Hartwick</strong> is distinctive—<br />

with a commitment to experiential learning, our<br />

community is stepping into spaces that are<br />

unfamiliar, to try, and not wait to be asked. It’s<br />

palpable. A student who welcomes that challenge is a<br />

student who is a good fit for <strong>Hartwick</strong>.”<br />

“There are many great colleges in the U.S., and<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> is one of the finest,” says Dr. Drugovich.<br />

“We have a distinctive personality. It’s impossible to<br />

be the right college for every student, but it is<br />

possible to be the best college for the right student.<br />

That’s what we want, and that’s why I like this class.<br />

They are a great fit for <strong>Hartwick</strong>; their interests, their<br />

values, their personality, and their focus are all in<br />

great alignment with <strong>Hartwick</strong>. When you have that<br />

you have the perfect medium in which to grow great<br />

learning.”<br />

“This is not an intractable community,” adds<br />

Conway. “Our students change <strong>Hartwick</strong>. They<br />

know that it’s their job to make this a different place,<br />

a better place by the time they graduate. They<br />

become the new story, the new narrative, which we<br />

will then tell.”<br />

More than 530 new students, including transfers,<br />

took their place at <strong>Hartwick</strong> this fall. For the first<br />

time in <strong>College</strong> history, 1,000 prospective student<br />

applicants were either denied admission or put on a<br />

wait list. The <strong>College</strong>’s previous 87% admit rate, an<br />

industry term that measures selectivity, has dropped<br />

precipitously to 69%.<br />

Conway explains. “A much larger applicant pool<br />

allows us to consider the students as a group as well<br />

as individually,” he says. “We are in a position to<br />

shape the class in ways that comport with <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s<br />

mission.”<br />

More than anything, it is the quality of this new class<br />

that is being celebrated. “Real selectivity is not just<br />

an acceptance rate,” Conway says. “It is the students<br />

themselves who matter.”<br />

21% increase<br />

in freshman enrollment<br />

8 applicants<br />

for every<br />

1 freshman spot<br />

30% of class in<br />

National Honor Societies<br />

27% brought<br />

Advanced Placement<br />

credits<br />

37% brought<br />

college-level<br />

course credits<br />

Read more about the Class of 2014 at<br />

www.hartwick.edu/about-us/fast-facts/classof2014<br />

6


Heard on<br />

The Hill<br />

Seven new students<br />

on why they’re here<br />

and how it’s going.<br />

“I wanted a liberal arts school which would offer me the opportunities to expand my<br />

interests and have more than enough resources to enrich my knowledge. I also wanted a<br />

school where it would be easy to communicate and have a close relationship with the<br />

faculty and staff. <strong>Hartwick</strong> is phenomenal.”<br />

—Sindhu Singh ’13, ME, Biology and Pre-Med, Three-Year program<br />

“I wasn’t sure I would come to <strong>Hartwick</strong>; my father is a graduate and all my younger<br />

siblings want to go here, too. I did want a college that has a wide variety of classes to<br />

experiment with different interests. <strong>Hartwick</strong> has proved to be the perfect choice for<br />

me; it feels like home.”<br />

—Deena Slaff ’14, NJ, undeclared major,<br />

Alumni Association Scholarship winner (Craig Slaff ’82)<br />

“The things that attracted me to <strong>Hartwick</strong> were its football team, the location, the beautiful<br />

campus, and the town of Oneonta. The thing that has surprised me about <strong>Hartwick</strong> is how<br />

personal this campus is. You can always find someone to help you if you need it.”<br />

—Dustin Gratto ’12, NY, Math and Accounting, transfer student, Three-Year program<br />

“The Nursing program was definitely one of the major<br />

contributions to my decision, but I think that [Field<br />

Hockey Coach] Anna Meyer was the one who sealed<br />

the deal. She made me feel like I belonged at<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>. I was looking for a place in which I would<br />

succeed, and a place where I would be challenged. I<br />

can already tell that I made the right decision.”<br />

—Megan Lefeber ’14, CT, Nursing<br />

“<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s Three-Year program is a good way to<br />

help me figure out ‘what I’m made of,’ so to<br />

speak. I want to know how far I can push myself.”<br />

—Allie Billington ’13, RI, Psychology and Sociology,<br />

Three-Year program<br />

“I was attracted to <strong>Hartwick</strong> because of its location<br />

and size, swim team, Biology program, and J Term.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> has what I was looking for academically and<br />

athletically. I love it here! It’s exactly as I had<br />

hoped my college experience would be.”<br />

—Sarah Uminski ’14, ME<br />

Biology or Anthropology<br />

“I don’t often dole out the word ‘love,’ but I find<br />

myself increasingly enamored by <strong>Hartwick</strong> and<br />

everything it has to offer. This place has given me a<br />

greater capacity to learn and the confidence to use<br />

that knowledge. <strong>Hartwick</strong> is freakin’ sweet.”<br />

—Devin Martin ’14, NY, Political Science with an<br />

internship assisting faculty<br />

7


CAMPUS NEWS<br />

Eight Thumbs Up<br />

Grace, Danny, Erin, and Bobby Mele start their <strong>Hartwick</strong> experience.<br />

Among <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s first-year students are four who represent<br />

their class well. They are quadruplets—Erin, Grace, Bobby,<br />

and Danny Mele of Long Island, NY—and they are news.<br />

Coast-to-coast media coverage followed the Mele quadruplets’ college search and<br />

ultimate decision to attend <strong>Hartwick</strong>. Headlines such as “8 Thumbs Up: Quadruplets<br />

Choose <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>” heralded their choice to stay together while pursuing their<br />

individual dreams.<br />

Just like that of so many other students, the Meles’ path to college took some turns.<br />

Their guidance counselor at Ward Melville High School recommended <strong>Hartwick</strong> for<br />

Grace, a bright and ambitious student with her sights set on medical school. When<br />

she visited campus with her mother and two brothers, the twists began.<br />

8


Top left: Grace works on genetic DNA with her biology professor Stan Sessions.<br />

Center: Danny practices for the percussion ensemble with Jason Curley, Assistant Professor of Music.<br />

Top right: Bobby discusses career success with President Drugovich over breakfast.<br />

Left: Erin enjoys her independence with her roommate, Blair Deforge ’14.<br />

“Grace liked it,” their mother, Dr. Patricia Mele, recalls, “but the boys loved<br />

it. Danny announced, ‘I’m going to <strong>Hartwick</strong>!’ All of their applications were in<br />

by October 1, and Bobby started to check the mail every day.” As he says, “I<br />

just fell in love with <strong>Hartwick</strong>.”<br />

For many students, their reasons for choosing one college over another are<br />

intangible, even elusive; often it is clear to them, yet hard for them to articulate.<br />

Erin, who visited campus after her siblings were already giving rave reviews,<br />

remembers, “The overall environment made me feel at home. I loved how<br />

beautiful it was.” And Grace, who turned out to be the last to decide, says, “I<br />

found <strong>Hartwick</strong> to be the most comfortable of colleges.”<br />

Danny has his own insights. “More than location and academics,<br />

choosing <strong>Hartwick</strong> was about opportunity,” he says. “This school offers<br />

professors who remember your name and talk to you one-on-one. This school<br />

has J Term, ISP [Individual Student Program], a ton of clubs and events, and<br />

great departments in all fields of academia.”<br />

Their career goals vary—law enforcement, medicine, nursing, and music—yet<br />

their personal goals may sound familiar to many students. “In the next four<br />

years I’m looking forward to having some of the best times of my life with some<br />

of the best friends I will ever have,” says Grace.<br />

Bobby has a varied list. “I am looking forward to so much,” he says. “Like<br />

college life, challenging myself to extreme lengths, my nursing clinical work,<br />

meeting new people, studying abroad, spending time with my siblings. But at<br />

the same time, I want to learn more about who I am.”<br />

Danny’s thoughts center on music, and include his work-study job in the<br />

recording studio, playing with the jazz combo, planning a rock orchestra, and<br />

looking into an internship with record companies. “And that’s just this year!”<br />

he says.<br />

For Erin, it’s about maximizing her opportunities. “Over the next<br />

four years I mostly look forward to growing as a person,” she says, “enjoying<br />

college, getting as much as I can out of my education, and every day getting<br />

closer to my career.”<br />

Falling in love is one thing, making it work is something else altogether.<br />

“Before <strong>Hartwick</strong>, we had been looking at state schools,” says Tricia. “Sending<br />

four kids at the same time, I was sure that private college would be out of my<br />

reach. But the staff here guided me and all of the kids qualified for<br />

scholarships.”<br />

Grace, especially. She wanted a small, private college, one where she would<br />

know her teachers and would have “serious” research opportunities as an<br />

undergraduate. “<strong>College</strong> is part of her plan to get into medical school,” says her<br />

mother. “I told her, ‘They don’t have TAs [teaching assistants] at <strong>Hartwick</strong>;<br />

they have professors.’”<br />

One of them, in particular, made a big impression—Stan Sessions, Professor of<br />

Biology. Grace was among a small group of prospective students invited to<br />

compete for an S-STEM scholarship (National Science Foundation<br />

Scholarship for Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics). “Dr.<br />

Sessions took her to his lab and she was so impressed,” remembers Tricia. “She<br />

said, ‘Did you see the research they’re doing?’ She was really taken with<br />

it.”Grace became one of six new students to be awarded the grant to advance<br />

their study of science. Her college choice was made.<br />

“<strong>Hartwick</strong> has the small school feel,” she says. “The individual attention in a<br />

small class setting—that will allow me to succeed.”<br />

9


THEORY IN PRACTICE<br />

Sharing knowledge with students, that’s education.<br />

Deepening and broadening understanding, that’s scholarship. . .<br />

Out of This World<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> joins international astronomical collaboration<br />

Late one night in August, two <strong>Hartwick</strong> students and their professor owned the<br />

skies—or at least a 6x6 degree patch of the sky. Working at Arecibo Observatory<br />

in Puerto Rico, Professor Parker Troischt, Michelle Brault ’11, and Catherine<br />

Weigel ’12 took charge of the most powerful radio telescope in the world. For<br />

months they had analyzed others’ findings, conducted repeat simulations, and<br />

raised new questions; it was time to make their own observations and collect<br />

original data using the very best equipment available. Their subjects: a group of<br />

galaxies known as WBL 368, located just above the Virgo Constellation, 200<br />

million light years away.<br />

“When you work on an astronomy/astrophysics-based project, the system you<br />

are looking at cannot be grasped and held in your hand,” says Weigel, a double<br />

major in Physics and Chemistry with a minor in Mathematics. “The telescope<br />

is the tangibility of the science. Using the instrumentation, seeing and<br />

understanding how it works, is a good way to more fully understand all the<br />

work that goes into Level One data reduction and really all the work that has<br />

gone into this project.”<br />

Advanced Work<br />

The project is the ALFALFA (Arecibo Legacy Fast Arecibo L-Band Feed<br />

Array) program, a blind survey using the Arecibo radio telescope to detect<br />

neutral hydrogen content in large areas of the sky (7,000 square degrees). Last<br />

Spring <strong>Hartwick</strong> was invited to join ALFALFA, a consortium of 18 colleges<br />

from across the country that includes Colgate University, Cornell University,<br />

Indiana University, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The program is<br />

sponsored through a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) and<br />

based out of the National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center, which is<br />

operated by Cornell University.<br />

Troischt, the <strong>Hartwick</strong> project leader and the <strong>College</strong>’s representative for the<br />

grant, calls the experience “amazing” for his students. “It allows them to be<br />

active participants in a major Legacy survey and an international astronomical<br />

collaboration,” he explains. “They are given the chance to control the world’s<br />

largest radio telescope and be the first to look at data produced by it. There is a<br />

chance they could be the first to see something very significant, such as a major<br />

tidal interaction or a dark galaxy.”<br />

The radio telescope is central to the work. “Large clouds of cool hydrogen are<br />

completely invisible to normal telescopes because they produce no light of their<br />

own,” says Brault, a double major in Physics and French who plans a career in<br />

medicine. “A radio telescope can reveal clouds of cool hydrogen in space<br />

because cool hydrogen emits a radio signal at the specific wavelength of 21 cm.<br />

Ninety percent of the atoms in the universe are hydrogen and hydrogen clouds<br />

are where stars are born.”<br />

Where stars are born…it is a sight worth seeking, and a presence worth<br />

measuring. <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s piece of the sky, WBL 368, was originally classified to<br />

have 13 galaxies. “So far we have found 47 galaxies in this group,” says<br />

Troischt, “and 22 of these have a significant amount of hydrogen gas, which<br />

indicates their ability to create new stars. We have seen evidence of interactions<br />

among some of the galaxies.”<br />

10


Michelle Brault ’11, Catherine Weigel ’12, and Physics Professor Parker Troischt are adding to world-class research.<br />

On-Campus Preparation<br />

The project at Arecibo was the culmination of the students’ summer research<br />

on campus. A “typical” day in Oneonta meant working on a specially designed<br />

computer to analyze Arecibo data gathered by other teams. As Troischt<br />

explains, “Our students ran data analysis tools developed by us and by many<br />

other ALFALFA team members. They also accessed large astronomical<br />

databases in order to study optical images and galactic spectra.”<br />

By the time they got to Puerto Rico, the <strong>Hartwick</strong> team was ready: ready to<br />

build on their analysis, observe other teams at work, run simulations on site,<br />

and, finally, get their hands on the telescope.<br />

“Working at Arecibo was a great way to demonstrate how the data we’re using<br />

are obtained, so that we wouldn’t be blindly working with numbers on a<br />

computer with no idea where they came from,” says Brault.<br />

“This experience has given me great insight into the research process,” she<br />

adds. “It involves continual learning; there is always something more you can<br />

do. For an undergraduate to get this kind of experience is invaluable. I’m lucky<br />

to have had the opportunity.”<br />

Troischt explains the lasting benefits. “Michelle and Catherine were able to<br />

build strong skills in manipulating astronomical data, learn programming<br />

techniques, develop an ability to make sound scientific decisions, and learn<br />

about some of the issues that need to be addressed to obtain high-quality<br />

scientific data.”<br />

Weigel and Brault are continuing the work this year, each branching off to<br />

develop a different aspect of the research—Brault for her Senior Thesis, Weigel<br />

for a J Term directed study with Troischt. ALFALFA is helping to send these<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> students to high-level astronomy meetings to present their findings,<br />

including the American Astronomical Society national meeting in Seattle,<br />

Washington in January.<br />

For their professor, this work is a point on his continuum of advanced research<br />

and student-faculty collaboration. “I have gone to the Arecibo telescope four<br />

times now,” Troischt says, “and it is always amazing!” He took a scouting trip in<br />

December 2008 before leading an astronomy J Term trip to Puerto Rico and<br />

the Bahamas in January 2009. In January 2010 he attended an NSF-funded<br />

astronomy research workshop at Arecibo with other professional astronomers.<br />

August 2010 was spent with Weigel and Brault, and this January he will take<br />

students there for a workshop and activities related to professional astronomy.<br />

“Our students have opportunities to participate in world-class astronomical<br />

research, interacting with faculty and student researchers from all over the world<br />

at one of the premier facilities in astronomy,” says Troischt. “It is certainly rare<br />

to have undergraduates at the forefront of such a big-time research project.”<br />

The students have been free to pursue this advanced study without concern for cost. Their work<br />

in Puerto Rico was funded by ALFALFA. Their on-campus astronomy work was salaried thanks to<br />

a Summer Stipend Research Award from the National Science Foundation and their preparation<br />

was further supported by a <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> Freedman Prize, established in 2002 by Judy and<br />

Allen Freedman H’00 to recognize superior student-faculty collaborative research.<br />

Arecibo Observatory is … • Home to the largest curved focusing antenna and most sensitive radio telescope on the planet. • Isolated deep within a<br />

rain forest of Puerto Rico. • Supported by the National Science Foundation. • A dramatic location for movie producers (“GoldenEye” and “Contact”). • Designed<br />

to detect neutral hydrogen in other galaxies. • Huge! More than 1,000 ft. across, the dome could hold 26 football fields. • Operating continuously to benefit<br />

scientists all over the world. • The site of advanced research by two <strong>Hartwick</strong> Physics majors and their mentor, Dr. Parker Troischt.<br />

ALFALFA Acknowledgement: Dr. Martha Haynes (Cornell), Dr. Rebecca Koopmann (Union), Dr. Tom Balonek (Colgate), and Dr. Sarah Higdon (Georgia Southern)<br />

provided valuable assistance during the startup of this research project.<br />

11


FIELD NOTES<br />

Extending learning outside of the classroom, that’s experience.<br />

Widening it to an international framework, that’s the future. . .<br />

Foothold in the<br />

Far East<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s developing relationship with China<br />

A member of <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s faculty for nearly 30 years, Professor Steve Kolenda<br />

has been studying and visiting Asia almost as long. He is a CPA, a respected<br />

professor of Accounting and Business Administration, and the former<br />

department chair. He also is one of the <strong>College</strong>’s foremost experts on Asia. This<br />

winter he and Professor John Clemens are leading a new J Term trip to China,<br />

taking 12 business students on what Kolenda terms “a pilot project.”<br />

Since 1990, Kolenda has lived what he has learned, visiting or teaching in one<br />

or more of the Golden Quadrangle countries—Thailand, Laos, Burma, and<br />

China—nearly a dozen times. He has led J Term programs to Thailand, sent<br />

new graduates to China for further study, taught international business here and<br />

in Asia, and lived and traveled extensively in China and Thailand. Belying all of<br />

that activity, he says, “I’m taking it slow.”<br />

It’s an approach that befits the culture. “The Chinese take a long-term view on<br />

everything,” he explains. “In Asia, doing business is all about relationships.<br />

That’s what we’re doing, building relationships and working on long-term<br />

possibilities.”<br />

Those relationships include <strong>Hartwick</strong> alumnus, alumnus parent, and Trustee<br />

