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Winter 2019
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BY WAY OF BUCKNELL
COLD FRONT
The ever-resilient Bison shoulders through a snowstorm.
If you would like a reprint of this photo, please fill out the form at bucknell.edu/bmag/PhotoOffer. We will send you a complimentary 8 x 10 print.
photograph by Emily Paine
BY WAY OF BUCKNELL
COLD FRONT
The ever-resilient Bison shoulders through a snowstorm.
If you would like a reprint of this photo, please fill out the form at bucknell.edu/bmagazine. We will send you a complimentary 8 x 10 print.
photograph by Emily Paine
Pathways
Pathways: From Bucknell to Undersea Shipwrecks

by Paula Cogan Myers

Ancient civilization seems less distant when professors like Kris Trego, classics & ancient Mediterranean studies, humanize the relics they study. The nautical archaeologist has traveled to Turkey for 20 years, exploring shipwrecks and analyzing artifacts, from amphorae used to carry wine to personal items kept on board.

Information lives within these objects, helping Trego piece together the social history they reveal. Patterns are important, and shared methodology is key. “How do we decide to categorize an object as something used by a ship’s crew instead of as part of the cargo?” she asks.

photograph by dustin fenstermacher
Pathways
Photograph of Kris Trego
Pathways: From Bucknell to Undersea Shipwrecks

by Paula Cogan Myers

Ancient civilization seems less distant when professors like Kris Trego, classics & ancient Mediterranean studies, humanize the relics they study. The nautical archaeologist has traveled to Turkey for 20 years, exploring shipwrecks and analyzing artifacts, from amphorae used to carry wine to personal items kept on board.

Information lives within these objects, helping Trego piece together the social history they reveal. Patterns are important, and shared methodology is key. “How do we decide to categorize an object as something used by a ship’s crew instead of as part of the cargo?” she asks.

photograph by dustin fenstermacher
Pathways
Pathways: From Grilling Kebabs to Studying Ancient Texts

by Heidi Hormel

When he’s not studying ancient texts, Professor Ali Karjoo-Ravary, religious studies, might be cooking up kebabs on his specialty charcoal grill.

They may not live up to the best he’s had, but they’re still his “lifeline” to the ones he had in eastern Turkey, served gyro style with fresh lamb, and another on the road outside Tehran at 11 p.m.

photograph by dustin fenstermacher
Pathways
Photograph of Ali Karjoo-Ravary
Pathways: From Corporate Banking to Bucknell
by Heidi Hormel

When he’s not studying ancient texts, Professor Ali Karjoo-Ravary, religious studies, might be cooking up kebabs on his specialty charcoal grill.

They may not live up to the best he’s had, but they’re still his “lifeline” to the ones he had in eastern Turkey, served gyro style with fresh lamb, and another on the road outside Tehran at 11 p.m.

photograph by dustin fenstermacher
Gateway
Letters

MENTORING EMERGING LEADERS: “I met Kathy Wagner ’68 [profiled in the fall issue] in the late ’70s at the Philadelphia Zoo while on an animal behavior class trip. We talked about my career aspirations, and the next day she gave me a lead that became my first job after Bucknell — executive director of the Wildlife Preservation Trust International. Her interest and concern for emerging leaders shaped the rest of my career in environment and foundation philanthropy, and I will always be grateful.”

Jon Jensen M’80
Ithaca, N.Y.
Opposed to Animal Experiments

It made me sick at heart to read the story in your fall issue about neuroscience professor Judy Grisel (“Judy’s Journey”), specifically the animal experiments on drug addiction carried out as part of her Bucknell research and in her classes. I would like to know what efforts, if any, Bucknell is making to move beyond vivisection in the classroom and adopt alternative methods, such as computer modeling.

A 2017 Gallup poll showed that 49 percent of Americans believe all medical experiments on animals are morally wrong, and few people remain under the illusion that animal experimentation is usually any less than torture for the “research subjects” involved. As part of its educational mission, Bucknell owes it to its students to at least address the issue.

