Class of 1988 Spring Class Letter
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| 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!) and the fact that alumni are FINALLY able to reunite on campus again after two years of virtual gatherings is something worth celebrating. 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. They also announced the news that Lisa Schott ’80, who since 2010 has served as managing director of the College’s land trust, the Philander Chase Conservancy (PCC), will step down from that position at the end of June after a nearly 40-year career with Kenyon. 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, all alumni are welcome back to campus May 27-29 for what promises to be the biggest alumni gathering in the College’s history! 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, 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 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! Beth Miyashiro Vivio
P.S. Scroll down to view the 1988 class notes.
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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
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Upcoming Events for Alumni
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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.
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Class AgentsClass agents are your connection to campus. To learn about becoming one, contact Director of Annual Giving Molly Gutridge '99 via email.
• Sue Byrne Wooster • cdavid cottrill • Beth Miyashiro Vivio • Tom Morris • Pattie Rossman Skrha
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Class of 1988 Spring Notes
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Jessica Brown
It is with great fortune that I became the Director of a new magnet visual and performing public arts school in Aurora, Colorado. We recently named the school after a prominent African American bass player in Denver who is 101 years old! The school will launch in August and grow to be a K-12 school in three years. I believe that the Arts provide an unequalled opportunity to foster intellectual growth and curiosity in students and our vision for "Burrell Arts" is to prepare and empower a community of creative, confident, and caring lifelong learners. I appreciate the Kenyon education that I received that prepared me to lead this great endeavor.
Shelley Swank-Anderson
Life is good with the Anderson family. We have been blessed to be re-united with our "best man" and fellow Kenyon '88 classmate, Bret Frye. Our eldest daughter, Kiele ’21, who just graduated from Kenyon in May has been adulting with her first real job in Marietta, Ohio - home of life-long resident and local dental hero, Bret Frye. What a lucky reunion! She has already been to his dental practice for a six-month check up and she has informed us that our local longtime dentist is way behind the times and is seriously lacking in the latest dental technology - thanks Bret! It has been great spending time with him and his family this summer while enjoying his pool and hospitality.
Our middle child, Leah ’23, (junior and Kenyon Women's Soccer goalie) is currently studying in Edinburgh through Kenyon's program and is having a blast! Kevin has decided that we shall spend our anniversary visiting her! My mom and dad will be coming up from their home in Florida to supervise Scott while we are away. Hopefully they will get the chance to enjoy one or two of his tennis matches. He is hoping to maybe play for Kenyon some day. (Coach, if you are reading this...give us a call). With our entire family having played a sport at Kenyon and with Aunt Holly's ’89 bigger-than-life mural in the Hall of Fame hallway at the KAC (AKA current Lowry), he may be slightly feeling the pressure. Anywhooo...
On an entirely different note; I have been delivering for "Meals on Wheels" for the past six months and have really had my eyes opened to the way people in poverty are living here. The elderly and shut-ins who count on the program for a daily hot meal are living in terrible circumstances in some cases and in complete squalor in others. For the first week I wondered why every "apartment" was so dark and then I realized that they did not turn the lights on because they couldn't afford to. Anyway, while I have a captive audience of means I would like to enlist your help to support your own local programs to help the poor, disabled, and shut-ins.
OK, that about covers it. I hope you and your families are all well and making the most out of every moment. Life is short. God is good. Peace out!
Amy Malkoff
Though the pandemic has curtailed so much of art and performance, I early on started getting together with 3 friends (Berklee professors, all), outside, before vaccines, working on an interesting arrangement of the traditional Irish tune, She Moved Through The Fair. We continued to rehearse outside and tweak the arrangement, then we recorded our parts individually, it was then edited, and it went off to a friend (who just happens to be a multi-GRAMMY award winning producer!) for mastering. I created this lyric video and we'll eventually make a video with us in it. Expect sweeping ocean views, probably.
I have also been able to see classmate Paul Singer here in the Boston area (and hear him regularly on the radio on WGBH!) , and J. Edward Ball in Atlanta. I enjoy keeping up with many of you online and hope to see more of you in person!
Paul Singer
I am helping a local museum divest itself of a bunch of vintage typewriters; totally coincidentally, my manual typewriter collection has recently expanded. But my sentimental favorite remains the 1949 Underwood Leader I used to write my senior thesis at Kenyon. It still has a cartoon from 1985 taped to the front.
