|
class notes
1920s | 1930s | 1940s | 1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s | MALS | UWW
People & projects | In Memoriam
1980s
1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989
1987
Jennifer Weisberg Millner
jwmil23@aol.com
Linda Gowell lives and works in Manhattan, where she administers the training fund at 32BJ, the largest building-service workers union in the world. The fund includes over 100 seminars and courses that she and her team have developed to help the mostly immigrant workforce grow professionally and personally. She loves the work and her West Village residence. She also enjoys spending part of the summer on nearby Fire Island. She welcomes hearing from classmates at lindanell@aol.com.
Linda spends time with Brooklyn resident Teresa Genaro, who is dean of students and a twelfth-grade English teacher at Packer Collegiate Institute there. Ever the optimist, Teresa is a perennial Rangers season-ticket holder. She volunteers with Ice Hockey in Harlem, hosts a monthly Scrabble game in a Brooklyn bar, and indulges her Saratoga-bred love of horse racing at various New York tracks. She’s in touch with Jim Lebson, who lives in Portland, OR.
John Jacobson lives on a farm in Princeton, NJ, with wife Melissa and children Hadley, 10, and Austin, 8. The clan acquired a new puppy, Winifred, to complete the domestic picture. John commutes to NYC for work and “lives for the weekends.”
Amy Kennedy Daniels attended our 20th reunion with husband Martin Daniels ’85 and children Trevor, 8, and Colin, 6. “It was great to see so many people and to catch up on the years gone by.” Busy volunteering and working part-time as a medical-legal consultant, Amy is looking forward to a nervous breakdown, after which she hopes to get some rest.
Michael Metcalf’s public art project—two 30-foot-high spiral forms made of stainless steel, wire rope, and bronze—was chosen to grace the I-40/Louisiana interchange. An associate professor in the expressive arts department at Western New Mexico University, he was among eight semifinalists vying for the commission.
|