Alicia Mottur ’91
Brussels, Belgium
Redesign Is Outstanding

My son, John Chestnut ’14, and I both want to let you know that the redesign of the magazine is outstanding! I’ve spent my career as a finance exec in the media communications world and have had a secondary education in design and communications as a result. The format, layout of articles, quality and volume of content has greatly improved the magazine’s desirability and readability.

Before, I usually only read the class notes and took a quick glance at the feature articles and then tossed the magazine. I now read the issues cover to cover because the way the content is presented and edited pulls you in to engage with each piece. This Summer 2018 issue especially will also be a great recruiting tool, because it showcases the diversity of paths Bucknellians take — finance, craft beers, making MLB “dirt,” etc. Congrats to all of those who were involved in taking the magazine in this direction!

Colette Edmundowicz Chestnut ’81
Old Greenwich, Conn.
Alternative Opinions on Women as Engineers

I was extremely dismayed by the letter from Stephen Doty ’84, published in the Fall 2018 Bucknell Magazine regarding female engineers.

I believe it is erroneous and frankly insulting to insinuate that Bucknell’s commendable focus on encouraging women in engineering is “discrimination” and that the reason for a lack of women in engineering is due to “simple gender preferences or lack of aptitudes.”

There have been studies done proving that abilities are not hard-wired but based on the different ways that boys and girls are socialized. When we grow up expecting a boy to be good at math and science and a girl to be good at nurturing (think science-kit toys marketed to boys vs. baby dolls marketed to girls), it’s difficult to overcome that inherent bias. The only way to reverse this bias is to encourage women from the time they are young that math and science are just as much areas for women as they are for men. That starts with equal representation in the workforce and by extension, in the College of Engineering.

I applaud Bucknell for focusing on diversity in engineering and otherwise. Thank you for creating the B-WISE scholarship. Thank you for showing high-school girls that Bucknell is a place where women will find other women who share their interest in engineering — my chemical engineering class was about 33 percent women, and I am happy to see that number increasing. Thank you for employing professors who care about diversity and inclusion. Bucknell is making the changes that are needed in the greater society, and I am grateful and proud to be a Bucknellian.

Jackie Misero Lawrence ’10
Bath, Pa.

I’m writing in response to the fall 2018 letter to the editor by Stephen Doty ’84. I disagree with his letter on all points save one, that bridges do not care about the gender of engineers. Being inanimate objects, it is true bridges don’t “care” about anything. However, being the product of human construction for human use, people do care a great deal about bridges, communication systems, chemical plants, hip replacements and all manner of products of the engineered world. And as it is to all of our benefit to have these objects designed and built in a technically sound, innovative, ethical and sustainable manner, it is to all of our benefit to ensure that we, as a society, have access to the best engineering talent there is, regardless of whether that talent has been previously buried under systemic biases or not. The next great idea might be in the head of a teenager whose guidance counselor just told her that calculus isn’t really for “people like her.” It’s the responsibility of a great educational institution to help her, and those students in similar situations, realize their potential, not for “correctness’ ” sake, but for the sake of the bridges (and everything else) that we all count on every day.

Margot Vigeant
Professor of Chemical Engineering and Rooke Professor of Engineering

Stephen Doty 84’s championing of pure merit-based student selection is about as helpful toward Bucknell’s goal of continuing its tradition of excellence in its engineering program as a person knocking out a load-bearing wall and then complaining to the contractor about why the house isn’t finished.

According to the U.S. Department of Labor, female engineers comprise 13 percent of those working in engineering, meaning 87 percent of those active in the profession are men. A recent study states that 40 percent of women who earn engineering degrees never enter the field or leave the profession within five years. The primary reason is the culture. Workplace sexism is first encountered by female engineering students in school. There are few female mentors to encourage new graduates. And seeing people who look like you unable to succeed in the corporate culture can be a huge discouragement.

The idea that female engineering students couldn’t keep up or would be subjected to undue pressure is ridiculous. Surviving four years in the College of Engineering is a trial no matter one’s gender, because engineering is a rigorous field. Female engineers have been under the types of pressures Mr. Doty describes since the moment we wanted Legos for our birthdays and were informed that those were boy toys and offered Barbies instead. We will continue to be under those types of pressures for our entire professional careers, unless things change.