Matthew Pasher
Hello all from NYC. My wife Lori and I continue to enjoy what we can of NYC. I am currently working remotely supporting users of The Quickbooks Product suite and my wife has transitioned to work for the NYC DOE as an SLP to multiple High Schools. Our daughter Naomi is a 7th grader at the Professional Performing Arts School in the theater district. It's a tremendous challenge being a parent to a tween, so any offers of support or a shoulder to cry on are appreciated. I am really enjoying reconnecting with lots of Kenyon people through our K'80s website and have started a weekly call on Sunday nights with a wonderful group shooting the breeze. I am always looking to add to our discussion. Recently caught up with Sabrina Barr and had a great time, and have had great help procuring hard to access books through Michael Zorek ’82 who works at a wonderful bookstore in the city. Please reach out to me if you are in the City and want to catch up.
Tara Jones
What I am loving these days is resuming spending time with friends and other activities that were restricted during the first two years of the pandemic: going to movies and concerts, eating dinner with friends, in person practices with the other member of my (music) duo. I have also returned to composing (piano sketches for piano) and started a blog. Please contact me if you would like to be on the mailing list for my latest compositions or to subscribe to my blog, please contact me at taral@efn.org.
Justin Lee
I am still living in Berkeley, CA. Now working for tech company that uses Virtual Reality to treat stroke patients-they actually have a blast doing therapy with penguins in VR pinball worlds! My daughter, Marnie, goes to UC Davis and is in her 3rd year. My wife, Sheryl, is a licensed architect and also does a lot of home-hardening consultation for wildfires. I still train youth XC and track and one of my former runners just won California State Champs in High School!
Tom Richardson
I have been busy producing Season 3 of my outdoor-adventure/destination show Explore New England, which airs on a regional TV network (NESN), as well as on Roku and YouTube. It has been an interesting journey from editing and writing for print magazines to the film and TV world, but the theme of trying to tell interesting stories remains the same. Plus it's a lot of fun and way better than a desk job! Speaking of fun, last summer I spent a weekend in Florida catching up with fellow classmates Nina Oldenquist, Sarah (Fox) Call, Lori (Hughett) Harrison, Joe Shrum, Tom Gallucio, Doug Thompson, and Don Dowd. We had a blast, although I'm pretty sure the phrase "I'm getting too old for this" may have been uttered a few times.
Beth Miyashiro Vivio
It was a delight to run into Chris Toft ’89 while on a weekend trip in Chicago last fall. The one and only J. Edward Ball came to St. Pete for a visit in November between the Delta and Omicron variants. Hoping to do more traveling in the coming months and especially hope that includes seeing more Kenyon classmates.
Pattie Rossman Skrha
It's fun to be a newlywed at age 55! And even better when your Kenyon roomies come to Cleveland to join the celebration. Great to see Jill Tibbe, Lauren (Ewers) Polite, Susie Brown, Susan (Lind) Quigley, and Lynne Schneebeck, along with spouses Blase Polite and John Quigley ’89 and niece Katie Rossman '21.
Bruce Szabo
My wife and I are empty nesters. We are living in an apartment in University Circle in Cleveland, Ohio.
Robin Caiola
I have been living in NYC since 2001, when my twins were born. They are now freshman in college (my daughter is at Duke University and my son is at Brown University.) I got a bonus year with them last year as they both took a gap year. In addition to raising them, I have been splitting my time between professional photography and non profit management. Currently, I am the Chair of the Board of the Center for Science in the Public Interest (which works to improve health and nutrition), and I am on the Advisory Board of Beyond Plastics. I get together with Aileen Hefferren often and keep in touch with several other Kenyon friends. My son participated in Kenyon Review’s Young Writing summer program a couple of years ago and loved it. Please get in touch if you are ever in NYC.
Janet E. Lord
I’m looking forward to returning to Middle Path in April to receive an honorary doctorate from Kenyon. I am astonished yet honored and delighted to receive this unexpected award and to be able to speak on the occasion in front of the faculty and student body.
Laurie Ewers Polite
The A-3 girls took advantage of Pattie Rossman's exciting news and gathered in Chicago for a pre-wedding celebration and Cleveland for the big day. Nothing could be better then celebrating love - congratulations Pattie and George. In other news, our daughter Tia is now a Certified Sommelier, if anyone needs some wine pairing recommendations. She'll graduate from DU in June and we're thrilled she'll be returning to Chicago. Our son Max is weathering the cold as a Sophomore at University of Rochester.
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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 kenyon.edu/class-note-form.
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Kenyon College
105 Chase Avenue, Gambier, OH 43022
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