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B U L L E T I N<br />

He climbs, he shoots, he skis …<br />

Life at Rolling Stone<br />

A <strong>woman</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>sea</strong><br />

F A L L 2 0 0 5


B U L L E T I N<br />

Fall 2005<br />

Volume 76 Number 1<br />

Bulletin Staff<br />

Director of Development<br />

John E. Ormiston<br />

Editor<br />

Julie Reiff<br />

Alumni Notes<br />

Linda Beyus<br />

Design<br />

Good Design, LLC<br />

www.gooddesignusa.com<br />

Proofreader<br />

Nina Maynard<br />

Mail letters to:<br />

Julie Reiff, Editor<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Taft</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Watertown, CT 06795-2100 U.S.A.<br />

ReiffJ@<strong>Taft</strong><strong>School</strong>.org<br />

Send alumni news to:<br />

Linda Beyus<br />

Alumni Office<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Taft</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Watertown, CT 06795-2100 U.S.A.<br />

<strong>Taft</strong>Bulletin@<strong>Taft</strong><strong>School</strong>.org<br />

Deadlines for Alumni Notes:<br />

Winter–November 15<br />

Spring–February 15<br />

Summer–May 30<br />

Fall–August 30<br />

Send address corrections to:<br />

Sally Membrino<br />

Alumni Records<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Taft</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Watertown, CT 06795-2100 U.S.A.<br />

<strong>Taft</strong>Rhino@<strong>Taft</strong><strong>School</strong>.org<br />

1-860-945-7777<br />

www.<strong>Taft</strong>Alumni.com<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin (ISSN 0148-0855) is<br />

published quarterly, in February,<br />

May, August, <strong>and</strong> November, by<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Taft</strong> <strong>School</strong>, 110 Woodbury<br />

Road, Watertown, CT 06795-<br />

2100, <strong>and</strong> is distributed free<br />

of charge to alumni, parents,<br />

gr<strong>and</strong>parents, <strong>and</strong> friends of <strong>the</strong><br />

school. All rights reserved.<br />

This magazine is printed on<br />

recycled paper.


Tibetan Buddhist monks from <strong>the</strong><br />

Drepung Gomang Monastery chant<br />

prayers of blessing over <strong>the</strong> M<strong>and</strong>ala<br />

of Healing <strong>the</strong>y created in <strong>the</strong> Mark<br />

W. Potter ’48 Gallery during <strong>the</strong>ir visit<br />

in September. Peter Frew ’75<br />

F E AT U R E S<br />

cover story: Alpine Nomad.................... 16<br />

<strong>The</strong> mountains of <strong>the</strong> world have <strong>the</strong>ir hold on Colin Samuels<br />

’85, who climbs, photographs, skis, <strong>and</strong> makes his home in<br />

<strong>the</strong> French Alps.<br />

By Linda Hedman Beyus<br />

My Back Pages....................................... 22<br />

Underneath his trendier-than-Clark-Kent disguise, Will<br />

Dana ’81—<strong>the</strong> new managing editor of Rolling Stone—is<br />

more magician than superhero. His first trick: restoring <strong>the</strong><br />

magazine to its former glory.<br />

By Julie Reiff<br />

Reeling <strong>The</strong>m In..................................... 26<br />

Professional fly angler Diana Rudolph ’90 has caught some<br />

of <strong>the</strong> biggest fish around.<br />

By Julia Feldmeier ’99<br />

D E P A R T M E N T S<br />

Letters.................................................... 2<br />

Alumni Spotlight.................................... 3<br />

Around <strong>the</strong> Pond................................... 6<br />

Around <strong>the</strong> Pond <strong>and</strong> Beyond............... 12<br />

Endnote: Little Rock Five....................... 30<br />

By Julie Reiff<br />

on <strong>the</strong> cover<br />

Not <strong>the</strong> easiest way to find snow. Ski mountaineering<br />

photographer Colin Samuels ’85 has made a career doing<br />

what he loves. (See page 16.) Colin Samuels collection<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> on <strong>the</strong> Web<br />

Find a friend’s new address or look up back issues of <strong>the</strong><br />

Bulletin at www.<strong>Taft</strong>Alumni.com.<br />

What happened at this<br />

afternoon’s game?<br />

Visit www.<strong>Taft</strong>Sports.com<br />

for <strong>the</strong> latest Big Red coverage.<br />

For o<strong>the</strong>r campus news <strong>and</strong> events, including admissions<br />

information, visit our main site at www.<strong>Taft</strong><strong>School</strong>.org, with<br />

improved calendar features <strong>and</strong> Around <strong>the</strong> Pond stories.<br />

Don’t forget you can<br />

shop online at<br />

www.<strong>Taft</strong>Store.com


L E T T E R S<br />

Big Easy to <strong>the</strong> Big Red<br />

By <strong>the</strong> start of October, three new students<br />

from Louisiana had begun to<br />

settle in to <strong>the</strong>ir new <strong>Taft</strong> routines. To<br />

accommodate <strong>the</strong> increased enrollment<br />

in an already full school, one of <strong>the</strong> common<br />

rooms in Vogelstein Dormitory was<br />

temporarily converted to a double.<br />

Responses to <strong>the</strong> headmaster’s<br />

letter* updating alumni <strong>and</strong> parents<br />

about <strong>the</strong> school’s outreach efforts<br />

were impressive. Some of <strong>the</strong>m are<br />

shared, briefly, here.<br />

—Julie Reiff, editor<br />

This is why I still love this place so much!<br />

—John Gagne ’80<br />

I am happy to see <strong>the</strong> two-part response.<br />

First, try to help everyone,<br />

<strong>and</strong>, second, help “one of our own.”<br />

I would have been upset if <strong>Taft</strong> had<br />

only made space for ano<strong>the</strong>r privateschool<br />

kid or two. I am not surprised<br />

that you <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> school reacted as you<br />

did, just happy about it.<br />

—John Merrow ’59<br />

Great idea! One of <strong>the</strong> reasons I am<br />

proud to be an alumnus of <strong>Taft</strong>.<br />

—Tim Carew ’65<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> will be well represented in <strong>the</strong><br />

relief effort: My three-year-old daughter<br />

just packed her <strong>Taft</strong> rhino T-shirt<br />

into one of <strong>the</strong> backpacks she <strong>and</strong> her<br />

bro<strong>the</strong>rs have assembled for displaced<br />

children with school supplies, small<br />

toys, <strong>and</strong> notes to kids.<br />

—Jessica Tausend Baccus ’83<br />

What an appropriate <strong>and</strong> splendid commitment<br />

for <strong>the</strong> school to make. Certainly<br />

it is in <strong>the</strong> very best of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Taft</strong> tradition.<br />

—Steve Henkel ’53<br />

Letters<br />

We welcome Letters to <strong>the</strong> Editor relating<br />

to <strong>the</strong> content of <strong>the</strong> magazine.<br />

Letters may be edited for length, clarity,<br />

<strong>and</strong> content, <strong>and</strong> are published<br />

at <strong>the</strong> editor’s discretion. Send correspondence<br />

to:<br />

Julie Reiff, editor<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin<br />

110 Woodbury Road<br />

Watertown, CT 06795-2100 USA<br />

or to<br />

ReiffJ@<strong>Taft</strong><strong>School</strong>.org<br />

It was heartening to read that <strong>the</strong> <strong>Taft</strong><br />

community has once again proven its collective<br />

dedication to humanity, especially<br />

to those in times of need. Thanks for sharing<br />

<strong>the</strong> news <strong>and</strong> reminding me that, even<br />

in <strong>the</strong> midst of a hectic life, <strong>the</strong>re is always<br />

a greater good to be served.<br />

—Debbie Zawadzki ’80<br />

Bravo! At a time like this, <strong>the</strong> <strong>Taft</strong><br />

motto is most important—not to be<br />

served but to serve.<br />

—Peter Buttenheim ’60<br />

Compassion <strong>and</strong> empathy are treasures<br />

of <strong>the</strong> heart. <strong>The</strong>se have immeasurable<br />

value as compared to treasures of <strong>the</strong><br />

storehouse or <strong>the</strong> body. <strong>The</strong> most<br />

important accomplishment in life is<br />

to reach out to someone in need <strong>and</strong><br />

make a real difference, turning poison<br />

into medicine.<br />

—Nicholas Bessmer ’77<br />

Well done! I would have expected nothing<br />

less of you <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Taft</strong> community,<br />

but it is still good to know that you are all<br />

responding as one would have hoped.<br />

—Bridget Macaskill P’02,’05<br />

I am touched by your e-mail as I have seldom<br />

been. Besides <strong>the</strong> simple eloquence<br />

of your expression, <strong>the</strong> superb values expressed<br />

in <strong>the</strong> activities of <strong>the</strong> entire school<br />

community are a terrific example of how<br />

both individuals <strong>and</strong> a community can<br />

ennoble <strong>and</strong> grace o<strong>the</strong>rs. How wonderful<br />

to have a motto that means something<br />

<strong>and</strong> is actually lived…sed ut ministret.<br />

—Jonathan Dill ’63<br />

Having seen <strong>and</strong> been involved with a<br />

very similar disaster in Haiti one year<br />

ago, I can appreciate <strong>the</strong> hope your<br />

letter offers. <strong>Taft</strong>’s caring response<br />

makes me proud to be an alumnus.<br />

—Bruce Johnson ’67<br />

I am heartened by <strong>the</strong> school’s response<br />

to Katrina. Reminds me of its response<br />

to <strong>the</strong> Little Rock integration crisis<br />

in 1958, when <strong>Taft</strong> made a place for a<br />

“refugee” from Arkansas after term had<br />

already started [see page 56]. I have<br />

been profoundly grateful for <strong>the</strong> school’s<br />

willingness to reach out <strong>and</strong> connect in<br />

times of need <strong>and</strong> to remind all of us that<br />

we can each be part of <strong>the</strong> solution.<br />

—Jim Rule ’60<br />

I’m sure o<strong>the</strong>rs have pointed out a<br />

parallel situation in 1958 when <strong>Taft</strong><br />

opened its doors to four or five students<br />

from Little Rock who were affected<br />

by <strong>the</strong> turmoil of <strong>the</strong> civil rights<br />

confrontations in that city. I believe<br />

that small b<strong>and</strong> produced a starting<br />

linebacker for Yale <strong>and</strong> a c<strong>and</strong>idate<br />

for U.S. Congress. In adversity <strong>the</strong>re<br />

may be significant opportunity.<br />

—Henry Lanier ’61<br />

It’s good to know that <strong>Taft</strong> has responded<br />

rapidly <strong>and</strong> generously to <strong>the</strong><br />

worst natural disaster in our nation’s<br />

history. I would have expected no less.<br />

—Bob Murdock ’47<br />

[<strong>The</strong>ir] transition from <strong>the</strong> Big Easy<br />

to <strong>the</strong> Big Red is clearly being conducted<br />

with <strong>the</strong> same sense of community,<br />

compassion, <strong>and</strong> high expectations<br />

from all involved…. This is<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> at its finest, its motto in action.<br />

Horace would approve.<br />

—Ev Anderson ’64<br />

*Didn’t receive <strong>the</strong> headmaster’s September<br />

e-mail? View <strong>the</strong> latest update online at<br />

http://www.taftschool.org/katrina/.<br />

A Numbers Game<br />

<strong>The</strong> endnote essay in <strong>the</strong> summer<br />

issue (“Boy of Summer, Fa<strong>the</strong>r of<br />

Fall”) brings to light a disturbing issue<br />

regarding college admissions. <strong>The</strong><br />

myopic pursuit of admission to <strong>the</strong><br />

“best” colleges (to wit, Ivy League)<br />

<strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> competition it fosters seems<br />

misguided <strong>and</strong> unhealthy. Regrettable<br />

are those businesses that promote<br />

<strong>and</strong> encourage such competition for<br />

a substantial fee <strong>and</strong> capitalize on<br />

<strong>the</strong> specious argument that Harvard<br />

equals success.<br />

And it is sad, indeed, that <strong>the</strong>re<br />

are admissions personnel who revel in<br />

this résumé-building charade. Isn’t a<br />

more grounded approach to enriching<br />

one’s personal development—intellectually<br />

<strong>and</strong> spiritually, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>reby enriching<br />

o<strong>the</strong>rs—<strong>the</strong> formula for success<br />

that should be nurtured? Isn’t that, after<br />

all, <strong>the</strong> essence of a <strong>Taft</strong> education?<br />

<strong>The</strong> college admission process is a<br />

competition, undeniably, <strong>and</strong> it should<br />

be pursued in earnest without <strong>the</strong> hubris<br />

of elitism. <strong>The</strong> numbers game will<br />

disqualify many good applicants to<br />

Harvard <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> like, but o<strong>the</strong>r schools<br />

will benefit <strong>and</strong> so will we all.<br />

—Roy Schonbrun ’68<br />

In Sheep’s Clothing<br />

I read in <strong>the</strong> summer issue that <strong>the</strong><br />

faculty had picked Farley Mowat’s<br />

Never Cry Wolf as a book <strong>the</strong> entire<br />

school would read over <strong>the</strong> summer<br />

<strong>and</strong> discuss this fall as you “revisit <strong>the</strong><br />

key <strong>the</strong>me of our human relationship,<br />

interaction, <strong>and</strong> participation in <strong>the</strong><br />

natural world.” Laudable as <strong>the</strong> goal<br />

is, this book was a surprising choice,<br />

<strong>and</strong> to my mind, a thoughtless one. I<br />

only hope that <strong>the</strong> discussion that occurs<br />

this fall can correct at least some<br />

problems with <strong>the</strong> book <strong>and</strong> salvage<br />

something of value from this exercise.<br />

I have written a half dozen<br />

scientific, legal, <strong>and</strong> ethical publications<br />

regarding wolves, whales, <strong>and</strong><br />

o<strong>the</strong>r wildlife. I am currently a member<br />

of <strong>the</strong> International Union for<br />

<strong>the</strong> Conservation of Nature’s Canid<br />

Specialist Group, a group of 100 scientists<br />

from around <strong>the</strong> world that<br />

monitors <strong>the</strong> conservation status <strong>and</strong><br />

biological knowledge of all 37 species<br />

of canids—including wolves (www.<br />

canids.org).<br />

Also, I am a qualified fan of<br />

Farley Mowat’s. My problem with<br />

his nonautobiographical books is<br />

that <strong>the</strong>y play extremely loose with<br />

<strong>the</strong> facts <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> persons described.<br />