Rory Read ’83. As the president and COO of Lenovo Group Ltd., Read is a<br />

major figure in international business, one whom the Fortune 500 company<br />

describes as “responsible for driving growth, execution, profitability and<br />

performance across a global $16 billion enterprise encompassing 160+<br />

countries.”<br />

No Substitute for Experience<br />

Read has become a frequent guest in <strong>Hartwick</strong> business classes, often making<br />

time between Trustee meetings. Kolenda describes him as “really dynamic. He<br />

has a great handle on China from running his multi-billion dollar, multinational<br />

business; the students hang on his every word.”<br />

Kolenda and Clemens talked with Read last spring about their plans for a<br />

January Term trip to China for business students. His immediate response:<br />

“How can I help?”<br />

He helped by sending Kolenda and Clemens to China this summer for a<br />

reconnaissance trip. They met Lenovo’s senior managers in Shanghai and<br />

Beijing, toured businesses and manufacturing centers, made connections, and<br />

generated innumerable ideas. “This trip let us set up the entire course for the<br />

students,” Kolenda says.<br />

Professors Kolenda and Clemens with Dr. Gao Jin Tian, head<br />

of the Department of International Economy and Trade at<br />

Ocean University of China in Qindao.<br />

Lance Lichorat ’10, Adam Randall ’10, and<br />

Thomas Morelli ’10 are studying at Ocean<br />

University of China’s International Chinese<br />

Business Program.<br />

Lauren Phillips ’09, Jaclyn Spahr ’09, and Amanda Johnson<br />

’09 on the Great Wall of China at Badaling, one of the Seven<br />

Wonders of the World.<br />

12


“It is intellectually so interesting to plan something like this,” he explains. “We’re trying to do it all, in<br />

business terms and in terms of getting to know the Chinese people and appreciate the Chinese culture.<br />

It’s a tough challenge.”<br />

During 23 days “in country,” the <strong>Hartwick</strong> students and professors will divide their time among Beijing,<br />

Shanghai, and (primarily) Qingdao, a small city that is located between the other two and is home to<br />

Ocean University. Halfway around the world, their hosts will include <strong>Hartwick</strong> graduates.<br />

In addition to Rory Read ’83 and his senior managers, the students will benefit from the experience and<br />

insights of Christina Zhang ’94, Ph.D., Academic Coordinator of Ocean University of China’s<br />

International Chinese Business Program. She has helped numerous recent graduates continue their<br />

studies in China, and is now helping to coordinate the <strong>Hartwick</strong> trip this winter.<br />

“It has been a great pleasure for me to receive my former professors in Qingdao, China,” Zhang says.<br />

“After 15 years, I finally get to do something for <strong>Hartwick</strong>.”<br />

The <strong>Hartwick</strong> group will spend two weeks in Qingdao, living on the campus of Ocean University,<br />

interacting with Chinese students, and taking classes with Chinese professors to gain insights into the<br />

nation’s economy, history, and culture. Afternoons will be spent touring businesses and meeting with<br />

managers.<br />

“Both China and the U.S.A. are very important economic and political powers in the world,” observes<br />

Zhang. “Although U.S. students have read a lot and learned a lot from various media at home, I believe<br />

their firsthand experience is very valuable and will help them make their own judgment.”<br />

Meetings and tours of Lenovo sites will be at the center of their time in Shanghai and Beijing. “Each<br />

student will have a one-day shadowing experience with a Lenovo manager in Beijing,” explains Kolenda.<br />

“Working side-by-side with Chinese managers—that adds value.”<br />

Alumni Assessments<br />

Ocean University, offering international business study within a cultural context, is quickly becoming<br />

familiar ground for <strong>Hartwick</strong> students and alumni. With the encouragement of Professors Kolenda and<br />

Clemens, and Zhang’s connections, young alumni are gaining a Certification in International Chinese<br />

Business.<br />

“It is important for <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

students to understand China’s<br />

extraordinary ascendance<br />

and its opportunities and<br />

challenges.It’s growth is<br />

astounding—it’s the secondlargest<br />

economy in the world,<br />

more than 450 of the Fortune<br />

500 companies are in China,<br />

and it’s home to one out of<br />

every five people on the<br />

planet.”<br />

—Professor John Clemens<br />

“Living and studying in a foreign country lets you see everything from a different perspective,” says<br />

Lauren Phillips ’09, one of the program graduates. “My experience was enhanced by the respect and<br />

the generosity of the Chinese people. China is a unique and wonderful country.”<br />

Jaclyn Spahr ’09, Phillips’ classmate at <strong>Hartwick</strong> and in China, gained invaluable business experience<br />

while studying overseas. “I was able to work with clients, watch Chinese business conversations, and see<br />

their office lifestyle. I saw Chinese business in a way that most people never will.”<br />

Amanda Johnson ’09, now an MBA student at the Brandeis University School of International<br />

Business, recognizes her time in China as “a life-changing experience, one that will open many doors.<br />

When I interview for jobs, it is the number-one topic of conversations.”<br />

Three 2010 graduates are at Ocean University now, pursuing their Certification in International<br />

Chinese Business. When Professors Clemens and Kolenda recommended the program, the new alumni<br />

did not hesitate. As Adam Randall ’10 says, “The growing role China plays in the world economy, and<br />

its unique relationship with America, made this an opportunity we could not pass up.”<br />

The opportunity promises to be an exceptional building block. Lance Lichorat ’10 explains: “This<br />

experience gives us a broader platform to utilize the business acumen that we developed during our time<br />

at <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>.”<br />

Through J Term, current students gain intense international exposure. Thomas Morelli ’10 says,<br />

“Their time in China will give them insight to one of the leading nations in the world economy and<br />

develop their understanding of how business is practiced in the leading modern emerging nation.”<br />

The professors are learning, too. “There is a faculty development element to these experiences,” says<br />

Kolenda. Each year he will bring another faculty member who has not been to China before. This time it<br />

is John Clemens for his perspectives on leadership, next year Professor Larry Malone for his insights on<br />

international economics. As Kolenda describes it, “We want to create a ripple effect.”<br />

Professors Steve Kolenda and John Clemens outside the “Seed<br />

Cathedral” UK Pavilion at the 2010 Shanghai World Expo.<br />

13


ALUMNI LEADERSHIP<br />

Collaborating with and engaging alumni, that’s progressive.<br />

Accomplishing all of this and inspiring each other, too—that’s <strong>Hartwick</strong>.<br />

Straight from the Source<br />

Students connect business with politics in New York City<br />

If you want to know what one of the country’s most powerful men in real estate<br />

thinks, ask a <strong>Hartwick</strong> student.<br />

Real estate mogul Stephen L. Green ’59 recently hosted 14 <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

students for an extended discussion of politics and its intersections with<br />

business. The group was joined by Mark Green—politician, author, former<br />

NYC Public Advocate, and brother of Steve Green.<br />

“Our students have been given a rare learning opportunity,” said <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

President Margaret L. Drugovich before the meeting. “Steve and Mark<br />

Green have each found significant success, and both have changed the city of<br />

New York through their influence. “<br />

In reconnecting with <strong>Hartwick</strong>, Steve Green wanted to go “directly to the<br />

students.” He and his brother worked with President Drugovich and Political<br />

Science Chair Laurel Elder to develop the inaugural Stephen L. Green<br />

American Governance Paper Competition.<br />

“I want to provoke thought,” Steve Green says, “and to challenge students to<br />

look at government from a practical point of view. As a businessman I deal in<br />

results, not theory.”<br />

To qualify for the competition, students across majors submitted proposals to<br />

address this statement:<br />

While there is a large and growing consensus worldwide that<br />

democracy is the best system of governance, many critics believe<br />

that our government is broken. What are the five most important<br />

ways America can improve its democracy?<br />

Elder led a faculty review of all entries and the advancing students were invited<br />

to Green’s New York City office. Each student is preparing a 15-page research<br />

paper in support of his or her own position. Winners will present their work at<br />

the Showcase of Scholars in May and Green will present the top five with cash<br />

awards.<br />

A monetary prize is attractive, of course, but it is not why these students got<br />

involved. “Each individual has chosen this as a way to challenge him or herself<br />

academically,” says Elder. “The work is above and beyond their coursework;<br />

there will be no class credit.”<br />

“This challenge is an exercise in thought,” explains Steve Green. “I do not<br />

expect the students to solve the problems of our democracy. I do want them to<br />

understand that before you can cure a problem you first must recognize that<br />

one exists.”<br />

The session was a dialog, with students asking many of the questions. Eric<br />

Shultz ’12 asked, “To what degree can economics and business be separated<br />

from politics, if at all?” Steve Green noted: “The people who contribute the<br />

money have the ear of the politicians. The people with the money are ‘big<br />

business.’”<br />

“If only public funding financed politics, how would that influence the<br />

outcome?” asked Rachel Rhodes ’13. “It would break up the existing<br />

protocol,” Steve Green replied, intrigued by the question. “It wouldn’t work for<br />

me or my industry, but our democracy would be stronger, our government<br />

would be better.”<br />

That kind of objectivity earned the students’ admiration. “I was amazed at how<br />

candid Mr. Green was,” says Tom Holmgren ’13. “He didn’t hold anything<br />

back. It was good to hear from someone who is so successful and who takes<br />

risks.”<br />

“How many chances do you get to meet a man like this, a man of his stature?”<br />

asks Alex O’Brien ’13. “And Mark Green with his experience; it was good to<br />

get both perspectives.”<br />

Steve Green studied Political Science at <strong>Hartwick</strong>, became a criminal attorney,<br />

and entered business almost by chance. A $50,000 loan to a neighbor was<br />

repaid in wigs, not cash. After the initial shock wore off, Green went to Hong<br />

Kong, found opportunities, and sold the product at a 100% profit. Within a<br />

Stephen L. Green ’59 is the founder and Chairman of the Board of SL Green Realty Corp., a publicly traded real estate investment<br />

trust that is New York's largest commercial landlord. With a $12 million market cap, the company has 95% occupancy on 23 million<br />

square feet of rentable space in many of the most desirable properties in New York City.<br />

14


Business leader Steve Green ’59 (front left) converses with his<br />

brother, former NYC Public Advocate Mark Green (front right) during a<br />

meeting with <strong>Hartwick</strong> students and faculty.<br />

Stephen L. Green ’59 tells David<br />

Osokow ’12 about his days as a<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> athlete; pictures of his<br />

tennis and basketball teams hang in<br />

his office on Lexington Avenue.<br />

The Chairman of the Board and the<br />

President of the <strong>College</strong> consider a<br />

student’s question during the half-day<br />

meeting in Manhattan.<br />

High above Midtown, students and faculty join Mark Green (left) and Steve Green<br />

(right, with President Drugovich) in the Chairman’s private office.<br />

few years he had forged a partnership, opened factories in Hong Kong and<br />

Korea, and sold the wig business to Gillette for $7 million.<br />

“I took a big risk and put in all of my money,” Green recalls. “You need a<br />

certain temperament to do that. I have a natural entrepreneurial spirit. When I<br />

see an opportunity, when I feel something, I act on it.”<br />

A few more business ventures followed, some successful, some not. Sitting in<br />

the conference room of the SL Green Building on Lexington Avenue, his<br />

brother Mark says, “In 1985 Steve was in a one-room office, two blocks from<br />

here, thinking about getting into real estate. Within a few years he was well on<br />

his way to creating the largest real estate company in New York City.”<br />

“This is the place to be,” says Steve Green. “New York City is the commercial<br />

center of the world. Working here allows me to use my creativity with a huge<br />

financial upside.”<br />

He offers students this advice: “You have to know who you are, and act on who<br />

you are, to find your success. Don’t fool yourself. When the excitement wears<br />

off, you still have to have some passion. You will not always love your job, but<br />

you can’t dislike it.<br />

“The most important thing is—don’t be static,” Green adds. “Make a decision,<br />

live with it, and don’t look back. Always take the next step, always be looking<br />

ahead. You’ve got to take the shot.”<br />

“The most important thing is—don’t be static. Make a decision, live with it, and don’t look back.<br />

Always take the next step, always be looking ahead. You’ve got to take the shot.” —Stephen L. Green ’59<br />

15


SPORTS<br />

I+III=<strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

The question has been settled,<br />

and without reservation.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> will continue both Division I<br />

and Division III athletics, retaining its status as<br />

one of just seven colleges and universities in the<br />

country to compete in both of these divisions of<br />

the National Collegiate Athletic Association.<br />

The closure came by vote of the Board of<br />

Trustees.<br />

“The decision<br />

made by the Board<br />

of Trustees is…<br />

a commitment<br />

to the entire<br />

athletic program.”<br />

—James Elting, M.D.,<br />

Chair of the Board of Trustees<br />

16


“The Board has considered this<br />

matter at several intervals in<br />

recent years,” says James Elting,<br />

M.D., Chair of the Board of<br />

Trustees. “For the first time we<br />

had information from multiple<br />

sources on which we could base<br />

our decision. President Drugovich<br />

did great work in assessing the<br />

situation, bringing in the right<br />

resources, and involving the entire<br />

community. We unanimously<br />

endorsed her recommendation to<br />

retain D-I sports.”<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> fields 17 intercollegiate<br />

teams—seven men’s and 10<br />

women’s sports—with men’s<br />

soccer and women’s water polo<br />

competing at the D-I level.<br />

“The decision made by the<br />

Board of Trustees is about<br />

strengthening the D-III program<br />

as well as continuing D-I,” says<br />

Elting. “This is a commitment to<br />

the entire athletic program.”<br />

The decision followed a year’s<br />

worth of focused study. “Given<br />

my initial review of previous<br />

discussions, it seemed important<br />

to look at the D-I issue within a<br />

context,” says Drugovich. “It was<br />

essential that we consider and<br />

understand the role of all athletics<br />

in the <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />

experience.”<br />

Context<br />

Step one was to gather information, and a lot of it. Drugovich charged two groups—one internal and<br />

one external—to present a comprehensive view of athletics at <strong>Hartwick</strong> and a review of its conference<br />

competitors.<br />

Vice President for Student Affairs Dr. Meg Nowak and Rory Shaffer-Walsh ’92 co-chaired an<br />

Athletics Review Taskforce (ART). The group of 25, which included 20 alumni among Trustees,<br />

coaches, and former athletes, took a deductive approach that included alumni surveys; on-campus focus<br />

groups with faculty, students, and friends of athletics; and public forums. Among their charges—to<br />

define success as it relates to athletic competition.<br />

Concurrently, the President commissioned NACDA Consulting to conduct an objective operational<br />

review of the athletic program. They were to provide benchmarking data of the program’s funding,<br />

staffing, and competitiveness. Their charge included measuring <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s investment in athletics<br />

relative to its peers.<br />

Definition<br />

After many discussions and much consideration, ART defined a successful athletic experience as one<br />

with many benefits. First among them: post-season play at least every four years for each team. In other<br />

words, each varsity athlete should have the experience of post-season competition at least once during<br />

four years of play.<br />

“As a student-athlete, you define success in many ways,” says Shaffer-Walsh. “The one goal every team<br />

and athlete has in common is to win. Our student-athletes are striving every day to get to post-season<br />

play, and so this became an obvious standard for us to set.”<br />

This definition was formed within the context of <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>’s Organizing Principle and<br />

Strategic Framework. It came after speaking with students, alumni, and coaching staff; looking at past<br />

win/loss records; and assessing the level of competition within the <strong>College</strong>’s conferences.<br />

“An important outcome of our work was the open campus dialog about the role of athletics in the life of<br />

the student and <strong>College</strong>,” says Nowak. “The data collected will be important for decision making and<br />

planning.”<br />

Action<br />

“Defining success is invaluable to setting strategy,” says Drugovich. “Measured against this objective,<br />

our D-I teams are enormously successful. Some of our D-III teams, such as field hockey, have also met<br />

the standard. Others have not. So the question becomes: What separates these teams from this level of<br />

success?”<br />

This has led to a shift in thinking. “The question was no longer if we would continue D-I athletics; it<br />

was obvious that we should,” Drugovich explains. “The question became: How can we bring all<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> teams to their level of success? What are the strategic investments, human or other, that need<br />

to be made in order to reach that objective at least every four years? That is the question I have asked our<br />

new athletic director, Dr. Kim Fierke, to consider.”<br />

“The question was no longer if we would continue D-I<br />

athletics; it was obvious that we should. The question<br />

became: How can we bring all <strong>Hartwick</strong> teams to their level<br />

of success?”<br />

—President Margaret L. Drugovich<br />

17


SPORTS<br />

Coaches Corner: What the D-I decision<br />

“The decision to keep D-I gives us a recruiting advantage that<br />

will open up a bigger field for <strong>Hartwick</strong>. We have a niche. There<br />

are not a lot of small liberal arts schools where women can<br />

participate in D-I water polo. The next smallest D-I school like us<br />

is Stanford University.”<br />

—Alan Huckins, Head Women’s Water Polo Coach (8th Season)<br />

2010: A Very Good Year for Water Polo<br />

In 10 years of competition, <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s Division I women’s water polo has<br />

made three NCAA tournament appearances, won three Collegiate Water<br />

Polo Association Eastern Conference championships, and won 10<br />

consecutive division championships. The team was 25-6 last season,<br />

including victories over Princeton, San Diego State, and Maryland, and<br />

made an impressive run at the Eastern Championships.<br />

2011 Roster: Student-athletes from New<br />

Zealand, Quebec, The Netherlands, and<br />

Ontario as well as California, Utah,<br />

Massachusetts, Connecticut, Florida,<br />

Hawaii, Illinois, Michigan, and<br />

Pennsylvania.<br />

Headlines<br />

• No. 11 <strong>Hartwick</strong> Handles Harvard & Brown to Win 10th<br />

Northern Division Title (collegiatewaterpolo.org, April 17, 2010)<br />

• <strong>Hartwick</strong> wins 10th straight CWPA Northern Division title<br />

• Head Coach Alan Huckins takes 200th career win at <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

A Clean Sweep: CWPA Varsity All-Conference<br />

Northern Division Awards<br />

• Player of the Year—Kirsten Hudson ’10, <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

• Coach of the Year—Alan Huckins, <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

• Rookie of the Year—Lily Martinez ’13, <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

’Wick in International Waters<br />

Two former <strong>Hartwick</strong> water polo teammates, among the best in their home<br />

countries and the world, faced off this summer in their sport’s biggest<br />

event—the FINA XV Women’s World Cup. Kirsten Hudson ’10 was<br />

selected to the 2010 New Zealand Senior Women’s National Team;<br />

Bronwen Knox ’08 was selected to play for her native Australia. Team<br />

U.S.A. took first place; Australia took second.<br />

Hall of Famer<br />

Kate Chambers ’05, the two-time American Water Polo Coaches<br />

Association All-America selection, ranks second in the <strong>Hartwick</strong> record<br />

books in career assists (202) and points (399). She was a four-time member<br />

of the AWCPA All-Academic Team and a John Christopher <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

Scholar. In 2005, the New Zealander was named the NCAA Woman of the<br />

Year for the State of New York.<br />

Impact Players: Water Polo<br />

Stars Lead as Coaches<br />

Megan Thomson ’02 | Head Coach, University of the Pacific (5th season); Former Assistant Coach,<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> (4 seasons); Player, New Zealand National Team (2001); Bronze Medalist,<br />

Commonwealth Game Championships, New Zealand Senior Women’s team (2006); <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

