Sprin 2022 Class Letters

Class of 1997 Spring Class Letter

Dear classmates,

It’s officially Reunion month on the Hill! I hope to see many of you back in Gambier this May to celebrate our 25th Reunion at what will certainly be a weekend to remember since alumni are FINALLY able to reunite on campus again after two years of virtual gatherings. The sense of isolation that has accompanied the past two years has been challenging to navigate, but having the support of you all, my Kenyon family, has continued to brighten the darkest parts of this pandemic for me — thank you! 

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 unique 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.

Hopefully you saw the news from President Sean Decatur this winter that, in response to calls from students as we approach our Bicentennial, he agreed the time had come to look beyond Lords and Ladies. Thanks to all of you who have 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, the College 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. First, more than 100 members of the Class of 2020 and their families have registered to attend their belated Commencement taking place on the Hill 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 then, as you know, many of us will be back on campus May 27-29 for what promises to be the biggest alumni gathering in the College’s history! I can’t wait to catch up with you all, celebrate our 25th Reunion and share a few laughs together. And what reunion would be complete without a special entertainment treat from our resident alumni deejay, emcee, and all-around crowd pleaser Robert “Butch” King! I hope you get your music choices in to him before the weekend!!

All of the excitement and achievement at Kenyon today can be traced, in part, back 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 stretch gift this year in honor of our 25th Reunion. 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!
Levon Sutton

P.S. Scroll down to view our 1997 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.

Reunion Committee

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

• Jamion Berry
• Alisoun Davis Bertsch
• Elizabeth Boon Carrico
• Nicky Dreyfuss
• Barbara Kakiris
• Ed O'Malley
• Larae Bush Schraeder
• Kelli Stebel Schrade
• Kerry Sheldon
• Levon Sutton
• Terry West

Class of 1997 Spring Notes

Amanda Berg Wilson writes: Still happily making theatre from my home base in Boulder, Colorado, as Artistic Director of The Catamounts (thecatamounts.org), and as a freelance director and performer with companies around the state. Especially excited the world premiere of THEATRE OF THE MIND will finally be happening in September of 2022, in spite of some COVID-induced delays. It's an immersive theatre piece by Mala Gaonkar and David Byrne and being produced by the Denver Center's Off-Center wing. I'm assistant directing, and having the "once in a lifetime" experience of collaborating with one of my heroes. If you're in Denver this fall, don't miss it.

Alisoun (Davis) Bertsch writes:  Friends, a toast to both of our big anniversaries this year: our 25th reunion AND making it through year 2 of the pandemic. 

Is anyone else thinking about changing her stage name to The Mauve now that we have found out that was the precursor to Lords and Ladies? The question is not what should our moniker be going forward but how did we drop that beauty? We’re still here, no matter what we’re called. Cheers to that! 

It has taken 15 years but we have finally gotten a diagnosis in our house for one of our family members. I guess in the larger sense of time, that is but a blink. It has not felt like a blink. We are making the accommodations based on new information. And while it’s not my story to go into detail, I will say that in thinking about neurodivergence and the mega-reunion this spring, if you are someone who is hoping for masks or better yet an all-Zoom event, I get it. This is a lot of yakkity-yak for the neurodivergent community and if it is easier to participate in spirit, we feel you, and we send our reunion love from over here where we promise not to hug you. 

Our firstborn is graduating high school the week after the mega-reunion. So here is your explanation ahead of time about my sitting on a Middle Path bench staring into the gravel processing the passage of time. I love that Kenyon still makes space for all of my big feelings.

One last thing, if you are on the fence about the reunion, here is your personal invitation to come. And if you can’t make this one (I gave birth during our 10th, believe me, you did not want me at that one or I would have made it all about me and the slow pace of you all bringing me ice chips), I hope you can come to the next one when we get to check out the new dorms and practice using the new moniker. (If we raise enough money, can we make a case to have Kenyon go by the name The 97’s? Gender neutral, super cool, enough with all the letters, how about numbers for a change?) Much love, support, health, and Happy 25th to all 97’s!

