Kenyon Class of 1972 Fall Class Letter
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Greetings, fellow classmates,
I’ve been asked to write something about Kenyon for the class letter, anything I was told, anything I wanted. Now there’s a can of worms waiting to be opened—kind of like when Michael Mott told me in Creative Writing class that I could write an essay on navel hair grooming as long as I made it interesting. Imagine his surprise when I turned my paper in. So I thought maybe, just maybe, I could jot down a few memories of my time at Kenyon—you know, reminiscences about the good old days? Like about how Professor Roelofs would read in his best Middle English, Whan that Aprill with his shoures soote, The droghte of March hath perced to the roote from the Canterbury Tales, and we’d all nod and pretend to understand? Or maybe about how Tom Short steadfastly remained on a last-name-only basis with everyone in his philosophy classes (and most likely everyone on Earth)? I knew him for four years, even house-sat for him one summer when I stayed on campus to work with the grounds crew, and still I was always Enright to him, just Enright. Or maybe about how Jim Carignan’s leg never stopped twitching a mile a minute when he sat behind the desk smoking his pipe of Cherry Blend in American History class, trying to convince us that the Civil War was actually about slavery and not state’s rights? All nice bits of trivia, but honestly what were the chances a seventy-one year-old codger like me could actually remember anything significant from way back then?
1968 was our freshman year at Kenyon. That was fifty-two years ago. Our Fiftieth Reunion is fast approaching. Wow. I’ve never been to a single one. I am so out of touch and probably insane to entertain the possibility that I can even vaguely recall important things from so long ago like the anxious anticipation of living away from home for the first time in my young life. Or the uncertainty of leaving my lifelong friends behind and going off into the middle of Nowhere, Ohio, to share a room for nine months with a complete stranger. And then there’s the uneasy feeling of being without the support and love of my family. How could I possibly recall at this point how worried I was at the time that I wouldn’t be able to make it without them? And then, of course, there was the absolute insanity of a Registrar who thought that a nineteen-year-old kid from Pittsburgh was worth accepting over the phone after being rejected by the three Ivy League schools (the only schools) he had applied to. I mean really… who would remember that? And, of course, there’s the wandering about in confusion around Ransom Hall that first week of freshman year trying to pick classes when I had no clue what I wanted to take or what I intended to do with the rest of my life. Fifty-two years ago. How could I possibly remember?
Well, in point of fact, I do. I remember quite clearly how quickly my anxiety over being away from home faded like a cut-to-black resolution from one scene to the next. After one week on campus, I was no longer away from home. I was home. And I remember quite vividly that first-roommate stranger I feared so much. Turned out, Craig was a gentle person, a good person, and we became friends. And I still remember the faces and the names of all of you that I became close with that year and in the three amazing years that followed. And I absolutely remember my realization in a moment of quiet reflection floating down the Kokosing River from Mt. Vernon to Gambier in a homemade plywood-and-inner tube raft with my friends that I hadn’t left my family behind after all. Rather, I had just discovered another part of it. Life is funny that way.
It is true that we have all since moved on and mostly lost touch, but I miss you in my own way. My fond memories of you, my friends, and of our time at Kenyon will always remain. I hope you feel the same. Who knows? Maybe I’ll see you at our fiftieth and we can talk about it.
Oh, I almost forgot, I actually do recall the classes I ultimately picked in 1968, but I must confess that even at seventy-one, I still don’t know what I intend to do with the rest of my life.
Pace e Bene,
Larry Enright ‘72
From Doug Holbrook
Dear Classmates,
When you read the Class Notes below, put together nicely by Jeff Newton, you can’t escape the fact that the pandemic and the crisis it has created are front and center on everyone’s mind. And because of the type of year this is, Kenyon is facing challenges unlike it has seen in some time. Larry Enright’s guest letter to the class above never mentions the pandemic or the economic crises and the stress they create for Kenyon as an institution. And yet Larry’s letter provides insight into how Kenyon is facing these challenges. As Larry talks of his time at Kenyon, many of us will recognize an experience not unlike what we went through. The sense of being “home”, the community of classmates and friends, the interactions with the faculty all speak to what most of us treasure of our time at college. And Kenyon, when facing the difficulties created by the pandemic, has not lost sight of that experience.