Athletics Hall of Fame 2002<br />

Ashleigh Jacobs ’04 | Head Coach, Marist <strong>College</strong> (4th season); Former Head Coach, United Water<br />

Polo Club; Former Head Coach Sammamish High School, Washington State; Semi-pro player,<br />

Cronulla Sharks, Australian National League; Northern Division Most Valuable Player (2004)<br />

18


means to the future of <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>.<br />

“This D-I decision was national soccer news, good news. There is a mystique that surrounds<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> soccer. <strong>Hartwick</strong> is known as one of the stalwarts of D-I soccer. The recruits I’m<br />

looking at are soccer guys, and they love the history. I tell them there’s an expectation that comes<br />

with playing here. Our alumni and supporters are passionate.”<br />

—John Scott, 1st year Head Coach, Men’s Soccer<br />

Top soccer assistant , D-I men, Binghamton University (9 seasons);<br />

Former <strong>Hartwick</strong> and semi-pro player; 7th Head Coach in 54 years of <strong>Hartwick</strong> Men’s Soccer<br />

Men’s Soccer Honors the Past,<br />

Plays For the Future<br />

Since its inception in 1956, <strong>Hartwick</strong> men’s soccer has won an NCAA national championship (1977)<br />

and made 23 NCAA tournament appearances. <strong>Hartwick</strong> has recorded 43 winning seasons in the past<br />

55 years and only six programs in the nation have accumulated more NCAA Tournament wins.<br />

The program’s other highlights include reaching seven Final Fours, and producing 26 All-Americans<br />

and two National Players of the Year. The decision to keep <strong>Hartwick</strong> men’s soccer in NCAA Division I<br />

is a commitment to maintain the program at the highest competitive level.<br />

“What hooked me [into the program] was the fact that you don’t<br />

have to be big to be good. I bristle at the thought that bigger is<br />

better in every way. What’s important is the quality of play, and<br />

the support for the game. <strong>Hartwick</strong> plays an excellent brand of<br />

soccer, and is respected for it.”<br />

—Cal Chase ’71, <strong>Hartwick</strong> Meritorious Service Award (2009); former member,<br />

Alumni Board of Directors; arguably the most active, loyal, and generous fan of<br />

’Wick soccer, he has hardly missed a game since 1969, home or away.<br />

2010 Roster: Student-athletes from Brazil,<br />

Canada, England, Finland, Jamaica,<br />

New Zealand, and Scotland; California,<br />

Connecticut, Massachusetts, Missouri,<br />

New Jersey, New York, and Texas.<br />

NCAA National Champions 1977<br />

19


SPORTS<br />

Impact Players: Soccer Stars Lead as Coaches<br />

Timo Liekoski ’71 | Head Coach, Football Association of Finland;<br />

Former Head Coach, U.S. Olympic Soccer Team; First Head Coach,<br />

D-I men, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; Former Head Coach,<br />

D-I men, <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>; 1995 <strong>Hartwick</strong> Athletics Hall of Fame<br />

John Bluem ’75 | Head Coach, D-I men, Ohio State Buckeyes<br />

(14th season); Former Head Coach, D-I Fresno State (6 seasons);<br />

Big Ten Coach of the Year (twice); Player, Tampa Bay Rowdies<br />

(NASL); 2002 <strong>Hartwick</strong> Athletics Hall of Fame<br />

Glenn “Mooch” Myernick ’76 (deceased) | Named to the NCAA D-<br />

I Men’s Soccer 50th Anniversary Team; #1 draft pick, North<br />

American Soccer League; 1977 Rookie of the Year, Dallas Tornado;<br />

Former Head Coach, the Colorado Rapids and the U.S. under-23<br />

team; Hermann Trophy winner (1976); 1995 <strong>Hartwick</strong> Athletics<br />

Hall of Fame<br />

Jeff Tipping ’78 | Director of Education and Coaching<br />

Development, NSCAA (8 years); Former Director of Men’s Soccer,<br />

D-III Muhlenberg <strong>College</strong> (16 seasons); Regional Coach of the<br />

Year (3 times); Drafted by New York Eagles (ASL); team captain,<br />

PA Stoners (5 seasons); 2005 <strong>Hartwick</strong> Athletics Hall of Fame<br />

Matt Kern ’88 | Head Coach, D-I men, UNC Asheville (1st season);<br />

Former Head Coach, D-I men, Wofford <strong>College</strong> (6 seasons); Former<br />

Head Coach, D-III men, The University of The South (11 seasons);<br />

Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference Coach-of-the-Year<br />

(twice)<br />

Mark Mettrick ’88 | Head Coach, D-I men, Loyola University (MD)<br />

(11th season); Former Head Coach D-I men, Mount St. Mary's<br />

University (6 seasons); 2008 NSCAA/Adidas Coach of the Year,<br />

North Atlantic Region; First-round draft pick, Baltimore Blast<br />

(MISL); 1997 <strong>Hartwick</strong> Athletics Hall of Fame<br />

“I was delighted to learn that men’s soccer will continue as a Division I sport. The great<br />

history of the <strong>Hartwick</strong> program can now prosper; this grand tradition will continue!<br />

“When you are in soccer circles and you mention that you played at <strong>Hartwick</strong>—there is<br />

an immediate recognition of what that means—and what <strong>Hartwick</strong> alumni in the sport<br />

have contributed to the game over the years. I find this to be true to this very day. The<br />

game of soccer in this country has been greatly influenced by soccer alumni from<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>.”<br />

—John Bluem ’75, Head Men’s Soccer Coach, Ohio State Buckeyes<br />

Carl Rees ’88 | Head Coach, D-I Fairfield University (13th<br />

season); Former Asst. Coach, D-I men, <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> (4<br />

seasons); MAAC and NSCAA New England Coach of the Year<br />

awards; Player, Albany Capitals (APSL) (2 seasons); 2007<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> Hall of Fame<br />

Mike Burns ’91 | Director of Soccer, New England Revolution<br />

(MLS); Player, United States national team and Danish club<br />

Viborg FF; Player, New England Revolution, San Jose Earthquakes,<br />

Kansas City Wizards (MLS); MLS All-Star (twice)<br />

David Gregson ’91 | Head Coach, NAIA Embry-Riddle University<br />

(15th season); NSCAA Florida Director of Coaching Education<br />

programs; Florida Sun Conference Coach of the Year (7 times);<br />

NAIA Regional Coach of the Year (5 times)<br />

Bryan Scales ’91 | Head Coach, D-II UMass-Lowell (2nd season);<br />

Former Head Coach, D-I Cornell University (11 seasons); Head<br />

Coach, New England Revolution U-16 squad; 2010 U.S. Soccer<br />

Eastern Conference Coach of the Year; 2001 NSCAA New York<br />

Region Division I Coach of the Year<br />

Geoff Bennett ’95 | Head Coach, D-I women, Colorado <strong>College</strong><br />

(7th season); Former Head Coach D-I women, University of Rhode<br />

Island (2 seasons); Former Head Coach D-I women, St.<br />

Bonaventure University (3 seasons); Conference Coach of the Year<br />

(twice); Player, Milwaukee Wave (NPSL)<br />

Ian McIntyre ’96 | Head Coach, D-I men, Syracuse University (1st<br />

season); Former Head Coach, D-I men, <strong>Hartwick</strong> (7 seasons);<br />

Former Head Coach (men, then D-I) Oneonta State (4 seasons);<br />

2005 Atlantic Soccer Conference Coach of the Year; 2001<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> Athletics Hall of Fame<br />

Matt Verni ’97 | Head Coach, D-III women, <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> (4<br />

seasons); Former Head Coach, D-II men, University of New Haven<br />

(3 years); Former Asst. Coach, D-I men, University of New Hampshire<br />

(2 years); 2006 East Coast Conference Coach of the Year.<br />

New AD Kim Fierke Takes the Helm<br />

New Director of Athletics Dr. Kimberly Fierke comes to <strong>Hartwick</strong> from Salem <strong>College</strong> in North Carolina, where she guided the school's<br />

entrance into the NCAA and the Great South Athletic Conference. Fierke will oversee <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s 17 NCAA intercollegiate sports. She will<br />

also manage the intramural, recreation, and physical education programs.<br />

What attracted you to <strong>Hartwick</strong>?<br />

I was immediately attracted to <strong>Hartwick</strong> by its unique athletic department. I believe firmly in the Division III<br />

philosophy where athletics surrounds the experience of the student-athlete. <strong>Hartwick</strong> lives that philosophy and I<br />

wanted to be part of a community where we center on the student-athlete. I was also interested in the multidivisional<br />

aspect. <strong>Hartwick</strong> is one of just a handful of colleges that offers this perspective and I believe there is<br />

potential for all ’Wick student-athletes to graduate with the finest athletic experience. I am drawn to the positive<br />

energy that permeates throughout the campus.<br />

What do you see for the future of <strong>Hartwick</strong> Athletics?<br />

It’s an exciting time to be part of <strong>Hartwick</strong> Athletics! The staff is so dedicated to their student-athletes and to<br />

making <strong>Hartwick</strong> Athletics as strong as it can be. With the decision by President Drugovich and the Board of<br />

Trustees to reaffirm <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s multi-divisional approach to athletics, our department can now move forward.<br />

We will be creating a vision for <strong>Hartwick</strong> Athletics that will guide us through the next five years. We have the<br />

unique opportunity to redefine ourselves as a department and while this is a great responsibility, I believe Wick<br />

Athletics will emerge stronger and more competitive.<br />

20


2010<br />

Fall Sports<br />

In Action<br />

21


GENEROSITY<br />

PORTRAIT IN PHILANTHROPY:<br />

John Johnstone ’54, H’90<br />

John Johnstone is rock-solid.<br />

Like the <strong>Hartwick</strong> Science Center named for him and his wife, Claire, he is<br />

straightforward and impressive. Like the students who learn in that Center,<br />

he is focused and determined. His approach: start small, work hard, do well,<br />

and be ready. His outcome: a career, and a life, that is extraordinary.<br />

John Johnstone is influential.<br />

A self-made man, he was a long-time leader of the chemical industry. In<br />

1996 he retired as CEO, President, and Chairman of the Board of Olin<br />

Corporation, a Fortune 200 company. As a philanthropist he has helped to<br />

transform <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> and the educational experiences of countless<br />

students. He is an Honorary Chair of the <strong>College</strong>’s upcoming capital<br />

campaign, past Chair of the Bicentennial Campaign, Trustee Emeritus, a<br />

1954 graduate, and 1990 Honorary Degree recipient.<br />

John Johnstone is uncomplicated.<br />

Despite his many achievements, at heart he is a still a boy from Brooklyn and<br />

Queens, the son of a New York City police officer. Married for 54 years to<br />

the love of his life, he is the father of three and grandfather to six.<br />

John Johnstone is grateful.<br />

A full tuition scholarship gave this young basketball player the opportunity<br />

to get a <strong>Hartwick</strong> education. Landing a “real job” sweeping the hallways and<br />

cleaning the labs of Bresee Hall kept him in spending money. Work on the<br />

railroad five days a week in the summer meant he earned money and built<br />

strength. All the while he double-majored in Chemistry and Physics,<br />

subjects in which “If you didn’t keep up you were swamped,” he says. A<br />

grueling schedule, but Johnstone remembers his <strong>Hartwick</strong> years fondly.<br />

“That was a very good part of my life.”<br />

FIRST OPPORTUNITY<br />

Chance brought him to <strong>Hartwick</strong> in 1950 when he and his parents visited a<br />

friend in Oneonta. As they walked downtown and through Bresee’s<br />

Department Store, this 6'9'' tall young man attracted attention. Word<br />

spread and the next day Johnstone was on the Hill, meeting with Coach Hal<br />

Bradley, and being recruited to play for <strong>Hartwick</strong>.<br />

“I got to be part of an outstanding basketball program,” Johnstone recalls,<br />

noting that many of the players were returning veterans. “There were a lot of<br />

veterans at the <strong>College</strong> then and they had seen a lot of things. They had a<br />

steadying influence on the rest of us. I think they helped us go on to live a<br />

better life.”<br />

EVERY OPPORTUNITY<br />

In 1954 Johnstone knew where his life was headed. “I had written a paper<br />

on petrochemical refining for one of my classes, and was fascinated,” he<br />

recalls. “My hope was to secure a sales position in the industry.”<br />

He got his chance at Oldbury Electrochemical, a small company based in<br />

New York City. Three years into his career, the company was acquired by<br />

Hooker Chemicals and Plastics Corp. Seizing the opportunity to manage<br />

major accounts, he and Claire moved to Cincinnati and Johnstone began his<br />

rapid rise. His 22 years with the company brought more moves and even<br />

more promotions.<br />

When Hooker Chemicals was acquired by Occidental Petroleum, Johnstone<br />

moved to Airco Inc. Four years later he went to Olin Corporation as a vice<br />

president and general manager. In less than 10 years this <strong>Hartwick</strong> graduate<br />

was named President of Olin Corporation, then Chief Executive Officer,<br />

then Chairman of the Board.<br />

THE RIGHT COMBINATION<br />

Pressed to identify the secret of his success, Johnstone says, “The key point<br />

is having the proper education and the proper tools at the right moment. In<br />

my career I was fortunate that those moments came fairly regularly.<br />

Students and faculty at work in the Johnstone Science Center Complex and Miller Hall.<br />

22


“More than once we have said to ourselves,<br />

‘Where can we make a real difference?’<br />

The answer has always been <strong>Hartwick</strong>.”<br />

Claire and John Johnstone '54, H'90<br />

at home in Connecticut.<br />

“Everyone has a skill set,” he explains. “It includes the education you’ve had,<br />

how you use that education, and the people you associate with. I was fortunate<br />

to have very good people who pushed me along as opportunities arose. Some<br />

mentors you choose; some choose you.”<br />

Johnstone broadened his knowledge base at every turn, reaching into research<br />

and development, finance, and more. “To be a candidate for something new,<br />

you have to keep growing,” he advises. “You need formal education, and you<br />

also need working knowledge and experience. I believe that if you do good<br />

work, good things will happen.”<br />

GOOD WORK<br />

The couple’s good work is expressed in their philanthropy. “In the early years<br />

we were typical Annual Fund supporters,” Johnstone recalls. “The more<br />

exposure I had to the financials of the <strong>College</strong>, the more I understood the need<br />

for extraordinary giving. As my ability to give increased, so did our<br />

contributions to <strong>Hartwick</strong>.<br />

“My background is the reason why I’ve supported the <strong>College</strong> the way that I<br />

have,” Johnstone says, referring to his volunteer service over the years and the<br />

couple’s many generous gifts. “I feel like I owed <strong>Hartwick</strong> in a sense. I have<br />

spent a long time repaying my obligation, and have done so willingly.”<br />

When he joined the Board of Trustees, he appreciated the responsibilities that<br />

came with the role. “Past Trustees had stepped in to make a major difference<br />

when I was a student,” Johnstone says. “I felt there was a tradition to live up to.”<br />

The Johnstones approach their giving strategically. “I believe every donor has<br />

two choices,” he says. “You can spread your gifts around or you can concentrate<br />

your giving. More than once we have said to ourselves, ‘Where can we make a<br />

real difference?’ The answer has always been <strong>Hartwick</strong>.”<br />

Johnstone sees such a decision as good for the <strong>College</strong>, and good for the donor.<br />

“The more you help your college, the better it is for you,” he says. “By<br />

financially supporting the institution, you are increasing the value of your own<br />

education.”<br />

Sixty years after he entered <strong>Hartwick</strong>, John Johnstone has proven his point.<br />

23


HOMECOMING & REUNION ’10<br />

Thanks<br />

for the<br />

memories<br />

More than 700 <strong>Hartwick</strong> alumni and their<br />

families returned to Oyaron Hill in October<br />

to take part in Homecoming & Reunion<br />

Weekend 2010. Festivities on and off<br />

campus were framed by brilliant blue skies<br />

and the bright hues of an upstate New York<br />

autumn.<br />

Class of 1950 | The Class of 1950 (left to right): Stanley M. Fleischer, Richard<br />

A. Schoof, George L. Grice Jr., James A. Delisio, Raymond G. Davis, Eleanor<br />

Peppmuller, Colonel Wendell H. Shawler<br />

Among the dozens of events that alumni and guests turned out for<br />

were a kick-off barbecue on Friday night staffed by notable campus<br />

personalities, packed athletic contests, conversations with <strong>College</strong><br />

President Dr. Margaret L. Drugovich, Alumni <strong>College</strong> classes taught<br />

by favorite faculty, and a perennial favorite—chicken dinner from<br />

Oneonta’s world-famous Brooks' House of Bar-B-Q.<br />

The <strong>Hartwick</strong> Jazz Ensemble provided music for the traditional Jazz<br />

Lunch on Saturday, during which the annual Alumni Awards were<br />

presented. Emory Ford ’62 and Gil Smith ’59 were each presented a<br />

Distinguished Alumnus Award for their career accomplishments,<br />

while Shelley Lynch ’00 was presented the Outstanding Young<br />

Alumna Award, and Professor of Biology Stanley K. Sessions received<br />

the Outstanding Employee Award (see story on pages 28 and 29).<br />

On Saturday afternoon, a Celebration of Diversity at <strong>Hartwick</strong> was<br />

hosted by the Asian-Latin American-Native American-African<br />

American Club (ALANA), the Society of Sisters United/Brothers<br />

United (SOSU/BU), and the Pluralism Associates League for<br />

Students (PALS). The event attracted a large crowd of alumni and<br />

students to mark the contribution of <strong>Hartwick</strong>'s diversity initiatives<br />

and participants through the years.<br />

Class of 1960 | Seated left to right: Nancy Bogel Brackett, Nancy Schauf<br />

Wohlhueter, Mary Ann Scully Mitchell, Faith Wilber Pratt, Janice L. Radley Downie.<br />

Standing left to right: Phyllis Trendell Holtzman, Damaris Rodriquez Molina, Peter<br />