Besides sending more female engineers into the workforce, we also need to prepare males to work alongside female engineers, creating better work environments for both genders. Bucknell is making a concentrated effort to do this. The College of Engineering acknowledges the problem and is taking concrete positive steps to make all of its engineering students better engineers and better people. Such efforts should be encouraged and honored.

Anjuli White ’04
Coraopolis, Pa.

In a special supplement to the Summer 2018 issue of Bucknell Magazine, the University proudly celebrated 125 years of engineering education, touting its plan to expand experiential learning, encourage students to create groundbreaking discoveries alongside teacher-scholar faculty, and further efforts to foster a diverse and inclusive environment for the Bucknell engineering community. In his fall 2018 letter to Bucknell Magazine, Stephen Doty ’84 overlooked the first two efforts and mischaracterized the third, referring to diversity and inclusivity efforts as “the new euphemism for discrimination by gender and race.” Mr. Doty is wrong.

Engineers are data-driven. The data makes clear that of engineering and all science fields, the percentage of women workers is the lowest in engineering. (See the National Science Board of the National Science Foundation’s Science & Engineering Indicators 2018.) Likewise, the gender disparity among those with the highest degree in a science or engineering field is greatest in engineering. Certain underrepresented racial and ethnic minorities experience similar disparities. As the National Science Board has stated, “The lower participation [of women and underrepresented racial and ethnic minorities] signals a lack of diversity in the workplace, negatively impacting productivity and innovation.” Similarly, a lack of diversity on campuses negatively impacts the education of all students.

Mr. Doty states that efforts in support of diversity and inclusivity, specifically regarding women in engineering, result in “teachers [being] denied the best students and society [being] denied the best graduates.” As someone who has spent 40 years in engineering education, I can speak with some authority in stating that his assumptions are uninformed at best. Further, they are insulting to the students who work so hard to enter pre-eminent schools like Bucknell and the engineering field, to the faculty who are dedicated to the education of those students, and to the administrators who strive each day to admit the very best students to campuses around the country.

Women are underrepresented in engineering. As is the case with other professions dominated by men, as women sought to enter the field, they faced — and in some instances continue to face — discrimination, marginalization and bias from those who baselessly doubted, or perhaps felt threatened by, their abilities. I am proud of the progress Bucknell has made and of the work we continue to do to address these challenges, to the benefit of all students. To echo Dean of Engineering Pat Mather, engineering a better world comes from the collective efforts of people with diverse views, abilities and experiences. As highlighted in the special supplement, pioneers such as Katherine Owens Hayden ’23, the first woman to study engineering at Bucknell, and Janet Schneider Lahner ’77, M’86, the first woman to teach engineering at Bucknell, helped pave the institution’s way to becoming a leader in this space.

Doty concludes his letter by stating: “A bridge doesn’t care about the gender of its designer.” Agreed! So let’s remove the barriers to women and other underrepresented groups and continue the noble endeavor of building a better world — together.

John Bravman
Professor of Electrical Engineering
President, Bucknell University
Letters Policy

Bucknell Magazine welcomes letters to the editor addressing topics covered in the magazine. Although criticism of the University and its policies is acceptable, no letters containing potentially libelous statements or personal attacks will be printed.

The editors reserve the final decision to publish and edit any letter — there is no guarantee that all letters received will be published.

All letters must be signed. The maximum length is 300 words. The editors reserve the right to edit letters for clarity and space. Writers may be asked to submit revised versions of letters or to approve editorial changes made by the Bucknell Magazine editor. After two issues, the debate on any topic will conclude. Some letters may be disseminated only on the Bucknell Magazine website, especially if there are many letters addressing a single topic. Views expressed in this magazine do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the editors or the official views or policies of the University.