Back in September, Kenyon President Sean Decatur, along with some of his staff and two current students, held a virtual town hall for alumni on the state of the College. Although this was open to all alumni, it seemed many from our years had logged on. Among the classmates were Nancy Ellis, Tom Moore, Sam Barone (all class agents) and Mark Denton. I must say it was great to see everyone, and everyone looking so good (except Sam, who we couldn’t see because he’d been working on remodeling his basement and didn’t think his appearance was screen worthy). We were joined by schoolmates from other years. Among them were Murray Horwitz and Jeff Goldberg from 1970; Pegi Goodman, Jan Guifarro, Steve Fineberg, Julie Miller Vick from 1973 and Jim Vick from 1974. I know I missed some others, but this is who I can remember. I mentioned to Shawn Dailey, from the Office of Alumni and Parent Engagement and Annual Giving, that there were so many from our era logged on to the event. He said our classes tend to show a very strong alumni leadership. As evidence, Tom Moore is now on the alumni council and Nancy Ellis is on a special committee for planning 50th reunions (more on that from Nancy later).
What was apparent to me from this Town Hall, is the College takes seriously the experiences we all think are essential to being at Kenyon. The College’s response to the pandemic shows this. Some of the policies implemented are:
- Only the freshman and sophomore classes, along with some international students, are on campus. The upper classes attend remotely online. The students on campus take a combination of online, hybrid and in class instruction. Some of the remote students are living in pods with fellow Kenyon students around the country. One of the students who spoke lived with a group of five other Kenyon students in Yonkers, NY. He showed a map of the country with pins stuck in various locations where other pods existed. This is probably not most of the students learning remotely, but I thought an interesting attempt to create some of the Kenyon experience.
- On campus students pay more, but financial aid has been increased. In addition, there’s a 10% discount to all students for this semester.
- The faculty and the College have worked hard over the summer on the pedagogy and curriculum to adjust to the new environment.
- Students on campus were tested three times by the middle of September and none showed up positive. The College worked with the student council (to get student buy-in) on upgrading the student handbook on appropriate behavior.
- Meals were initially just pick-up, but as the campus began to get into the rhythm of the new routine, restrictions were relaxed and service expanded.
The one student living on campus mentioned how it really does seem the students have bought into the new codes of behavior. She mentioned many of them don’t want to be the ones bringing the virus to campus. I found that interesting given the reports from around the country of outbreaks on other campuses – often from large groups and parties.
- There are no sports currently going on.
- Social Justice is being addressed. The College and faculty are reviewing how they teach and introduce these issues into the curriculum.
Finally, President Decatur addressed the issue of how we view institutions. He explained there has been less support throughout society in support of our various institutions and Kenyon was not exempt to this trend. The underlying assumption I believe, is President Decatur feels a stronger faith in our institutions results in a much healthier and vibrant society.
Larry’s letter above talks of arriving on campus in 1968. I’m sure some of you have heard, discussed or felt that this year is similar to 1968 in that events seem bigger, maybe overwhelming. You might recall when we first came to campus the College was in dire financial straits. There were rumors Kenyon was technically bankrupt. The decision to accept women was done partly to gain financial stability. Since then the College has become a strong institution. The endowment is now $400 million. Kenyon’s reputation is as good, if not better, than when we attended. And yet the stress President Decatur speaks of is a challenge both financially and spiritually for Kenyon.
We’re asking you to help support this special institution in these challenging times. When speaking to Shawn Dailey, I asked what message he wanted us to get out. He said there is no panic, but the College does need renewed commitment from the alumni. Kenyon alumni are partly what have made the College such a strong institution, and now Kenyon needs that support more than ever.
Before I leave you, I’ll leave some comments by others.