R. Christoph, Campbell R. McCabe, The Rev. Henry K. Johnson, The Rev. Barry H.<br />

Downing, George R. Schermerhorn, Donald Anderson, Bonnie Jo Warren Spink,<br />

Denise Ward Wicks, President Margaret L. Drugovich. Not pictured: Edward<br />

Clough ’60.<br />

From Stack Lounge to Elmore Field, from The Depot downtown to<br />

the big tent on Frisbee Field, everyone at H&R Weekend 2010 spoke<br />

of the joy of reconnecting with old friends, the timeless beauty of the<br />

Susquehanna Valley, and of the enduring impact <strong>Hartwick</strong> has had on<br />

their lives.<br />

24


Professor of English Susan Navarette<br />

interviews Chris Klinger Paul ’52 in the<br />

Stories from the HART booth in The Yager<br />

Museum of Art & Culture.<br />

Charlotte Van Doren ’00, Eric Shoen ’99,<br />

and Demetria Cavallari ’00 on their way to<br />

the Brooks’ Bar-B-Q in the tent on Frisbee<br />

Field.<br />

Trumpet-playing President Margaret L.<br />

Drugovich joined Samantha Carboni ’11,<br />

president of the Student Senate, in the Pep<br />

Band at the Homecoming football game.<br />

Paul “Gene” Clements ’52 and his wife,<br />

Martha, relaxing outside Bresee Hall.<br />

Al Chambers ’65 and his grandson Bryan<br />

with Chris Winant Johnson ’68 and Paul<br />

Johnson ’67.<br />

Jim LeSuer ’07 and Jesse McCullagh ’09,<br />

an American Idol Hollywood finalist,<br />

performing under the tent on Frisbee<br />

Field.<br />

Enjoying an informal AOPi reunion: (back)<br />

Kelly Armisto Baird ’89, Leslie Pallante<br />

Dagen ’90, Trustee Sally Griffiths Herbert<br />

’88, Michelle Brown ’87; (front) Sarah<br />

Bender Greenway ’89, Kathy Campbell ’88.<br />

Mike Bruny ’99 and Don Sawyer ’99<br />

reconnecting at the Celebration of Diversity<br />

at <strong>Hartwick</strong> in Stack Lounge.<br />

Art Professor Phil Young with Carrie Riordan<br />

’02, Linda Balloqui-Smith ’91, and Scott<br />

Hamilton ’00.<br />

Jeff Croll ’77, president of Deep Blue,<br />

presenting an interactive tour of a bay in<br />

New England for Alumni <strong>College</strong>.<br />

25


HOMECOMING & REUNION ’10<br />

Homecoming &<br />

26


snapshot memories of the weekend.<br />

Reunion 2010<br />

27


ALUMNI NEWS<br />

2010 Alumni<br />

Award Winners<br />

Shelley Polinsky Lynch ’00,<br />

Gil Smith ’59, Emory Ford ’62,<br />

Professor of Biology Stanley Sessions<br />

You remember them from the classroom and the field.<br />

They sat next to you in The Commons and at events on<br />

Frisbee Field. Yet off (and quite often on) Oyaron Hill,<br />

these four <strong>Hartwick</strong> personalities have left their mark—<br />

through research, volunteer work, career, connections,<br />

and accomplishments with students. This year’s<br />

Alumni Award winners make <strong>Hartwick</strong> proud.<br />

Shelley Polinsky Lynch ’00 | Outstanding Young Alumna<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> degree | Nursing<br />

What she does now | Shelley is certified as a critical care nurse and legal<br />

nurse consultant, and publishes continuing education programs focusing<br />

on critical care nursing. She has worked as a clinical specialist for CHF<br />

Solutions and as a nurse for the Level I Trauma Center at Beth Israel<br />

Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. She recently received her master<br />

of science in nursing from Grand Canyon University while working as an<br />

adjunct clinical nursing instructor at Bunker Hill Community <strong>College</strong> and<br />

Quincy <strong>College</strong>, and as a nurse educator for the ICU at Quincy Hospital.<br />

This past January Term, Shelley traveled with a group of <strong>Hartwick</strong> Nursing<br />

students, Professor Emerita of Nursing Sharon Davidson Dettenrieder<br />

’65, and Associate Professor of Nursing Jeanne-Marie Havener for a fourweek<br />

off-campus program in Jamaica. She also volunteers with<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s Boston Alumni Network.<br />

“I am truly indebted to <strong>Hartwick</strong> for the life that I have. With the<br />

exception of my family, all the riches in my life stem from my four years<br />

at <strong>Hartwick</strong>: my nursing career, my friends, my love of travel, and my<br />

husband.”<br />

Gil Smith ’59 | Distinguished Alumnus Award<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> degree | Biology<br />

What he does now | Gil is in his 45th year as a cancer researcher at the<br />

National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD,<br />

where he started his career after receiving his Ph.D. in biology from<br />

Brown University. He was nominated twice for the American Society for<br />

Cell Biology E.B. Wilson Medal for far-reaching contributions to cell<br />

biology over a lifetime in science and is the 2007 recipient of an NIH<br />

Merit Award for outstanding research into understanding the role of the<br />

mammary stem cell niche to development and tumorigenesis.<br />

Recognized numerous times for his research, Gil has been published<br />

nearly 150 times and has served as keynote speaker at events<br />

worldwide.<br />

28


Special recognition and<br />

scholarship award<br />

President Margaret L. Drugovich and<br />

Richard A. Schoof ’50, recipient of the<br />

Donald ’60 and Diane ’60 Brown Award<br />

for Outstanding Commitment to Annual<br />

Support of the <strong>College</strong>.<br />

Emory Ford ’62 | Distinguished Alumnus Award<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> degree | Chemistry<br />

What he does now | Emory is a research and development scientist with<br />

experience in process development, product development, analytical<br />

chemistry, catalyst chemistry, and materials science. In 2000, he retired<br />

from Lyondell as chief scientist. Today, he works part-time as associate<br />

director for Materials Technology Institute and is a visiting scientist at<br />

Oak Ridge National Lab. He also has ongoing research projects at Oak<br />

Ridge and Argonne National Lab. He holds 20 publications and 10 patents<br />

to his credit.<br />

Deena Slaff ’14, recipient of this year’s<br />

Alumni Association Scholarship; Craig<br />

Slaff ’82; and Stephanie Lavenberg ’92.<br />

“I left <strong>Hartwick</strong> with two great things, my wife and the knowledge that I<br />

wanted to do—and could do—science.”<br />

Alumni Association<br />

election results<br />

The following alumni have been elected to the Alumni Association Board.<br />

Stanley Sessions | Professor of Biology<br />

Outstanding Employee Award<br />

What he does now | Stan joined the <strong>Hartwick</strong> faculty in 1989, and has<br />

since been awarded numerous teaching awards, including the Margaret<br />

B. Bunn Award for Outstanding Teaching and the Wandersee Award for<br />

research. He has been awarded research grants from the National<br />

Science Foundation, the Cargill Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation,<br />

the Corning Foundation, and numerous nationally recognized<br />

organizations. He has authored 13 publications and more than 50<br />

articles, many with <strong>Hartwick</strong> students as co-authors and researchers,<br />

and has been internationally recognized for his work on limb<br />

malformation in amphibians.<br />

How he connects | Not only does Stan provide <strong>Hartwick</strong> students with<br />

tremendous classroom and research opportunities, but he stays in touch<br />

with students when they leave, follows their professional progress, and<br />

gives deserved recognition to those who excel in their chosen careers.<br />

As a vital connection between life as a student and life as an alumnus,<br />

Stan epitomizes the connection between the <strong>Hartwick</strong> connection and<br />

the world.<br />

FIRST TERM:<br />

• Scott Holdren ’80, of Coeymans, NY. Physics/Forensics/Computer Science<br />

Teacher and National Honor Society Advisor, Ravena-Coeymans-Selkirk H.S.<br />

• Donald Keinz ’75, of Wrentham, MA. President, Acadia Consulting Group Inc.<br />

• Steven Paille ’05, of Shaker Heights, OH. M.A. Candidate, Political Science,<br />

West Virginia University, Case Western Reserve University Law School,<br />

Class of 2013.<br />

• Elizabeth Arnett Paille ’06, of Shaker Heights, OH. M.A. Candidate,<br />

Elementary Education, Assistant Coordinator for Resident Program Centers,<br />

Case Western Reserve University.<br />

SECOND TERM:<br />

• Kate Hurrle ’98, of Canastota, NY. Project Manager, Koester Associates Inc.<br />

• Erin Zuck ’05, of Clinton, NY. Human Resources Manager, Morrisville Auxiliary<br />

Corporation.<br />

29


ALUMNI NEWS<br />

UPCOMING ALUMNI EVENTS<br />

December 2010<br />

Presidential Receptions<br />

Upstate NY Region | December 1, Pittsford, NY<br />

Hosted by Andy ’74 and Linda Ashworth<br />

South Atlantic Region | December 15, Raleigh, NC<br />

Hosted by Trustee Rory Read ’83 and<br />

Mary Savoy-Read ’84<br />

Metro New York Region | Donor Appreciation Reception<br />

December 8, New York Athletic Club, New York, NY<br />

Capital Region | Faculty Lecture featuring Dr. Larry Malone<br />

December 9, The Desmond Hotel and Conference Center,<br />

Albany, NY<br />

January 2011<br />

West Coast Region<br />

January 26, The Waterfront Restaurant, Pier 7<br />

The Embarcadero, San Francisco, CA<br />

Sponsored by the San Francisco Region Alumni Network<br />

Be on the lookout for event invitations in your mailbox six weeks in advance<br />

of the program date. For more information on events or to RSVP, go to<br />

The Wall at www.hartwickalumni.org.<br />

Alumni<br />

IN PRINT<br />

Dawn Lajeunesse ’71 has written the novel Autumn Colors (American<br />

Book Publishing, 2011). It tells the story of Kerry and Charles, who have<br />

been married 20 years, and the influence of Kerry’s relationship with her<br />

first fiancé, Tom, who was lost to her forever 30 years ago. For more<br />

information, visit www.dawnlajeunesse.com.<br />

HELP FILL OUR BOOKSHELVES<br />

The Office of Alumni Relations wants to fill its bookshelves with the work<br />

of <strong>Hartwick</strong> alumni. If you’ve published a book and are interested in<br />

donating a copy, e-mail Assistant Director of Alumni Relations Liz<br />

Cook ’05 at cooke@hartwick.edu or give her a call at 607-431-4088.<br />

Connections count.<br />

Join 5,265 current<br />

Wall members at<br />

www.hartwickalumni.org.<br />

STAY CONNECTED<br />

Events and activities sponsored by the Office of Alumni<br />

Relations, the Alumni Association, and your regional<br />

alumni network help you stay connected to <strong>Hartwick</strong>.<br />

By hosting lectures with distinguished faculty, professional career<br />

networking forums, spirited events around the athletic calendar, and just-forthe-fun-of-it<br />

activities, we bring the campus to you, no matter where you live.<br />

To get involved with any of our regional alumni networks, contact<br />

Director of Alumni Relations Duncan Macdonald ’78 at<br />

macdonaldd@hartwick.edu or 607-431-4032.<br />

More about each of <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s alumni networks is online at<br />

www.hartwick.edu/alumninetworks.xml.<br />

HARTWICK COLLEGE<br />

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD<br />

Neal Miller ’72, President<br />

Steve Suleski ’76, Vice President<br />

Ashley Beadore ’07<br />

Bruce Cameron ’67<br />

Bryan Clutz ’04<br />

Sharon Davidson Dettenrieder ’65<br />

Kenneth Dobert ’61<br />

Garfield Drummond ’99<br />

Jeff Gardner ’92<br />

Scott Holdren ’80<br />

Kate Hurrle ’98<br />

Don Keinz ’75<br />

John (Jack) Leyden Jr. ’78<br />

Sarah MacDonald ’01<br />

Laura Mack ’09<br />

Steve Paille ’05<br />

Elizabeth Paille ’06<br />

Frank Panzarella ’96<br />

Jennifer Panzarella ’97<br />

PJ Prunty ’10<br />

Alix Shaw ’79<br />

Eric Shoen ’99<br />

Barbara Vartanian ’71<br />

Jon Valder ’08<br />

Emily Weisenbach ’03<br />

Brian Welsh ’62<br />

Renata Williams ’05<br />

Erin Zuck ’05<br />

ALUMNI TRUSTEES<br />

Debra French ’80<br />

Kathi Hochberg ’73<br />

EX OFFICIO<br />

Nancy Romeo ’78<br />

30


On the Road<br />

with the Alumni Association:<br />

Recent Regional Events<br />

Presidential<br />

Receptions<br />

Boston, MA |1<br />

Albany, Party on Lakewood, the Patio at the Manlius, Navigator Club on<br />

NY; the Denver, Charles River, CO; Greenwich,<br />

July 8. Sponsored by the<br />

CT; Boston Philadelphia, Alumni Network PA Committee and<br />

hosted by Ed Mancini ’93. (Boston Region)<br />

Portland, ME<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> Night at the Portland Seadogs<br />

minor league baseball game, July 22.<br />

Sponsored by the Portland Alumni Network<br />

Committee. (Maine Region)<br />

Rochester, NY |2<br />

Party in the Pavilion at the Rochester Yacht<br />

Club on Lake Ontario for July 27.<br />

Sponsored by the Rochester Alumni Network<br />

Committee. Hosted by Bryan Clutz ’04.<br />

(Upstate New York Region)<br />

Boston, MA |3<br />

Boston Red Sox game and reception in the<br />

Right Field Roof Terrace at Fenway Park,<br />

sponsored by the Boston Alumni Network<br />

Committee, September 20. (Boston Region)<br />

Skaneateles, NY | 4<br />

Skaneateles Lake Lunch Cruise, sponsored by<br />

the CNY Alumni Network Committee,<br />

September 25. (Central New York Region)<br />

Saratoga, NY<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> Day at the Races at the Saratoga<br />

Race Track. Sponsored by the Albany<br />

Network Committee, August 7. (Central<br />

Region)<br />

Binghamton, NY |5<br />

Meet & Greet: A Welcome to the <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

Family at the Binghamton Club in<br />

Binghamton, NY, August 4. A reception for<br />

incoming students from the Class of 2014,<br />

parents, alumni and friends. Sponsored by the<br />

Binghamton Alumni Network Committee.<br />

(Southern Tier Region)<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> Seminary, NY |6<br />

Annual Seminary Reunion at the Evangelical<br />

Lutheran Church, September 12. (Central<br />

Region)<br />

1<br />

Save the Date<br />

2011<br />

Homecoming &<br />

Reunion<br />

Sept. 30-Oct. 2<br />

3 3<br />

5 6<br />

2<br />

4<br />

31


CLASS NOTES<br />

The deadline to submit your Class Note for the spring Wick is<br />

February 4, 2011. Send your news to beachk@hartwick.edu or the<br />

class correspondent listed under your class year.<br />

1938<br />

Lucena Kibbe still walks a half mile a day with her walker. “I don’t even walk<br />

around my apartment without my walker! I see doctors for eyes, teeth (I still<br />

have my own), general health, and even heart. For 93 I’m doing very well.”<br />

1941 | 70th Reunion<br />

1944<br />

David Trachtenberg, davsel@att.net<br />

1946 | 65th Reunion<br />

1950<br />

George Grice, geog@3rivers.net<br />

It happened! I doubt any of us thought we’d be attending a 60th Reunion<br />

when we first got up Oyaron Hill in 1946. Last weekend, 13 of us were back<br />

at <strong>Hartwick</strong>, feeling the spirit of all you who weren’t there physically, and quite<br />

astounded by the remarkable institution that has grown up on the hill where<br />

one permanent building greeted us 64 years ago. I hope my article will pass<br />

along to you some of the excitement, amazement, and joy we experienced.<br />

I drove into Oneonta a bit before noon on Friday, and found my way to the<br />

Holiday Inn. As I pulled up to the front entry, there was a vaguely familiar<br />

looking guy in the parking lot near the door. And yes it was Ray Davis! He just<br />

looked a bit older (don’t we all?). I thought it was a wonderful coincidence—<br />

what a welcoming for me! Ray and his new wife Helen joined us for coffee.<br />

Members of the Class of 1950 gathered for a dinner honoring members of the<br />

Class of 1960. Those from Class of 1950 were from New York, Florida,<br />

Alabama, and Montana. The members were Ray Davis and wife Helen, Jim<br />

DeLisio and wife Ruth, Stan Fleischer, Eleanor Peppmiller, Wendy Shawler<br />

and wife Mary, Dick Schoof and wife Evelyn, Carol Young Woodard and<br />

husband Ralph, and me. We were all present for the splendid breakfast the next<br />

morning when President Margaret Drugovich spoke to us at length and<br />

answered questions in a wonderful, relaxed meeting. Our group was very<br />

impressed with <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s new President.<br />

After the Breakfast Meeting, the 1950 group went off for events that attracted<br />

them. Dick Schoof received an award for his extra effort in bringing our group<br />

back to “The Hill” for this special occasion. There were many events to tempt<br />

us, even a football game we lost to Alfred. I did my grandfatherly duty and took<br />

my granddaughter Catherine Bell ’11 out to lunch at a local spot, The Autumn<br />

Café. Catherine is a Nursing student. After lunch, we went to Pine Lake, where<br />

she and a number of students live out in the “country,” getting them a<br />

somewhat primitive and outdoor living place.<br />

Sunday, as the group of 1950 classmates parted, we talked about keeping in<br />

touch and I’m sure we’ll do that. We especially hope that you out there who<br />

couldn’t be with us back at <strong>Hartwick</strong> will chime in by writing and calling,<br />

whether just to old friends or to me. Being somewhat limited (and most of us<br />

are), you can still be a part of our class efforts by communicating. PLEASE<br />

WRITE and COMMENT! Love to all. George<br />

1951 | 60th Reunion<br />

1952<br />

Paul Clements writes: “Martha and I have moved to a senior living<br />

community in Williamsburg, VA. It seems like a very nice place.”<br />

1953<br />

Fred and Ellie (Brown ’55) Hickein “celebrated our 56th anniversary<br />

June 4 and then visited our Miami, FL family with six grandchildren. In all we<br />

have 12 grandchildren, one step-grandson, and two great-grandchildren. Still<br />

Oneonta residents and served on the Oneonta Bicentennial Committee in<br />

2008-09.”<br />

Harry Kratoville writes: “Shirley and I continue to live seven months in<br />

Sun City Center, FL and five in Naples, NY. Contact us at harryshirleykrat@<br />

netzero.net.”<br />

1956 | 55th Reunion<br />

1957<br />

Don Michel, don36@maine.rr.com<br />

1958<br />

Dick Hatzenbuhler, the hatz@verizon.net<br />

1959<br />

Dalene Davis Cross, poppabob@verizon.net<br />

1961 | 50th Reunion<br />

This past summer Bob and Merry (Baker ’62) Boening and Ken and<br />

Karin (Karlsson ’62) Engkvist took a Baltic Sea cruise on the Star Princess,<br />

visiting Stockholm, Oslo, Helsinki, St. Petersburg, Gadansk, Tallinn, and<br />

Copenhagen. Bob was a business administration major and both Merry and<br />

Karin were nursing majors at <strong>Hartwick</strong>. All attended and will attend their<br />