Table of Contents
You can display this frosty bison.
From Bucknell to undersea shipwrecks and from grilling kabobs to studying ancient texts.
GATEWAY
Our readers share their thoughts.
Course explores how music and social justice intersect.
In Lewisburg and far afield, Bucknell’s students and staff make a positive and palpable difference.
Bucknell marks the 100th anniversary of the WWI Armistice.
New admissions collaborative looks beyond the numbers.
Professor Emeritus John Peeler reveals his faves.
Scientist Christine Kassab ’09 studies glaciers in the Antarctic.
Professor Robert Rosenbaum teaches a Comedy & Satire Workshop.
Basketball’s Kimbal Mackenzie ’19 pushed through injury to excel.
Jen Schneidman Partica offers tips to help your garden grow.
Surrealism’s enduring impact was celebrated throughout the year.
David Scadden ’75, H’08 translates stem-cell science to potential cancer cures.
FEATURES
Bucknell students explore prison from the inside out.
Molly Montalvo ’19 travels to SCI Coal Township, a medium-security prison.
Centurion founder Jim McCloskey ’64 works on behalf of the wrongly convicted.
Walter and Nancy Bellmeyer Everett ’58, P’83 advocate against the death penalty after a tragic loss.
Superintendent fosters better decision-making through prison exchange class.
World War I research team makes second trip to Europe to honor fallen Bucknellians.
Successful alumni couples share secrets of balancing family and career.
’RAY BUCKNELL
Reading and remembrance.
Alumni pay tribute to their beloved late professor in A Slant of Light: Reflections on Jack Wheatcroft.
Love of acting born at Bucknell persists for David Ackroyd ’62.
Bucknellians make their mark in the fashion and beauty industry.
Carolyn Neely Ainslie ’80 brings new financial leadership to foundation.
Colleen Zakrewsky ’91 lends a hand to low-income entrepreneurs overseas.
Taylor Lukof ’03 leads a global-investment firm.
Christian Hubicki ’07, M’11 fulfills his dream to join Survivor cast.
Couple promotes sustainable tourism while providing bikes to those in need.
BBC job keeps Morgan Gisholt Minard ’17 in the thick of things.
Remember your friends, family and classmates.
Gregg Cohenca ’12 enters the performance-wear market with JACQUES.
Kat Sokirka ’18’s work with Bucknell athletics leads to a sports-marketing career.
A salute to engineering — and more.
Your opportunities to get involved.
Ali Reach ’20 keeps her trilobite close at hand.
Bucknell
magazine

Volume 12, Issue 1

chief communications officer
Andy Hirsch

Editor
Sherri Kimmel

Design
Amy Wells

Associate Editor
Matt Hughes

class notes editor
Heidi Hormel

Contributors
Brad Tufts
Heather Johns
Emily Paine
Beth Kaszuba
Christina Wallace

Editorial Assistants
Shana Ebright
Haley Mullen ’19
Kathryn Nicolai ’20
Julia Stevens ’20

Website
bucknell.edu/bmagazine

Contact
Email: bmagazine@bucknell.edu
Class Notes:
classnotes@bucknell.edu
Telephone: 570-577-3611

Bucknell Magazine
(ISSN 1044-7563), of which this is volume 12, number 1, is published in winter, spring, summer and fall by Bucknell University, One Dent Drive, Lewisburg, PA 17837. Periodicals Postage paid at Lewisburg, PA and additional mailing offices.
Permit No. 068-880.

Circulation
53,000

Postmaster
Send all address changes to:
Office of Records,
301 Market St., Suite 2
Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA 17837
© 2019 Bucknell University
Please recycle after use.

Mix Paper from responsible sources
Professor Annie Randall and her students in Danville, PA
Photo: Emily Paine
Professor Annie Randall, music, far left, gathered her students each Monday night to make music with adjudicated female teenagers at a Danville, Pa., facility.
Beatboxing Creates Community Connections
by Paula Cogan Myers
Twelve Bucknell students walk through a mural-lined hallway, stopping halfway to open the cases they carry: inside, a violin, guitar, bass, ukulele, drum and portable speaker. Cases stowed, they hear, “Hey, teach!” as they walk toward a group of teenage girls.

So goes a typical week of the Music and Social Justice class, taught by Professor Annie Randall, music, at the North Central Secure Treatment Unit (NCSTU), a facility in Danville, Pa., for adjudicated female teenagers run through the Bureau of Juvenile Justice Services.

