Sprin 2022 Class Letters

Class of 2000 Spring Class Letter

Dear classmates,

It’s officially Reunion month on the Hill!  Even though this year isn’t a milestone reunion year for us, all alumni are welcome back for Reunion Weekend this year, and in the future!  The fact that alumni are finally able to reunite on campus again after two years of virtual gatherings is something to celebrate.  These years have been challenging, and I am grateful for our Kenyon community and looking forward to more times together in the future. 

Last fall, I hope you heard about (and perhaps supported!) the new Kenyon Access Initiative.  We are eight months into our five-year partnership with the Schuler Education Foundation to increase access to Kenyon for exceptional students with limited resources.  Our extended Kenyon community has enthusiastically responded by making more than 1,113 gifts to support this initiative, helping to create new scholarships that will be awarded to students we are enrolling now.  In further great news, applications this year hit another record, up 14% over last year.

In other news, in response to calls from students as we approach our Bicentennial, President Sean Decatur agreed this winter that the time had come to look beyond Lords and Ladies.  Thanks to all of you who submitted suggestions or other feedback for the process to consider a new athletics moniker.  This letter was finalized before the results were known, but you can visit kenyon.edu/moniker to learn the latest.

This spring, Kenyon continued its commitment to integrating environmental stewardship into its curriculum, campus operations and campus culture.  One exciting way this is happening is that Kenyon is refraining from new commitments in specialized private investment funds that focus on fossil fuels — expecting that less than 1% of Kenyon’s endowment portfolio will be invested in fossil fuels by 2030.  This news and more was shared in Kenyon’s new quarterly Green Newsletter.  If you don’t already receive it, I encourage you to sign up for it at bit.ly/Green-Kenyon.

As summer approaches, Kenyon is preparing to welcome several groups of alumni back to campus.  More than 100 members of the Class of 2020 and their families have registered to attend their belated Commencement taking place on the Hill on May 22.  On May 26, the Classes of 1970, 1971 and 1972 will be kicking off Reunion Weekend a day early with special 50th Reunion programming.  And all alumni are welcome back to campus May 27-29!  If you aren’t able to make it back for Reunion this year, I hope you’ll plan to attend one soon.

All of the excitement and achievement at Kenyon today can be traced, in part, to our support.  Kenyon relies on our gifts to the Kenyon Fund to support every aspect of students’ experience today, from seminars to scholarships.  I hope you’ll join me in making a gift today.  We know first-hand how a Kenyon education can impact one’s future — not just professionally, but personally.  When we support Kenyon’s current and future students, we help make a Kenyon family like ours a possibility for many more.

Thank you!
Beko Reblitz-Richardson

P.S. Scroll down to view the 2000 class notes.

43022 Day

There's still time to join the celebration!

Why limit the fun to April 30, 2022? Here are a few ways you can get in a Gambier state of mind any day of the year:


Give 43022
Because Kenyon is at the heart of 43022, we held our annual giving challenge April 29-30. There's still time to support sustainability, scholarships, athletics and all the elements that make Kenyon, Kenyon. MAKE A GIFT

Buy exclusive 43022 merch

While supplies last, the Bookstore is still selling 43022 shirts, totes and water vessels that include a built-in gift to the Kenyon Fund to support today’s Kenyon students. START SHOPPING

Send Reunion greetings to 43022
Can't make it back to the Hill this year? Record a video greeting to be played on campus for your fellow alumni during Reunion Weekend 2022. RECORD A MESSAGE 

Build a 43022 community near you
Attend a regional event or plan one yourself. The Alumni Office can help you organize an event for alumni, families and friends of the College in your region — complete with 43022 swag! PLAN AN EVENT

Connect with 43022 from afar

It's easy — and fun — to stay connected to Kenyon from wherever you are. The Alumni Office organizes virtual events for alumni that range from class-specific gatherings, professional development panels, topical conversations and more. BROWSE UPCOMING EVENTS

Learn More

Upcoming Events for Alumni

Save the date for these upcoming events for alumni taking place online and on the Hill.
  • Virtual Alumni Town Hall
    Our Reunion Town Hall with President Decatur will take place Thursday, May 12 via Zoom.

  • Reunion Weekend
    All alumni are invited to join us on the Hill May 27–29.

  • Homecoming Weekend
    Join us for athletic competitions, festivities and alumni volunteer meetings on the Hill Sept. 23-25.
Visit kenyon.edu/alumnievents to register for the events above and view our full alumni event calendar.

Class Agents

Class agents are your connection to campus. To learn about becoming one, contact Associate Director of Annual Giving Isabelle Rivers-McCue via email.

• Beth Bogner Miranda
• Jennifer Kozak Rawlings
• Mike Lewis
• Kristin Meister
• Meredith Methlie
• Beko Reblitz-Richardson
• David Shearer
• Mary Jacobsen Teague
• Joanna Radnor Vilensky

Class of 2000 Spring Notes

Ben Bagocius: Ben recently moved from Cleveland, Ohio, to Washington, DC to teach with the Bard Sequence Program, which brings Bard College humanities courses to public high school students. Ben also has two books of poetry coming out: The Canaanite Woman will appear later this year, and The Gospel According to B. is slated for publication in 2024. Ben has two academic articles forthcoming as well: _Studies in the Novel_ is publishing his article Homosexual Calm: Pausing to Listen to Queer Shame in Frankenstein; and _Modern Fiction Studies_ is publishing his article Queer Mrs. Ramsay, or Virginia Woolf's Geomorphic Family." Yes, Woolf's To the Lighthouse is still Ben's favorite novel, which he was introduced to at Kenyon, and Ben still cries upon reading just about every page of it. Ben is founding director of the Institute for Spiritual Poetry, which hosts informal writing workshops and publishes a journal. Join us! We'd love to have even more Kenyon people to write, talk, and imagine with in a casual atmosphere of fun, discovery, and renewal. Reach out and learn more at BenjaminBagocius.com or InstituteForSpiritualPoetry.com.