49th and 50th anniversaries through 2012. They are all proud to be<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> alumni!<br />

1962<br />

Sharon Dorff Conway, asadsac@aol.com<br />

Dinah McClure, Dinamo32@aol.com<br />

The Nursing Class of 1962 held its 48th reunion at <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s Pine<br />

Lake Environmental Campus from July 6-9, 2010. Attending were Mary Lu<br />

Wade Eshelman, Rose Holderidge Elliott, Sue Mosher Wainwright, Patty<br />

Post Brink, Marilyn Bell Michaud, Carol Stapleton Andersen, Carol Beecher<br />

Brown, Jeannette Reimann Waterman, Ann Collson Johnson, Emily Walter<br />

Mikulewicz, Merry Baker Boening, Becky Brink Brown, Karin Karlsson<br />

Engkvist,andDinah McClure.<br />

Marjorie Turrell Julian writes: “A <strong>Hartwick</strong> connection: At Heathrow<br />

32


1965<br />

Janice Charles, a registered nurse and founder of the North Country<br />

Children's Clinic, retired after 38 years. NCCC serves un- and under-insured<br />

children and young adults needing medical, dental, and mental health and<br />

nutrition care. Janice is raising funds for the volunteer transportation center in<br />

Watertown, NY.<br />

Bill Gaillard is still with the rescue squad, driving the bus. He also is in the<br />

Lions Club and community band. Carol is Director of the Cheney Library.<br />

They have four grandchildren.<br />

Bill Gates just finished three years as president of New Adventures in<br />

<strong>Learning</strong>, a life-long learning program affiliated with Chandler-Gilbert, AZ<br />

Community <strong>College</strong>. During that time the number of courses doubled and<br />

membership rose from about 200 to more than 450. He continues to teach<br />

media and history-related courses in the program.<br />

By chance: Sharon Dorff Conway ’62 and Susan Osborn Coffey ’70 met quite<br />

unexpectedly in October. Shown in front of Carlsbad Caverns, they spent nine<br />

days traveling through New Mexico. Susan (left) lives in Midlothian, VA and<br />

Sharon and husband Patrick live in Carolina Shores, NC.<br />

Airport standing in a long, slow security check line, heading for<br />

Johannesburg, I must have made some comment as the woman in front of me<br />

asked where I was from. ‘New York, but not the city, upstate near Syracuse.’ ‘I<br />

know Syracuse,’ she said. ‘My son went to college in Oneonta.’ She turned out<br />

to be the mother of British soccer player Ryan Cruz ’08, and had in fact visited<br />

her son at <strong>Hartwick</strong>. Small world. I’m still rowing with the Syracuse Rowing<br />

Club. I medaled at Nationals this summer in an 8 and a 4 and competed in the<br />

World Masters Regatta in September.”<br />

Norma Trottere Grimaldi and husband Joseph are in their 28th year of<br />

living by the beach in South Carolina; they have never regretted leaving<br />

Michigan for the wonderful climate and friendly people of the South. They<br />

spend winter months in a condo at Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, where they play<br />

the beach-bum role and chill by the pool for the duration. Daughter Alison<br />

lives in the Detroit area and works as a marketing software consultant for HP.<br />

Her two children have started new phases in their lives this year. Jillian is a<br />

freshman in high school and Ashley is a freshman at Ferris State University,<br />

where she is majoring in computer graphics/marketing. Norma notes “life has<br />

been good to us all and one of the things I am most grateful for is the<br />

continued friendship of my classmates from the Nursing Class of 1962.”<br />

1963<br />

Lois Otterbein Wolcott writes: “Recently sold our house of 41 years and<br />

scaled down to one with less maintenance. We also welcomed fourth<br />

grandchild. We now have three girls, one boy.”<br />

1964<br />

Faith Sandles “discovered the uniqueness of New Bern, NC, 50th high<br />

school reunion, writing a book on developmental disabilities.”<br />

1966 | 45th Reunion<br />

Richard Riccio continues to be involved with Trout Unlimited. He also<br />

enjoyed fishing and camping in NH with his brother in June and a week with<br />

his brothers in Wells Beach, ME, during July.<br />

1967<br />

Bruce Cameron, bpsychia@stny.rr.com<br />

1968<br />

1969<br />

John Wood Goldsack, jwgoldsack@aol.com<br />

1970<br />

Susan Osborn Coffey is retired after 34 years with the VA Community<br />

<strong>College</strong> System. She spent 28 years as faculty and six as Director of<br />

Professional Development for the system’s 23 colleges. She enjoys travel,<br />

reading, cards, and her two grandchildren. She resides in Midlothian, VA.<br />

Lorraine Kelly continues to enjoy retirement, “although I do sub<br />

occasionally in the high school. I no longer run a tour boat, but I do private<br />

charters on the lake. I also enjoy selling real estate through Guide Boat Realty<br />

in Saranac Lake, NY. Retirement is busy and wonderful!”<br />

1971 | 40th Reunion<br />

Barbara Klapp Vartanian, birhbev@omh.state.ny.us<br />

1972<br />

Scott Griswold, urfree@bellsouth.net<br />

1973<br />

Ronald Stair, ronalds@att.net<br />

Peter Caltagirone, his wife, and Greg Lauger ’76 went to Phoenix, AZ for<br />

a friend’s wedding. “We toured the Grand Canyon, T. Roosevelt Lake, and<br />

Apache Lake, and other points of interest.”<br />

Randy Lamb writes: “After 12 years with a church in Mechanicsburg, PA,<br />

33


CLASS NOTES<br />

I concluded my time there last summer with our fourth trip to Kenya. We<br />

relocated this past winter back to the greater Oneonta area and are now living<br />

in Maryland, NY. I worked this summer at Hyde Hall in Cooperstown, and<br />

Springbrook in Milford.”<br />

Lois Reeves reports that son Brian received his civil engineering degree<br />

from FL State. He’s building bridges for the Maine DOT. Daughter Kristen<br />

is one semester away from her law degree. She also works full time in Fairfax<br />

County, VA.<br />

1974<br />

Mike Brown, mike.g.brown@comcast.net<br />

1976 | 35th Reunion<br />

1977<br />

As Director of health and wellness at Prudential, Diane Hettinger is<br />

responsible for sustaining the health and productivity of 20,000 domestic<br />

employees with a culture of health. Diane recently received designation as a<br />

certified employee benefit specialist. Diane, Rich, and their three boys<br />

continue to live in Mendham, NJ.<br />

Lucy Pierpont has been appointed the new program director at The Kent<br />

Memorial Library in Waterbury, CT. She has a strong background in graphic<br />

design and marketing. She owns her own design company and previously<br />

worked for The Litchfield County Times/Housatonic Publications. In addition<br />

to joining the library, she will continue her work with Klemm Real Estate in<br />

graphic design and marketing.<br />

1978<br />

Nick and Norma (Baillie) Romansky report that all is well in Malvern,<br />

PA. Nick is in his 23rd year in private practice in sports medicine and surgery.<br />

Norma remains very active in and out of the office. Jamie (Boston U. ’07) is at<br />

tableart.com. Kim (Wake Forest U. ’10) plays field hockey (Wassenaar, The<br />

Netherlands), and Ian ’10 is teaching and farming in Argentina. Nick writes:<br />

“Give back and support <strong>Hartwick</strong> in any way you can!”<br />

1981 | 30th Reunion<br />

Larry Tetro, ldtet2004@yahoo.com<br />

Cyd Miller DeMichele invites everyone to visit the Post and Beam<br />

Farmhouse in Windham, NY that she, her boyfriend, and two brothers have<br />

just spent nearly four years renovating. “We took it right down to the ribs,<br />

and rebuilt it for future generations.” In addition to landscaping, rockwork,<br />

carpentry, and laying tiles, she also built a stone hearth with native rock<br />

collected in the back meadows. This hard manual labor on weekends (she’s a<br />

graphic designer during the week) and ballroom dancing have helped her get<br />

back in shape following a motorcycle accident five years ago. “It’s been a crazy<br />

few years, and I apologize to my pals for falling off the grid…but would love<br />

to hear from my friends.” Dennis Gallagher ’80 designed the Web site:<br />

WindhamPostandBeam.com, or e-mail Cyd at cynthiany@gmail.com.<br />

Beth Gamble “traveled with my great friends this year: Pat Carrigan ’82,to<br />

her paintings exhibition at UConn-Groton. Also saw Cathy Weeks during<br />

my summer vacation. Campus weekend at <strong>Hartwick</strong> with Pat and Mary Ann<br />

Ambelas Lunn, Sharon Wilec-Young ’80, and Cathy Winana Graves ’82.”<br />

Summer fun: Art Johansen ’82 and Jody Solomon-Johansen ’83 were in the area<br />

this summer for a family reunion at Gilbert Lake.<br />

Doug and Janet (Hirt ’83) Steves write that son Patrick is on the<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> football team. David is a junior at Brockport High School.<br />

1983<br />

Woody Thompson, woody.thompson@octagon.com<br />

Beth Gillett writes: “At Elizabeth Gillett (my fashion brand) we are selling a<br />

lot of scarves and cover-ups with shine and sparkle.” EG has had some recent<br />

press from Martha Stewart, WWD, and Women’s World. Check out<br />

elizabethgillett.com and say hi at facebook.com/elizabethgillett.<br />

Bob and Barb (Pyle) Shipman’s daughter Michaela (Art major) joined<br />

her sister Megan (Psychology major) on the Hill this fall as part of the Class of<br />

2014! Megan graduates in 2011. The whole family is now part of the greater<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> family too!<br />

Susie Westly Wren operates West Island Studio, now in its 17th year, in<br />

Bath, ME. The studio offers after school art classes, art workshops for adults,<br />

large working studio, and a private art brokerage. Susie is a painter and teacher,<br />

and, most recently, a builder…this year designing and building her second<br />

building in her current hometown of Georgetown. Susie is married to Theo<br />

Holtwijk, a native of the Netherlands, who works in urban planning and<br />

development in Falmouth.<br />

1985<br />

Rhonda Foote, rhondasfooteworks@yahoo.com<br />

1986 | 25th Reunion<br />

Alison Donnelly, alisond@mindspring.com<br />

Robin Shepard Anderson lives in Durham, NC with husband<br />

LeGrande and children, Josh and Nicole. Robin has worked at Duke<br />

34


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and have been married since 1998. They report being amazed and grateful for<br />

their daughter Erin Elizabeth McCollough. Erin’s grandparents are Paul and<br />

Jeannette Bodurtha (former faculty and staff). A true <strong>Hartwick</strong> family!<br />

Rob Carpenter is Regional Manager Senior Vice President with Wells<br />

Fargo Private Bank in Baltimore, MD. He lives in Monkton with wife<br />

Christine and daughters Kate and Samantha. Rob is coaching girls’ soccer;<br />

perhaps we will have some future super stars on the ’Wick soccer team!<br />

Kathy Fallon writes that things are much the same in Boston. She took a<br />

summer vacation in Spain/Morocco with the family that went well save for an<br />

incident with the rental car and the Rock of Gibraltar! Hope Hertz does not<br />

read The Wick.<br />

Jennifer Johnson Hrycyszyn is happy to be back to the East Coast and<br />

enjoys living in the Boston area with her family. Jennifer joined Greenough<br />

Communications as a vice president and is working on a number of high-tech<br />

clients. You can find Jennifer at www.linkedin.com/in/jenniferhrycyszyn.<br />

Maine getaway: Allison Maynard DeVaux ’83, Lee Auchincloss ’83, Leslie Miller<br />

Zimmer ’83, Susan Ward ’83, Sue Trichka Dillon ’84, Jay DeVaux ’83, Mindy<br />

Grinold Bicknell ’83, Peter Fitzgerald ’82, Mike Zimmer ’83, Paul Peck ’83,<br />

Nancy Greenwood Albertson ’83, and John Dillon ’83 gathered this summer at<br />

the Rockport Boat Club in Maine for a lobster bake hosted by Albertson and her<br />

husband, Tom. The weekend also included sailing and hiking on the mid coast.<br />

University in Pediatrics in some capacity since graduating. She is Clinical<br />

Operations Coordinator in the Department of Pediatrics.<br />

Rob DiCarlo lives in Rochester, NY, with wife Janine and children<br />

Sophie, Nicholas, and Patrick. Rob is Assistant Director of Career Services at<br />

The <strong>College</strong> at Brockport, State University of New York working with both<br />

students and employers seeking internship opportunities.<br />

Alison Donnelly lives in Raleigh, NC, with husband Kyle and sons Kevin,<br />

Ryan, and Jason. Alison is Manager of Global Accounts for HelmsBriscoe,<br />

working with clients who have meeting needs involving hotels. “Looking<br />

forward to our 25th reunion in 2011!”<br />

Barbara Friling Johnson lives in Rhoadesville, VA, with husband Doug<br />

and an assortment of goats, sheep, horses, chickens, turkeys, honey bees,<br />

vegetable gardens, fruit trees, etc. When not working on her farm, Barbara is<br />

an Information Technology Manager in the software development<br />

department at GEICO Insurance Company.<br />

1987<br />

Chris Adams lives in Cleveland, OH, with wife Denise and their<br />

daughters Emily and Madeline. Chris is a senior project manager at<br />

University Hospital, where he is implementing their electronic medical<br />

system.<br />

1988<br />

Kathy Fallon, kfallon@pcgus.com<br />

Kristin Bodurtha and Jeff McCollough ’89 live in Binghamton, NY,<br />

Carole McGuire writes that she had a fun summer, “but too short!” In<br />

August, Carole put her 1st grade son on the bus and took her other son to his<br />

second year of pre-K! It is going very well! Happy Fall to everyone!<br />

Tim Rielly has been an account manager at Mid-State Food Brokers in<br />

Liverpool, NY, since 2002. Tim and wife Deb celebrated their 10th wedding<br />

anniversary in August. Their son Brendan keeps them busy with soccer,<br />

lacrosse, Pop Warner flag football, and this winter will play his third year in<br />

youth hockey. Tim’s stepson, Brian, is a U.S. Navy Seal stationed out of<br />

Norfolk, VA, and stepson Tim is a Gunner’s Mate in San Diego on the Wayne<br />

Meier Battleship. Tim has been in Auburn since 1996, and loves the peace<br />

and surrounding areas of the Finger Lakes of central New York. Tim can be<br />

reached at Trielly@midstatefood.com.<br />

1989<br />

Dorothy Holt, holtcrew@maine.rr.com<br />

Stacey Angus writes: “I have been living in the Azores for the past two<br />

years with husband Mark and son John. I am a clinical social worker at the<br />

American School on the Air Force base. In November we will be moving to<br />

Japan (just outside Tokyo), where I will start a new job as a clinical director<br />

with the Army. John will start at the American School there. If you live in Japan<br />

or have information e-mail me at staceyangus@hotmail.com.”<br />

Cary Jordan writes: “My husband Mitch Gueran and I recently moved into<br />

a new house with our kids, Chris, RJ, and Eve. I enjoy being a stay-at-home<br />

mom in White Plains, NY. I love reconnecting with old friends on FB. If<br />

anyone wants to say hi, feel free! I’m on as Cary Romanos Gueran.”<br />

Irene (Radiotis) and David Minster ’88 live in Albuquerque, NM<br />

with their teenage boys Bradley and Joshua. “We’ve lived here since 2005,<br />

when Dave retired from the U.S. Air Force. He is a manager with Sandia<br />

National Laboratories. Dave manages people who train others how to<br />

dismantle or carefully explode IED (Improvised Explosive Devices) or Nuclear<br />

Weapons. I’m still a stay-at-home mom and love it! I still run marathons and<br />

practice yoga Life is good out in the Southwest. We still have a passion for<br />

travel and are currently planning two trips. One to Montana and the other<br />

back to Thailand. My e-mail is david.minster@comcast.net and I’d love to hear<br />

from anyone from <strong>Hartwick</strong>, especially Phi Sig Phi alumni.”<br />

35


CLASS NOTES<br />

John Naizby writes: “I have been living in Madison, CT, for the past seven<br />

years and have been married for 17 years. We have two great boys, Hunter and<br />

Grayson. I have a small litigation practice law firm with my wife Leslie. We just<br />

recently were involved in the truancy intervention project, which is a program<br />

that pairs kids with working attorneys to keep them in school. I ran my first<br />

Ironman in August to raise money for the program in Louisville, KY; it was<br />

pretty hot but the race was a great experience. If anybody from <strong>Hartwick</strong> is in<br />

the Madison area, I would love to hear from them.”<br />

1990<br />

Leisyl Ryan Kleinberg, leisyl@kleinbergs.com<br />

1991 | 20th Reunion<br />

Rena Switzer Diem, rnmommy@yahoo.com<br />

Greetings from the Class of 1991! We have all apparently been very busy with<br />

our lives, as only one update was received for this newest issue of The Wick. So<br />

please enjoy the following from Andrea and Shawn Martin: “It has been a<br />

calmer fall for us so far, after the Hall of Fame inductions last July for my high<br />

school, as well as <strong>Hartwick</strong>. To see so many family, friends, and teammates<br />

there to support me, it was an awesome feeling. We then missed the annual<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> gathering in Vermont in August due to sickness, but we have<br />

rebounded and jumped right into soccer season. As winter approaches fast up<br />

here, I am looking forward to coaching varsity boys’ basketball by November<br />

and co-ed youth basketball come December.”<br />

The Class Correspondent has been busy living her life with her family and<br />

work at the top of her to-do list daily. A summer vacation in the northern WI<br />

Manitowish Chain of Lakes with the extended family, a boat trip down the<br />

Mississippi on our boat, an adult daughter and her son moving home for a few<br />

months and then out on their own, studying for a certification test, attending a<br />

regional Hyperbaric Medicine conference (thankfully close enough to go home<br />

each night), and now looking into updating the windows in the house, all part<br />

of that which keeps me busy. Oh yeah, and trying to get the rest of you busy<br />

people to take a few minutes and send in some updates. :) Remember to check<br />

out The Wall online too, as alumni do find time to update their spaces. Take<br />

care everyone! Hope to hear from more of the class next update, which figuring<br />

ahead, will mean you’ll all be hearing from me again in a few months! :)<br />

1992<br />

Rory Shaffer Walsh, rorysw@gmail.com<br />

Feel free to e-mail me your class notes at Rorysw@gmail.com or send me a<br />

message on Facebook. Wishing you the best! Rory<br />

Richard McCoy was elected to the Board of Directors for the National<br />

Association of Public Health Statistics and Information Systems. The<br />

association represents states’ Vital Records’ offices and promotes national<br />

standards for health statistics reporting.<br />

Greta Rothermel Rupert writes: “I am married to Matt Ruppert ’90. We<br />

live in Paxton, MA, with our children Alexander, Timothy, and Jacob. I am a<br />

physical therapist assistant at a skilled nursing facility three days a week and<br />

enjoy it. On my free days I am either helping out the kids in the classroom or<br />

enjoying my free time. Matt teaches German in Rutland to 7th and 8th<br />

graders as well as coaching basketball. We have lived in Paxton for 13 years.”<br />