Mowat’s story, presented as alleged<br />

science, undercuts <strong>the</strong> credibility of<br />

real scientists—reinforcing <strong>the</strong> public<br />

misconception that re<strong>sea</strong>rchers find<br />

only what <strong>the</strong>y want to find <strong>and</strong> misleading<br />

people badly about <strong>the</strong> true<br />

nature of wolves <strong>and</strong> our environmental<br />

issues.<br />

What saddens me is that <strong>the</strong>re<br />

are so many o<strong>the</strong>r, better books that<br />

<strong>the</strong> <strong>Taft</strong> community could, <strong>and</strong><br />

should, have read. I recommend Barry<br />

Lopez’s Of Wolves <strong>and</strong> Men, Aldo<br />

Leopold’s A S<strong>and</strong> County Almanac, or<br />

selected portions of Jared Diamond’s<br />

Guns, Germs, <strong>and</strong> Steel or <strong>The</strong> Third<br />

Chimpanzee—all excellent books that<br />

are scientifically sound <strong>and</strong> sure to<br />

elicit <strong>the</strong> sought-after debate.<br />

<strong>The</strong> world is suffering a humancaused<br />

environmental catastrophe that<br />

is threatening most species, including<br />

humans. <strong>Taft</strong> needs to lead <strong>the</strong> effort<br />

toward scientific literacy, which is falling<br />

to frightening levels, <strong>and</strong> awareness<br />

of <strong>the</strong> environment. But <strong>Taft</strong> can only<br />

do so if it adheres to <strong>the</strong> highest st<strong>and</strong>ards<br />

of honesty <strong>and</strong> lets <strong>the</strong> scientific<br />

process inform us, ra<strong>the</strong>r than illegitimately<br />

presenting one’s own prejudices<br />

as “science,” no matter how agreeable<br />

those prejudices may seem.<br />

—Jim Scarff ’66<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


A L U M N I S P O T L I G H T<br />

S P OT L I G H T<br />

© Noah Greenberg/Vistalux<br />

A Capital Game<br />

His career “is catching fire” <strong>and</strong> he’s “sizzling,”<br />

according to People magazine in its<br />

latest list of eligible bachelors; Winston<br />

Bao Lord ’86 is one of <strong>the</strong> “Guys on <strong>the</strong><br />

Rise” in <strong>the</strong> June 27 issue.<br />

“I got flooded with r<strong>and</strong>om<br />

e-mails after that came out; my thirdgrade<br />

teacher <strong>and</strong> several ex-girlfriends<br />

even tracked me down,” Lord said.<br />

“Some included photos of <strong>the</strong>mselves.”<br />

As executive director of <strong>the</strong><br />

Washington Baseball Club, he has been<br />

working for six years to bring a team<br />

to <strong>the</strong> nation’s capital. “Not only was<br />

Washington <strong>the</strong> largest market without<br />

a franchise, but it just makes sense that<br />

<strong>the</strong> national pastime needs to be in <strong>the</strong><br />

nation’s capital.”<br />

Lord had just started his own advertising<br />

business back in 1999 when D.C.<br />

Mayor Tony Williams announced his<br />

hopes of bringing a Major League Baseball<br />

franchise back to <strong>the</strong> city. “It was an unbelievably<br />

perfect opportunity,” said Lord, a<br />

native Washingtonian who is equally passionate<br />

about his hometown as he is about<br />

baseball. “This was a chance to do something<br />

for <strong>the</strong> city I love.”<br />

Hired as <strong>the</strong> executive director that<br />

year, he began working full-time for <strong>the</strong><br />

group in 2002, when MLB made <strong>the</strong> decision<br />

to relocate <strong>the</strong> Expos out of Montreal<br />

because of declining ticket sales. <strong>The</strong> original<br />

group of six investors in Lord’s group<br />

has grown to 12 community <strong>and</strong> business<br />

leaders (including former Secretary of<br />

State Colin Powell) <strong>and</strong> has endorsements<br />

from <strong>the</strong> mayor as well as a number of key<br />

members on <strong>the</strong> Hill.<br />

Now that <strong>the</strong> team is already in<br />

D.C., all that remains is for <strong>the</strong> league to<br />

pick an ownership group from <strong>the</strong> eight<br />

who are competing. <strong>The</strong> process of acquiring<br />

<strong>the</strong> team has been “a lot like promoting<br />

a political c<strong>and</strong>idate,” says Lord.<br />

<strong>The</strong> 29 MLB owners will make <strong>the</strong> decision,<br />

<strong>and</strong> three-quarters need to vote<br />

for you.” <strong>The</strong> league planned to make a<br />

decision by <strong>the</strong> end of September. Lord<br />

was optimistic. “We hope to lead <strong>the</strong><br />

major league in community initiatives<br />

<strong>and</strong> partnerships, to use <strong>the</strong> team as a<br />

platform to help <strong>the</strong> city.”<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


<strong>The</strong> Cell Game:<br />

Sam Waksal’s Fast Money<br />

<strong>and</strong> False Promises—<strong>and</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> Fate of ImClone’s<br />

Cancer Drug<br />

Alex Prud’homme ’80<br />

HarperBusiness, 2004<br />

It began with a promising cancer drug—<br />

<strong>the</strong> brainchild of a gifted re<strong>sea</strong>rcher—<br />

<strong>and</strong> grew into an insider trading sc<strong>and</strong>al<br />

that ensnared one of America’s most successful<br />

women. <strong>The</strong> story of ImClone<br />

Systems <strong>and</strong> its “miracle” cancer drug,<br />

Erbitux, is <strong>the</strong> quintessential business<br />

saga of <strong>the</strong> late 1990s.<br />

At <strong>the</strong> center of it all st<strong>and</strong>s Sam<br />

Waksal, a brilliant, mercurial, <strong>and</strong> desperate-to-be-liked<br />

entrepreneur, addicted<br />

to <strong>the</strong> trappings of wealth <strong>and</strong><br />

fame. He promised that Erbitux would<br />

“change oncology,” <strong>and</strong> would soon<br />

make $1 billion a year.<br />

When <strong>the</strong> FDA withheld approval<br />

of Erbitux, he panicked <strong>and</strong> desperately<br />

tried to cash in his stock before <strong>the</strong> bad<br />

news hit Wall Street.<br />

Waksal is now in jail, <strong>the</strong> first of <strong>the</strong><br />

Enron-era white-collar criminals to be<br />

sentenced. Yet Erbitux remains promising,<br />

<strong>the</strong> leading example of a new way to<br />

fight cancer.<br />

Publishers Weekly called Prud’homme’s<br />

reporting “especially strong when he delves<br />

into <strong>the</strong> seemingly haphazard way in which<br />

ImClone distributed C225 for ‘compassionate<br />

use’ during <strong>the</strong> clinical testing period.”<br />

Booklist called <strong>The</strong> Cell Game “exemplarily<br />

written,” <strong>and</strong> U.S. News said,<br />

“Prud’homme weaves a chilling tale.”<br />

Alex Prud’homme is a writer living<br />

in Brooklyn, New York. His work has<br />

appeared in Vanity Fair, <strong>the</strong> New Yorker,<br />

<strong>the</strong> New York Times, Time, <strong>and</strong> People.<br />

He is currently working on a biography<br />

of Julia Child.<br />

Middle Eastern Democracy 101<br />

Dick Williams ’89 spent two weeks in<br />

Jordan <strong>and</strong> Egypt “at a fascinating time in<br />

<strong>the</strong> political evolution of both countries.”<br />

He was asked to participate in a bipartisan<br />

delegation of nine “young political<br />

leaders” to <strong>the</strong> Middle East through a<br />

program organized <strong>and</strong> partly funded by<br />

<strong>the</strong> American Council of Young Political<br />

Leaders <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> U.S. State Department.<br />

On an invitation from <strong>the</strong> speaker,<br />

<strong>the</strong>y attended <strong>the</strong> roll call vote in <strong>the</strong><br />

People’s Assembly of Egypt in May 2005<br />

when <strong>the</strong> Egyptian legislature voted to<br />

amend <strong>the</strong>ir constitution to allow for<br />

competitive (multic<strong>and</strong>idate) presidential<br />

elections. <strong>The</strong>y also had meetings<br />

with <strong>the</strong> speaker as well as <strong>the</strong> leaders<br />

of several opposition parties “hearing<br />

about history as it was being made,”<br />

he adds. <strong>The</strong> historic Egyptian election<br />

took place in September, capturing <strong>the</strong><br />

world’s attention for its implications for<br />

<strong>the</strong> rest of <strong>the</strong> region.<br />

Similarly, in Jordan, <strong>the</strong>y met with<br />

<strong>the</strong> leaders of <strong>the</strong> Upper <strong>and</strong> Lower<br />

Houses of Parliament as well as <strong>the</strong> architects<br />

of <strong>the</strong> democratic reforms that <strong>the</strong>y<br />

are undertaking currently. “<strong>The</strong> program<br />

is designed to introduce members of <strong>the</strong><br />

delegation to social <strong>and</strong> economic leaders<br />

in <strong>the</strong>se countries,” Williams explains,<br />

“in order to underst<strong>and</strong> better <strong>the</strong> role of<br />

politics in everyday life.”<br />

Williams would love to continue to<br />

raise <strong>the</strong> profile of <strong>the</strong> Middle East as<br />

he finds it to be a place that is “a living<br />

breathing contradiction—full of anti-<br />

Americanism because of <strong>the</strong>ir perception<br />

of our policies yet simultaneously<br />

evolving towards our governmental <strong>and</strong><br />

economic models <strong>and</strong>, as we all know,<br />

obsessed with our pop culture! This is<br />

an area of <strong>the</strong> world that we will continue<br />

to misunderst<strong>and</strong> at our own peril.”<br />

Williams also worked at campaign<br />

headquarters in Washington in 2003<br />

<strong>and</strong> 2004 as a member of <strong>the</strong> finance<br />

team of Bush-Cheney ’04 <strong>and</strong> started a<br />

program aimed at <strong>the</strong> next generation<br />

(under 40) all over <strong>the</strong> country that<br />

raised more than $10 million beyond<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir target. “I had an unforgettable experience<br />

(in both a positive <strong>and</strong> a negative<br />

sense) in <strong>the</strong> eye of <strong>the</strong> hurricane!”<br />

. Dick Williams ’89, on a tour of <strong>the</strong><br />

Middle East, at <strong>the</strong> lost city of Petra with<br />

one of <strong>the</strong> group’s Jordanian hosts, Samer<br />

Kawar, who runs <strong>the</strong> Jordanian Young<br />

Economists Society.<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


A L U M N I S P O T L I G H T<br />

Up to <strong>the</strong> Mountain:<br />

Wade Hampton Frost,<br />

Pioneer Epidemiologist,<br />

1880–1938<br />

Thomas M. Daniel ’47<br />

University of Rochester<br />

Press, 2004<br />

No Alabaster Box<br />

Charles D. Bradley ’56<br />

XLibris, 2005<br />

Distressed<br />

Investment Banking:<br />

To <strong>the</strong> Abyss <strong>and</strong> Back<br />

Henry Owsley <strong>and</strong><br />

Peter S. Kaufman ’71<br />

Beard Books, 2005<br />

<strong>The</strong> Pineapple:<br />

King of Fruits<br />

Fran Beauman ’95<br />

R<strong>and</strong>om House, 2005<br />

<strong>The</strong> Family Stone<br />

<strong>The</strong> All-American Football Foundation<br />

recognized Larry Stone at its 72nd<br />

Banquet of Champions in Boston in<br />

July. He received <strong>the</strong> President Gerald<br />

R. Ford All-American High <strong>School</strong><br />

Coach Award.<br />

At <strong>the</strong> same event, <strong>the</strong>y recognized<br />

his daughter Kelly Stone ’77 for her<br />

work with <strong>the</strong> Eastern College Athletic<br />

Conference. Larry, who began his career<br />

at <strong>Taft</strong> in <strong>the</strong> fall of 1962, coached<br />

football, baseball, <strong>and</strong> served as <strong>Taft</strong><br />

athletic director for more than 30<br />

years, retiring in 1995.<br />

Home with<br />

<strong>the</strong> Rangers<br />

Former Ohio State University st<strong>and</strong>out<br />

Ben Crabtree ’01 signed with <strong>the</strong><br />

Texas Rangers, who drafted him in<br />

<strong>the</strong> 26th round of <strong>the</strong> Major League<br />

Baseball Amateur Draft in June.<br />

“I’m really excited to be able to<br />

play <strong>the</strong> game that I love <strong>and</strong> actually<br />

have someone pay me to do it,” he<br />

said. “Signing a professional contract<br />

is something that I’ve wanted to do<br />

my whole life.”<br />

While in Ohio, Crabtree set <strong>the</strong><br />

state’s all-time hits mark on <strong>the</strong> last<br />

day of <strong>the</strong> <strong>sea</strong>son. He led his team in<br />

nearly every offensive category, with<br />

72 hits, 14 doubles, 10 home runs,<br />

<strong>and</strong> a .344 batting average. He’s<br />

currently playing for <strong>the</strong> Spokane<br />

Indians, <strong>the</strong> Rangers’ development<br />

team in <strong>the</strong> Northwest League.<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


AROUND THE<br />

To Russia with Love<br />

Perestroika, glasnost, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> end of <strong>the</strong><br />

Cold War have been important news<br />

stories in History Department chair<br />

Jon Willson’s adulthood, so when he received<br />

<strong>the</strong> Davis Fellowship earlier this<br />

year, he knew right away he wanted to<br />

travel to Russia to see <strong>the</strong> transformation<br />

of that country from <strong>the</strong> communist<br />

Soviet Union to a capitalist, “sort of<br />

democratic” society, he says.<br />

Using plenty of frequent flier miles to<br />

bring his family along with him, Jon (with<br />

wife Sarah, daughter Cassie, <strong>and</strong> sons Sam<br />

<strong>and</strong> Luke) flew to Helsinki in August,<br />

“wanting to squeeze in as many cultural<br />

experiences as we could,” says Jon.<br />

Three days later <strong>the</strong>y spent <strong>the</strong><br />

better part of a day on <strong>the</strong> train to<br />

St. Petersburg, where Sarah’s sister<br />

Maud, who is married to a Russian,<br />

lives. “We wanted to travel without a<br />

group, so having <strong>the</strong>m <strong>the</strong>re really made<br />

that possible. Not too many people on<br />

tour groups have <strong>the</strong> chance to go to <strong>the</strong><br />

local vegetable market, figure out how<br />

to get on <strong>the</strong> right bus, <strong>and</strong> eat borscht<br />

Davis Fellow Jon Willson ’82 <strong>and</strong> his wife Sarah Albee in Russia’s Red Square<br />

at <strong>the</strong> homes of real Russian people.”<br />

<strong>The</strong>y toured <strong>the</strong> Hermitage, <strong>the</strong><br />

Russian Museum, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> Winter<br />