From Lincoln Brown: Greetings classmates! Every class letter that comes out is filled with long paragraphs of information from people busy with life and adventures. I feel woefully inadequate with the amount of information that I have to share. While it is substantial in terms of effort, it is short in its description. Two years ago, I “retired” from my career as a Critical Care Flight Paramedic in order to take on the challenges of medical school. Having now completed those two lovely didactic years, I am looking forward to clinical rotations for the next two. Thus, I have not had opportunities to travel or engage with the people and the world--beyond my books. Sadly, they even kicked us off campus with the advent of the pandemic. I have seen little beyond my home in WI. Given the state of the world for the past two years though, I have been told, it may have been the perfect time to get lost in those books. And who knew professors of Epidemiology could get so excited? With all that behind us, it will be thrilling to be together with friends again in May. See you soon! 

Jeremy Collins shares that he moved to Cincinnati this year and started working as the Senior Network Administrator at Shepherd Material Sciences. His partner has started working at Tri-Health as a Laborist and they are currently looking for a house. They are currently living downtown and enjoyed the Bengals playoff run. They are within walking distance of the stadium and enjoyed the sense of excitement that has permeated downtown during the playoffs. Jeremy is looking forward to seeing people at the reunion this spring.

From Nicole Dreyfuss:  Hi all, Thanks to the persistence of Barbara Kakaris, I am on the reunion planning committee and I’m very excited to see you all in May!! Jamion Berry and I are your social chairs, so please reach out if you have any fun ideas for reunion weekend. As for news, David Seaman and I are doing well. We are close to celebrating our 20th wedding anniversary, we live on the Upper West Side of Manhattan with our 15 year old identical twins Oliver and Alexander and our dog Bonnet. I am in real estate, so if anyone is considering a move to NYC (or if you just want to talk about coops, condos, and townhouses) definitely reach out, and David is at the French bank, BNP Paribas, where he’s been for 23 years. We hope to see you all in May!

Don Español writes “I'll be celebrating 20 years working at National Public Radio this year.”  Congrats, Don!

William Fox shares this past summer, “I had the opportunity to travel with President Biden for the day including some personal time as I was with him all day in the motorcade.”
Mandy (Mason) Gadrow was promoted in December 2021 to the position of VP of Quality Assurance and Support at RStudio, PBC. She's excited to contribute in new and interesting ways to the organization’s mission to help people understand and improve the world through data. 

In other news, Mandy participated in her first USCA curling bonspiel in Detroit in February, and had an absolute blast. If anyone in the Columbus area wants to learn to curl, she highly recommends signing up for a clinic at www.columbuscurling.com/index.php/learn-to-curl.

Elliott Holt writes: “I am thrilled to be among the 35 prose writers who won 2022 Fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts. I’m grateful for the financial support and the vote of confidence in my fiction.”

Adam Howard shares: “I was recently selected for the Road Theatre Company’s Under Construction Playwrights residency! The ten writers in the cohort are spending the next 9 months each working on a brand new play – the group relies on each other for critical feedback and collaboration. Each of the playwrights will have a completed play by the end of the residency, which will lead to a public reading in Los Angeles, and then the theatre company has first option on producing the work(s).”

Barbara Kakiris writes: “I am so proud to be serving as our reunion planning committee chair and to be working with such a dedicated and amazing group of our classmates who I want to thank personally for their contributions: Nicole Dreyfuss, Jamion Berry, Terry West, Kerry Sheldon, Liz Boon Carrico, Larae Schraeder, Kelli Schrade, Levon Sutton, Alisoun Bertsch, and Ed O'Malley. We sincerely hope you're planning to join us for our 25th reunion in May and are so excited to see you. In personal news, I accepted a job opportunity in January 2022 as Director of Engagement and Stewardship at The MetroHealth Foundation and I am really enjoying my new role and workplace culture. I am excited to be back in my hometown after leaving Kenyon, but still get back to Gambier often to visit friends and participate in activities with the boards on which I served. Hoping that you're all well and that it's not long before we're together again.”

Anne (Roberts) Moore of Greenville, S.C., is the Constituent Relations Coordinator in Limestone University’s Office of Institutional Advancement. She returned to work at the University after an 18-year absence during which time she stayed home to raise her three children, Archie, 18, and Kit and Walter, both 16. Anne and her husband, John, are currently guiding the twins – who will graduate from high school next year – through the college-search process. Archie, who has Down syndrome, often impresses strangers with his extensive knowledge of countries and languages, states and capitals. His command of the global landscape doesn’t surprise his family, though, because Archie has taught all four of them never to judge a book by its cover.