Nancy wrote, “The feeling I took away is that this is serious, but the College will be okay, and the values that make Kenyon and a liberal education so important will survive—even thrive. The finances are more than daunting, but the financial plan and decision-making guidelines that the Trustees and Administration put in place are sound. The incoming freshman class shows that students want a Kenyon education.”
Sam wrote: “Kenyon has gone about this rethinking of ‘The Experience’ very responsibly and I believe Sean's opening comments are very reassuring, while not minimizing the extraordinary challenge this year has been. Our classmates should be encouraged to see and hear our gifted president first-hand if the opportunity presents.”
Before I hand this off to Nancy I’ll mention I’m posting after her part on the 50th Reunion Committee some information she got from Todd Burson, Kenyon VP of Finance. Nancy did a great job in summarizing them.
Thanks everyone,
Doug Holbrook
From Nancy Ellis:
50th Reunion Steering Committee
Kenyon is taking a fresh look at 50th Class Reunion planning, and they invited alumni from our era to form a steering committee for this new program. That is why Susan McGannon, Tom Moore and I have joined with Alan Radnor ’67, Jim Finn ’70, Eric Herr ’70, Belinda Bremner ’71, Peter Holloway ’71, Jan Guifarro ’73 and David Horowitz ’74 and administrators Shayna Daubert, Director 50th Reunion Program, Sharon Williams, AVP Development, and Colleen Garland, VP Advancement. The College knows 50th reunions are a big deal, and they want us to help fine tune their updated reunion planning program.
The committee’s kick-off session in early September led with a presentation by President Sean Decatur to us and other alumni volunteers. He described Kenyon’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the reopening of campus. He provided an objective look at the changes for students, the pandemic-related costs, and the necessary adjustments to the budget to accomplish these things. But he balanced this with good news of successes in remote/in-person/hybrid learning, good admissions numbers, and progress on the Chalmers Library and the West Academic Quad. He said this has been an unusual year, but the campus feels “very Kenyon-like.”
This realistic optimism informs our steering committee meetings. It has been great to connect via Zoom and “see” one another again. Our conversations are insightful, and Shayna and Sharon are listening carefully and incorporating our ideas.
Each class’s reunion committee will have the familiar three-part structure: communication & outreach, social, and gift sub-committees. The main difference is that the planning process will extend over three years with more opportunities to connect with classmates, and more planning support from the College.
- Communication & outreach committees will work to contact every class member, share the enthusiasm, and gather ideas for 50th Reunion activities.
- Social committees will organize pre-reunion and reunion weekend activities that are unique for each class. These may include regional or online mini-reunions or virtual campus tours, as well as events during the weekend itself. The College is even considering inviting 50th Reunion classes back to campus a half-day early.
- Gift committees will advocate for financial support for Kenyon and seek participation from each class member. They will emphasize the virtues of investing in Kenyon students and the collective impact of every gift. (Because there are so many ways to give to the College—targeted gifts to The Kenyon Fund such as scholarships, athletics, or student life; gifts to the Women & Philanthropy Initiative; planned giving through an estate, or even a major gift—each alumna/alumnus will be able to make a meaningful gift for their 50th Reunion.)
May 2022 is not that long from now, and our own 50th Reunion planning will begin soon. We have a good start on the communication portion thanks to all of our guest writers for each Class Letter and to our Class Notes participants. But we’ll need more volunteers. So, if you would like to serve on a committee, or you have ideas for reunion-related events, please contact me or any of our other Class Agents.
Further information from Nancy Ellis
In early September, I corresponded with Todd Burson and he shared these principles that the Kenyon Board of Trustees and Administration are following as the College manages through the COVID-19 pandemic. They will:
- Protect the health and safety of the community.
- Support students and employees as much as possible.
- Carry out the College’s institutional mission.
- Protect the long-term financial health of the College by avoiding cuts that compromise that mission and avoiding decisions that undermine long-term financial health or long-term institutional strength.
