Sprin 2022 Class Letters

Class of 1974 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!) 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, and I can’t imagine what is has been like for the students.  In 1974 we had our challenges as we were exiting a recession, a gas crisis, an 8.9% unemployment rate, inflation at 12.3% and the stock market down 45% but at least we could enjoy being together on campus and I am so glad that the current students will once again have that experience.

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. (This will be us before we know it! Watch for special opportunities to connect with our classmates leading up to our big 50th!) 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!
Jeff Walker and Cynthia Cole

P.S. Scroll down to view the 1974 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.

1974 Committee

To learn more about joining us, contact Director of 50th Reunion Programs Shayna Daubert via email.

• Stu Anness, Co-Leader
• Stewart Peck, Co-Leader
Communications & Engagement
• Cynthia Cole, Co-Chair
• Jeff Walker, Co-Chair
• Sally Wright
• Gregg DeSilvio
• Jeff Brown
• Fred Specht
• Lindsay Jones
• Charles Jones
• Tim Newcomb
• Marylen Marty-Gentile
• Eric Koppert
Fundraising & Participation
• Dave Barrie, Co-Chair
• Bill Kozy, Co-Chair
• Gil Meister
• Mike Gibbons
• Gail Cudak
• Andy Wellenbach

Class of 1974 Spring Notes

In October, Jim Breece organized a reunion at Sea Island, GA with some help from Doug Vogeler ‘71 and David Duff ‘71. It comprised the following Peeps and lone Beta: John Himmel ‘73, Randy “Kent” Harrison ‘73, Ransom “Butch” Griffin ‘71, Dan “Slim” Pickens ‘71, Peter Hoover ‘71, Jack “J. Fred” Killen ‘71, Jan Ostrovsky ‘71. Spouses were included and somehow there were a bunch of JD’s, MBA’s and MD’s. Himmel and Breece were taildraggers as undergrad furniture gurus. There was plenty of golf and no drinking!!!

Peter Smagorinsky's 2020 book, Learning to Teach English and Language Arts: A Vygotskian Perspective on Beginning Teachers' Pedagogical Concept Development, has been awarded the American Educational Research Association's 2022 Exemplary Research in Teaching and Teacher Education Award.

Steve Johnson:  Missing my friends and fraternity brothers. Retired and relaxing in the greater Nashville area.

Dan Patterson: I joined Kenyon's Gund Gallery Board last year which gives me a great excuse to visit the campus. For those of you who aren't aware of the Gallery, which is still quite new, provides an exceptional opportunity to provide Kenyon students and faculty a hands-on connection to visual arts. Also it gives Kenyon membership in an exclusive club among its peers. You should visit it if you get to the campus and say hello to our amazing director, Daisy Desrosiers!

Doug Wilhelm continues to work as a writer in Vermont's Champlain Valley. His 18th book, Catalysts for Change: How Nonprofits and a Foundation Are Helping Shape Vermont's Future, was published this spring. Doug's most recent novel, Street of Storytellers, won three national awards and one New England gold medal for independently published books.

James Carson: Getting back into piano-duet playing after a decade-plus hiatus; my new duo partner and I will be giving a pair of recitals in Cincinnati this spring.

Dave Barrie:  I continue my slow descent into retirement. After ten years, I have decided to step down as Chairman of the Board at Perma-Pipe International Holdings. During that time, it has been a great transformation of the company and a wonderful experience working with excellent people. I still, however, remain Chairman of the Board of Advanced Battery Concepts where we are transforming the energy storage world.

Jeffrey Walker: I’m singing with the Kokes Klassics (Jim Hecox ‘69, Eric Herr ’70, Paul Keiner ’70 and Tim Wildman ’68) performing at schools and assisted living facilities in New Hampshire and Massachusetts. We had a little hiatus due to the Omicron variant but will be performing again this spring. Karen (Handel) ’77 and I enjoy taking care of our twin 4-year-old grandsons in nearby Somerville and visiting our 2- and 4-year grandsons in Montreal where our son’s family lives. We are hoping to go to reunion weekend for Karen’s 45th and for a Kokes reunion.