Palace, <strong>and</strong> spent a day at Maud’s dacha<br />

in <strong>the</strong> countryside. Sarah <strong>and</strong> Jon also<br />

flew to Moscow for a day without <strong>the</strong><br />

kids, where <strong>the</strong>y toured <strong>the</strong> Kremlin<br />

<strong>and</strong> Red Square.<br />

Hoping to offer a Russian history<br />

elective next year, Jon also managed to<br />

interview a few septuagenarians about<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir fascinating, <strong>and</strong> often-harrowing<br />

memories of <strong>the</strong> Stalin era, with Maud<br />

acting as translator. “This was an amazing<br />

trip,” Jon adds. “To be able to see a<br />

culture from a native’s perspective—<strong>and</strong><br />

to have <strong>the</strong> opportunity to hear firsth<strong>and</strong><br />

accounts from those who lived<br />

through <strong>the</strong> eras that I teach—was a<br />

powerful experience.”<br />

Peter Frew ’75<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


A R O U N D T H E P O N D<br />

Special Trips <strong>and</strong> Special Effects<br />

You’re in beautiful Glacier National Park<br />

when suddenly you see a young man fall<br />

from a precipice, crashing through <strong>the</strong><br />

trees as he drops, only to wind up suspended<br />

from <strong>the</strong> branches over <strong>the</strong> raging<br />

river below.<br />

No, that never actually happened—at<br />

least not in real life—but hopefully it will<br />

look as if it had. If <strong>the</strong> eight students who<br />

traveled to Montana with acting <strong>and</strong> video<br />

teacher Rick Doyle over <strong>the</strong> summer <strong>and</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> students in his film editing class this<br />

year have anything to say about it, you’ll<br />

be biting your nails as you watch <strong>the</strong> scene<br />

unfold on <strong>the</strong> big screen in May.<br />

Beginning what Doyle calls <strong>the</strong><br />

most intensive project he’s ever taken<br />

on, <strong>the</strong> group spent two weeks out west<br />

filming many of <strong>the</strong> scenes <strong>the</strong>y will use<br />

in a yearlong venture. Students in his<br />

video class worked out <strong>the</strong> basic story<br />

line for <strong>the</strong> movie in <strong>the</strong> spring, which<br />

Doyle <strong>the</strong>n flushed out as a screenplay.<br />

“We shot most of <strong>the</strong> live action in<br />

<strong>the</strong> mountains at Glacier, some as high<br />

up as 12,000 feet,” Doyle says. “<strong>The</strong>re<br />

were bears <strong>and</strong> bald eagles; it was absolutely<br />

extraordinary.”<br />

Inner Circle—<strong>the</strong> project’s working<br />

title—is a fantasy movie along <strong>the</strong> lines<br />

of Lord of <strong>the</strong> Rings. Students dressed in<br />

medieval costumes <strong>and</strong> acted out sword<br />

fights with real metal swords. For <strong>the</strong><br />

more dangerous or “fantastic” scenes,<br />

Doyle has planned over 100 special effects,<br />

which students will work on over<br />

<strong>the</strong> course of <strong>the</strong> year with professionallevel<br />

editing <strong>and</strong> 3-D modeling software<br />

(Maya, VUE, <strong>and</strong> Shake).<br />

<strong>The</strong>y’ve built a 12-by-24-foot green<br />

screen in <strong>the</strong> Woodward Black Box<br />

<strong>The</strong>ater to film some of that action.<br />

“With <strong>the</strong> new software, students can<br />

create whole backgrounds <strong>and</strong> even new<br />

kinds of animals that <strong>the</strong>y can <strong>the</strong>n animate<br />

<strong>and</strong> ride in <strong>the</strong> film.<br />

“What I always tell <strong>the</strong> kids is that<br />

story is <strong>the</strong> most important thing, but<br />

<strong>the</strong>y can use <strong>the</strong>se special effects to<br />

help carry <strong>the</strong> story,” says Doyle. “And<br />

<strong>the</strong>y’ll need to learn to solve problems<br />

to make those special effects work.<br />

It really is about problem solving.”<br />

This gives <strong>the</strong> kids something concrete<br />

to apply <strong>the</strong>ir newly acquired editing<br />

skills to, he explains, a real application<br />

of what <strong>the</strong>y are learning. “When<br />

<strong>the</strong> movie plays on <strong>the</strong> big screen in May,<br />

it has to look absolutely photorealistic.”<br />

Students on <strong>the</strong> trip were senior<br />

Bill Lane, <strong>and</strong> upper mids Benjamin<br />

Grinberg, Sara Merrick-Albano, Neal<br />

McCloskey, Flora Nagy, Grace Scott,<br />

Marlena Slowik, <strong>and</strong> Emma Strubell.<br />

“It was such a wonderful trip,” says<br />

Marlena. “Some of my favorite moments<br />

were just sitting upstairs in our<br />

rented cabin <strong>and</strong> watching <strong>the</strong> reruns of<br />

<strong>the</strong> tape from that day.” For all of <strong>the</strong>m,<br />

though, finally seeing <strong>the</strong> actors in <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

costumes, getting <strong>the</strong> light working, or<br />

hiking six hours up a mountain in <strong>the</strong><br />

Ben Grinberg ’07 surveys <strong>the</strong> Montana l<strong>and</strong>scape in <strong>the</strong> film Inner Circle, which debuts in May.<br />

sweltering heat just to get a few quick<br />

minutes of travel scenes will be moments<br />

<strong>the</strong>y say <strong>the</strong>y’ll remember long<br />

after <strong>the</strong> movie airs.<br />

All <strong>the</strong> students who ventured out<br />

to Montana did make it safely back to<br />

Watertown at <strong>the</strong> end of <strong>the</strong> project.<br />

Perhaps <strong>the</strong> students who create <strong>the</strong> credits<br />

at <strong>the</strong> end should add <strong>the</strong> line: No students<br />

were harmed in <strong>the</strong> filming of this movie.<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


A R O U N D T H E P O N D<br />

<strong>The</strong> Teen Brain<br />

New York Times Medical Editor Barbara<br />

Strauch explains to <strong>the</strong> faculty <strong>the</strong> latest<br />

re<strong>sea</strong>rch on changes in <strong>the</strong> adolescent<br />

brain. Peter Frew ’75<br />

“I would <strong>the</strong>re were no age between sixteen<br />

<strong>and</strong> three-<strong>and</strong>-twenty, or that youth would<br />

sleep out <strong>the</strong> rest; for <strong>the</strong>re is nothing in <strong>the</strong><br />

between but getting wenches with child,<br />

wronging <strong>the</strong> ancientry, stealing, fighting.”<br />

—Shakespeare, <strong>The</strong> Winter’s Tale<br />

Barbara Strauch, <strong>the</strong> medical science <strong>and</strong><br />

health editor for <strong>The</strong> New York Times, explained<br />

<strong>the</strong> latest re<strong>sea</strong>rch on <strong>the</strong> teenage<br />

brain to <strong>the</strong> faculty at <strong>the</strong>ir opening meeting<br />

in September. Her book <strong>The</strong> Primal<br />

Teen is a groundbreaking look at how new<br />

discoveries in neuroscience “may help us<br />

to underst<strong>and</strong> our children.” She says that<br />

as <strong>the</strong> mo<strong>the</strong>r of two teenagers, she was<br />

“motivated to try to figure this out.”<br />

Scientists previously thought brain was<br />

set by age 13 <strong>and</strong> all that could be added<br />

was more content, more experiences, but<br />

through advances in magnetic resonance<br />

imaging, <strong>the</strong>y are now able to see what’s<br />

happening in a living teenage brain, <strong>and</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> results, she says, have been amazing.<br />

“Starting around age 11 for girls <strong>and</strong><br />

12 for boys,” she explains, “<strong>the</strong>re is a big<br />

jump in <strong>the</strong> growth of <strong>the</strong> gray matter<br />

of <strong>the</strong> brain, that outer layer that makes<br />

us much of what we are. <strong>The</strong>n, <strong>the</strong>re’s a<br />

massive pruning <strong>and</strong> disposal of millions<br />

of brain branches, cutting away as much<br />

as 50 percent in some smaller regions.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> changes <strong>the</strong> brain goes through during<br />

adolescence are, experts now say, as<br />

dramatic <strong>and</strong> crucial as those that take<br />

place in <strong>the</strong> first two years of life.<br />

Legacy List Alumni <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir children <strong>and</strong> gr<strong>and</strong>children at <strong>Taft</strong><br />

Much of this activity occurs in <strong>the</strong><br />

prefrontal cortex—<strong>the</strong> section of <strong>the</strong><br />

brain that “allows us to plan ahead, to resist<br />

impulses, to NOT do something totally<br />

insane. This is <strong>the</strong> rational area that<br />

helps us resist impulses, or at least count<br />

to ten first,” she said. As a result, teens are<br />

more likely to use a more emotional part<br />

of <strong>the</strong> brain <strong>and</strong> are less able to anticipate<br />

<strong>the</strong> consequences of <strong>the</strong>ir actions.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is also increased chemical activity<br />

going on in <strong>the</strong> brain at that age—<br />

dopamine, melatonin—explaining at least<br />

in part why teens love to sleep late or seek<br />

new thrills. We can help <strong>the</strong>m underst<strong>and</strong><br />

what’s going on <strong>and</strong> sometimes make adjustments,<br />

she adds, whe<strong>the</strong>r it’s changing<br />

<strong>the</strong> length of a driver’s permit or letting<br />

<strong>the</strong>m sleep later.<br />

<strong>The</strong> good news, she says, is that <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

ability to think abstractly is growing, as is<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir awareness of emotion in o<strong>the</strong>r people.<br />

“<strong>The</strong>ir brains are open to new experiences.<br />

We have to nudge <strong>the</strong>m, be <strong>the</strong>ir prefrontal<br />

cortex at times—not necessarily telling <strong>the</strong>m<br />

what to do, but helping <strong>the</strong>m realize <strong>the</strong><br />

consequences. Given <strong>the</strong>ir newfound awareness<br />

of o<strong>the</strong>rs, keeping <strong>the</strong>m too sheltered at<br />

this age could mean a lost opportunity for<br />

developing in <strong>the</strong>m a sense of altruism.”<br />

Great-Gr<strong>and</strong>parents<br />

Henry Wick Chambers 1895*............. Timothy R. Chambers ’07<br />

Thomas W. Chrystie ’21*............................ Henry T. Wyman ’07<br />

Roth F. Herrlinger ’22*............................. Daniel M. Hillman ’06 ,<br />

Elizabeth L. Lanahan ’08, Scott H. Hillman ’09<br />

Charles P. Luckey ’18*.............................Charlotte D. Luckey ’08<br />

Samuel F. Pryor Jr. ’17*.................................Antonia R. Pryor ’07<br />

Gr<strong>and</strong>parents<br />

Eldredge L. Bermingham ’43*........Alex<strong>and</strong>er N. Bermingham ’08<br />

Edward Madden Bigler ’40*...........................Marika K. Bigler ’06 ,<br />

Griffith B. Bigler ’08<br />

Dexter Barnes Blake ’33*.......................Charlotte G. Bromley ’08<br />

G. Renfrew Brighton Jr. ’43................... Whitney Z. Brighton ’06<br />

John B. S. Campbell ’34*....................... Susannah M. Walden ’06<br />

Robert A. Campbell ’34*......................Robert A. Campbell II ’07<br />

Livingston Carroll ’37*....................... David J. Carroll-Kenny ’07<br />

H. Wick Chambers Jr. ’27*.................. Timothy R. Chambers ’07<br />

Ronald H. Chase ’54................................Hillary N. Simpson ’06<br />

Thomas L. Chrystie ’51............................... Henry T. Wyman ’07<br />

Barnaby Conrad Sr. ’40.................................... Helen P. Gazin ’07<br />

Roy E. Demmon ’45 Katharine L. Demmon ’09 ,<br />

A. Bailey Fowlkes ’09<br />

Arthur T. Garfunkel ’44*.......................... Amy L. Brownstein ’09<br />

John C. Geupel ’45*......................................Noah D. Geupel ’08<br />

Edward F. Herrlinger II ’46 Daniel M. Hillman ’06 ,<br />

Elizabeth L. Lanahan ’08, Scott H. Hillman ’09<br />

Herbert S. Ide ’21*...........................................William A. Ide ’09<br />

Lee Paul Klingenstein ’44...................................Lee S. Ziesing ’07<br />

Charles A. Lamb ’42...............................Charles A. L. Bartlett ’08<br />

George R. Lindemer ’42....................................Eric L. Becker ’08<br />

Charles P. Luckey Jr. ’43*.........................Charlotte D. Luckey ’08<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


A R O U N D T H E P O N D<br />

More than 70 teachers <strong>and</strong> leaders from Urban Education Exchange partner schools<br />

came to Watertown in August for <strong>the</strong>ir Summer Training Workshop. Steven Valenti<br />

While We Were Away…<br />

Urban Education Exchange recently<br />

held its Summer Training Workshop at<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> for <strong>the</strong> second time. “<strong>The</strong> training<br />

marks a critical first step,” says Executive<br />

Director Nancy McDonnell Scharff, “in<br />

introducing teachers from our partner<br />

schools to <strong>the</strong> UEE program.” More<br />

than 70 attendees from <strong>the</strong>ir seven partner<br />

schools came to Watertown from<br />

August 10 to 12.<br />

UEE is a nonprofit organization<br />

committed to fostering a culture of<br />

academic excellence in urban elementary<br />

schools by providing teachers with<br />

a re<strong>sea</strong>rch-based curriculum, intensive<br />

teacher training, <strong>and</strong> detailed assessments.<br />

UEE provides <strong>the</strong> tools to address<br />

<strong>the</strong> academic needs of an at-risk<br />

urban population.<br />

“We recognize that teachers are a<br />

critical component in ensuring students<br />

receive a quality education,” Scharff<br />

says. Founded in 1991 as <strong>the</strong> Friends<br />

of <strong>the</strong> Family Academy, a model public<br />

school in Harlem, UEE’s vision is to<br />

empower a growing network of schools<br />

with tools <strong>and</strong> best practices.<br />

“And <strong>the</strong> program is working!” says<br />

Scharff. “We have just received test scores<br />

from our two New York partner schools<br />

<strong>and</strong> are delighted with <strong>the</strong> results.”<br />

Among <strong>the</strong>ir New York City partner<br />

schools, 84 percent of fourth grade students<br />

are reading at or above grade level.<br />

All of <strong>the</strong> teachers from three partner<br />

schools—KIPP SHINE Prep (<strong>the</strong><br />

first “Knowledge Is Power Program”<br />

elementary school), Waterside <strong>School</strong><br />

(which targets low-income students<br />

in Stamford, Connecticut), <strong>and</strong> Girls<br />

Preparatory Academy (a charter school<br />

opening this fall on <strong>the</strong> Lower East<br />

Side)—attended <strong>the</strong> summer training<br />

sessions at <strong>Taft</strong>. Leaders <strong>and</strong> staff from<br />

four o<strong>the</strong>r partner schools <strong>and</strong> UEE<br />

board members came as well (including<br />

Drummond Bell ’63, who was instrumental<br />

in arranging <strong>the</strong> group’s use of<br />

<strong>the</strong> <strong>Taft</strong> campus).<br />

“This is a great partnership,” says<br />

Headmaster Willy MacMullen ’78, “<strong>and</strong><br />

one we are thrilled to be part of.”<br />

“As usual TAFT was over <strong>the</strong> top,”<br />

says Scharff. “We could not have felt<br />

more welcomed <strong>and</strong> supported by everyone<br />

we met. Teachers <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir families<br />

were very friendly. <strong>The</strong> food was<br />

excellent, <strong>and</strong> everyone was very comfortable<br />

in <strong>the</strong> surroundings. I cannot<br />

begin to tell you what a positive impact<br />

your wonderful school setting has on<br />

all of our teachers...<strong>and</strong> all of our prospective<br />

teachers <strong>and</strong> board members.<br />

EVERYONE was charged up!”<br />

Condict Moore ’34.....Emily L. Moore ’07, Ca<strong>the</strong>rine R. Moore ’09<br />

James I. Moore ’41*........................................Emily L. Moore ’07 ,<br />

Ca<strong>the</strong>rine R. Moore ’09<br />

Samuel F. Pryor III ’46..................................Antonia R. Pryor ’07<br />

Walter C. Reisinger ’42*...........................Abigail B. Reisinger ’08<br />

Edward Van V. S<strong>and</strong>s ’14*.................................Diana P. S<strong>and</strong>s ’06<br />

Spyros S. Skouras ’41 Spyros S. Skouras III ’06 ,<br />

Sophia M. Skouras ’08<br />

Harry W. Walker II ’40.............................. Holl<strong>and</strong> E. Walker ’07<br />

John S. Wold ’34...................................... Claire W. Longfield ’06<br />