Based on these principles:
- Decisions related to employee salaries are intended to protect jobs and take-home pay.
- Building renovation and repairs will be deferred only if they do not affect health and safety.
- The College will only draw on financial reserves that do not put the institution at risk.
Important take-a-ways:
- Kenyon found the cost savings to balance the 2019-2020 budget. No employees have been let go or furloughed. The College can still prioritize financial aid for students.
- Going forward, the Administration and Board see potential financial risk in reduced Endowment revenue, a loss in tuition revenue (fewer students living on campus, an abbreviated academic year), potentially lower contributions to the Annual Fund, increased need for financial aid, and increased expenses to manage COVID-19 on campus.
- Already, the College has budgeted for modest losses related to headcount and remote learning for 2020-2021. This has been communicated to the Board, employees, and other members of the Kenyon community.
- The Administration monitors the potential for further losses very closely, and they will take additional steps if necessary. They will do everything possible to prevent layoffs.
- The Board of Trustees has confidence in the Administration led by President Sean Decatur.
- Overall, the Board and the Administration are confident Kenyon will come through these next few years with its identity and mission intact. Students and employees will always come first.
The 1972 Class notes, gathered and compiled by Jeff Newton, are found below.
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Introducing the Lowry Center & Scholarship
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William E. Lowry Jr. ’56 H’99 was the first Black student in the nation initiated into Beta Theta Pi, was student body president and captained the football, basketball and baseball teams. He went on to serve in many volunteer roles at Kenyon, including as trustee. In honor of Bill’s accomplishments and impact at Kenyon, the Board of Trustees decided to rename the Kenyon Athletic Center in his honor.
Recognizing his legacy, Board Vice Chair Joseph E. Lipscomb ’87 has created an endowed scholarship in Bill’s name to help bring more underrepresented students to Kenyon. Anyone can make a gift to the annual fund portion of this scholarship, or one of many other scholarships at Kenyon, and provide an immediate benefit to a current student.
Support currents students now with a gift to scholarships
Despite a challenging year, the College remains committed to continuing to meet 100% of students’ increased demonstrated need, with donor support. Every dollar you give goes directly to support students this academic year.
Consider giving today in support of:
- Hannah More Scholarship for first generation students
- Kenyon Women’s Annual Scholarship for female students
- Lowry Annual Scholarship for underrepresented students
- Pope Memorial Annual Scholarship for students from urban Ohio public school
And, of course, you can make a gift to the Kenyon Fund’s scholarships and financial aid designation, which supports the education of every single Kenyon student.
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Upcoming Virtual Events for Alumni
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You're invited to join us this winter at these free events for alumni.
- Alumni Town Halls with President Decatur
Thursday, Dec. 10 at 7 p.m. ET and Thursday, Feb. 18 at 7 p.m. ET
- Five-week mini class with Professor Emerita Pam Jensen
"Democracy & Education: An Introduction to Rousseau's Emile" Tuesdays, Jan. 5 – Feb. 2 at 7 p.m. ET
- A Celebration of Kenyon Green Initiatives (two-part series)
Wednesday, Jan. 20 and Thursday, Jan. 27 at 7 p.m. ET
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Class AgentsClass agents are your connection to campus. If you would like to learn more about becoming a class agent, contact Tracey Wilson at wilson1@kenyon.edu.
• Paula Barone • Sam Barone • Nancy Ellis • Doug Holbrook • Kevin Horrigan • Tom Moore • Jeff Newton • John Ryerson • Ed Straub
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1972 Class Notes – Gathered and compiled by Jeff Newton:
I did not expect to get many updates from our classmates this season because I know that everybody has been extremely busy staying locked up at home during the pandemic. It is quite amazing to me how exhausting it is to just stay put in one place for months. I now understand Professor Baker’s lecture on medieval monks who all went to bed at the first sign of sundown.