Tony Brogna ’99 and Dr. Emelia Parker share their wedding celebration with<br />

Paul Lynch ’98, Tim Fadden ’98, Andy Deluca ’98, Kyle Tipson ’00, and Josh ’00<br />

and Aniece (Sukovaty) ’00 Collins.<br />

China Flanigan lives in Omaha, NE. “I have recently gotten divorced and<br />

am still doing freelance photography work as well as starting a small business<br />

in the Omaha Metro. I have two children, who keep me running amok. I see<br />

and hang with several <strong>Hartwick</strong>ians from time to time, or when travel allows<br />

me to bust out of my Hinterland setting, as there is not a large community of<br />

alumni here. Go figure.”<br />

1994<br />

Missy Foristall, foristallm@yahoo.com<br />

1995<br />

Louis Crocco, lbcrocco@aol.com<br />

Missy Ulrich writes: “What an incredible time on campus at Alumni<br />

Weekend. I had so much fun reconnecting with Jennie Viggiani, Jen Vilord,<br />

Tiffany Sanders, Maureen Batsie, Heather Fadil, Kristin Barrett ’96, and Erin<br />

Ford ’96. Everyone should make time to visit <strong>Hartwick</strong>. We had an amazing<br />

weekend.”<br />

Sallie O’Connor writes: “My husband Brian and I welcomed our second<br />

child, Sean Thomas O’Connor, on September 17. Nicole is so excited to be a<br />

big sister!”<br />

Louis Crocco will be on the road again this fall touring with the National<br />

Touring production of “WHITE CHRISTMAS.” The tour opened in<br />

Atlanta, GA, on November 2 and other cities include Greenville, SC;<br />

Hartford, CT; Schenectady, NY; Tampa, FL; Charlotte, NC; and will be in<br />

Chicago, IL, in December.<br />

1996 | 15th Reunion<br />

Amy Cottle, amycottle@comcast.net<br />

36


Molly Hannon-Galuszka and her husband welcomed their first child on<br />

July 29, 2009. “Lainey is beautiful and what a joy!”<br />

1997<br />

Amy Maletzke Moore, maletzke@hotmail.com<br />

1998<br />

Jamie Sommerville O’Riordan, jamieoriordan@yahoo.com<br />

Hello everyone! I hope you’re all doing well. It’s been great keeping in touch<br />

with so many of you, especially on Facebook. I continue to work in professional<br />

services marketing and have been interviewing for several new opportunities. I<br />

also finally finished my MBA…four years later! I spend my free time traveling,<br />

catching up with friends, and taking language lessons. Eoin ’97 and I look<br />

forward to ringing in the New Year in Rome! Keep in touch.<br />

Sharnette Topsey Underdue writes: “Rashawn and I celebrated our<br />

12th year of marriage in June and I am pregnant with our first child. Baby<br />

Underdue is due to arrive in November. We live in Anaheim, CA. Rashawn<br />

has a thriving career as an actor (has guest starred on Cold Case, Castle, and<br />

CSI Miami last season) and I am the Associate Director of Housing &<br />

Residence Life at California State University, Fullerton. We love the West<br />

Coast and are excited about the upcoming expansion of our family.”<br />

Tara Tracy Chamberlin writes: “I just started a new job as the ER Nurse<br />

Manager at the Togus Veterans Hospital. I decided to give management a try!<br />

Liam is almost 2 and the time has flown by. I caught up with Carol and Adam<br />

Pierce and their kids this summer in Freeport and I hope to catch up with<br />

others this fall. Sorry I am a Facebook and Wall slacker!”<br />

Darcy Meek Perez still enjoys music therapy at Springbrook in Oneonta,<br />

NY, and collaborating with the Music and Education departments to host<br />

interns. “We’re expecting our second child in February!”<br />

Jennifer Heald-Clapp and husband Karl welcomed their second child,<br />

Kristopher James, on April 6, 2010. He joins big sister Kayla. He is a<br />

remarkable baby, sleeping through the night at 2 months! Jenn continues to<br />

work full-time as co-coordinator of school-based programming for a domestic<br />

violence program. She also continues to sing with Seaglass Performing Arts of<br />

Kennebunk, ME. Jenn and Karl are preparing to place their home on the<br />

market in spring 2011 to accommodate their growing family. Jenn has had the<br />

great fortune to see Jennifer Thayer ’97, Kristin Crosby Miller ’99 and Kris<br />

Miller and son Zachary, Heather Trela,and Jennifer Deguglielmo Corey and<br />

husband Jay and their son Will over the past year. Jenn traveled to the<br />

Rochester area to see Amy Grenier Gepfert ’97 to celebrate the life of David<br />

Gepfert ’95 at his memorial service.<br />

Adrienne Juan writes: “I finished my prerequisites from County <strong>College</strong> of<br />

Morris for nursing school. However, I decided to take the semester off to work<br />

and started a business called We Got This. I will be walking pets, doing<br />

groceries, and creating e-mail accounts for those who do not know how and<br />

would like to keep in touch with their loved ones. I miss everyone in my class,<br />

so keep in touch! My e-mail is adriennejuannj@yahoo.com.”<br />

Andi Sciremammano Murray had a great summer of camping, visiting<br />

family and friends (including a mini Phi Sig reunion at Lisa Madis’ house!),<br />

and triathlons. “I am working as a School Psychologist in the Troy City School<br />

District. I enjoy spending time with my daughter Cooper, who started<br />

kindergarten this fall and I am coaching her U6 soccer team! Jax (age 2) is a<br />

crazy man and keeps us all laughing.”<br />

Jamie Feinour writes: “A lot has happened over the past 12 years. I got<br />

married in 2002. Right after we got married, my husband and I decided to get<br />

out of dreaded upstate NY winters and migrated to sunny South Carolina. I<br />

started working for Novant Health, Presbyterian Hospital in Charlotte, NC,<br />

and have been working for the system ever since. I am currently the Manager of<br />

Business Operations and Regulatory Compliance for the Laboratory System<br />

in the Southern Piedmont region. The most recent surprise and blessing in our<br />

lives has been the birth of our beautiful daughter Addison. I cannot believe she<br />

is going to be 1 in November! How quickly time goes...before I know it, she<br />

will be attending <strong>Hartwick</strong>! Our spring trip this year caught us up with some<br />

friends from the ’Wick. Nicole Rozonewski Rezza ’99 and her adventurous<br />

son Nick joined us for a week of fun in Jensen Beach, FL. We took a day trip<br />

up to Orlando to visit Mickey Mouse. On our way back home we stopped in<br />

to visit Amy Sue Hermus Long ’99 and Scott Long and their three handsome<br />

boys. For our summer trip this year, we returned to Saratoga Springs, NY, to<br />

visit friends and family. We were able to meet up with Allison Brownell ’00<br />

and her boyfriend at the racetrack. It was great to spend time with some<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> friends that we have not seen in way too long. To finish the summer<br />

I graduated with my master’s in health administration. I have decided to take a<br />

semester off, but it will be back to the books in January to finish off my<br />

master’s in business administration.”<br />

Ekaterini Vlamis continues to work hard getting her new business up and<br />

running. She has made enhancements to the Web site including adding a<br />

picture gallery. Visit edgewoodcs.com to read all about Edgewood Consulting<br />

& Services, which offers private guided hikes, team-building programs,<br />

workshops, and more! Referrals are greatly appreciated...they are an ultimate<br />

compliment and truly the way Ekaterini prefers to gain clients and provide<br />

services to those in need of what she does best. You can become a fan of her<br />

business page on Facebook or contact her at ekaterini@edgewoodcs.com;<br />

she’d love to have your support and hear from you!<br />

1999<br />

Kristen Falk, hartwick99@yahoo.com<br />

Since fall is upon us—and for me fall is eternally associated with going back to<br />

school—leaves changing color, and the view from Oyaron Hill, I asked my<br />

classmates about their favorite <strong>Hartwick</strong> memories or their favorite things<br />

about returning to campus each year.<br />

Jenna Neale Aufiero had a beautiful baby girl on August 5, Sophia<br />

Marie Aufiero. “Everyone, including big sister Addison, is enjoying having her<br />

here. I saw all the girls at Mandy Harris’s ’00 wedding in October!”<br />

Kanchan Banga is currently enrolled at University of Central Florida’s<br />

Ph.D. program in public policy.<br />

Ellen Favata Barlow and Matt Barlow ’98 had a little boy, Jake, on<br />

August 10. “Now we have three boys and a girl. Also, Matt recently got<br />

promoted to Sergeant in the NYS Police and is working in Margaretville.”<br />

Bianca Bernardo writes, “I had a great summer, which included trips to<br />

37


CLASS NOTES<br />

CA and ME. I enjoyed Shana Maddicks’ wedding in September and Mandy<br />

Harris’ ’00 wedding in October. My first ’Wick memories: the lavender hat, all<br />

the steps to class, how hard pre-season really was. The things I looked forward<br />

to coming back to: the freedom to do whatever I wanted, field hockey, and<br />

AOPi.”<br />

Tony Brogna recently got married to the fabulous Dr. Emelia Parker<br />

(Brogna), Simmons <strong>College</strong> ’04,’07. “We were ecstatic to have alumni in<br />

attendance: Paul Lynch ’98, Tim Fadden ’98, Andy DeLuca, Kyle Tipson ’00,<br />

and Josh ’99 and Aniece (Sukovaty) Collins ’00. After many years in Boston,<br />

we are living happily in Burlington, VT, hatching our plans for world<br />

domination.”<br />

The adventure never ceases with Geno Carr. “My wife Nancy and I were<br />

both invited to serve on the faculty for the Fall 2010 Semester at Sea voyage,<br />

which left from Halifax, Nova Scotia and ends in San Diego, CA. We’re<br />

teaching courses in musical theatre, theatre, and comedy for the floating<br />

university and stopping at amazing ports all across the globe. As I write this,<br />

we are on our way from Takoradi, Ghana to our next port, Cape Town, South<br />

Africa. Yesterday we all became Emerald Shellbacks, meaning we crossed the<br />

Equator and the Prime Meridian at the same time. Who gets to do that?! We<br />

really enjoying teaching on the ship and we’re learning so much every day from<br />

all of our fellow voyagers (faculty, staff, and students alike). We’re trying to<br />

enjoy every minute of this amazing adventure, although we must admit we<br />

miss family, friends, and Clara (our puggle) back home. We end our journey by<br />

docking in San Diego December 13, so we’re pretty lucky to basically be<br />

dropped off at our doorstep! Feel free to check out our adventures via our blog:<br />

http://www.offexploring.com/nancyandgenocarr.”<br />

Kristen Falk cannot think of anything to follow Geno’s Semester at Sea<br />

voyage! However, Kristen’s birthday was on 10/10/10 this year, and it was<br />

quite a celebration at 10:10:10 (twice) to have such a marvelous celebration of<br />

numbers! Happy Birthday to fellow Libra Kanchan Banga, who shares the<br />

same birthday! The reason we know that is because during MetroLink<br />

orientation junior year, we had to organize ourselves and line up by our<br />

birthdays. “My first <strong>Hartwick</strong> memories include pre-season volleyball, the<br />

realization that I was attending a college built on the side of a hill, and giving<br />

thanks that I lived in Smith and my first classes of the day were in Miller. The<br />

biggest reason I came back to campus each year was WRHO (though I worked<br />

on campus each summer so I never really left). Other than that, I started a new<br />

research position at Oregon State University this fall, doing chemical analyses<br />

of the non-structural carbohydrate contents of Douglas Fir. Goodbye<br />

cellulose, hello fructose/glucose/sucrose/starch!”<br />

Danielle Quilligan Fochs took a week-long trip to NY the end of May<br />

for Karen Fish’s ’01 wedding to John Burke. She also made it up to Oneonta<br />

the weekend before the wedding for the TKE Clambake. She was able to cram<br />

in a Yankee game, a Broadway show, a trip to the beach and a baby shower for<br />

Jen Strekas-Coombs ’01 into the rest of her East Coast trip! “Before my trip,<br />

I entered some of my roses in the American Rose Society District Convention<br />

here in Tucson and won Best in Show Photography, the Trophy for Best<br />

Novice Hybrid Tea Rose and also the District Certificate for best Miniature<br />

Rose. You can view some of my entries at http://www.pswdphotography.com/<br />

winners.html#2010tucson. My rose garden continues to grow! I am now up<br />

to 25 bushes and looking forward to the next show! We are planning a family<br />

trip to Disneyland in July for my daughter Taylor’s 5th birthday. My daughter<br />

Kaitlyn keeps yelling ‘Yea Disneyland!’ and throwing her hands in the air at any<br />

opportunity. She loves Tinkerbell and is more excited than Taylor for our trip!”<br />

Gayle Huntress remembers: “My first <strong>Hartwick</strong> memory was arriving as a<br />

freshman for the first day of Awakening and meeting Jonathan Wood on the<br />

lawn outside of Anderson for a group name game. I think it involved tossing a<br />

rubber chicken. Fifteen years of friendship later, I can still remember his<br />

name!”<br />

Kimberly Hurlbut is living in Syracuse and working for the state of NY.<br />

She visited <strong>Hartwick</strong> last summer and noted: “It was very strange after so<br />

many years. Some things looked the same, but so many things looked<br />

different. There were some kids walking around campus and looking at me and<br />

my friend pretty funny since we were taking pictures...but it was just amazing.”<br />

Kate (Warner) and Joe Johnson report: “It was really hot here this<br />

summer but the weather has started to cool and it is beginning to feel like what<br />

passes for fall here in Texas. Fall is the start of the busy season for us, the kids<br />

are back to school and their activities are starting up again, filling the family<br />

calendar with events, meetings, etc. The kids are growing up so fast. Beth is in<br />

2nd grade, Jessica is in 1st. Beth tells everyone she sees that she wants to be an<br />

entomologist when she grows up. I am in the process of changing jobs again. I<br />

am going to be working as a case manager at North Austin Medical Center. I<br />

am excited about this change. I even got a week off and had a chance to spend<br />

some time relaxing with Aaron, our 3-year-old. I still have about a year left<br />

before I’ll finish my master’s degree. Joe and I had fun this summer<br />

participating in a marriage group at our church and teaching Sunday school.”<br />

Some exciting news from Nick Miles: He and his family recently had their<br />

visas approved and returned to the U.S. at the end of October! Nick is on a<br />

three-year visa, where he will continue to work for JPMorgan in their Delaware<br />

office. They hope to be visiting <strong>Hartwick</strong> with increased frequency.<br />

Kathleen Brennan Mills recounts this <strong>Hartwick</strong> memory, from her<br />

Awakening ’99 experience in August 1995: “Some time during the week, our<br />

group went orienteering somewhere not too far from Pine Lake. The van<br />

dropped us off and we were ready with our maps and compasses. We were<br />

ready for a fun hike in the woods and we set off. Several hours later it dawned<br />

on one of our facilitators (Kelly Oxton Murray ’98) that we were dropped off<br />

in the wrong spot and we really had no idea where we were. After many more<br />

miles we did end up finding a road and making our way back to Pine Lake. It<br />

was an adventure to say the least!” Kathleen enjoyed celebrating Ann<br />

Whittaker’s marriage with <strong>Hartwick</strong> friends.<br />

Patricia Tiller Mitchel and husband Mike just moved into their new<br />

home in Maryland. Their two beagles finally have a yard and tons of stuff to<br />

sniff. Patty and Mike are enjoying the fun of taking down wallpaper and<br />

planting flowers. Patty writes, “My position as Head of U.S. Research at<br />

RiskMetrics Group is going great...but not as great as it will be if the Yankees<br />

repeat this October. Go Yanks!”<br />

Kevin Stube got married in October 2009. His and wife Jessica<br />

(Oklahoma University) and are both enjoying their jobs at NASA. Kevin is a<br />

project analyst for more than 50 projects and Jessica is the New Media<br />

Specialist working on creating a framework for participatory exploration and<br />

improving how NASA reaches out to the public. They bought their first house<br />

in April and Kevin is half way through his MBA.<br />

38


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2000<br />

Kristen Hall, hartwick2000@yahoo.com<br />

Kristen Hall writes: “I just left alumni weekend, where I had an absolute<br />

blast! It was so good seeing friends and being able to catch up (without<br />

resorting to Facebook) as well as meeting children and having a birthday party<br />

for a 2-year-old at the rock garden (formerly Arnold Hall). I will admit to<br />

feeling my calves today after walking up and down the hill yesterday! I am<br />

enjoying my new job as a Physician Assistant in Bangor, ME. I am working on<br />

the surgery and trauma service, learning tons and trying to find my way<br />

around eastern Maine. Also, I am going to be taking over the class notes again;<br />

thank you to Charlie Catania for taking it over while I was in school.”<br />

Dana Rothenberger Faulconer announces: “Jason and I have been<br />

enjoying the past few months soaking up every moment with our daughter<br />

Reese who was born this past March. Reese has met so many <strong>Hartwick</strong> babies<br />

already, and we are excited to take her to her first <strong>Hartwick</strong> swim meet this<br />

winter to cheer on the team and the coach, Grandpop to her!”<br />

Marnie Kommalan writes: “I live in Baltimore and work for The<br />

University of Maryland Medical Center. I am the Charge Nurse in the<br />

operating rooms and manage a four-OR unit. University of Maryland also<br />

includes The Shock Trauma Center and in April through STC, I was able to<br />

go to Haiti and help with long-term medical and surgical support in the<br />

aftermath of the January earthquake. I spent nine days operating in a hospital<br />

in Port-au-Prince and got to experience firsthand the devastation in that<br />

country. It was one of the most powerful and rewarding experiences I have had<br />

in the past 10 years.”<br />

Chris Laidlaw and wife Allison welcomed a baby girl, Callie Genevieve,<br />

on March 24.<br />

Ginneh Lewis teaches high school earth science, biology, and chemistry in<br />

Denver, CO.<br />

Edith Newberry and John Fogarty were married August 14, 2010 in<br />

Lyme, NH. In July they bought their first house in Newbury, VT. Edith is<br />

teaching 7th and 8th grade social studies in Windsor, VT, where she has<br />

worked for the past three years.<br />

Laura Fitter Walker writes: “We now have a boy, Ayden, and a girl,<br />

Maddi. They are such a blessing! I have taken on a Director of Rehab position<br />

at a skilled nursing/short-term rehab facility, which is very time consuming but<br />

a good challenge. We are still living outside of Cincinnati and loving it.”<br />