Randall has long been interested in how music and social justice intersect, but when three Bucknell student D.J.s were expelled for on-air racist comments in 2015, she sought the advice of then-Director of Civic Engagement Janice Butler, who helped her consider how to create deeper connections around diversity and to use empathy as a tool in her courses.

news ticker
LAYING THE FOUNDATION
This fall the University received an eight-figure pledge to support construction of a new home for the Freeman College of Management and Department of Art & Art History. The University will name the building in honor of the donor, who has temporarily requested anonymity. Construction could begin as early as June 2019, pending board approval.
GARDEN REAPS ACCOLADES
The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society honored the Lewisburg Community Garden with a blue-ribbon award in its Gardening and Greening Contest. The garden, a partnership between Bucknell and the borough, was chosen from among more than 300 entries for its commitment to neighborhood enhancement and addressing food insecurity.
FORGING CONNECTIONS IN MALAYSIA
Ikmal Azman ’19 helped to design and launch a camp for 31 teenagers from various racial, ethnic, religious and economic groups in his native Malaysia through a Davis Projects for Peace grant.
AROUND TOWN AND AROUND THE GLOBE
’burg and Beyond
In Lewisburg and far afield, Bucknell’s students and staff make a positive and palpable difference.
Carolyn Sidoti ’19 helps local entrepreneurs advance their businesses.
Photo: Emily Paine
" "
Carolyn Sidoti ’19 helps local entrepreneurs advance their businesses.

" "416 Market St., Lewisburg
From her office space overlooking bustling Market Street, Student-in-Residence Carolyn Sidoti ’19 enthusiastically tackles projects for Bucknell’s Small Business Development Center (SBDC). The SBDC provides local entrepreneurs and small businesses no-cost consulting and has aided in the success of local favorites such as Siam Restaurant & Bar and Threading Love. Sidoti conducts research, composes reports and collaborates with owners, creating plans to help ensure their success.

What She’s Doing:
Sidoti not only helps her clients advance their businesses, but provides them with tools to help them “get their feet under them” and progress independently. A mathematics and music double major, Sidoti taps into her strengths to find creative solutions that move her clients’ businesses forward. She also hones newfound skills, such as demographic analysis and market research, that she hopes to carry into her career after Bucknell.

AROUND TOWN AND AROUND THE GLOBE
’burg and Beyond
In Lewisburg and far afield, Bucknell’s students and staff make a positive and palpable difference.
Professor Amanda Wooden at Fairytale Canyon
Photo: John Enyeart
" "
Fairytale Canyon, named for its incredible sandstone rock formations, was one of the scenic sites Professor Wooden took in this summer in Kyrgyzstan.

" "Kyrgyzstan, Central Asia
Professor Amanda Wooden, environmental studies, has been immersed in the languages, culture and politics of post-Soviet countries since her first visit to Russia and Belarus in 1992. She has lived in Kyrgyzstan several times since 2001 and returns frequently to her “second home.”

“I care deeply about what happens there, am committed to doing research on environmental topics that concern people and have a responsibility to share what I learn,” Wooden says.

What Interests Her:
Through a Fulbright research grant, Wooden is currently studying the social meaning and political impacts of glacier loss in the Tian Shan mountain range. The project stems from an earlier examination of Kyrgyzstan’s Kumtor mine, where miners are removing glaciers to access gold.

Serving Them All Our Days
by Sherri Kimmel
France marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I on a murky day, while in Lewisburg, on a crisp, clear day, Bucknell paid tribute to 718 Bucknellians, men and women, who in that war served their country.

About 50 alumni, community members, faculty and staff gathered Nov. 11 outside Rooke Chapel to especially honor the 33 Bucknellians who died as a result of the first world conflict but also to remember the 40 who died in World War II, the eight who died in the Korean War, eight in the Vietnam War and five or more in later conflicts.