To survive the summer quarantine, I found myself reaching back to my days in graduate school when I was living on nearly nothing and seeking inspiration from magazines like the Whole Earth catalog where, if my memory is correct, I first learned about sourdough bread. I have now, with varied success, made every conceivable type of sourdough bread and hope to never make another one. It is true that one cannot live by bread alone.
Another memory from that early time was the fact that I first learned to smoke cigarettes at Kenyon (it seemed cool at the time) and took the habit with me to graduate school where a classmate, in an attempt to help me quit, taught me how to knit so that I would have something to do with my hands during withdrawal. I have now made two pairs of socks, three sweaters, a winter hat, a winter scarf, and am working on a 5’ by 8’ blanket which I will call Corona when it is done (both the blanket and the pandemic I hope). After which I will gladly buy all knitted clothing items for myself and friends for the rest of my life.
Not everyone, it seems, has spent the last several months baking and knitting and I was truly amazed at how much our classmate Carole Vogel has packed into her time. She wrote:
Since retiring as a science writer I have focused on genealogy and constructing a humongous family tree that stretches back to the 1600s and accounts for many hundreds of family members who were murdered in the Holocaust. I started this project decades ago and over the years I have made contact with long-lost relatives all over the world. Sometimes I have been lucky enough to meet them in person and have been invited into the homes of cousins in Russia, England, Israel, Germany, and Austria. This past February, my husband Mark and I attended a family wedding in New Zealand and got to explore the North Island. (Hobbiton is overrated.) The isolation of sequestering due to the pandemic has been broken by emails and calls from relatives from five different continents who want to know more about the family history or talk about American politics.
Mark and I live on a lake and we kayak every day in warm weather, lake conditions permitting. This year so far we have racked up more than 350 miles, which is greater than the distance between Montreal and New York City. We are also in charge of water quality testing for our lake association and I am finally using my rusty skills with a microscope. Cyanobacteria blooms have significantly increased due to climate change and warmer summers. They muck up the lake but the individual cells look cool underneath a microscope.
Our kids have really risen to meet the challenges of the pandemic, while balancing the demands of children and career. Our son, who is a single dad with high-energy daughters, ages 3 and 8, has managed to keep the girls relatively happy and meet all his work deadlines while being sequestered. My daughter accepted the job of municipal attorney of Anchorage just as the COVID crisis became real and before she had even learned the names of all the people on her staff. She and the mayor's chief of staff have been responsible for writing most of the coronavirus legislation in the state of Alaska. Once Anchorage posted its new regulations, the state would pick them up, sometimes word for word. Her husband put his career on hold temporarily to look after their two-year-old twins.
I always suspected that the co-eds who joined our class were over-achievers. Kayaking 350 miles at our age – well, you just have to bow in awe.
After Carole’s note, I received an email from the Kenyon administration that was forwarded to me automatically. It came from someone called Robert Horrigan. I had no idea who Robert Horrigan was. Finally, it dawned on me. Like Madonna, Lady Gaga, Prince, Liberace, and J. Arthur Rank, Robert Horrigan never used his real first name while he was with us on campus. Everyone knows Robert as Kevin Horrigan – and he wrote the following:
Christina and I are well and continue to enjoy retirement in Mansfield, Ohio, even during these stay-at-home days of 2020. She is very conscientious regarding COVID 19 precautions, and so, I have often been questioned if I have a mask with me when I go out the door for some keep-your-distance activity. Her training has succeeded, and of late, I am even asking if she has her mask. Early this morning (October 6), masked, we went to the front door of our younger daughter Sarah's house to sing "Happy Birthday" on her 38th. Keeping our distance, we did not go in to join that family of four and start the day with revelry. Instead, we came home for the kind of activities that have occupied us recently: working in the yard and preserving the fruits of the harvest. In the early evening, I'll go for a run with the run-club, and later, Christina and I hope to have a FaceTime chat with our older daughter Katherine who lives in Fairfax, VA, with her husband and four year-old daughter. May all of you classmates be well and content in your daily round of activities!