Parents<br />

R<strong>and</strong>olph G. Abood ’68..........................R. George Abood Jr. ’07<br />

Eric D. Albert ’77........ Lindsay C. Albert ’06, Jamie E. Albert ’08<br />

Jonathan D. Albert ’79....................................Sarah B. Albert ’09<br />

Robert C. Barber ’75.................................... Martha J. Barber ’08<br />

John W. Biedermann ’77........................... Max P. Biedermann ’08<br />

Paul G. Bigler II ’74.......Marika K. Bigler ’06, Griffith B. Bigler ’08<br />

Arthur F. Blake ’67.................................Charlotte G. Bromley ’08<br />

Richard W. Blossom ’66..................................Carissa Blossom ’08<br />

Martha Stine Boyd ’73..................................... Emily C. Boyd ’07<br />

Henry G. Brauer ’74 Mary O. Brauer ’08 ,<br />

Benjamin H. Brauer ’09<br />

Shawn D. Brazo ’82......................................Zachary A. Brazo ’09<br />

Renfrew M. Brighton ’74....................... Whitney Z. Brighton ’06<br />

John S. Brittain Jr. ’77.................................John S. Brittain V ’06<br />

Mat<strong>the</strong>w Bronfman ’77................................Eli M. Bronfman ’07<br />

Lawrence F. Brownstein ’74...................... Amy L. Brownstein ’09<br />

Gordon S. Calder Jr. ’65.............................William C. Calder ’07<br />

Robert C. Campbell ’76........................Robert A. Campbell II ’07<br />

Wick R. Chambers ’66........................ Timothy R. Chambers ’07<br />

Charles J. Demmon ’79.......................Katharine L. Demmon ’09<br />

c c c<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


A R O U N D T H E P O N D<br />

New Faces<br />

on <strong>the</strong> Faculty<br />

Front from left, Jason BreMiller,<br />

English; John Magee, English; Kaitlin<br />

Harvie, English fellow; Andrew<br />

Svensk ’94, ma<strong>the</strong>matics; second row,<br />

Gil Thornfeldt, business manager;<br />

Lydia Finley, science fellow; Enyi-<br />

Abal Koene, French fellow; Robertson<br />

Follansbee, science; third row, Molly<br />

MacLean, French; Cheryl Setchell,<br />

history fellow; Seiko Michaels,<br />

Japanese; <strong>and</strong> Kristen Fairey, history.<br />

Peter Frew ’75<br />

Admissions by <strong>the</strong> Numbers<br />

Director of Admissions Ferdie W<strong>and</strong>elt<br />

’66 <strong>and</strong> his team of admissions officers<br />

received 4,780 inquiries last year <strong>and</strong> reviewed<br />

more than 1,400 applications for<br />

192 places among this year’s student body.<br />

Here’s how <strong>the</strong> numbers break down:<br />

c 460 boarders <strong>and</strong> 105 day students<br />

c 292 boys <strong>and</strong> 273 girls<br />

c 103 lower middlers, evenly divided<br />

between boys <strong>and</strong> girls, chosen from<br />

a pool of 730 c<strong>and</strong>idates<br />

c Toge<strong>the</strong>r, <strong>the</strong>y represent 34<br />

states <strong>and</strong> 19 countries. Students<br />

of color make up 24 percent of<br />

<strong>the</strong> student body, with 139—<strong>the</strong><br />

largest number ever.<br />

c Tuition, room, <strong>and</strong> board for <strong>the</strong><br />

2005–06 school year rose by 6<br />

percent to $35,000, with a 10<br />

percent increase in <strong>the</strong> amount<br />

of financial aid awarded—a record<br />

$4.7 million.<br />

Fudan Scholars<br />

Senior Lexi Comstock meets new<br />

students Lily Shen ’07 <strong>and</strong> Julia Qin ’07<br />

while on a summer visit to China. Lily<br />

<strong>and</strong> Julia, who arrived in September,<br />

are <strong>the</strong> school’s first students from<br />

Fudan University in Shanghai.<br />

“Enrollments at day schools have increased<br />

steadily over <strong>the</strong> past three years,”<br />

says W<strong>and</strong>elt, “while enrollment at<br />

boarding schools has decreased. So why<br />

has our applicant pool remained constant?<br />

Because <strong>Taft</strong> enjoys a reputation as<br />

a school that st<strong>and</strong>s for academic excellence,<br />

first-rate college placement, <strong>and</strong> is<br />

nationally known for <strong>the</strong> care it brings to<br />

raising o<strong>the</strong>r people’s children.”<br />

c c c<br />

Nancy Demmon ’81.................................... A. Bailey Fowlkes ’09<br />

Joseph O. Dillard ’84................................ Monisha R. Dillard ’08 ,<br />

Joseph O. Dillard Jr. ’09<br />

K. Gregg Douglas ’79...................................Colin T. Douglas ’09<br />

Paul M. Ehrlich ’62.................................Benjamin A. Ehrlich ’06<br />

J. Keith Fell ’72.................................................J. Keith Fell Jr. ’08<br />

Jeffrey Foote ’73..................................................Julie E. Foote ’09<br />

Alexis D. Gahagan ’74............................William D. Gahagan ’06<br />

Michael D. Gambone ’78*........................... Kyle S. Gambone ’06<br />

Carl M. Geupel ’68........................................Noah D. Geupel ’08<br />

David W. Griffin ’74.........................................Julia B. Griffin ’08<br />

Gordon P. Guthrie Jr. ’62............................. Joseph S. Guthrie ’07<br />

Laura Weyher Hall ’78...................................Caroline C. Hall ’06<br />

Elizabeth Christie Hibbs ’78........................William C. Hibbs ’08<br />

Katharine Herrlinger Hillman ’76............. Daniel M. Hillman ’06 ,<br />

Scott H. Hillman ’09<br />

Nancy Goldsborough Hurt ’79............................. Cai S. Hurt ’08 ,<br />

Nicolas A. Hurt ’09<br />

Douglas G. Johnson ’66.................................Peter B. Johnson ’08<br />

Laura Gieg Kell ’73............................................Arthur L. Kell ’08<br />

H. Craig Kinney ’68.....................................Jane I. E. Kinney ’06<br />

Andrew J. Klemmer ’75............................Austin G. Klemmer ’07<br />

Daniel K. F. Lam ’75.................................Adrienne P. Y. Lam ’07<br />

Susan Condie Lamb ’77..........................Charles A. L. Bartlett ’08<br />

Leslie Herrlinger Lanahan ’73.................Elizabeth L. Lanahan ’08<br />

Brian C. Lincoln ’74................................Lys<strong>and</strong>ra D. Lincoln ’07<br />

Todd W. Luckey ’75.................................Charlotte D. Luckey ’08<br />

Ann Magnin ’76............................................... Elena C. Stein ’09<br />

Lisa Reid Mayer ’75........................................Drew W. Mayer ’08<br />

Sharon G. McLaughlin ’73.................... Laura R. McLaughlin ’06<br />

James I. Moore Jr. ’74.....................................Emily L. Moore ’07 ,<br />

Ca<strong>the</strong>rine R. Moore ’09<br />

10 <strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


A R O U N D T H E P O N D<br />

<strong>The</strong> Mark Potter Gallery Schedule<br />

2005–2006<br />

September 19–23<br />

<strong>The</strong> Sacred Arts Tour<br />

from <strong>the</strong> Drepung Gomang<br />

Monastic University<br />

September 30<br />

to October 31<br />

Jon Guiffre<br />

Pleasant Distractions<br />

November 3<br />

to December 9<br />

Mauricio H<strong>and</strong>ler<br />

Photographer<br />

January 6<br />

to February 2<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Student Work<br />

Opening reception<br />

Friday, January 6<br />

February 17<br />

to March 10<br />

Juried High <strong>School</strong> Art<br />

Competition<br />

Opening reception<br />

Friday, February 17<br />

March 31 to April 14<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Student Work<br />

April 21<br />

to May 26<br />

Paintings by<br />

Michael Chelminski ’56<br />

Recent Work<br />

Opening reception<br />

Friday, April 21<br />

June through August 2006<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Student Work<br />

Free Roaming Horse: Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, by Jon Guiffre m<br />

“My work in photography <strong>and</strong> painting has never been about sending a message to <strong>the</strong> viewer,” explains photographer Jon<br />

Guiffre, who is also director of publicity <strong>and</strong> sports information at <strong>Taft</strong>. “For me it has always been about looking at something<br />

beautiful for <strong>the</strong> sole purpose of enjoying that photograph or painting.”<br />

Jeffrey Paley ’56............................................... Austin T. Paley ’09<br />

Kenneth A. Pettis ’74..................................... Kendra B. Pettis ’06<br />

Jean Strumolo Piacenza ’75.......................Thomas F. Piacenza ’06<br />

Samuel F. Pryor IV ’73..................................Antonia R. Pryor ’07<br />

Langdon C. Quin III ’66.................................Adrian F. Quin ’08<br />

Ronald B. Reisinger ’60............................Abigail B. Reisinger ’08<br />

Edward Van V. S<strong>and</strong>s ’65..................................Diana P. S<strong>and</strong>s ’06<br />

Carl H. Sangree ’75...................................William A. Sangree ’08<br />

Kenneth A. Saverin ’72.................................Hilary C. Saverin ’06<br />

Roy A. Schonbrun ’68...................... Stephanie D. Schonbrun ’07<br />

Spyros S. Skouras Jr. ’72......................... Spyros S. Skouras III ’06 ,<br />

Sophia M. Skouras ’08<br />

Michael S. Stein ’73.......................................... Elena C. Stein ’09<br />

Taylor J. Strubell ’63.................................... Emma T. Strubell ’07<br />

Tom R. Strumolo ’70..............................Andrew C. Strumolo ’06 ,<br />

Harriet E. Strumolo ’07<br />

Paul A. Sylvester ’74.................................. Bridget K. Sylvester ’08<br />

Bridget Taylor ’77............ Reed E. Coston ’06, Elias P. Coston ’08<br />

Samuel W. M. Thayer ’72........................ Katharine T. Thayer ’07<br />

Nikko Peterson Thompson ’83............. Olabisi O. Thompson ’09<br />

C. Dean Tseretopoulos ’72................Denisia K. Tseretopoulos ’07<br />

Amy E. Upjohn ’79......................................Elizabeth K. Brey ’08<br />

George D. Utley III ’74............................... Hannah D. Utley ’07<br />

Elizabeth Brown Van Sant ’75....................Elinore F. Van Sant ’07 ,<br />

Mary Jennings Van Sant ’09<br />

Sally Childs Walsh ’75.....................................Mary C. Walsh ’06<br />

Christopher C. Wardell ’69................... Clayton C.H. Wardell ’06<br />

Brooks Hendrie Widdoes ’73.................Margaret H. Widdoes ’08<br />

W. Dewees Yeager III ’75.......................... Benjamin B. Yeager ’07<br />

Joanne Klingenstein Ziesing ’78.........................Lee S. Ziesing ’07<br />

Michael D. Zucker ’77............................ Benjamin H. Zucker ’09<br />

*Deceased<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005 11


AROUND THE<br />

This year, three separate funds were available to help students find meaningful summer<br />

experiences: Meg Page Fellowships, Kilbourne Arts Fellowships, <strong>and</strong> Robert K. Poole<br />

Fellowships. As you will see, students put <strong>the</strong>ir resources <strong>and</strong> talents to good use.<br />

Caring about Healthcare<br />

When Eliza Jackson ’06 <strong>and</strong><br />

Christine Anderson ’06 applied<br />

for <strong>the</strong> newly created Meg Page<br />

Fellowship, <strong>the</strong>y were intrigued<br />

by <strong>the</strong> idea of helping at an<br />

AIDS clinic in Albany. “But we<br />

quickly realized that would be<br />

impractical,” Eliza says.<br />

Instead, Eliza’s fa<strong>the</strong>r helped<br />

<strong>the</strong> girls work out a program<br />

with <strong>the</strong> Jimmy Fund, an outpatient<br />

facility for children at <strong>the</strong><br />

Dana Farber Cancer Institute in<br />

Boston, where <strong>the</strong> Jacksons already<br />

had an apartment.<br />

Eliza <strong>and</strong> Christine spent two weeks<br />

playing with <strong>and</strong> reading to young cancer<br />

patients, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>y also arranged to go on<br />

rounds with a staff psychologist to gain<br />

some insight into <strong>the</strong> field—an interest<br />

that came out of <strong>the</strong> adolescent psychology<br />

course both girls took last year.<br />

“I thought working in a cancer center<br />

would freak me out,” says Eliza, who<br />

would like to major in psychology in<br />

college, “with little kids hooked up to<br />

tubes <strong>and</strong> everything. I worried it would<br />

be really depressing. It wasn’t, though. I<br />

wound up really loving it. <strong>The</strong> kids were<br />

just amazing, <strong>and</strong> people were so upbeat.<br />

I left really wanting to help kids in<br />

ways I never expected. It was intense,”<br />

she adds, “but I’m really glad I did it.”<br />

“It was definitely an experience,”<br />

says Christine. “I had a cousin who<br />

died of cancer, so it was really hard,<br />

but after a day or so it was<br />

incredible. We made a difference<br />

in children’s lives just by<br />

telling <strong>the</strong>m that <strong>the</strong> pictures<br />

<strong>the</strong>y drew were really good<br />

<strong>and</strong> making <strong>the</strong>m smile. It was<br />

amazing. I wouldn’t change a<br />

minute of it.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> Meg Page Fellowship<br />

was created to honor Meg Page<br />

’74, who died last year from<br />

cancer. Tyler Perry ’07, who<br />

also received a Page grant, is<br />

in China on <strong>the</strong> <strong>School</strong> Year<br />

Abroad program.<br />

Page Fellowships offer financial support<br />

to help students underwrite <strong>the</strong> expenses<br />

of a summer project, internship,<br />

or course of study devoted, ultimately,<br />

to <strong>the</strong> provision of better healthcare.<br />

Fellowships may be used to help students<br />

pursue interests in public health,<br />

family planning, medical re<strong>sea</strong>rch, mental<br />

health, as well as non-western practices<br />

of health <strong>and</strong> healing.<br />

12 <strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


A R O U N D T H E P O N D<br />

Time for <strong>the</strong> Arts<br />

Whe<strong>the</strong>r it was a course in drawing <strong>and</strong><br />

painting at Parsons <strong>School</strong> of Design<br />

for four weeks or a trip to New Mexico<br />

to study photography at <strong>the</strong> Santa Fe<br />

Workshops, ten students took advantage<br />

of <strong>the</strong> summer vacation to immerse<br />

<strong>the</strong>mselves in <strong>the</strong> arts. O<strong>the</strong>r students<br />

studied creative writing at <strong>the</strong> Sewanee<br />

Young Writers’ Conference held at <strong>the</strong><br />

University of <strong>the</strong> South in Tennessee,<br />

<strong>and</strong> yet ano<strong>the</strong>r took courses in graphic<br />

design, painting, drawing, <strong>and</strong> art history<br />

at Rhode Isl<strong>and</strong> <strong>School</strong> of Design.<br />

“I think <strong>the</strong> experience really<br />

pushed my abilities to a higher level,”<br />

says Lindsay Albert.<br />

Besides producing a large quantity<br />

of artwork, Helen Gazin says she was<br />

also able to “taste <strong>the</strong> art school experience.<br />

It really helped me in my decisions<br />

about college.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> Kilbourne Summer Enrichment<br />