Scott Carney: At the end of March I will release my 5th book: The Vortex: A True Story of History's Deadliest Storm, an Unspeakable War and Liberation with Ecco books. I met my co-author Jason Miklian at graduate school at U. Wisconsin-Madison. My tiny Denver-based media continues to put out books, audiobooks and podcasts, including the third season of Wild Thing and a new one about wine fraud in California called Blood Vines. Someday I plan to take a vacation.

Kathleen (Birck) Florea: My family moved to SE Arizona in mid-February and we are loving it so far. The natural beauty, weather, and people are unbeatable. We also started our 3-year old son in preschool which has been quite an adjustment for all of us. We sadly lost both of our elderly kitties in the last 3 months and are now fur-baby-less for the first time in years...hoping to adopt new animals in the near future, and grateful to still have our two young desert tortoises :)

Apple (Plotnick) Jannotta: My husband Jeremy (Penn State '99) and I are pleased to announce the birth of our son Luca in May 2021! He is a delight, as laughter, kisses, and giggles fill our home. We welcome anyone in the Seattle area to come visit our new little family!

Vanessa Miller-Sims: My husband, 5-year old son and I moved into a new home in Novato (north of San Francisco) in January. We are enjoying settling in with a little bit more space. I am teaching High School biology nearby and I enjoy swimming in the pool and bay. My 5:30 AM practices are the highlight of my week and definitely never thought I would say that! Hope you are all doing well in your corner of the world!

Dan Nemiroff: Dan and Sarah Holmes live outside Philadelphia with their three kids (Max, Lilly, and Izzy) and two dogs (Sunny and Midge). Sarah owns and operates her own law firm and Dan works as a Project Manager for the region’s transit authority.

Beko Reblitz-Richardson: I spent the winter holidays in Utah with my wife and kids, tromping around in the snow and enjoying some days skiing. We're back in California now, my oldest son is 13, and he will start high school this fall. That's making me feel old, but it's exciting. I'm otherwise continuing and enjoying my work as an attorney.

Noah Seferian: While I am still in touch with friends from my own time in Gambier, I have started meeting many alumni for other eras, especially recent grads. Kenyon student workers have been trying to unionize as KSWOC and unfortunately the administration has hired a law firm to fight its own students. Concerned alumni have been meeting in response and I am suddenly talking with a bunch of alumni many of whom have only been off the Hill for 3-5 years. It has been fascinating to speak with these other alumni about their time at Kenyon and hear both the similarities and the differences - and who is still there (Jeff Bowman, who I took a seminar with is now Provost, I discovered). While it is bitterly disappointing to see the administration fighting students, suddenly talking with a bunch of new Kenyonites makes me feel as though I am back in college meeting new classmates.

Maraleen Shields: Although the results of the fall election have yet to be certified, I didn’t achieve my goal of becoming judge in Lehigh County (yes, we still vote on judges in PA). We know that we ran a successful campaign and history will be made in our courts here. I appreciate the support of several Kenyon folks along the way (Michael Lewis, Nick Deifel ’02, Rebecca Kent, Kristin Meister, David Cohen ’80, Art Stroyd ’67, Molly Gutridge ’99, Eugene Peterson ’70, Susie Apel ’83, and many more). I’ve settled back into my private practice and have taken an additional position as Assistant Solicitor for the City of Bethlehem, which is a little bit of history in and of itself. I’m looking to change the face of leadership in my community. If our 11-year old (Cole) and 6-year old (Sage) don’t keep me and my spouse (Kevin) busy enough, I am continuing to work out daily (1,523 days and counting) and develop my Spanish skills. Starting from nothing in 2019, I am now able to speak with some fluency, which helped quite a bit on the campaign trail here. My life continues to be interesting and incredible. Hope to see you in May.

Holly Donahue Singh: I never imagined being a professor in a pandemic. It's been quite an adventure teaching mainly undergrads who aspire to be physicians, nurses, and public health officials, while trying to keep our little family (partner Deepak & child Anushka) healthy in Florida. In the midst of it all, I have a book baby on the way in December. More here: iupress.org/9780253063878/infertility-in-a-crowded-country/ 

Molly (Willow) Vogel: I'm looking forward to Reunion Weekend 2022, my first ever Kenyon reunion! (Don't tell my co-workers.) (I work at Kenyon.) I hope to see many of you there! My small talk muscles are atrophied from too much time on my couch with my dog, but I look forward to catching up in short awkward interactions. I hope you'll join me in giving -- something, anything -- to the college because I see every day how much students rely on our collective support. Also, if the prospect of chit chat with virtual strangers isn't enough of a draw, the new Chalmers Library alone is worth the trip!
Read notes from the Class of 2001 and the Class of 1999.
Support Kenyon
If you missed the chance to share your news for this letter, you can submit a class note at any time via kenyon.edu/class-note-form.
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