Tom Northway:  Can’t remember when or even if I’ve contributed to our class notes but like many of us the last year or so has been especially tumultuous. I’ve been practicing dentistry in Grand Rapids, MI for 43 years and my wife and I have been in the same downtown lake house for 41 years. It’s been a great town to watch grow. In the fall of 2020 our only daughter, Emelyn, delighted us with the news that she was pregnant. They later discovered a massive lymphoma requiring immediate chemotherapy and triggering the birth of our beautiful healthy granddaughter, Olivia, ten weeks prematurely. The chemo was long and brutal but thankfully effective. During the course of her multiple treatments we made many trips to NYC where she was treated and it became clear to me that dentistry was getting in the way, so I retired last July. We were then free to help them during her recovery. They now live in Rowayton, CT and we’re able to spend six weeks with them during their search for a nanny. We look forward to visiting them more. Would love to track down some East Coast Kenyon friends while out there.

Frank O'Donnell:  All is fine in Arlington, TN. During the first week in February, I flew to the Windy City, to visit family and friends. Chicago is still my home base, as I grew up in that area. The suburb of Naperville is my hometown. One of the highlights of that trip was a tour of the Art Institute of Chicago. Since my brother is a member of the institute, I was admitted for free as his guest. There I enjoyed viewing several impressionist masterpieces, of which On the Terrace, by Renoir, is my favorite. I would like to extend best wishes to my Kenyon classmates. I look forward to seeing all of you at a future reunion.

Edward Cohen: Greetings fellow hibernators, 2021 was a very difficult year for all of us, and this year isn't shaping up too well either.  But I'd like to share some brighter stories. In 2021 I was engaged for work on 2 long form film projects: Law and Order / Organized Crime, and Armageddon Time, a forthcoming film from writer/director James Gray. And now this year, I've been contacted by Carver Diserens, the creative son of my classmate Karla (Hay) Diserens about a TV pilot that could shoot this spring in Minnesota! Meanwhile, I've been fortunate enough to have shared some good glasses of wine with some of my other classmates: Jane (Hershcopf) Schreck, Janet (Noakes) McGannon, Kathleen (Hume) Britz as well as participating in a Wine Zoom for the Class of ’72 with Chris Fahlman '72, Bruce Mavec '72, Rick Alles '72 and Douglas Holbrook ’72 as organizers. The jovial and enlightening event included many other classmates as participants. I even was able to visit with former classmate Deborah Boone Tepper '76 on Cape Cod where she and her family now reside. What could really make it a happy turnaround is the opportunity to see my cherished friend, Wilder Gutterson, this year, in London. And I'm planning for it.

Betsy (Robinson) Schram:  After 20 years in banking and 20 years as an independent bookstore owner I have retired and hope to spend more time with my family and read all the books I have put on my retirement bookcase over the years. I have one grandchild at present and look forward to more. I truly hope we have a BIG turnout for our 50th.

Marylen Marty:  I don't think I've ever submitted a class note, so here's the first as we approach our 50th reunion. After spending 20+ years in parish ministry at a church in Oak Park, IL I am (and my husband is) retired. My life now mostly consists of being a decent human (trying hard) and an excellent Nanna to three young boys, with some travel thrown in.  Covid has refocused many of us, me included, on what matters in life—family and compassion for the world. I hope this finds my Kenyon classmates well and thriving and planning on coming to Gambier in May.

Jane (Hershcopf) Schreck:  Don and I joyously celebrated the wedding of our son, Sam Schreck, to Georgia Horn Weinberg on January 22, 2022. The day was beautiful and it was a wonderful wedding. It was a bit smaller than we had originally planned (thanks to Covid!) but it went off without a hitch and everyone stayed healthy.  Janet (Noakes) McGannon traveled up from Sarasota to be there which definitely made it even better!

John Vrtachnik: Greeting to all my classmates of the Class of 1974.  How time flies. I thought that I was retired two years ago, but resumed IT project management work recently on a part-time basis.  A new career as a grandfather beckoned a year ago.  I will happily attend a first birthday party in Washington, D.C. in late March 2022.

This fall, the Kenyon College football team is celebrating a 50th reunion of the undefeated 1972 season.  I am helping to plan the event along with representatives of each of the other classes.  Feel free to join us if you are looking for a reason to return to the ‘Hill’ prior to our next class reunion. 

Happily, I remain in contact with classmates and friends from the College.  I communicate most with Ed Grzybowski ’72 and we get together occasionally.    

Lawrenceville, GA is still home for me.  If you are passing through, give me a call. 
Read notes from the Class of 1975 and the Class of 1973.
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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