Fund, established by John Kilbourne<br />

’58 in memory of his parents, provides<br />

students with opportunities to participate<br />

in enriching programs in <strong>the</strong> arts.<br />

Recipients in 2005 were seniors Lindsay<br />

Albert, Chrissy Anderson, Helena Smith,<br />

Michael Davis, <strong>and</strong> Claire Longfield,<br />

<strong>and</strong> uppermids Teddy Dwyer, Helen<br />

Gazin, Kacey Klonsky, Sara Partridge,<br />

<strong>and</strong> Jacqueline Staub.<br />

b Untitled, by Claire Longfield ’06, xerox transfer, lexan, <strong>and</strong> charcoal on paper, 32” x 40”<br />

A World of New Perspectives<br />

Robert K. Poole Fellowships were created<br />

in 1988 in memory of Bob Poole ’50,<br />

who devoted his life to conservation <strong>and</strong><br />

education. <strong>The</strong> fellowships help students<br />

underwrite <strong>the</strong> cost of a summer<br />

program that might open eyes, broaden<br />

perspectives, <strong>and</strong> expose individuals to<br />

new ideas <strong>and</strong> experiences in <strong>the</strong> hope<br />

that all members of <strong>the</strong> community will<br />

be <strong>the</strong> ultimate beneficiaries.<br />

SuYeone Jeon ’06, who returned<br />

home to Korea for <strong>the</strong> summer,<br />

chose to work in a nursing home<br />

in Eumsung, ChoongChungBookDo.<br />

“Every weekend, my mo<strong>the</strong>r <strong>and</strong> I<br />

went down to this village <strong>and</strong> helped in<br />

buildings where <strong>the</strong> elderly lived,” she<br />

says. “Most of <strong>the</strong>m had Alzheimer’s,<br />

<strong>and</strong> many were paralyzed. It hurt me<br />

that most of <strong>the</strong>se people were thrown<br />

away by <strong>the</strong>ir children at a train station<br />

or in front of <strong>the</strong> village. One<br />

<strong>woman</strong> always saved her snacks to<br />

give to her daughter who, she said,<br />

‘will visit sometime soon,’ but no<br />

one ever came. Although it was very<br />

difficult work, I learned a lot from<br />

this trip <strong>and</strong> will never forget all <strong>the</strong><br />

moments I had with <strong>the</strong>se patients.”<br />

O<strong>the</strong>r fellows this year’s were seniors<br />

Emily Andrysick, Spencer Barton, Derek<br />

Chan, Sarah Ewing, Brendan Gangl,<br />

David Greco, Caroline Hall, Justin<br />

Hsieh, Jason Kim, Arielle Palladino,<br />

Will Rickards, Sarah Schoonmaker,<br />

Hillary Simpson, Skye Taylor, Elizabeth<br />

Walle, <strong>and</strong> Mary Walsh, <strong>and</strong> upper mids<br />

Clare Maltman <strong>and</strong> Martha Pascoe.<br />

Derek Chan ’06 describing life <strong>and</strong> academic experiences at <strong>Taft</strong> as an assistant<br />

language teacher at Matsuyama, Japan. When not teaching, he learned about<br />

Japanese history <strong>and</strong> Japanese classical literature with his students.<br />

c c c


A R O U N D T H E P O N D<br />

Skye Taylor <strong>and</strong> Caroline Hall performed <strong>the</strong> traditional<br />

Meke dance in front of <strong>the</strong> entire village of Nasivikoso in<br />

<strong>the</strong> Fiji Isl<strong>and</strong>s, where <strong>the</strong>y lived with individual families.<br />

While <strong>the</strong>re, <strong>the</strong>y did various community service acts such as<br />

building concrete pathways <strong>and</strong> teaching English to children<br />

in <strong>the</strong> local schools.<br />

Sarah Ewing spent five weeks in Ghana, including a two-week<br />

community service project in which she taught <strong>and</strong> helped build<br />

an extension onto a school, a two-week homestay, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>n<br />

four days traveling around <strong>the</strong> country. Sick with malaria <strong>and</strong><br />

dysentery for <strong>the</strong> first half of <strong>the</strong> trip, she had “<strong>the</strong> worst case of<br />

homesickness, but soon began falling in love with <strong>the</strong> country,”<br />

she says. “I know I will go back <strong>the</strong>re as soon as I can.”<br />

David Greco embarked on a two-week trip to Guatemala to<br />

volunteer in <strong>the</strong> excavation of a Mayan site never previously dug.<br />

“I was literally knee deep in <strong>the</strong> fertile soil surrounding <strong>the</strong> coffee<br />

village of Chocola,” he says, “sifting for 2,000-year-old pottery<br />

shards <strong>and</strong> figurines, or <strong>sea</strong>rching for <strong>the</strong> fourth corner of an<br />

ancient structure once a Mayan temple.”<br />

On <strong>The</strong>ir Own<br />

While not funded by one of <strong>the</strong> school’s<br />

three summer enrichment funds, o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

students found plenty of opportunities<br />

for excitement over <strong>the</strong> vacation as well.<br />

c Simone Foxman ‘07 <strong>and</strong> her family spent<br />

two weeks in Israel to explore <strong>the</strong>ir Jewish<br />

heritage <strong>and</strong> visit a number of ancient <strong>and</strong><br />

modern sites. Simone says she enjoyed<br />

seeing <strong>the</strong> last remnants of <strong>the</strong> Second<br />

Temple, <strong>the</strong> Dome of <strong>the</strong> Rock <strong>and</strong> al-Aqsa<br />

Mosque that now adorn Mount Moriah.<br />

She also took pleasure in riding camels in<br />

<strong>the</strong> West Bank (“I was ra<strong>the</strong>r enamored<br />

with <strong>the</strong> four-legged beast,” she says, “<strong>and</strong><br />

its child”) <strong>and</strong> investigating <strong>the</strong> ab<strong>and</strong>oned<br />

trenches Israelis <strong>and</strong> Jordanians inhabited<br />

while fighting in <strong>the</strong> Golan Heights. While in<br />

Israel, <strong>the</strong> family took an opportunity to meet<br />

relatives in Tel Aviv, one of whom helped<br />

Israel evacuate <strong>the</strong> Gaza Strip in August.


Emily Andrysick’s five-week trip to Greece included a ten-day community service<br />

project at <strong>the</strong> American Farm <strong>School</strong> in <strong>The</strong>ssaloniki, ano<strong>the</strong>r project in a much smaller<br />

village during <strong>the</strong>ir homestay, a tour of <strong>the</strong> country’s sites, <strong>and</strong> a final climb up Mount<br />

Olympus—mythical home of <strong>the</strong> gods. “<strong>The</strong> eight-hour trek up Greece’s tallest mountain<br />

was unlike anything I’ve ever even attempted to do before,” she says.<br />

Jason Kim traveled to<br />

<strong>the</strong> Galápagos Isl<strong>and</strong>s on<br />

a three-week program<br />

with Lifeworks. “Since we<br />

were working with <strong>the</strong><br />

national park, we had some<br />

privileges that average<br />

tourists don’t have,” he<br />

says, “like touching <strong>the</strong><br />

giant tortoises.” <strong>The</strong> group<br />

also worked to remove<br />

invasive plants <strong>and</strong> planted<br />

native ones; worked at local<br />

schools, painting, playing<br />

with children; <strong>and</strong> learned<br />

about <strong>the</strong> isl<strong>and</strong>s—while<br />

working on <strong>the</strong>ir tans on<br />

<strong>the</strong> beach.<br />

Hillary Simpson spent eight days in Costa<br />

Rica living at a <strong>sea</strong> turtle conservatory<br />

in Punta Judas. Working with <strong>the</strong> Coast<br />

Guard, she cleared brush to exp<strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

hatchery, constructed baskets to place<br />

on relocated turtle nests, <strong>and</strong> went on<br />

“turtle patrol.” Her most memorable<br />

experience was rescuing eggs from a<br />

nest as <strong>the</strong> mo<strong>the</strong>r was laying <strong>the</strong>m. “It<br />

was such a surreal experience to have a<br />

living, breathing <strong>sea</strong> turtle right in front<br />

of me,” she says. “She laid about 115<br />

eggs, <strong>and</strong> I placed each of <strong>the</strong>m in a<br />

plastic bag to be transported to <strong>the</strong><br />

hatchery. I left feeling informed <strong>and</strong><br />

now carry a sense of accomplishment<br />

that I was able to make a difference.”<br />

. Max Biedermann (at right) worked as a governor’s page in North<br />

Carolina. “It was very rewarding <strong>and</strong> provided a great insight into<br />

how <strong>the</strong> state government works,” he says. His main responsibility<br />

was delivering mail for <strong>the</strong> secretary of Crime Control <strong>and</strong> Public<br />

Safety, but he also got <strong>the</strong> chance to work side by side with<br />

real detectives one day, working in <strong>the</strong> department of Alcohol<br />

Enforcement. He also got to meet <strong>the</strong> state’s attorney general.<br />

m Andrew Kazakoff (at left) went to Israel to play squash in <strong>the</strong><br />

World Maccabiah Games. “Our team received gold in <strong>the</strong> team<br />

competition for junior squash,” he says. <strong>The</strong> opening ceremonies<br />

were held at Ramat Gan Stadium. “<strong>The</strong> best part,” he adds,<br />

“was having <strong>the</strong> chance to interact with so many different Jewish<br />

people from all around <strong>the</strong> world.”


16 <strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


<strong>The</strong> mountains<br />

of <strong>the</strong> world<br />

have <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

hold on Colin<br />

Samuels ’85,<br />

who climbs,<br />

photographs,<br />

skis, <strong>and</strong> makes<br />

his home in <strong>the</strong><br />

French Alps.<br />

By Linda<br />

Hedman Beyus<br />

Not everyone who travels to <strong>the</strong> Alps to ski, stays <strong>the</strong>re for<br />

15 years as Colin Samuels has, in <strong>the</strong> shadow of <strong>the</strong> gr<strong>and</strong> La<br />

Meije. Nor does everyone who skis drag heavy gear up on <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

back, dangling off a precipice with climbing rope attached, to<br />

find a hidden couloir to ski <strong>and</strong> shoot. He says it was serendipity<br />

that l<strong>and</strong>ed him in Les Terrasses, a mountainside village in<br />

<strong>the</strong> French Alps near Grenoble, now his home base.<br />

After breaking his leg at Telluride while working as a ski<br />

photographer in 1989, Samuels saved his workman’s comp<br />

money <strong>and</strong> felt <strong>the</strong> pull of new mountains to ski <strong>and</strong> shoot.<br />

Alone, he headed for Chamonix, a skiers’ mecca, to discover<br />

<strong>the</strong> next level of skiing—unrestricted <strong>and</strong> more challenging<br />

than <strong>the</strong> smaller U.S. peaks—<strong>and</strong> to get off piste (off <strong>the</strong><br />

groomed slope). After a year in Chamonix, Colin discovered<br />

m Colin Samuels ’85 in <strong>the</strong> alpenglow, st<strong>and</strong>ing on <strong>the</strong> summit of<br />

La Meije. Colin Samuels collection<br />

b Colin Samuels ’85 makes his home in <strong>the</strong> small French village<br />

Les Terrasses. <strong>The</strong> view from his bedroom window is of <strong>the</strong><br />

13,140-foot mountain La Meije. Colin Samuels<br />

<strong>the</strong> La Grave ski area, with its formidable 13,140-foot mountain<br />

called La Meije, <strong>and</strong> he hasn’t left yet. It was love—of a<br />

mountain—at first sight.<br />

Work that isn’t work<br />

As a mountain <strong>and</strong> outdoor photographer specializing in skiing<br />

<strong>and</strong> mountaineering, Samuels takes on assignments for<br />

U.S. <strong>and</strong> European magazines <strong>and</strong> does independent photo<br />

shoots. He’s photographed for clients such as Patagonia, Black<br />

Diamond, Rossignol, <strong>and</strong> Skiing <strong>and</strong> SKI magazines. Colin<br />

chooses his own subject matter, he says, with 90 percent of his<br />

images shot on film, ra<strong>the</strong>r than in digital format. “Work has<br />

never been work,” he claims. “Even when I don’t sleep for two<br />

or three days, it’s okay—it’s a passion.”<br />

What Samuels likes best about being a freelance photographer<br />

is <strong>the</strong> freedom <strong>and</strong> being responsible for his own success<br />

or failure—<strong>the</strong> same way one climbs a summit or skis a<br />

glacial runout. <strong>The</strong> creativity of making photographs is satisfying,<br />

he says; “It’s value that goes beyond monetary; people<br />

appreciate <strong>the</strong>m.”<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005 17


A first descent on La Meije<br />

by Samuels in summer 2003.<br />

Colin Samuels collection<br />

c With a vertical drop of 7,054<br />

feet, La Grave isn’t known for its<br />

blue or green trails. Colin Samuels<br />

Samuels’ freelance career in France took off slowly but surely.<br />

He knew he had taken plenty of ski photos that were magazine-caliber<br />

<strong>and</strong> could find a niche continuing to shoot. <strong>The</strong> timing<br />

was also perfect—he broke into European ski publications<br />

during “<strong>the</strong> golden era” when snowboarding really took off, ano<strong>the</strong>r<br />

sport he enjoys. “Hanging out with friends who were into<br />

alpinism,” Samuels says he went along to take photos in <strong>the</strong> high<br />

mountains of France, which lured him into climbing. Traveling<br />

around <strong>the</strong> world now, on photo shoots or treks, Samuels says<br />

<strong>the</strong>re’s no difference between trips for work or for pleasure—a<br />

balance not many of us have <strong>and</strong> something many might envy.<br />

Letting a mountain take hold<br />

Samuels’ powerful photos include those of Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Asia,<br />

Cambodia’s Angkor Wat, <strong>the</strong> Sahara, Peru, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> 1994 Winter<br />

Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway. Continuing his colorstreaked<br />

style of athletes in motion, he hopes to shoot <strong>the</strong> 2006<br />

Torino Olympics this winter <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> IX Paralympic Games.<br />

His travel photos include color images of wind-sculpted<br />

desert s<strong>and</strong> with deep shadows, a Buddhist monk in prayer<br />

silhouetted in a temple doorway, <strong>and</strong> a lone fisherman casting<br />

a h<strong>and</strong> net at sunset. <strong>The</strong>y have a gr<strong>and</strong> perspective—<strong>the</strong><br />

figures of people are small, conveying <strong>the</strong> intense drama <strong>and</strong><br />

essence, often of snow-covered, high mountains.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> mountains are majestic,” Samuels’ haiku-like way<br />

of getting across that <strong>the</strong>y are much more than l<strong>and</strong>scape for<br />

him. Clearly spiritual in <strong>the</strong> way he speaks of <strong>the</strong>se spectacular<br />

places, Samuels says in <strong>the</strong> intro to his SKI magazine photo essay,<br />

“Like <strong>the</strong> true love affair that it is, my attraction to La Meije<br />

grows all <strong>the</strong> time. When I put my camera down, reverse our<br />

roles <strong>and</strong> let her take hold of me, <strong>the</strong> more I learn <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> closer<br />

we become.” Mountains are far more than geology or sport for<br />

Samuels—<strong>the</strong>re’s a seductive animism in his awe.<br />

18 <strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


Taking it to a higher level<br />

Raised in New York City, Samuels grew up skiing <strong>the</strong> Nor<strong>the</strong>ast<br />