Greta Scharnweber is very much looking forward to traveling to Gambier in May for the 25-year reunion weekend! She along with Bexley 101 (Beth Canterbury & Arian Giantris) are making their way to campus to see what has changed since our 10th reunion, which seems like just yesterday. Truly time is flying! Greta can't wait to see and catch up with former classmates!

Kelli (Stebel) Schrade writes: The reunion countdown continues! Can't wait for our 25th (?!?!) and seeing many of you again in Gambier! As part of the reunion committee, we've had a lot of fun Zooms and really enjoyed the kickoff Happy Hour in February. On the home front, trying to adjust to a new normal, some days in the office, mostly still at home for me. Dismayed by the baseball situation since I was very much looking forward to returning to Wrigley frequently this spring. Hard to believe, but this is my 23rd year with season tickets and I'd like to use them! Get it together MLB! Also, in the "how did that happen" category, my husband and I celebrate our 15th wedding anniversary on 3/31. We had just been married a couple months when I brought him to our 10th reunion and we stayed in Old Kenyon! Somehow, he agreed to stay married to me after sleeping on the plastic mattresses and no air conditioning. Hope all is well with our classmates, and if you haven't yet, register for reunion!

Larae (Bush) Schraeder writes: “I recently registered for our 25th reunion. Not sure how that happened -- 25 -- but it's here and I'm looking forward to being back on the Hill to see many of you. It has been a blast serving on the reunion planning committee -- more than any of our other planning committees in memory. I'll be wrapping up my term on the Kenyon board this summer, and looking for other ways to continue volunteering. In other news, not much has changed. I'm still living in Columbus, still have 1 husband, 2 shelter cats, 2 jobs (Nationwide Insurance & my own law practice).”

Kerry Sheldon writes: “I recently set a professional development goal for myself to work LESS. Specifically, to play hooky more frequently. Happy to report that I am making progress! Recently took a few days off to take my son Jack skateboarding in San Diego - first time we've been on a plane in 2 years, and I am definitely a rusty traveler (a question I literally had to ask myself the night before: am I supposed to pack shampoo? They'll have shampoo in San Diego, right?!). But the whole jam went off without a hitch. Jack even talked me into surfing, which I forcefully resisted at first (why? Because I am orders of magnitude LESS bendy than he is - plus, the water is 58 degrees and I'm no fancy big city lawyer but won't we DIE pretty quickly under those conditions?!). Turns out wetsuits are witchcraft, the Pacific is amazing, and my boy is a natural. I am decidedly not - AND we still had a blast. I will treasure that memory forever. Anyway, all that to say that life remains so good, thanks be. Also feeling super grateful to put February in the rearview. One month closer to Reunion!”

Levon Sutton writes: “I am settling in pretty well in my iterate appointment in Baltimore City.  Additionally, our home will have one less occupant when my oldest daughter Simone sets off for college this upcoming fall.  Although her mind is made up, we’re still waiting to hear from a few schools including Kenyon! I am also preparing for an awesome 25th reunion. If you have been one of the fortunate ones who have received a text or email, please consider coming back in May. Looking forwarding to see you all back on The Hill!” 

Kirsten (Bauman) Tychonievick shares: I continue to work as a Nurse Practitioner in Bariatric Surgery and Comprehensive Weight Management at OSU. I’ve also taken on management tasks as an APP Lead. The needed (but not always wanted) explosion of tele-health visits to care for my patients has had a huge impact on my practice. I am looking forward to several future in-person conferences after a lot of Zoom-ing. This will include my presenting at the ASMBS conference in Dallas in June. If you have any “musts” to recommend for a brief Dallas visit, I’m all ears! My husband Michael continues to teach Math at OSU (mostly Financial Math) and has had to navigate many “virtual” pivots in that role. He’s been happy to return to a woodworking hobby as a stress reliever and creative outlet. Our son, Luke, is now 6 and is super excited to return to Gambier for reunion. One of his favorite shirts is his Kenyon tie dye and I’m hoping to show him the observatory since he has a huge interest in all things outer space.
Read notes from the Class of 1998 and the Class of 1996.
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.
Kenyon College
105 Chase Avenue, Gambier, OH 43022