Sprin 2022 Class Letters

Class of 1983 Spring Class Letter

Dear classmates,

Greetings once again from Reid and Gregg!  We write with news from Gambier and 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. 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, 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.

There is a lot happening on the Hill.  You may have seen 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 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, you may sign up for it at bit.ly/Green-Kenyon.

You probably also 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.

There is also news from our classmates, so thank you to all of you who submitted class notes!  Scoll down to find the latest from the class of 1983.

Well, that’s the news from Gambier and classmates. 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. Please join us 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!
Reid and Gregg

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 Director of Leadership Annual Giving Tracey Wilson via email.

• Susan Apel
• Reid Click
• Gregg Courtad
• Amy McCloskey
• Karen Rockwell

Class of 1983 Spring Notes

Reid Click was in touch with his freshman roommate in Lewis 43, George Carroll, who is now working for Silicon Valley Bank and has an eight-month-old granddaughter.  Congratulations on both!  George says he is still pursuing his quest to ski at least once on every continent – so classmates are welcome to join him on future trips to Morocco, Australia, Japan and Antarctica.  Reid has also been in touch with his sophomore roommate in McBride, Mike Green, who as usual has top secret news that cannot be printed here but will be declassified in time for the fall class letter.  Reid and Mike had dinner in November with Mark Taylor and Jebb Curelop, who was visiting Washington from New Hampshire.  It was fun to share stories again – and quite literally “again” because the stories are pretty much the same whenever we get together (always fun though).

Reid’s junior-year roommate from Old Kenyon, Rick Howell, submitted a note.  Well, it’s more of a short-answer essay and full of news.  He says, "Still living and working in Western Michigan. Survived the first batch of Covid, and two vaccinations and a booster later, survived Covid again with a much milder course (hard to face that I am now in the high-risk generation!) My oldest daughter and her husband are back home and attending seminary. My oldest son and his battalion made it back from the evacuation safely, and he also survived a rollover car accident heading back to Camp Lejeune after the holidays – the Lord‘s grace is abundant! My youngest daughter is getting her MBA remotely from home, and finally pushed me hard enough to get her out West on skis in February. My youngest son is a sophomore in high school this year, playing football and just starting up lacrosse along with singing in one of the high school vocal groups. I have started dating again (after several years as a widower.) Still was unable to bring myself to do anything online, but fortunately things have worked out anyway. Now I have to say I am enjoying just looking around and appreciating all the little things, and a life full of blessings."

Enough about Reid’s posse.  Classmates who did not room with Reid also sent news, and there is plenty from the Amy McCloskey posse.  She updates us:  "I've been a member of the workforce since we all graduated in 1983, and I've had some demanding jobs. But I've never worked harder than I did reopening my bar after being closed for 16 months. WAY harder than opening it the first time! Between having to replace nearly my entire staff, to dealing with guests who seem to have reacted to the uncertainly created by the shutdown by needing to micro-manage every detail, it's been a real roller coaster. Still, NYC nightlife appears to be coming back strong, and in some ways it reminds me of what it was like when I first started going out here. A little raw, a little dangerous, a lot DGAF. Eat, drink, and be merry, folks, because who knows what tomorrow will bring.  Still, feeling pretty lucky as I seem to have put together a new team that will be able to bring Madame X into the 21st century, and are likely to inherit her when I retire. Hoping to divest myself of enough of the day to day to visit Gwen Kreager, Ellen Leerburger ’86, Jocelyn Hardman ’87, and Nona Rubin ’84 this summer! Can't wait to get on the road again after two years trapped in Brooklyn!"  

Gwen Kreager reports, “I've been in Asheville NC for 7 years now, working remotely the whole time, from a log cabin on the side of a mountain. I turned pro with dogs in the past few years, I have 5 Corgis (one is actually a yellow Lab, don't tell him he isn't a Corgi). We visited campus last summer, and it took the whole crew 2 hours to get from downtown to Old Kenyon and back, because we were mobbed by students. Beth Crawford braved the house of dog hair to visit in June, and I'm just back from a visit with Beth and her husband, Bob Dickerman ’82, at their home in western MA. I think I'm the only person in New England who was happy to be there for a snowstorm.”

Beth Crawford is concise, “Last year I threw off the black robe, bought a gigantic hammer drill and began making sculptures from reclaimed granite, concrete and rusty bits of iron.”

There is a good Kenyon story from Nancy Powers.  “While in Utah for a niece's wedding, my brother (in a Kenyon t-shirt) and I were walking in the alley behind our rental when a car pulled out into the alley. Seeing the Kenyon t-shirt, they rolled down the window, and asked if we were from Ohio. It turned out that the couple in the other car were Laurie (Read) Wood ’82 and her husband, Tony Wood ’82, on vacation (usually in Ohio). Laurie and I had played on the women's club soccer team together for three years! We all went out to dinner and had a lovely time catching up.”
Tim Girian writes, “Working on my golf game at Lookout Mountain Club in TN and at Augusta GA. I started a hedge fund valuation company based in Miami. My son, Sam is at Tulane University medical school and my daughter, Elizabeth is at Colorado College playing tennis.”

Laura Rushton reports, “I live in Strongsville with my husband Joe. I've been busy with several ongoing projects at the United Methodist Church of Berea, where I chair the Missions Committee. We are planning a Creation Justice Fair on April 23 with 15 presenters from regional and local organizations. This year I helped organize and administer a volunteer tutoring program at our church. I'm also very involved in voter advocacy and supporting Democratic candidates.”

Andrew Welsh-Huggins is “Happy to announce the upcoming summer 2023 publication of my stand-alone suspense/thriller, The End Of The Road by Mysterious Press. A (very) loose retelling of the Odyssey, I wrote it while channeling the reading I did as a Classics major.”

Bill Sondheim says, “2021 was an awesome year for me and my family. My middle daughter got married in the same Rhode Island seaside chapel where I was married 32 years earlier. My son got engaged and will be married this fall. My other daughter got a nice promotion and a new place in Boston, so my kids really had a stellar year in adulthood! My new company, Greenfield Media LLC, Executive Produced 3 films last year and we have 5 already lined up for 2022. I am making modest budget action films with well-known marketable cast.”

After spending an unexpected night sleeping in the lobby of the Orlando Airport, Gregg O. Courtad returned to an icy Pittsburgh with no winter coat and found himself wandering around the airport parking lot desperately searching for his snow-covered vehicle at 2AM. Fortunately, he chanced upon a grouchy but benevolent shuttle driver who took pity on him and helped him find his frosty pick-up truck. Gregg had just gotten back from Puerto Rico, where he had given a presentation in Spanish on picaresque literature.  “When the last leg of my return flight was cancelled, I tried to book a room at the Hyatt in the airport in Orlando, but there was no room at the inn, so I made do with a comfortable chair. It reminded me of when I was a penniless graduate student traveling through Europe, sleeping in train stations—I guess life does come full circle.” 
Read notes from the Class of 1984 and the Class of 1982.
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
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