Kevin always was so polite and thoughtful. It is good to see that these qualities have endured in his letter writing. But I still suspect he goes by Robert to his non-Kenyon friends so that he can always deny anything ‘Kevin’ might have gotten up to in the late 60’s.
Speaking of the 60’s, the activist spirit is still alive and well, apparently, as I learned from Mark Hofmaier when he sent in the following update:
I wrote a one-person play about FDR returning from the afterlife to issue a clarion wake-up call and stern warning, with the intention of performing it live in colleges this Fall and registering students to vote. Then came Covid. So it became a screenplay and a film. It's about 40 minutes long and can be sent as a You Tube link to any interested parties. Many schools have promised to show it in class to their history, political science, and theatre classes, or at least make it available to their students as a homework assignment. Let's hope it gets its desired results!
Thanks Mark. Your note reminded me that I cast my first vote while at Kenyon. It’s a habit that has stayed with me all my life. Is it possible I was alive during FDR? No, that was Truman. As they say, that was a lifetime ago.
It is always good to have a doctor in the house, and it looks like we will be able to count on Ron Schenendorf joining us for our 50th reunion. Remember classmates, it’s not fair to ask for free advice, however tempting, so we all must promise to let Ron relax and have a good time. He wrote:
[I am] coming to a welcomed end of my career as a Psychiatrist after 40 years. I have been winding down over the past couple of years spending more time with my wife Barbara and our dog Jordie. Recently spoke to my roommate and classmate Howard Ducker after many years happy to see (FaceTime) he is doing well. We hope to see each other again in real life at our 50th reunion in Gambier. Future plans are to move closer to my son Jesse and his wife Erica and our two grandchildren in Rochester NY. He tells me I could open a practice there if retirement ends up not suiting me. We will see.
Retirement seems to be in the air, as Sam Barone testifies in his message where he wrote:
I retired as executive director of the Knox County Foundation on July 10 after 18 very satisfying years with the organization. Paula (Siegel) Barone and I are undertaking a host of deferred projects around our home, waiting out Covid for opportunities to visit children and grandchildren around the country, as well as to visit farther-flung destinations. Volunteer opportunities with Kenyon and throughout Knox County abound, so boredom is not on the agenda, at least for the foreseeable future. We enjoyed a delightful, and responsible, breakfast with Lance Coon and his wife Judy last winter while he was in town, sadly, for a family funeral. Always great to spend time with both of them.
Sam’s letter reminds me that Lance Coon and I were always known as the “townies” since we came to Kenyon from Mount Vernon. Given the fact that Sam and Paula have spent so many years working and living in Mount Vernon, I think Lance and I need to have a meeting to discuss bestowing the title of ‘Honorary Townie” on them both. This is, of course, one of the highest honors that can be bestowed. I believe it was first created by Henry Curtis for Philander Chase.
Some of our classmates have kept up the athletic tradition. John Emack wrote:
Like everyone else I've been adjusting to life during a pandemic. One bright spot has been playing golf with Norm Schmidt '71 once a week all summer. We had no problem maintaining social distancing on the golf course!
I know what John means. The only time I played golf was when Fred Williams convinced me to join him to learn the game. I had no idea Fred was like an Olympic golfer. We kept more than social distance as I played every rough edge while Fred sauntered down the middle of each fairway.
Speaking of the Rolling Stones. Some of our classmates are certainly gathering no moss. Richard Ripley wrote:
After two years of looking for our new home in Lompoc, CA my wife, Jane and I are finally moving in to our new home in Vandenberg Village just before Halloween. The renovation is almost complete and hopefully, there will be lots of treats and very little tricks.
The weather in northern Santa Barbara County has turned California Fall with cool evenings and nights and warm days. The grape leaves are turning brilliant colors in the vineyards and life continues, circle within circle.