(upstate New York <strong>and</strong> Vermont) <strong>and</strong> out west. His penchant<br />

for photography started early <strong>and</strong> took hold. At <strong>Taft</strong>, he did<br />

an independent studies project in photography with faculty<br />

member Courtney Carroll, using a medium-sized format<br />

(2 1/4 in. negatives) in black <strong>and</strong> white. He learned oneon-one<br />

<strong>and</strong> happily notes that Carroll was an easygoing<br />

teacher. Samuels even had a small exhibition at <strong>Taft</strong>, images<br />

of architecture <strong>and</strong> people on campus.<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> prepared him to be independent <strong>and</strong>, he emphasizes,<br />

“pushed you to a higher level,” something he has apparently<br />

never stopped doing in his skiing, photography, <strong>and</strong> life. “My<br />

education at <strong>Taft</strong> prepared me more than my Ivy-League university<br />

for <strong>the</strong> rest of my life.” He studied French for all four<br />

of his <strong>Taft</strong> years (including one year of AP), which was tough,<br />

he says, but superior to his French studies at UPenn, where he<br />

minored in French literature. “<strong>Taft</strong> gave me <strong>the</strong> freedom to be<br />

athletic on a daily basis,” he affirms. Growing up in NYC, it<br />

wasn’t so easy to do outdoor sports every day. At <strong>Taft</strong> he could<br />

play basketball, tennis, soccer, <strong>and</strong> just be outside. After <strong>Taft</strong>,<br />

he wanted to immerse himself in skiing, again “taking it to a<br />

higher level,” <strong>and</strong> went to Telluride <strong>and</strong> l<strong>and</strong>ed a ski photography<br />

job: his launching pad for a career <strong>and</strong> for France.<br />

Why La Grave?<br />

“It was perfect,” he says. “Huge mountains.” And he<br />

made a lot of friends. What he likes most about living in<br />

<strong>the</strong> small mountain village of Les Terrasses, surrounded<br />

by incredibly steep cliffs, he muses, is, “You have to make<br />

your own way. <strong>The</strong> wea<strong>the</strong>r is wild; people get depressed<br />

because <strong>the</strong> mountains make it dark. I’ve never been<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005 19


ored one second while living here—it feels like home.”<br />

And he wants a simple life style. <strong>The</strong> locals are of all<br />

ages <strong>and</strong> include sheep farmers, extreme skiers, <strong>and</strong> yearround<br />

mountain guides. “A passionate group of people,”<br />

Samuels says. With skis or snowboards on his feet about<br />

150 days per year, he also enjoys climbing, running, <strong>and</strong><br />

o<strong>the</strong>r outdoor sports.<br />

<strong>The</strong> La Grave ski area he loves is no average ski resort.<br />

<strong>The</strong> online magazine First Tracks!! decribes it as “<strong>the</strong><br />

most extreme lift-served terrain…<strong>and</strong> an unlimited scope<br />

to do whatever <strong>the</strong> hell you want to without anybody to<br />

tell you o<strong>the</strong>rwise...whe<strong>the</strong>r it kills you or not.” With a<br />

vertical drop of 7,054 ft., it’s not a blue or green trail.<br />

Samuels likes skiing in challenging terrain, doing alpine<br />

climbing, <strong>and</strong> solo climbs <strong>and</strong> descents anywhere in <strong>the</strong> world,<br />

not just in his beloved Alps. Recent trip destinations this past<br />

year include Norway for r<strong>and</strong>onnée skiing (alpine ski touring)<br />

above <strong>the</strong> Arctic Circle in May, skiing <strong>and</strong> climbing in <strong>the</strong><br />

San Juan <strong>and</strong> Gr<strong>and</strong> Teton mountains in July, <strong>and</strong> an August<br />

ski-mountaineering trip to Argentina’s Tierra del Fuego<br />

mountains—not your average fare. He likes <strong>the</strong> responsibility<br />

for self <strong>and</strong> freedom that his genre of work <strong>and</strong> skiing<br />

requires. “<strong>The</strong> life I’ve chosen has its built-in risks, but I’m<br />

not choosing it because it is risky.”<br />

Ascents <strong>and</strong> descents<br />

<strong>The</strong> biggest challenges for Samuels have not been <strong>the</strong> steep<br />

slopes of mountains around <strong>the</strong> world—it was “sharing his<br />

love <strong>and</strong> falling in love,” with his Norwegian fiancée Siri<br />

Hofseth, a world-class skier <strong>and</strong> ex-police<strong>woman</strong> from Oslo.<br />

Colin met Siri in 1999, when she moved to La Grave to live.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y shared a love for <strong>the</strong> mountains, <strong>and</strong> she was often a<br />

model in his photo shoots. “My whole life had led up to meet-<br />

20 <strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


Traveling around <strong>the</strong> world on photo<br />

shoots (to places like Cambodia’s Angkor<br />

Wat), Samuels says <strong>the</strong>re’s no difference<br />

between trips for work or for pleasure.<br />

Colin Samuels/Getty Images<br />

c Samuels practices a form of mountaineering<br />

called ski-alpinism—climbing, often solo,<br />

<strong>and</strong> decending with skiis or snowboard. His<br />

work often combines <strong>the</strong> technical aspects<br />

of getting <strong>the</strong>re with <strong>the</strong> creative aspects of<br />

photography. Colin Samuels collection<br />

To see more photos by Colin Samuels, visit <strong>the</strong> Getty<br />

Images website: http://creative.gettyimages.com.<br />

ing her,” he calmly shares, “<strong>and</strong> she was a soul mate.” In May<br />

2002, Siri died in a skiing accident in Norway.<br />

Rebuilding his life after her death was not easy. “It’s important<br />

that her death doesn’t overshadow her life,” Colin<br />

reflects. “Despite Siri’s death, I still find joy <strong>and</strong> meaning<br />

in my daily life, even if <strong>the</strong> grief remains profound. I love it<br />

here in <strong>the</strong> mountains <strong>and</strong> intend to continue living life to<br />

<strong>the</strong> fullest.”<br />

Virtual thrills<br />

“I’ve never been risk averse,” Samuels points out—an understatement<br />

when taking in <strong>the</strong> setting of his photos; to get<br />

to <strong>the</strong> steeps, alpine climbing is <strong>the</strong> only route. Those of us<br />

who view his photos <strong>and</strong> digest <strong>the</strong> reality of his (literally)<br />

on-<strong>the</strong>-edge life, are simultaneously awed by <strong>the</strong> beauty of<br />

<strong>the</strong> extreme l<strong>and</strong>scape <strong>and</strong> vicariously thrilled by <strong>the</strong> adventure<br />

<strong>and</strong> risk involved. We don’t have to climb that knifeedged<br />

peak; we can let someone like Samuels go for it, while<br />

we admire his passion <strong>and</strong> ability to get <strong>the</strong>re <strong>and</strong> share <strong>the</strong><br />

experience visually. In fact, he distills each mountain’s or<br />

s<strong>and</strong> dune’s energy, its force, for <strong>the</strong> viewer, empowering its<br />

specific exquisiteness.<br />

In a deeply philosophical way, yet with a light touch,<br />

Samuels talks intently about his life <strong>and</strong> high-altitude adventures<br />

without bragging. He seems, in fact, humble <strong>and</strong> wise<br />

with a softened attitude—perhaps rare in <strong>the</strong> world of adventurers.<br />

It’s clear that <strong>the</strong> mountains of <strong>the</strong> world, where he<br />

lives, works, <strong>and</strong> plays, have woven <strong>the</strong>ir spell <strong>and</strong> enveloped<br />

him in <strong>the</strong>ir majesty. After all, his beloved La Meije is nicknamed<br />

“<strong>The</strong> Queen.”<br />

Linda Hedman Beyus is alumni notes editor for this magazine.<br />

She writes <strong>and</strong> skis, but not in couloirs.<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005 21


My<br />

Back<br />

Pages<br />

Michael Kodas<br />

Underneath his trendierthan-Clark-Kent<br />

disguise,<br />

Will Dana ’81—<strong>the</strong> new<br />

managing editor of<br />

Rolling Stone —is more<br />

magician than superhero.<br />

His first trick: restoring<br />

<strong>the</strong> magazine to its<br />

former glory.<br />

By Julie Reiff


My Back Pages<br />

T<br />

he photo editor’s office<br />

at Rolling Stone looks<br />

out over 51st Street through<br />

floor-to-ceiling glass. It’s not a<br />

huge room, but seven editors<br />

file comfortably into it—although<br />

<strong>the</strong>re aren’t enough<br />

chairs. Two editors lean against<br />

<strong>the</strong> solid wall that’s shared with<br />

<strong>the</strong> neighboring office <strong>and</strong> a<br />

third st<strong>and</strong>s near <strong>the</strong> doorway.<br />

Will Dana ’81, <strong>the</strong> newly promoted<br />

managing editor, grabs<br />

a <strong>sea</strong>t by <strong>the</strong> glass wall that<br />

separates <strong>the</strong> office from <strong>the</strong><br />

cubicles beyond. He’s wearing<br />

khakis <strong>and</strong> a flowered shirt<br />

<strong>and</strong> puts his loafer-clad feet<br />

on <strong>the</strong> edge of Jodi Peckman’s<br />

desk. She sits behind it holding<br />

a box of tissues, apologizing<br />

that she has a cold.<br />

<strong>The</strong> group brainstorms<br />

cover ideas for an upcoming<br />

issue featuring <strong>the</strong> rock b<strong>and</strong><br />

White Stripes. Dana suggests<br />

dressing <strong>the</strong> duo in NASCAR<br />

jumpsuits in front of a burning<br />

car wreck; <strong>the</strong>y know that<br />

publisher Jann Wenner will<br />

want what <strong>the</strong>y call a “concept<br />

cover.” Excited about his<br />

idea, Dana pulls his feet off<br />

<strong>the</strong> desk <strong>and</strong> leans forward as<br />

he describes <strong>the</strong> scene he pictures<br />

in his mind.<br />

<strong>The</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r editors nod<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir heads <strong>and</strong> discuss his<br />

idea for a minute until someone<br />

suggests a carnival <strong>the</strong>me.<br />

Nah, I think Annie Leibowitz<br />

has done that already, one says,<br />

<strong>and</strong> someone else grabs a photography<br />

book off <strong>the</strong> shelf<br />

behind Peckman to see if he<br />

can find it. <strong>The</strong>y’re bro<strong>the</strong>r <strong>and</strong><br />

sister, right? ano<strong>the</strong>r editor<br />

asks. And isn’t he into Orson<br />

Welles? Maybe we can do something<br />

with that?<br />

<strong>The</strong> magazine is such<br />

a collaboration, Dana says<br />

later. He loves <strong>the</strong> teamwork,<br />

working with o<strong>the</strong>r editors,<br />

writers, <strong>and</strong> art directors.<br />

“My role is to create an atmosphere<br />

in which people can do<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir best work, to give <strong>the</strong>m<br />

<strong>the</strong> support <strong>and</strong> confidence<br />

to do work that will meet our<br />

st<strong>and</strong>ards. I like people who<br />

are ambitious, talented, <strong>and</strong><br />

a little weird; I want <strong>the</strong>m to<br />

know that if <strong>the</strong>ir creative impulses<br />

lead <strong>the</strong>m away from<br />

<strong>the</strong> conventional approach,<br />

that we’ll follow <strong>the</strong>m <strong>the</strong>re.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> group throws out<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r ideas—dressing <strong>the</strong><br />

musicians up in one costume<br />

or ano<strong>the</strong>r almost as if <strong>the</strong>y<br />

were a couple of Barbie dolls.<br />

Eventually <strong>the</strong> editors move<br />

on to discuss which photographer<br />

to use. Dana listens attentively<br />

to each of <strong>the</strong>m. He<br />

may be <strong>the</strong>ir boss now, but he’s<br />

also still one of <strong>the</strong> guys, part<br />

of <strong>the</strong> team.<br />

All I Really<br />

Want to Do<br />

A large W (for Wenner<br />

Media) dominates <strong>the</strong> small<br />

lobby, but, neatly lined up<br />

along <strong>the</strong> wall, framed issues<br />

of <strong>the</strong> publication give away<br />

<strong>the</strong> place’s true identity: home<br />

of <strong>the</strong> most famous magazine<br />

in <strong>the</strong> world devoted to music<br />

<strong>and</strong> pop culture.<br />

Beneath <strong>the</strong> glass, <strong>the</strong><br />

newspaperlike first issue from<br />

1967 is far from pristine. Dogeared<br />

<strong>and</strong> yellow—<strong>the</strong> fold<br />

still visible—it’s a clear sign<br />

that Wenner, <strong>the</strong> magazine’s<br />

founder, had little idea what<br />

an integral part of that culture<br />

Rolling Stone would become.<br />

A single black-<strong>and</strong>-white image—a<br />

still photo of John<br />

Lennon in army fatigues—<br />

dominates <strong>the</strong> colorless cover.<br />

<strong>The</strong> offices of Rolling<br />

Stone are, though, simply offices.<br />

Bob Dylan isn’t hanging<br />

out at <strong>the</strong> water cooler,<br />

nor is Aerosmith performing<br />

its latest song. In fact,<br />

<strong>the</strong>re isn’t any music playing,<br />

unless people are listening<br />

through headphones.<br />

<strong>The</strong> place is busy but surprisingly<br />

quiet, businesslike,<br />

except that jeans outnumber<br />

suits even on a Tuesday.<br />

“That’s all I remember about<br />

my first day,” says Dana,<br />

“how quiet it was here. <strong>The</strong><br />

place was sleepy. <strong>The</strong> saying<br />

was you’d work here for one<br />

year or 15.”<br />

Dana started his career as<br />

an unpaid intern at Harper’s<br />

right after graduating from<br />

Middlebury in 1985. He<br />

has also worked at Interview,<br />

Esquire, 7 Days (which won<br />

a national magazine award<br />

for general excellence two<br />

weeks after closing down),<br />

Manhattan Inc, Outside, <strong>and</strong><br />

Worth. After that he worked<br />

for Details, what he calls his<br />

“lone Condé Nast experience”<br />

in his 20-year career.<br />

He says he felt uncomfortable<br />

<strong>the</strong>re because <strong>the</strong> culture was<br />

so competitive <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>re was<br />

no real sense of job security.<br />

So when Rolling Stone<br />

called Dana in 1996—after<br />

periodic inquiries on his<br />

part—it was, he says, as if a<br />

helicopter had flown over <strong>and</strong><br />

dropped a ladder to rescue<br />

him. “This is really where I<br />

wanted to be all along.”<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005 23