2001 | 10th Reunion<br />

Jessica Hyde, jessicahyde@yahoo.com<br />

Jessica Hyde continues to toil away as a civil servant in Jefferson County,<br />

NY, and has been painstakingly chronicling the rise of prescription and illicit<br />

drug misuse and associated inadequate guardianship involving the county’s<br />

children. She is finally starting the First Time Homeowner Quest after<br />

copious procrastination and plans to own a sweet bachelorette pad before the<br />

end of the year. House guests will be welcome on a first-come, first-served<br />

basis.<br />

Shawn August writes: “Time is flying by! Crystal and I are finalizing our<br />

wedding plans. We are getting married in May 2011 in Bronxville, NY, and<br />

then off to Italia for three weeks. I didn’t realize how many details go into<br />

planning a wedding. It’s ridiculous. I lost about 65 pounds so I should not<br />

look too long in the tooth. Other than that, work.”<br />

Dave Olsher is completing his first year as an employee for a small<br />

independent fiber arts company called The Sanguine Gryphon, where he is the<br />

mill liaison as well as a wool and silk dyer. In addition, Dave was the<br />

Entertainment Coordinator for the Maryland Faerie Festival and a Stage<br />

Manager for the Maryland Renaissance Festival. He still enjoys his adventures<br />

in Charm City.<br />

Sarah MacDonald married Sean Browne August 27 in Boston. Karen<br />

Fish Burke, Erika Lowe Dube, and Kim Treacy Kaplowitz joined Sarah on the<br />

dance floor to commemorate old times. Sarah and Sean live in Dedham, MA,<br />

and look forward to seeing everyone at next year’s Class of 2001 10 year<br />

reunion!<br />

Art Schouten writes: “2010 has been a crazy, hectic, fun-filled year. My son<br />

Jacob Rudolph (Rudy) was born February 15. Shortly thereafter, I was<br />

promoted to Lead Instructional Technology Specialist for Orange-Ulster<br />

BOCES overseeing 17 component school districts and three divisions within<br />

BOCES. I am completing my second master’s in educational administration<br />

and will graduate from SUNY New Paltz in May. If that wasn’t enough, my<br />

wife Cathy Gibbons (SUNY Cobleskill ’07) and I married on August 29,<br />

2010 with Karen Fish, Jim Archer ’00, Rob Mancini ’05, and Brett<br />

Schillkraut ’95 in attendance. I was elected president of the Tau Kappa Epsilon<br />

Alumni Association in October.<br />

Jennifer Strekas Coombs and Josh Coombs welcomed a beautiful baby<br />

girl, Cadence Grace Coombs, into the world August 23. “We still live in<br />

Alabama, so we hope to introduce her to all her Wick aunties (Sarah<br />

MacDonald, Karen Fish, Kim Kaplowitz, Erika Lowe, Danielle Fochs, and<br />

Natalie Hatch) at the 10 year reunion if not before!”<br />

Scott Alberts has founded a 1860s-rules base ball team called the Athletic<br />

Base Ball Club of Philadelphia. “We compete in reproduction historical<br />

uniforms against other like-minded teams on the East Coast. Jonathan Palma<br />

is our MVP and Lawrence George ’99 is a regular supporter at our home<br />

games.”<br />

Natalie Evans Hatch just had her fourth child, Braden, a little boy who is<br />

so sweet and fun! “We are enjoying our kids and spent the summer developing<br />

my husband’s new business in the outdoor sports industry. We are hoping to<br />

get back East for a visit soon!”<br />

Karen Fish became Karen Fish Burke on May 23, 2010 in a wedding<br />

attended by many alumni. The groom, John Burke, had to endure the<br />

throwback fun at a party attended by Sarah MacDonald, Erika Lowe Dube,<br />

Meaghan Fitzgibbon Quilop, Jennifer Strekas Coombs, Art Schouten,and<br />

Kimberly Treacy Kaplowitz, and from the Class of 1999, Danielle Quilligan<br />

Fochs, Greg Quilop,andForrest Lewandowski. “As newlyweds we’re happily<br />

living in Boston with our dog Belle and contemplating the house-buying<br />

process as the next adult step. On a side note, I am excited to hear of the births<br />

of Cameron Cardarelli to Alex ’02 and wife Kelly, and Rudy Schouten to Art<br />

and Cathy.”<br />

39


CLASS NOTES<br />

Peter Hazelton is still in Athens, GA, “almost two years into my Ph.D. in<br />

aquatic toxicology. During the time spent away from my lab, my wife Angela<br />

Cote ’02 and I are busy renovating our house and trying to enjoy the Georgia<br />

summer heat.”<br />

Christopher Marlatt writes: “I live in Humboldt County in NC working<br />

as a program director for North Coast Adventure Centers.” Here’s a fantastic<br />

blurb from his company, which makes me miss Pine Lake and the PA ropes<br />

course (and Topher): With over 11 years in the experiential education field,<br />

Topher Marlatt has established a career teaching in the outdoors. Topher has<br />

worked as a wilderness guide, a conservationist, an environmental educator,<br />

and a challenge course technician. “I strive to teach in a manner that transcends<br />

the boundaries of the typical classroom to help others retain knowledge<br />

through employing a variety of teaching methods in a mixture of settings.”<br />

Topher directs operations for North Coast Adventure Centers Ropes<br />

Courses, Leave No Trace program, Portable Climbing Wall, Leads Canopy<br />

Tours, and is diligently planning an Adventure Expedition to Thailand.<br />

Erica Popick had a blast with West Coaster Luke Moyer ’00 and reminded<br />

him about how great the East Coast is. Erica recently convinced another West<br />

Coaster to come out East and is now engaged to Gregor Kevrekian from<br />

Eugene, OR. Erica and Gregor are happy with their baby (dog, not human)<br />

who arrived this summer.<br />

Daniel Wagoner writes: “My wife and I traveled to the Faroe Islands, which<br />

is a territory of Denmark between Scotland and Iceland. It’s a great place to go<br />

if you like to hike and fish. It’s really like you are visiting the end of the earth.<br />

The British who were stationed there in WWII called it the land of maybe due<br />

to the rugged terrain and unpredictable weather, which made it impossible to<br />

make formal dinner/visitation plans. The islanders frequently noted that the<br />

islands are the only place on the earth that can have all four seasons in one day.<br />

Check out my pictures on Facebook.”<br />

Jieun Yoo reports: “My husband Mike Bruny ’99 and I are living a very busy<br />

life. I still work at Lord and Taylor in Natick, MA, managing cosmetics and<br />

sportswear. I love what I do and it’s hard to believe it’s already been five years<br />

since I started there. I also started my MBA in March at Babson <strong>College</strong>.<br />

Balancing work, school, and family has been challenging, but I am so blessed to<br />

have a husband who supports me. Emmanuelle Klossou ’03 visited us for a few<br />

weeks; she’ll be moving to Washington, DC, with Doris Dupuy ’04 soon. I<br />

wish her good luck on finishing her Ph.D.”<br />

2002<br />

Meredith Robbins, meredithrbbns@yahoo.com<br />

2003<br />

Erin Rowe brahms, drowe214@hotmail.com<br />

Thanks to all the alumni who contributed notes for this edition of the ’Wick!<br />

2010 has been an exciting year so far for me as I got married in the<br />

Adirondacks on August 21, 2010. Kathryn O’Connell Cleary was matron of<br />

honor and former <strong>Hartwick</strong> RA Syrah Porter Nicasse was also in attendance.<br />

Tyler Case writes: “Life certainly has been busy lately! I recently received my<br />

master’s in Public Administration from SUNY Binghamton, accepted a new<br />

position as Workforce Coordinator for The Resource Center (Chautauqua<br />

Ashley Kern ’07 and Eric Schell ’07 were married August 7, 2010 in Freeport,<br />

ME. Joining the newlyweds are Jason Musselman ’08, Chris Schell ’10, Sheileen<br />

Nicholson ’07, Becca Landers ’12, Mariel Gross ’07, Katie Morelli ’08, Becky<br />

Salamone Jones ’07, Cait Kennett ’07, Andrea Brush ’08, Emily Lapayowker ’08,<br />

Sara Goto ’06, Paige Griffiths Sears ’07, Susan Stone Schell ’76, Linda Schell<br />

Marks ’72, Carl Schell ’76, Owen Landrey ’06, Joe Flaherty ’07, Dave Plossl ’05,<br />

Dan Johnson ’08, Loren Sullivan ’06, Ryan Jones ’07, Kerry Spring Boyd ’07,<br />

Cameron Boyd ’04, Matt Corbett ’04, and Ian Sears ’07.<br />

County Chapter of NYSARC), and bought a house in Jamestown, NY. Hope<br />

all is well with everyone!”<br />

Renee Tasney Cummings and husband Chris are expecting their first<br />

baby (a girl) in February 2011.<br />

The Maloney family welcomed their second child, Molly May, on August<br />

22. She is joined by brother Maximus. They are living just outside of Boston<br />

and enjoying their growing family. Ryan works for Salary.com selling global<br />

compensation data/surveys and Blair ’04 also works in sales for PlatformQ<br />

selling virtual college fair memberships. Everyone is healthy, happy, and proud<br />

to be <strong>Hartwick</strong> alumni.<br />

Kate Austin (now Kate Austin-Avon) married Cory Avon June 19, 2010,<br />

and honeymooned in Negril, Jamaica. It was awesome! She is in the process of<br />

starting up her own business, Advokate, doing promotions and “honey-do”<br />

type work for artists. She also has been made Community Coordinator of The<br />

Shirt Factory, a converted factory in Glens Falls, NY, that houses artists’<br />

studios, shops, and galleries. Kate also has a studio in the building where she<br />

does her mixed-media work. Visit kateaustinavon.net.<br />

Larissa Wasyl and Dennis Bates (Manhattan <strong>College</strong> ’03) became<br />

engaged on May 20, 2010 during their vacation on the Mayan Riviera in<br />

Mexico. Larissa has asked Meghan DuBois O’Connor to be her matron of<br />

honor. A wedding date is set for June 17, 2011 in Saratoga Springs, NY.<br />

2004<br />

Bry Anderson, bryanna.anderson@uconn.edu<br />

Kate Bachner will receive her second M.A. from the Monterey Institute of<br />

International Studies, where she specialized in Russian and nuclear<br />

40


nonproliferation. She attended the United Nations Conference on<br />

Disarmament, Geneva, working on nuclear nonproliferation and disarmament<br />

issues. During the summer she began work at the Department of Energy/<br />

National Nuclear Security Administration, assisting in cooperative efforts to<br />

manage weapons usable nuclear material in Russia and other former Soviet<br />

states.<br />

Margaret Warren Cohn reports: “My husband and I welcomed our little<br />

girl, Grace Eugenia, on March 8, 2010. We’ve been trying to soak it all in, as<br />

she’s growing so fast. All is well otherwise and we are enjoying our new role as<br />

parents!”<br />

Chris Cooper and Erika Seery (Manhattanville ’06) were married at St.<br />

Josephs Church in Hewlett, NY, and partied all night at Fox Hollow in<br />

Woodbury. In attendance were Zach Sanzone ’04, Eric Davis ’05, Dustin<br />

Wickseel ’05, Mikey Tegart ’06, and Mary Cardello ’06. Oh and most<br />

importantly Mr. Met.<br />

Charles Coulon still lives in Chicago's western suburbs and works in the<br />

ever-busy corporate relocation field. Besides enjoying a busy personal travel<br />

schedule in 2010, he has been actively involved with the Alliance Francaise, a<br />

non-profit French educational centers network, and planned the annual<br />

conference in New Orleans in October 2010. “Bonjour to all!”<br />

Meleia Egger is traveling in India making her way back to the U.S. after her<br />

two years in the Peace Corps in Malawi. She hopes all Pine Lakers are happy<br />

and peaceful.<br />

On December 14, 2009, Megan Tweedie Eklund and husband Jim<br />

became the proud parents of a beautiful baby girl, Lillian Bailey. Despite being<br />

three weeks early, Lillian weighed in at over six pounds. Margaret Warren<br />

Cohn, Amber Benge VanEtten ’03, and uncle Nathan Tweedie ’09 were<br />

among the many visitors welcoming Lillian into the world!<br />

Keri Holloway Evans had her second son on December 11, 2009. His<br />

name is Jadon Fisher Evans.<br />

Sara Gorsky married Christian Lokossou on June 5, 2010 in Glenn Dale,<br />

MD. Bryan Clutz, Alison Sulock, and Adam Travis joined the celebration.<br />

Josh Jennings and Fallon Dion were married July 2, 2010 at Christ the<br />

King Church in Albany with a reception following at Albany Country Club.<br />

Fallon is a graduate of the SUNY Oneonta (’07). She earned her master’s in<br />

literacy from the State University at Albany, and teaches 7th and 8th grade<br />

Spanish at Cohoes Middle School. Josh earned his master’s from The <strong>College</strong><br />

of Saint Rose, where he is the Assistant Sports Information Director and<br />

Head Men’s Golf Coach.<br />

Julie Landmann moved back to CA last January and lives in Sacramento.<br />

“Still working for PricewaterhouseCoopers. Miss living on the East Coast, but<br />

loving being back in CA!”<br />

Alexis Mays-Fields continues to work as an Inclusion Specialist in<br />

Washington, DC. She is excited to be completing her first year of marriage to<br />

her soul mate, Nathaniel Fields. She has been doing some minor traveling and<br />

spending time with her niece, Madison, and new nephew, Kaleb.<br />

Carolanne Bucicchia Mazur and her husband are the parents of a son,<br />

born in August.<br />

Emily Reynolds Stringer lives in San Antonio, TX, where her husband is<br />

doing his first year as a surgical resident and she is freelance writing as well as<br />

being a mom to Lilah, with another little one on the way in March!<br />

Audrey Lohse and Miguel Vargas ’03 were married in May 2009 in<br />

Porterville, CA. They had an amazing time and great <strong>Hartwick</strong> turnout!<br />

Clarence Welch is still living in Ithaca, NY, and was promoted in June<br />

2009. He remains at the Johnson School at Cornell University. His new<br />

position is Assistant Director in the Office of Diversity and Inclusion and it is<br />

going very well!<br />

2005<br />

Edwin Siegfried, edwin.siegfried@gmail.com<br />

Elizabeth Morris Cook and Jonathan Cook welcomed their first child,<br />

Claire Elizabeth, on March 1, 2010.<br />

2006 | 5th Reunion<br />

Brian Knox, brian.j.knox@gmail.com<br />

Florence Alila, fakoth@hotmail.com<br />

Jayne Donovan writes: “I received my medical doctorate degree this past<br />

May from the University of Connecticut School of Medicine. I am completing<br />

a preliminary year in Internal Medicine at the University of Connecticut and<br />

will be moving to Boston next year for my residency training in Physical<br />

Medicine and Rehabilitation at Spaulding/Harvard University.”<br />

Daryl Thompson proposed to his girlfriend, Vanessa Croft, in February<br />

on the island of Anguilla, where they currently live. He runs his own custom<br />

engraving business, Alloyd Enterprises Ltd. (alloyds.com), and graphic design<br />

company, DCT Designs (dct-designs.com). In early 2009, the second painting<br />

in his Anguilla Cottage series was chosen to be featured on the EC$1.50<br />

stamp for the country of Anguilla. More of his work can be seen on<br />

darylcthompson.com. Daryl also is an assistant tennis professional at the<br />

Anguilla Tennis Academy. He plans to be wed on July 23, 2011.<br />

2007<br />

Ashley Kern and Eric Schell were married August 7, 2010 in Freeport, ME.<br />

2008<br />

Nicole Barren-Audette is a Peace Corps volunteer in a small village in the<br />

Northern Province of Zambia (Southern Africa). “My biggest project now is<br />

trying to construct a school building for a pre-school for orphans and<br />

vulnerable children.”<br />

Ryan and Sarah (Clark ’07) Quarles announce the birth of their first<br />

child, Paul Harrison Quarles, on August 24, 2010. Ryan is in rotations for<br />

medical school and Sarah is taking time to raise their baby boy.<br />

41


IN MEMORIAM<br />

1934 | Vivian Cronk McCandlish, 97, of Glen Rock, NJ, died August<br />

10, 2010. She lived in Florida for 30 years prior to her final move to Glen<br />

Rock in 2000. Vivian was a member of the Daughters of the American<br />

Revolution. An avid bridge player, she enjoyed visiting and remaining in touch<br />

with her beloved friends from Delaware County, NY. Vivian was predeceased<br />

by her husband, Fred, in 1998.<br />

1936 | Nella Hughes, 95, of Oneonta, NY, died August 2, 2010. Living<br />

in Oneonta all her adult life, Nella worked many years at Bresee’s Department<br />

Store as a sales associate. She enjoyed and was an expert at knitting, crocheting,<br />

embroidering, and sewing. She was a longtime member of the First United<br />

Methodist Church of Oneonta. Nella was the greatest grandmother anyone<br />

could ask for. She loved traveling throughout the U.S., visiting her<br />

grandchildren. Family was her life; she instilled in them the importance of<br />

Sunday dinners, a tradition that they still carry on. She loved the many family<br />

gatherings, especially those at the holidays. Survivors include her children, Joan<br />

Duckwall ’60 and Roger Hughes ’68; eight grandchildren; 18 greatgrandchildren;<br />

sister and brother-in-law Doris ’49 and Donald ’64 Filkins;<br />

sister Pat Weissman ’57; and sister Elva Kroeger ’55. She was predeceased by<br />

her son.<br />

1946 | Donald Haight, 89, died peacefully July 16, 2010, at his home in<br />

Davenport, NY. After Don and Kathleen married in 1942, Don was called to<br />

active duty in the United States Army. He served in Torrington, England,<br />

before entering the second wave of the Normandy Invasion of 1944,<br />

culminating in the Battle of the Bulge. While on the final drive through<br />

Europe, Don was a member of a heavy artillery unit responsible for the aiming<br />

and firing of the famous “Long Tom” guns, where he decoded logistical<br />

instructions sent from the central command unit. After the war, Don returned<br />

to New York and completed his bachelor’s degree at <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>. He<br />

then earned his master’s from Columbia University. Don started his teaching<br />

career at A.L. Kellogg Central School in Treadwell. In 1949, Don accepted a<br />

position as a social studies teacher at Charlotte Valley Central School. He was<br />

promoted to supervising principal and superintendent, a position he held until<br />

his retirement in 1973. Throughout his life, Don was proud to serve his<br />

community in many volunteer capacities. He held leadership positions in the<br />