And just to show the Ripley’s that some of us can take the moving thing to outer limits, Ric Bauer wrote:
[We] sold our house and bought an RV. We’ll first be headed to Anna Maria Island, FL., for the Winter. Then on to explore the National Parks in TX and NM. Then on to CO, WY, MT, ID, UT, and hopefully up into Alberta and the Canadian Rockies. From there we’ll head to the West Cost, and meander from the San Juan Islands all the way down to where we’ll winter-over in Los Cabos. Spring 2022 will see us off to Europe for a couple years, then the Mediterranean. Have a couple books in the works, which will begin to hit the market when they’re published, in the Spring of 2021.
If you like to follow our adventures on our YouTube Channel, or receive a free “Advanced Reader’s Copy” of each of my books when they’re published (in return for an honest review) drop us a line at: theprincelypeasant@gmail.com- You won’t be disappointed!"
Now that is what I would call a true free spirit, and the optimism of Ed’s plans is something we could all use as our pandemic life moves on.
It will be interesting to see what the Spring brings, and I, for one, will look forward to reading more updates.
Jeff Newton
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If you missed the chance to share your news for this letter, you can submit a class note at any time via class.letters@kenyon.edu.
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Kenyon is grateful to the following donors for their generous support of the College, including the Kenyon Fund, during the 2019-20 fiscal year. An asterisk (*) indicates a donor is a member of the Henry J. Abraham Society for loyal and consecutive giving. An obelisk (†) indicates an individual who is deceased. Please note that as of July 1, 2019 Kenyon’s annual giving societies have changed. Visit kenyon.edu/societies for more information.
1972
Annual Fund Total: $56,295
Class Participation: 50.41%
Philander Chase Society
Donors of $10,000 to $24,999
Susan Lewis (widow of Mark Owen Lewis)
Bexley Society
Donors of $2,500 to $9,999
Paul C. Elsner P'04*
Susan Emery McGannon*
Thomas R. Moore*
Todd J. Rosenberg*
Edward J. Straub P'93*
William R. Wallace P'01 '06*
Kenyon Society
Donors of $1 to $2,499
Frederick H. Alles*
William H. Arey*
David C. Barclay*
Paula M. Barone*
Samuel Barone*
Arthur C. Barton III*
David L. Bergman*
David H. Blocksom*
Michael Blume*
Charles M. Bronfeld*
W. Drew Cannon*
Charles T. Capute*
Gerald Chalphin*
John M. Ciavardone Jr.*
William S. Cline*
Stuart N. Conway P'98*
Lance C. Coon*
Robert C. Cooper*
Jonathan H. Corbett
William D. Correll*
Mark L. Denton*
Nancy Ellis*
John H. Emack*
Lawrence P. Enright
J. Christopher Fahlman P'03*
Roberta L. Fancher*
DeAvian Grauel (widow of Michael J. Grauel MD '72)*
David Greenwood*
Barry Gross*
Lawrence R. Harbison*
John A. Harr Jr.*
Douglas G. Holbrook*
R. Kevin Horrigan*
Preston Lentz P'04*
Diane Markham Lane P'05*
Bruce V. Mavec*
Howard K. Morgan Jr. P'04
Jeffrey L. Newton*
Charles J. Otting P'05 '06*
Robert W. Price*
Richard B. Ripley*
Richard A. Rothermel*
John T. Ryerson Jr.
John L. Schaeffer*
Ronald Schenendorf MD
Richard A. Schlein
Sara E. Sedgwick*
Byers W. Shaw Jr., MD P'09 H'20*
Tracy G. Smith P'13*
Alan M. Spiro
Perry R. Thompson*
Jeffrey A. Wolin*
Ann Worthington
Michael J. Zimmerman
Steve Zinder H'14*
George Wharton Mariott Society
These alumni have included Kenyon in their estate plans or have made other planned gifts.
Elden L. Apling
Samuel Barone and Paula Barone
Lance C. Coon
Robert C. Cooper
Nancy Ellis
Paul C. Elsner and Pamela B. Elsner P'04
Preston Lentz
Susan Emery McGannon
Thomas R. Moore
Todd J. Rosenberg
John T. Ryerson Jr.
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Kenyon College
105 Chase Avenue, Gambier, OH 43022
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