My Back Pages<br />

A Satisfied<br />

Mind<br />

“Will Dana <strong>and</strong> I get along<br />

great,” says Wenner, who promoted<br />

him in May. “He’s got<br />

my deep respect, <strong>and</strong> we’ve<br />

been working very closely toge<strong>the</strong>r<br />

for quite a few years.<br />

He’s been in training for <strong>the</strong><br />

job for a long time, <strong>and</strong> he<br />

got it on his own merits <strong>and</strong><br />

hard work.”<br />

Prior to <strong>the</strong> promotion,<br />

Dana was one of three deputy<br />

managing editors, but he’s<br />

held a number of roles in his<br />

nine years at <strong>the</strong> magazine.<br />

During his stint as <strong>the</strong> political<br />

editor, he interviewed most<br />

of <strong>the</strong> major figures in <strong>the</strong> last<br />

presidential campaign.<br />

Dana clearly does his<br />

homework. For <strong>the</strong> most part,<br />

his interviews are straightforward<br />

questions <strong>and</strong> answers,<br />

but he writes introductions for<br />

each that let <strong>the</strong> reader know<br />

exactly what’s at stake. Among<br />

his many subjects, he has interviewed<br />

John Kerry, Tom<br />

Brokaw, Ted Kennedy, Howard<br />

Dean, Al Sharpton, Wesley<br />

Clark, Thomas Friedman, <strong>and</strong><br />

Dennis Kucinich.<br />

“Kucinich. I loved him,”<br />

says Dana. “That was <strong>the</strong><br />

most fun because it was just<br />

him <strong>and</strong> three o<strong>the</strong>r people.<br />

I was sitting next to him<br />

on <strong>the</strong> plane, sitting next to<br />

him in <strong>the</strong> van. I followed<br />

him for a couple legs of that<br />

trip. When Kerry was going<br />

<strong>the</strong>re were tons of people<br />

around him. Dean, by <strong>the</strong><br />

time I got to him, he was at<br />

<strong>the</strong> height of his campaign.<br />

With Kucinich, no one else<br />

was talking to him.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> Times<br />

<strong>The</strong>y Are<br />

A-Changin’<br />

Now that he’s running <strong>the</strong><br />

magazine, Dana says his concerns<br />

are more conceptual<br />

<strong>and</strong> amorphous: “I have to<br />

think about <strong>the</strong> whole equation,”<br />

he says. “Is <strong>the</strong> rock<br />

section working? Do we need<br />

to think up more special issues?<br />

Did we mess up by not<br />

putting Kanye West on <strong>the</strong><br />

cover before Time did?”<br />

In <strong>the</strong> course of a morning<br />

he suggests two different energy-related<br />

stories to editors who<br />

pop in <strong>and</strong> out of his office with<br />

questions. He’s obsessed, he<br />

says, with energy. “It’s <strong>the</strong> biggest<br />

story out <strong>the</strong>re, <strong>and</strong> we’re<br />

not talking about it. We have<br />

an energy crisis, but <strong>the</strong> general<br />

sense of how much or what <strong>the</strong><br />

crisis entails is hardly discussed.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y write about oil issues, but<br />

<strong>the</strong>y don’t get it or don’t want<br />

to get it. And it just amazes me.<br />

This is topic number one.<br />

“In Japan this is <strong>the</strong> focus,<br />

<strong>and</strong> here you’d never know—<br />

‘buy an SUV <strong>and</strong> burn more<br />

gas.’ So I try to get those issues<br />

out <strong>the</strong>re,” he adds. “We<br />

want to get beyond <strong>the</strong> chicken-little<br />

approach <strong>and</strong> look<br />

at <strong>the</strong> people who are rolling<br />

up <strong>the</strong>ir sleeves <strong>and</strong> trying to<br />

find ways to solve it.”<br />

But Dana wants to be<br />

clear: Rolling Stone is not a policy<br />

magazine. “We try to treat<br />

Will Dana ’81 interviewed Vice President Al Gore during <strong>the</strong> 2000<br />

election. Photo courtesy of Rolling Stone<br />

our readers with intelligence,<br />

but we don’t see it as our job<br />

to get deep into every policy<br />

discussion,” he says. “O<strong>the</strong>r<br />

people do that better; it’s not<br />

where we’re going. We’ll cover<br />

<strong>the</strong> war in Iraq, or <strong>the</strong> war on<br />

drugs. Long articles are worth<br />

doing, as long as <strong>the</strong>y aren’t<br />

boring. Good articles are not<br />

just about facts; we’re trying<br />

to tell stories.”<br />

National affairs may be<br />

only two or three pages per issue,<br />

but <strong>the</strong> issues <strong>the</strong>y choose<br />

to cover are always provocative.<br />

And Rolling Stone takes a more<br />

partisan approach than st<strong>and</strong>ard<br />

news media. “I would say<br />

<strong>the</strong> difference is that we don’t<br />

hide our bias, but we’re fair.<br />

Our stories generally have an<br />

argument to <strong>the</strong>m,” he adds,<br />

“but we don’t distort <strong>the</strong> facts.<br />

Being fair <strong>and</strong> being objective<br />

are two different things.”<br />

Like a Rolling<br />

Stone<br />

<strong>The</strong> cover discussion over,<br />

Dana is back in his own office,<br />

which is a mirror image of <strong>the</strong><br />

photo editor’s. He leans back<br />

in his chair <strong>and</strong> puts his now<br />

bare feet up on <strong>the</strong> desk. It is<br />

uncluttered, a little dusty at <strong>the</strong><br />

edges, but organized. An Apple<br />

flat-screen monitor dominates<br />

one corner <strong>and</strong> chimes like a<br />

cowbell every few minutes announcing<br />

new e-mail messages.<br />

<strong>The</strong> only personal item in <strong>the</strong><br />

room is a black-<strong>and</strong>-white photo<br />

of his 7-year-old son on <strong>the</strong><br />

shelf behind him. [Dana lives<br />

in Manhattan with his wife<br />

Ellen Tien, who writes for <strong>the</strong><br />

New York Times Sunday Style<br />

section, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir son Jack.]<br />

Features editor Eric Bates<br />

leans in <strong>the</strong> doorway to see if<br />

Dana has time to talk <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>n<br />

takes <strong>the</strong> chair by <strong>the</strong> glass wall.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y discuss <strong>the</strong> draft of an article<br />

about <strong>the</strong> mission to Mars,<br />

deciding what order things<br />

should go in—<strong>the</strong> vision behind<br />

it, <strong>the</strong> reality, <strong>the</strong> challenge,<br />

<strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> why—as well<br />

as where <strong>the</strong> draft still needs<br />

fine-tuning <strong>and</strong> what questions<br />

<strong>the</strong>y’d like it to answer.<br />

“I think it needs to really<br />

explain <strong>the</strong> scope of <strong>the</strong> chal-<br />

24 <strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


My Back Pages<br />

lenge—<strong>the</strong> insane challenge of<br />

it—in <strong>the</strong> second half,” Dana<br />

says to Bates, sliding his glasses<br />

up on his forehead. “I think it’s<br />

got to be like, ‘Mars is <strong>the</strong> future.’<br />

Show it first as this wacky<br />

idea, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>n get to Bush <strong>and</strong><br />

explain why it’s worth bankrupting<br />

our treasury to do it.<br />

Did <strong>the</strong> writer talk to any astronauts<br />

in person? He needs<br />

quotes from <strong>the</strong>m; I want to<br />

hear <strong>the</strong>ir voices.”<br />

“Will is a creative thinker<br />

about story assigning,”<br />

Wenner agrees later, “as well<br />

as being a very good leader<br />

<strong>and</strong> listener. He inspires writers<br />

<strong>and</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r editors.”<br />

Dana is most proud of<br />

two projects: coming up with<br />

<strong>the</strong> idea in 1998 for a series<br />

of articles on fast food for<br />

<strong>the</strong> magazine that ended up<br />

as Eric Schlosser’s book Fast<br />

Food Nation <strong>and</strong> author Evan<br />

Wright’s award-winning book<br />

on <strong>the</strong> war in Iraq. Generation<br />

Kill also began as a series of<br />

articles for Rolling Stone while<br />

Dana was <strong>the</strong> features editor.<br />

“Will came up with <strong>the</strong><br />

basic idea <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> title of Fast<br />

Food Nation,” says Schlosser.<br />

“He asked me to find out<br />

what was happening behind<br />

<strong>the</strong> counter at fast-food restaurants.<br />

He didn’t know <strong>the</strong> answer,<br />

but sensed that it would<br />

be interesting. My re<strong>sea</strong>rch<br />

turned into a huge investigative<br />

piece that challenged<br />

some very powerful, very<br />

mean companies. Will backed<br />

me all <strong>the</strong> way, never asked me<br />

to tone things down, <strong>and</strong> had<br />

faith that <strong>the</strong> piece was worth<br />

publishing at length.<br />

“I’d like to tell you that<br />

Will is a vain, arrogant,<br />

“With Music<br />

in His Ears…”<br />

egotistical monster who<br />

routinely takes credit for<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r people’s work…,” says<br />

Schlosser, “but that would<br />

be a total lie. Will is without<br />

question one of <strong>the</strong> finest<br />

editors working today. He’s<br />

great at seeing <strong>the</strong> big picture<br />

<strong>and</strong> equally skilled at worrying<br />

about every comma,<br />

en-dash, <strong>and</strong> semi-colon. I<br />

can’t tell you how much I’ve<br />

enjoyed working with him,<br />

arguing with him about various<br />

sentences or paragraphs,<br />

<strong>and</strong> occasionally winning<br />

those arguments. He is not<br />

only a terrific editor, but also<br />

a dear friend.”<br />

In Dana’s time at <strong>the</strong><br />

magazine, he says <strong>the</strong> two most<br />

profound experiences were<br />

also <strong>the</strong> two worst. <strong>The</strong> first<br />

was September 11, he says.<br />

“Because it happened right<br />

here, we did this big issue. It<br />

was really cathartic to deal with<br />

what was going on. It was an<br />

amazing group effort.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r was when<br />

Rolling Stone writer Hunter S.<br />

Thompson—who pioneered<br />

<strong>the</strong> gonzo journalism genre<br />

for which <strong>the</strong> magazine is famous—took<br />

his own life earlier<br />

this year.<br />

“It was <strong>the</strong> sort of thing<br />

where we just dove so deeply<br />

into this guy’s life,” Dana says.<br />

“It was a great experience to<br />

pull all <strong>the</strong>se stories out <strong>and</strong><br />

read all his stuff, <strong>and</strong> talk to<br />

all <strong>the</strong>se people to create a<br />

portrait of <strong>the</strong> guy. We usually<br />

close <strong>the</strong> issue on Friday,<br />

Dana is a serious Bob Dylan fan. He rarely covers music<br />

for <strong>the</strong> magazine, although he did review Dylan’s NYC<br />

concert in May <strong>and</strong> interviewed Trey Anastasio ’83 last<br />

year. He still loves <strong>and</strong> follows music—from <strong>the</strong> latest<br />

indie rock groups like Spoon, Death Cab for Cutie, or<br />

<strong>the</strong> Magic Numbers to <strong>the</strong> classics from his days at <strong>Taft</strong>.<br />

“In a weird way, with everything available at <strong>the</strong><br />

touch of a finger, new music doesn’t mean as much as<br />

it used to,” says Dana. “Somehow, if it’s new to you,<br />

it’s new. It’s not necessarily what was released last week.<br />

Your path through <strong>the</strong> music is much more winding<br />

<strong>and</strong> circuitous than it used to be.”<br />

maybe around 6 o’clock <strong>and</strong> I<br />

don’t think we finished until<br />

8 on Saturday morning.”<br />

Dana points out that<br />

what he calls <strong>the</strong> “gonzo”<br />

stuff—a more partisan, youare-<strong>the</strong>re<br />

style of writing<br />

that doesn’t always follow<br />

<strong>the</strong> rules—only worked for<br />

Thompson “because he had<br />

such great analytical reporting<br />

skills—<strong>and</strong> he had things<br />

to say.”<br />

Underneath <strong>the</strong> gonzo<br />

journalism image, Rolling<br />

Stone has a very traditional<br />

approach, Dana says later.<br />

“You’ve got to hook people<br />

<strong>and</strong> bring <strong>the</strong>m in. An article<br />

may seem very offh<strong>and</strong>, very<br />

casual, but it still takes a lot<br />

of work to make it read like<br />

that. Attitude is just <strong>the</strong> veneer;<br />

it hides a lot of really<br />

hard work.”<br />

When I<br />

Paint My<br />

Masterpiece<br />

Dana seems to grasp intuitively<br />

what will work for <strong>the</strong> magazine,<br />

<strong>and</strong> things are going well.<br />

So far, circulation is up 20 percent<br />

over last year according to<br />

<strong>the</strong> New York Times. In returning<br />

to its roots—what Wenner<br />

described as long-form journalism<br />

with an emphasis on<br />

politics, culture, <strong>and</strong>, of course,<br />

music—Rolling Stone seems to<br />

have a better grasp on its readers<br />

than it has in 20 years.<br />

“We can make this magazine<br />

as good as it’s ever been,”<br />

says Dana. “It’s never going<br />

to have <strong>the</strong> importance it had<br />

in <strong>the</strong> late ’60s because <strong>the</strong><br />

culture has changed. But it<br />

can be a better magazine than<br />

it was <strong>the</strong>n, <strong>and</strong> every bit as<br />

ground breaking.”<br />

When <strong>the</strong> 982nd issue<br />

of Rolling Stone finally hit <strong>the</strong><br />

newsst<strong>and</strong>, <strong>the</strong> cover featured<br />

<strong>the</strong> b<strong>and</strong> White Stripes in<br />

front of a ruby-red <strong>the</strong>ater curtain<br />

with Jack White dressed<br />

as a magician <strong>and</strong> Meg as his<br />

assistant. With <strong>the</strong> l<strong>and</strong>mark<br />

1,000th issue of <strong>the</strong> magazine<br />

looming in April, Dana<br />

is planning a little magic of<br />

his own, but he’s not about<br />

to reveal what he has up his<br />

sleeve. You’ll have to go to <strong>the</strong><br />

newsst<strong>and</strong> to find out.<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005 25


Reeling<br />

<strong>The</strong>mIn<br />

Fly Angler Diana Rudolph ‘90 Casts for World Records<br />

By Julia Feldmeier ’99<br />

Diana Rudolph’s world record tarpon catch had all <strong>the</strong> trappings<br />

of a suspense flick. It was a hot, breezeless day in April;<br />

<strong>the</strong> shallow waters off <strong>the</strong> Florida Keys were blanketed by <strong>the</strong><br />

kind of stillness that—in movies, at least—portends chaos.<br />

So it was no real surprise when <strong>the</strong> 32-year-old Rudolph,<br />

fly fishing aboard a skiff called—what else?—Hell’s Bay,<br />

hooked into a giant tarpon. Measuring 6 feet, 8 inches long,<br />

with a 37-inch girth, it tipped <strong>the</strong> scales at 135.5 pounds.<br />

As fishing writer Jerry Gibbs once wrote: “Tarpon hunting<br />

is not a genteel endeavor. Tarpon hunting is war.” At 5 feet,<br />

6 inches, <strong>and</strong> 125 pounds, Rudolph was <strong>the</strong> token underdog.<br />

Her battle with <strong>the</strong> fish lasted 2 hours <strong>and</strong> 20 minutes.<br />

Movies that run more than two hours are considered long.<br />

But a fishing bout? Really long. And arduous. Rudolph held<br />

on furiously from <strong>the</strong> bow of <strong>the</strong> skiff as <strong>the</strong> tarpon zipped<br />

back <strong>and</strong> forth through <strong>the</strong> water, enraged.<br />

Her fishing guide, Dale Perez, deftly maneuvered <strong>the</strong><br />

skiff through <strong>the</strong> shallow waters using a 22-foot fiberglass<br />

pole, trying to keep pace with <strong>the</strong> fish. Perez estimates that he<br />

poled for more than a mile during <strong>the</strong> struggle.<br />

And how’s this for a stunt? <strong>The</strong> tarpon, a specie known for<br />

its strength <strong>and</strong> acrobatic maneuvers, shot through <strong>the</strong> air eight<br />

times while Rudolph had it on <strong>the</strong> line. Rudolph held on.<br />

<strong>The</strong>n a plot twist. Enter <strong>the</strong> bull shark: ruthless, pugnacious<br />