Davenport Historical Society and was an active member of the Davenport<br />

Methodist Church. He also played an integral role in the creation of the Bus<br />

Driver Education Program at his beloved Charlotte Valley School, and coached<br />

Little League for many years. Don was a lifelong Yankees fan who would stay<br />

up to any hour to hear the conclusion of games. Don embodied exceptional<br />

core values centered around family, education, athletics, and most importantly<br />

equality. He was a lifelong educator and community servant, always taking the<br />

time listen to others and carefully explain his political, historical, and<br />

educational perspectives. Known for their dedication to their family, Don and<br />

Kathleen would travel all over New York State to watch their grandchildren<br />

participate in athletics and musical events. In his retirement, Don took up<br />

golfing and was proud to have scored a hole-in-one at CJ’s golf course in 1995.<br />

Survivors include his loving wife of 67 years, Kathleen; four children; seven<br />

grandchildren, including Seth Haight ’96; and five great-grandchildren. He<br />

was predeceased by his grandson Collin Haight.<br />

1946 | Elma Wallace Howey, 86, of Inverness, FL, died June 17, 2010.<br />

A member of <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s Nurse Cadet Corps, she graduated with her<br />

registered nurse degree. She was employed at Milton Memorial Hospital in<br />

Newton, NJ, for many years. She was a member and past president of the<br />

Ladies Auxiliary of Blue Ridge Rescue Squad in Branchville. Elma was a<br />

member and past regent of Chinkchewunska DAR and member of the<br />

Presbyterian Church of Branchville. Survivors include her husband Kenneth,<br />

five sons, two stepdaughters, and eight grandchildren.<br />

1947 | Marie Zacaroli Mayberry, of Pittsford, NY, died August 11,<br />

2010. She was in one of the last classes of the Cadet Nurse Corps at <strong>Hartwick</strong>.<br />

Marie had a can-do attitude and wonderful leadership qualities. Survivors<br />

include her husband of 62 years, Harold; two sons, including Richard<br />

Mayberry ’72, Esq.; one daughter; three grandchildren; and one greatgranddaughter.<br />

1948 | Isabelle Leavitt Swartz, 83, of Delmar, NY, died April 30,<br />

2010. She served in the Cadet Nurse Corps during World War II. Liz worked<br />

as an RN at Albany Medical Center in labor and delivery most of her nursing<br />

career. Beloved wife of the late Donald Swartz, M.D., they traveled the world<br />

together. Survivors include her daughter, stepchildren, grandchildren, and<br />

great-grandson.<br />

1952 | Kenneth DeBevoise, 87, of Clinton Township, NJ, died October<br />

6, 2010. A graduate of the New York State Maritime Academy, he served<br />

during World War II as an Engineering Officer in the United States Maritime<br />

Service. Upon graduation from <strong>Hartwick</strong>, he married Francine (Franke)<br />

Pidgeon ’51 and relocated to Bogota, NJ. He joined the New Jersey Bell<br />

Telephone in 1952. During a 30-year career with NJ Bell and AT&T he held<br />

positions with business management, public relations, and rates management.<br />

He retired from AT&T in 1982. Kenneth served as vice president of the<br />

Bogota Board of Education in the early 1970s. He is survived by his wife of 58<br />

years, Franke, and their family.<br />

1952 | James Peters, 82, of Jamestown, NY, died June 14, 2010. James<br />

enlisted at the end of World War II and served 18 months. His tour included<br />

an assignment in the Tokyo compound of Supreme Post-War Commander in<br />

Japan Gen. Douglas MacArthur. Thanks to the G.I. Bill, he graduated from<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> with a degree in business. Jim will be remembered for his warm wit,<br />

jokes, and wry sense of humor. He loved his family and enjoyed his time with<br />

his grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Jim’s jobs included working on his<br />

family’s farm; as an insurance salesman; as an investment broker at Goodbody<br />

and Company, later Merrill Lynch. He married the vision of his youth and is<br />

survived by his wife of 58 years, Barbara; two sons; and one daughter.<br />

1954 | Robert Ross, 81, of Vestal, NY, died July 9, 2010. Bob joined the<br />

U.S. Air Force and served three years. He received his teaching degree from<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> and Albany University. He taught science for 34 years at<br />

Vestal Central Schools. Bob held various positions in the Vestal Teachers<br />

Association, including chief negotiator and president. He also was president of<br />

the Southern Zone of NYSTA. He was on the Board of Directors for NEA for<br />

10 years. Bob retired from teaching in 1988; he then became an active member<br />

of the NYS Retired Teachers Association, serving as a delegate. Bob’s favorite<br />

pastime was golf and rooting for the Yankees and the Giants. Survivors include<br />

his wife of 53 years, Joan ’55, and their family.<br />

1972 | William Puotinen, 61, of Schoharie, NY, died June 29, 2010 at<br />

his residence following a long illness. Bill received his master’s in 18th century<br />

English literature from Oneonta State. For the past 25 years, Bill has worked<br />

at Northeast Parent and Child Society in Schenectady, holding various<br />

positions including vice president of human services, director of operations,<br />

and finance manager until the onset of his illness. Bill served on the Board of<br />

Directors for Catholic Charities in Schenectady, and was a member of the<br />

Society for American Baseball Research. Bill volunteered with Northeast<br />

Parent and Child throughout the years and was an avid Yankees fan his entire<br />

life. Survivors include his wife of 37 years, Margaret, and their family.<br />

1981 | Mary Ann Ambelas Lunn, 51, of Norwell, MA, died<br />

September 1, 2010, at home after an eight-year struggle with colon cancer. She<br />

graduated cum laude from <strong>Hartwick</strong> before working as an RN in various<br />

Boston hospitals. Survivors include her husband.<br />

Honorary Degree | William Rittberger H’84, 80, of Albany, NY,<br />

died July 4, 2010. Rev. Rittberger’s ministry started in 1955, when he was<br />

42


called to organize St. John’s Lutheran Church in Burlington. In 1958, he was<br />

called to serve at St. John’s Lutheran Church in Hudson, until 1965, when he<br />

was called to the First Lutheran Church in Albany. He retired from active<br />

ministry in July 1991. He received an honorary doctor of divinity degree from<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> in May 1984. Survivors include his beloved wife of 57 years,<br />

Joan, and one daughter.<br />

Faculty Emeritus | Terrance Fitz-Henry, 70, of Oneonta, NY, died<br />

September 22, 2010 in Lincoln, NH. Terry graduated from Reed <strong>College</strong> on<br />

full scholarship. He attended Portland State University, OR, and received his<br />

master’s from the University of California, Santa Barbara. While completing<br />

his graduate work he taught at Laguna Blanca School in Santa Barbara. He<br />

then taught at the International People’s <strong>College</strong> in Elsinore, Denmark, where<br />

he also directed theatre. He began his career at <strong>Hartwick</strong> in 1970, where he<br />

taught theatre and courses that included but were not limited to Chaucer, Old<br />

English, Composition, Oral Interpretation, Beowulf, William Blake, and<br />

Shakespeare. In the early 1970s, he founded a repertory company, the World<br />

Stage Players, which was composed of <strong>Hartwick</strong> graduates and students. Terry<br />

directed several plays, including “The Taming of the Shrew” and “Hamlet.”<br />

More recently he worked with colleagues to produce unique programs such as<br />

“Oiseaux Exotiques.” He led many programs abroad, taking students to<br />

England, Spain, Ireland, and Thailand. In the late 1990s, he taught at the Sara<br />

Mei Institute (monastery) in India, teaching English to the young monks.<br />

Students who signed up for his courses were endlessly surprised as he would<br />

take them to the apple orchards, the John Burroughs house in Roxbury, the<br />

Cloisters in New York City, and down the hill on campus to watch the gingko<br />

tree turn yellow. He taught adult education courses through the Elderhostel<br />

program and literature seminars for business executives. Terry retired from<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> in 2001. Since retirement he has been involved in the Center for<br />

Continuing Adult <strong>Learning</strong>, served as an elder at the First United Presbyterian<br />

Church, acted in the Snark & Bandersnatch readers’ theatre, and performed<br />

the role of Herr Drosselmeyer in a local production of the Nutcracker. Terry<br />

was incomparable. His varied interests kept his family and friends guessing. He<br />

was kind, gentle, and a lover of all people and things. He could be satisfied<br />

eating a can of sardines or feasting on a gourmet meal. He took great pleasure<br />

in raising his children, teaching, and in nature. He was an artist, writer, chef,<br />

carpenter, dancer, scholar, adventurer, plumber, avid reader, musician,<br />

wonderful listener, counselor, naturalist, dramatist, toy maker, teacher, mentor,<br />

luthier, dreamer, risk-taker, orator, alchemist, house painter, caretaker,<br />

puppeteer, environmentalist, innovator, automotive body repairer, visionary,<br />

motorcyclist, traveler. Survivors include his wife, Nadine Stenson; two<br />

daughters, including Kate Fitz-Henry; one son; and two stepsons, Chris<br />

Carvin ’94 and Cuyle Carvin ’03. He also is survived by his precious<br />

granddaughter. Contributions can be made to the Terry Fitz-Henry Memorial<br />

Fund, attention Ms. Alicia Fish, <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>, Oneonta, NY 13820.<br />

Gifts to the fund will support the library and Theatre Arts Department.<br />

Former Administrator | Arthur Knauss, 79, of Bluffton, SC, died<br />

September 20, 2010. Art was the vice president and account executive at<br />

BBDO and SSC&B advertising in New York for 22 years. He moved to<br />

Laurens in 1976 to work at <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> for the next 20 years. He was<br />

vice president of operations at <strong>Hartwick</strong> when he retired. A member of the<br />

Oneonta Country Club, Art served on the Board of A.O. Fox Memorial<br />

Hospital until 1998. His wife of 50 years, Sally Halpin, predeceased him in<br />

2006. Survivors include his son, daughter, and five granddaughters.<br />

Former Administrator | John Muyskens Jr., 88, of Cambridge, MA,<br />

died June 8, 2010. John was a veteran of World War II, serving as a first<br />

lieutenant in the U.S. Navy. John was a leader in undergraduate college<br />

admissions in a career that spanned half a century. A graduate of Colgate, John<br />

served <strong>Hartwick</strong> as Dean of Admissions. As a member of the senior<br />

admissions staff at multiple institutions of higher education, John championed<br />

“radical” and innovative admissions policies. Serving academic institutions<br />

during times of significant social changes, he was always a champion of social<br />

justice and educational equality. His love of people was surpassed only by his<br />

love for college admissions. John enthusiastically embraced the mission of<br />

helping young people find an institution through which they shaped their lives<br />

and developed their passion for learning. Survivors include his large and loving<br />

family.<br />

Friend | Esther Bresee, 99, of Oneonta, NY, died October 4, 2010. She<br />

graduated from the State Normal School in 1931, after which she taught<br />

school on Long Island. In 1935, she married Wilmer Bresee H’90, Trustee<br />

Emeritus, who predeceased her in 1997. Esther was a dedicated volunteer for<br />

many pre-War organizations including The Salvation Army, Red Cross,<br />

British War Relief, and the Chinese War Relief. Esther loved being a soloist<br />

with the First United Methodist Church and member of the choir. She was a<br />

long-standing member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Esther<br />

was an honorary member of Rotary and received the prestigious Paul Harris<br />

Award. She was a founding member of the Greater Oneonta Historical<br />

Society.<br />

Friend | Joan Heffner, of Oneonta, NY, died August 29, 2010 after a<br />

brief illness. A loving mother, devoted wife, and committed church worker, Joan<br />

was a generous and giving soul to all who were privileged to know her. She was<br />

as an elementary school teacher in Pennsylvania during her husband’s seminary<br />

training, after which the Rev. and Mrs. Heffner devoted their lives to the service<br />

of Jesus Christ through parish ministry and led Lutheran congregations in<br />

Mount Kisco and Lockport. They and their growing family moved to Oneonta<br />

in 1963, when Robert became Chaplain and later Dean of Students at<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>, and their ministry broadened to the <strong>College</strong> community<br />

and rural Lutheran parishes in and around Otsego County—including St.<br />

Matthew Lutheran Church (Laurens). Joan was an avid reader and one of the<br />

founding members of Book Group ’69, originally chartered as the book group<br />

of the <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> Women’s Club. She enjoyed watching football and<br />

tennis. She was preceded in death by her husband in 2002. Survivors include<br />

four children, nine grandchildren, and her twin sister.<br />

Friend | Irwin Gooen, 82, of Oneonta, NY, died May 28, 2010. Irwin<br />

was a photographer, writer, outdoor educator, environmental and peace activist,<br />

community volunteer, movie buff, canoeist, actor, rock critic, latke maker, road<br />

man, and gadfly.<br />

Friend | Larry Hilts, 61, of Oneonta, NY, died August 29, 2010. He<br />

was the owner and president of Oneonta Bus Lines of Oneonta since 1993.<br />

He enjoyed traveling immensely but most of all he loved his family, good jokes,<br />

and a good time. Survivors include his loving companion, Camilla Morris; his<br />

sons; his sister-in-law Deb Hilts ’93; and his nephew Cale Hilts ’00.<br />

Friend | R. Carver Palmer Jr., 73, of Oneonta, NY, died June 25, 2010.<br />

Carver worked at Bruno’s Food Market before going to work at Bendix<br />

Corporation. He was proud of the time he spent in the United States Navy<br />

Reserves. He worked at Homer Folks Hospital and then Delhi State <strong>College</strong>,<br />

where he worked as stationary engineer for 32 years until his retirement in<br />

1994. He was proud of the fact that he had lived at the same address for over<br />

45 years, had the same telephone number, was married to the same women for<br />

52 years, and held the same job for more than 30 years. He was a member of<br />

the Elks for 45 years. Carver was a family man and wonderful father, who was<br />

never happier than when his children and his grandchildren were around him.<br />

He took up kayaking during his retirement and experienced hot air balloon<br />

rides and parasailing. His greatest joys were creating memories with his wife<br />

and family in Ocean City, MD; Bradenton Beach, FL; Arizona; Alaska; and<br />

many more. Together with his wife, they made many friends from all over the<br />

United States during these travels. Survivors include his wife, Madolyn; one<br />

son; two daughters; and five grandchildren.<br />

43


Do you recognize<br />

anyone in this<br />

photograph?<br />

What was going on at<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> then?<br />

Flashback<br />

Now, who can tell us about this issue’s photo?<br />

Send identifications and memories of this or similar events to<br />

the_wick@hartwick.edu or Editor, The Wick, <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>,<br />

PO Box 4020, Oneonta, NY 13820<br />

The Story Behind<br />

the Photo<br />

Well, look at that! Give you a January Term picture and the memories start flooding in! First, we heard<br />

from Ayres Stockley ’86 and Rob DiCarlo ’86, who helped us put together details about last issue’s<br />

photo. Ayres recognized our very own Trustee and President of the Wick Athletic Association, Ron<br />

Lynch ’87, sitting in the middle of the group.<br />

Rob wrote in to tell us he was on the 1986 trip, but not in the picture. “After China, there was an<br />

additional trip to South Korea that not everyone participated in. I’m guessing this photo was taken in<br />

Korea. The gentleman to the far right was a dad of one of the students...he was a doctor involved in AIDS<br />

research.” Rob was able to pick out a few other people in the photo, including Mark Borst ’86 and Dr.<br />

Sugwon Kang, who led the group. One Korean student in the program, he remembers, was adopted and<br />

planned to trace her heritage during the excursion.<br />

Flashback also sparked completely unrelated memories for some of you,<br />

like Rick Zwetsch ’79, who sent in this pic for the ages from the first<br />

floor of Smith Hall, taken December 6, 1975. Take a look—and give<br />

this month’s big Flashback photo a good scrutiny, too—and let us know<br />

who you see!<br />

44


HARTWICK COLLEGE<br />

BOARD OF TRUSTEES<br />

Dr. Margaret L. Drugovich<br />

<strong>College</strong> President, ex officio<br />

James J. Elting, M.D., Chair<br />

Diane Pfriender Hettinger ’77,<br />

Vice Chair<br />

Frances P. Sykes, Secretary<br />

John K. Milne ’76, Treasurer<br />

A. Bruce Anderson ’63<br />

John D. Bertuzzi<br />

Carol Ann Hamilton Coughlin ’86<br />

Jeanette S. Cureton<br />

Edward B. Droesch ’82<br />

Arnold M. Drogen<br />

Virginia Elwell ’77<br />

Debra Fischer French ’80, P’09<br />

Thomas N. Gerhardt ’84<br />

Robert Hanft ’69<br />

Sarah Griffiths Herbert ’88<br />

Kathi Fragola Hochberg ’73<br />

Paul R. Johnson ’67<br />

David H. Long ’83<br />

Ronald P. Lynch ’87<br />

Margaret Mansperger ’07<br />

Erna McReynolds<br />

Rory Read ’83<br />

John Uhlein P’10<br />

Betsy Tanner Wright ’79<br />

Brian R. Wright, Esq. H’02<br />

TRUSTEES EMERITI<br />

John Bronson ’70<br />

Sallie S. Brophy<br />

Joyce C. Buckingham<br />

William K. Davis ’49<br />

Edward S. Dewey H’98<br />

John P. Duffy H’00<br />

John W. Johnstone Jr. ’54, H’90<br />

William E. Lewis<br />

Martha Longbrake<br />

Donald E. Michel ’57<br />

Robert W. Moyer H’98<br />

Frank E. Perrella ’50, H’93<br />

Elizabeth R. Phelps<br />

William C.H. Prentice H’91<br />

Clarence D. Rappleyea H’82<br />

Joann Rasmussen<br />

Gordon B. Roberts ’47, H’97<br />

Gary G. Roth ’71<br />

Roy Rowan H’95<br />

Edward W. Stack H’82<br />

George P. Stephan H’01<br />

Stephan Waterhouse<br />

Carol J. Woodard ’50, H’91<br />

H = Honorary degree awarded by <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

P = Parent of <strong>Hartwick</strong> student


<strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />

Office of Institutional Advancement<br />

PO Box 4020<br />

Oneonta, New York 13820 USA<br />

www.hartwick.edu<br />

Non-Profit Org.<br />

U.S. Postage<br />

PAID<br />

Binghamton, NY<br />

Permit #588<br />

14 <strong>Hartwick</strong> students and their professors head to Midtown Manhattan to talk business and politics with Stephen L. Green ’59,<br />

the largest commercial land owner in New York City, and his brother, Mark Green, the city's former Public Advocate.<br />

Read about it on page 14

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