<strong>and</strong> known to attack tarpon. (Not to mention humans.<br />

Had Rudolph fallen overboard—which occasionally happens,<br />

she says—she’d have been fair game.) Keen to <strong>the</strong> vibrations<br />

of a fish in distress, <strong>the</strong> shark began circling <strong>the</strong> skiff.<br />

“It scared <strong>the</strong> hell out of me,” Rudolph said, “but it was<br />

one of those things where you obviously don’t want <strong>the</strong> fish to<br />

get munched.”<br />

Perez quickly put <strong>the</strong> boat’s engine in neutral <strong>and</strong> revved<br />

it, hoping <strong>the</strong> noise would scare <strong>the</strong> shark away.<br />

“Sometimes it doesn’t work,” he said. “But in this case it did.”<br />

When <strong>the</strong> tarpon finally surrendered <strong>and</strong> flopped up<br />

against <strong>the</strong> side of <strong>the</strong> boat, Rudolph hauled it in—<strong>and</strong> burst<br />

into tears. In order to submit <strong>the</strong> fish for a world record, it<br />

would have to be brought back to shore to be weighed. It<br />

would die in <strong>the</strong> process.<br />

“I’ve never felt that type of adrenaline or that much emotion,”<br />

Rudolph said. In all her years of fishing, she’d never<br />

brought a tarpon back to shore. “<strong>The</strong> fun is catching <strong>the</strong>m—<br />

I’d much ra<strong>the</strong>r let <strong>the</strong>m swim.”<br />

She promptly iced <strong>the</strong> tarpon down <strong>and</strong> called <strong>the</strong><br />

University of Miami to pick it up for re<strong>sea</strong>rch. That is, after<br />

<strong>the</strong> scale revealed it to be a new world record for tarpon<br />

using a 16-pound test (<strong>the</strong> heavier <strong>the</strong> test, <strong>the</strong> stronger <strong>the</strong><br />

line)—outweighing <strong>the</strong> old record by more than 50 pounds.<br />

b Diana Rudolph ’90 loves to fish in Montana as well as <strong>the</strong> Florida Keys. Most of what she does is catch <strong>and</strong> release.<br />

<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005 27


R udolph has none of <strong>the</strong> ego that might befit an angler<br />

of her status. She is disarmingly humble, too modest to<br />

admit how talented she really is.<br />

“I still don’t think I’m any good!” she said, laughing—despite<br />

holding four world records that suggest o<strong>the</strong>rwise. “Every<br />

time I catch a fish, I’m surprised. I’m like, ‘Wow—damn!’”<br />

For Rudolph, fishing is a simple matter of lifestyle. As a<br />

mid at <strong>Taft</strong>, <strong>the</strong>n English teacher Willy MacMullen ’78 gave<br />

her A River Runs Through It, Norman McLean’s acclaimed<br />

novel that begins: “In our family, <strong>the</strong>re was no clear line between<br />

religion <strong>and</strong> fly-fishing.”<br />

“It’s true,” Rudolph said. “I can’t even imagine not having<br />

it. <strong>The</strong>re’s not a day that goes by that I don’t think about it.”<br />

Fly fishing is a passion inspired by her dad, Alex, an investment<br />

banker in downtown Chicago <strong>and</strong> an avid angler. <strong>The</strong> family<br />

had a vacation home in Islamorada <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> elder Rudolph<br />

began teaching his daughter <strong>the</strong> mechanics of fishing when she<br />

was just four years old. He never got to see his protégé’s spectacular,<br />

record-breaking catches; he died eight years ago.<br />

Rudolph was in her second year of graduate school at Florida<br />

Tech at <strong>the</strong> time, finishing up her master’s in marine biology.<br />

She’d finished her coursework <strong>and</strong> was trying to write her <strong>the</strong>sis.<br />

“I really wasn’t in <strong>the</strong> right frame of mind to have that<br />

much downtime,” she said. “I decided, ‘You know what? <strong>The</strong><br />

hell with it. I love to fish, <strong>and</strong> I’m gonna try to do something<br />

in <strong>the</strong> industry.’”<br />

She moved back home to Chicago <strong>and</strong> spent two years<br />

working in a fly shop before relocating to <strong>the</strong> Florida Keys,<br />

where she spends five days a week working in <strong>the</strong> Florida Keys<br />

Outfitters, a local fly shop, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> remaining two days out on<br />

<strong>the</strong> water, fishing for new records.<br />

Alex Rudolph would have been proud of his daughter’s<br />

passion <strong>and</strong> accomplishments, said Joyce Rudolph, Diana’s<br />

mo<strong>the</strong>r. “<strong>The</strong>y were very close. He’s up <strong>the</strong>re looking down.”<br />

Two weeks before he died, Alex ordered a blank, <strong>the</strong> unadorned<br />

“rod” part of <strong>the</strong> apparatus, intending to build a fly<br />

rod for his daughter. Later, Diana took <strong>the</strong> blank <strong>and</strong> had a<br />

friend make it into a rod. On her first cast, she hooked a fish.<br />

Not just any fish: A permit—one of <strong>the</strong> most coveted catches<br />

among anglers.<br />

“I’d never caught a permit on fly before, my dad had never<br />

caught a permit on fly,” she said. “That’s like <strong>the</strong> holy grail<br />

of fly fishing, <strong>the</strong> ultimate catch. It was really cool.”<br />

b Fly fishing is a<br />

passion Diana’s<br />

fa<strong>the</strong>r instilled in her<br />

from <strong>the</strong> time she<br />

was four years old.<br />

c Diana broke <strong>the</strong><br />

previous women’s fly record<br />

by more than 50 pounds<br />

with this 135.5-pound<br />

tarpon, becoming <strong>the</strong> first<br />

<strong>woman</strong> to win <strong>the</strong> Don<br />

Hawley Tournament.<br />

28 <strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


Reeling<strong>The</strong>mIn<br />

Today, Rudolph holds <strong>the</strong> women’s world record for<br />

permit (24 pounds on 12-pound tippet), in addition to tarpon,<br />

bonefish (10.5 pounds on a 6-pound tippet), <strong>and</strong> snook (6.5<br />

pounds on a 4-pound tippet). Last year, she was <strong>the</strong> first <strong>woman</strong><br />

in history to win <strong>the</strong> prestigious Don Hawley Tarpon Fly<br />

Tournament in Islamorada in <strong>the</strong> Keys, catching <strong>and</strong> releasing<br />

15 tarpon over five days to best 17 o<strong>the</strong>r fly-fishing experts.<br />

Though Rudolph won’t brag about herself, her colleagues<br />

will.<br />

S<strong>and</strong>y Moret, her boss at Florida Keys Outfitters, called<br />

her “dynamite.”<br />

“<strong>The</strong> skill that she uses in underst<strong>and</strong>ing how to manipulate<br />

<strong>the</strong> tackle is what makes her exceptional,” he said. Plus,<br />

“she has a tremendous amount of desire to excel at this, <strong>and</strong><br />

she does. A lot of people talk about fishing, but she does it.”<br />

Dale Perez, who guided Rudolph to her world record tarpon<br />

catch, said Rudolph’s focus <strong>and</strong> quick reflexes help make<br />

her so successful.<br />

Rudolph’s tarpon catch marked Perez’s 20th world record<br />

as a guide (he also guided for her permit record). “I’ve been<br />

guiding for 35 years,” he said, “<strong>and</strong> she fishes as well as any<br />

man I’ve ever fished.”<br />

Her status as a top-notch angler—<strong>and</strong> a female—has<br />

earned her some cachet within <strong>the</strong> industry. In a recent Q&A<br />

with Mid-Current, an online magazine, Rudolph told editor<br />

Marshall Cutchin, “If I were a guy, no one would give a rat’s<br />

ass about me… But <strong>the</strong> guys really think of me as a fisherman.<br />

And I hope as a <strong>woman</strong>, too.”<br />

Oh, but <strong>the</strong>y do. After <strong>the</strong> Mid-Current Q&A was posted,<br />

online fly-fishing chats began buzzing about Rudolph.<br />

Writes one chatter: “I’ve always liked women who cuss,<br />

<strong>and</strong> speak of passion.” Ano<strong>the</strong>r chimes in: “And here I was<br />

just fallin’ in love with her simply because she fishes <strong>and</strong><br />

drinks beer.”<br />

Good fishing, capped off with a cold beer, is exactly <strong>the</strong><br />

kind of lifestyle Rudolph enjoys. “Fly fishing isn’t like bass<br />

fishing, where you can make a ton of money in <strong>the</strong> tournaments<br />

or anything,” she said. “It’s more trying to win <strong>the</strong> respect<br />

of your peers <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> people that you look up to.”<br />

Camaraderie is a big part of <strong>the</strong> appeal. “I’m certainly not<br />

saving <strong>the</strong> world working in a fly shop, but I’ve met a lot of<br />

really interesting people because of fly fishing.”<br />

Moret, Perez, <strong>and</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r guides are her mentors, she said,<br />

always imparting new wisdom. That’s what keeps her te<strong>the</strong>red<br />

to <strong>the</strong> sport: discovering new tricks. “<strong>The</strong> day I stop learning<br />

is <strong>the</strong> day I want to get out of it. <strong>The</strong>re’s not a day that goes<br />

by where I’m not surprised by something or intrigued or just<br />

completely awestruck.”<br />

In August, she left for Montana, where she owns a house<br />

<strong>and</strong> where she planned to spend two months doing some freshwater<br />

fly fishing before returning to <strong>the</strong> Keys in October. She’s<br />

hoping to squeeze in some traveling, too, maybe to Australia.<br />

For fun, yes, but also for records.<br />

She may be humble, but she’s still competitive.<br />

“It kind of keeps it interesting,” she said. “That’s not to<br />

say I don’t go out <strong>and</strong> go fishing just to go fishing, but <strong>the</strong>re’s<br />

always a little bit of competition. I don’t think <strong>the</strong>re’s anything<br />

wrong with that.”<br />

So if somebody broke her tarpon record?<br />

“Oh, I’d go break it. I’d have to go out <strong>the</strong>re <strong>and</strong> try to<br />

break it.”<br />

After all, every good story merits a sequel.<br />

Julia Feldmeier ‘99 writes for <strong>the</strong> Washington Post. Although she<br />

loves <strong>the</strong> water, she admits she hasn’t been fishing since she was five.<br />

. Diana, who now holds five women’s world records, reels in a<br />

Pacific sailfish in Guatemala.


E N D N O T E<br />

Little Rock Five<br />

By Julie Reiff<br />

“Ra<strong>the</strong>r than accept<br />

desegregation,<br />

Arkansas governor<br />

Orville Faubus chose to<br />

close Little Rock’s four<br />

high schools<br />

for <strong>the</strong> 1958–59<br />

academic year….”<br />

Boarding schools have long been places of<br />

refuge from times of upheaval. Diplomats<br />

stationed to unstable parts of <strong>the</strong> world have<br />

turned to schools like <strong>Taft</strong> as a safe haven for<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir children. More recently, as most of you<br />

know, <strong>the</strong> school has reached out to those<br />

affected by more natural disasters. By <strong>the</strong> start<br />

of October, three students from Louisiana<br />

had found <strong>the</strong>ir way to Watertown. One<br />

girl had already started classes three times,<br />

in three different schools, in three different<br />

states before settling in here.<br />

Almost 50 years ago, ano<strong>the</strong>r city faced<br />

closed schools—but for very different reasons.<br />

Ra<strong>the</strong>r than accept desegregation,<br />

Arkansas governor Orville Faubus chose to<br />

close Little Rock’s four high schools for <strong>the</strong><br />

1958–59 academic year—following <strong>the</strong> crisis<br />

over <strong>the</strong> “Little Rock Nine” <strong>the</strong> previous fall.<br />

“It was clearly a tense time,” says Jim Rule<br />

’60. “My fa<strong>the</strong>r was frantic, <strong>and</strong> one of <strong>the</strong><br />

people he confided in was George Hampton<br />

(fa<strong>the</strong>r of George ’60). He called Joe Orgill<br />

’23—a member of <strong>Taft</strong>’s board at <strong>the</strong> time <strong>and</strong><br />

whose son had graduated in 1955—with whom<br />

he did business <strong>and</strong> told him of my situation.<br />

He must have contacted Mr. Cruikshank. Two<br />

days later I was on <strong>the</strong> plane to New York to<br />

start my upper-mid year.<br />

“Life magazine came to <strong>the</strong> school that<br />

fall to photograph me for an article <strong>the</strong>y were<br />

doing on <strong>the</strong> Little Rock diaspora, but I didn’t<br />

make <strong>the</strong> article.”<br />

Nearly 3,700 students were affected by <strong>the</strong><br />

closings; Life called <strong>the</strong>m “passive victims in a national<br />

tragedy” in its 1958 article “<strong>The</strong> Lost Class<br />

of 1959.” Of that number, five students arrived<br />

at <strong>Taft</strong> that fall—most joining <strong>the</strong> Class of 1960.<br />

“<strong>The</strong>y all seemed like terrific guys,” says<br />

Henry Lanier ’61. “I only wish <strong>the</strong> school had<br />

been more enlightened <strong>and</strong> had opened up some<br />

discussions around civil rights <strong>and</strong> why <strong>the</strong>se kids<br />

were in Watertown ra<strong>the</strong>r than at home.”<br />

Years later Lanier worked at Lehman<br />

Bro<strong>the</strong>rs with Ernie Green, <strong>the</strong> oldest of <strong>the</strong><br />

Little Rock Nine, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> first black student to<br />

graduate from Central High <strong>School</strong>. “In ano<strong>the</strong>r<br />

era (today),” Lanier says, “Ernie might well have<br />

found a welcome at <strong>Taft</strong>, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>n wouldn’t we<br />

have had an interesting discussion.”<br />

Julie Reiff is editor of this magazine<br />

m Students arriving at <strong>Taft</strong> in <strong>the</strong> fall of 1958<br />

Leslie Manning Archives<br />

30 <strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin Fall 2005


Walker Hall Series<br />

December 6 | Reception following 70th Service of Lessons <strong>and</strong> Carols<br />

(Congregational Church, Watertown)<br />

January 20 | Pianist Husnu Onaran, 7:00 p.m.<br />

January 26 | Master Storyteller Odds Bodkin, 7:00 p.m.<br />

February 10 | Arts Faculty Recital, 7:00 p.m.<br />

February 23 | James <strong>and</strong> Jamie Dutcher Living with Wolves, 7:00 p.m.<br />

Come Join Us!<br />

December 1 | Boston Holiday Party<br />

December 7 | NYC Holiday Party<br />

February 11 | Alumni Hockey Game<br />

February 18–19 | Winter Parents’ Weekend<br />

March | Regional Ga<strong>the</strong>rings in Florida<br />

April 10 | Gr<strong>and</strong>parents’ Day<br />

May 20–21 | Alumni Weekend<br />

May 28 | 116th Commencement Exercises<br />

Visit www.<strong>Taft</strong>Alumni.com for more information


<strong>Taft</strong> Bulletin<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Taft</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Watertown, CT 06795-2100<br />

860-945-7777<br />

www.<strong>Taft</strong>Alumni.com<br />

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