Members of Bucknell’s Reserve Officers Training Corps color guard
Members of Bucknell’s Reserve Officers Training Corps color guard
Photos: Yuan Gao ’19
" "
Members of Bucknell’s Reserve Officers Training Corps color guard (center) helped mark the observance of the 100th anniversary of the Armistice on Nov. 11. Inset: Joe Diblin ’40 (center) watched the ceremony on closed-circuit television and met with ROTC members as well as local media, Bucknell students and President John Bravman (right).
Making character matter more
by Heidi Hormel
University admissions may have reached an inflection point where qualities such as grit and empathy are becoming as important as GPAs and SATs.

Bill Conley, the University’s vice president for enrollment management, says that if schools like Bucknell stress these character qualities, then “we’re getting to truly measure the potential of a human being.”

The Character Collaborative, of which Bucknell is a charter member, is a new all-volunteer organization exploring the qualitative rather than quantitative assets of potential students. The group has united educators and administrators from the likes of Swarthmore, Carnegie Mellon and MIT plus secondary schools and research and testing organizations interested in elevating noncognitive, character-related attributes in the admissions process.

Robert Massa, senior vice president for enrollment at Drew University in New Jersey and interim chairman of the collaborative’s board, says that administrators are searching for better ways to choose students for their classes “because we know that overemphasis on academics is damaging. We want learning to be fun. We want to see [applicants] helping fellow students. Those attributes are more important than loading up on the maximum number of AP classes, for example.”

What I'm Listening To
John Peeler Headshot
Illustration: Joel Kimmel
John Peeler
Professor Emeritus of Political Science
What I'm Reading Typography
The Soul of America: The Battle for Our Better Angels, Jon Meacham. To help us deal with the dark times confronting the national polity, Meacham shows us prior instances when dark forces seemed to prevail. In each case, from America’s founding years to the McCarthy era, to the struggle over segregation in the 1950s and ’60s, our “better angels” have prevailed. Meacham gives us an elegantly patriotic book. Reading it in these times is like sweet water to the parched.
The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America Cover
The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America, Richard Rothstein. Rothstein’s point is that government at all levels has had a substantial and continuing responsibility for perpetuating residential segregation, and thus in perpetuating school segregation. Since this is manifestly contrary to the provisions of the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments, the courts and Congress should have the responsibility to put it right. Long after slavery, our society and our government worked together to keep black people down.
Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right Cover
Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right, Arlie Russell Hochschild. Hochschild immersed herself in the lives of a community in and around Lake Charles, La., to produce an insightful study of Tea Party Republicans. She scaled the “empathy wall” that divides left from right in contemporary America and portrayed those who have these political views as human beings who aren’t angry all the time, who lead normal lives in communities that have vitality in spite of the grave environmental challenges they confront.
John Peeler Headshot
Illustration: Joel Kimmel
John Peeler
Professor Emeritus of Political Science
The Soul of America: The Battle for Our Better Angels, Jon Meacham. To help us deal with the dark times confronting the national polity, Meacham shows us prior instances when dark forces seemed to prevail. In each case, from America’s founding years to the McCarthy era, to the struggle over segregation in the 1950s and ’60s, our “better angels” have prevailed. Meacham gives us an elegantly patriotic book. Reading it in these times is like sweet water to the parched.
The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America Cover
The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America, Richard Rothstein. Rothstein’s point is that government at all levels has had a substantial and continuing responsibility for perpetuating residential segregation, and thus in perpetuating school segregation. Since this is manifestly contrary to the provisions of the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments, the courts and Congress should have the responsibility to put it right. Long after slavery, our society and our government worked together to keep black people down.
Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right Cover
Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right, Arlie Russell Hochschild. Hochschild immersed herself in the lives of a community in and around Lake Charles, La., to produce an insightful study of Tea Party Republicans. She scaled the “empathy wall” that divides left from right in contemporary America and portrayed those who have these political views as human beings who aren’t angry all the time, who lead normal lives in communities that have vitality in spite of the grave environmental challenges they confront.
Pop Quiz
Christine
Kassab ’09
Christine Kassab in the Transantarctic Mountains
Photos: Kathy Licht; Tinseltown/shutterstock.com
Scientist studying glaciers in the Antarctic
Kassab, a Ph.D. candidate in earth science at Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis, studies a blue-ice moraine in the Transantarctic Mountains. She analyzes glacier deposits by collecting rock samples, as well as through ground-penetrating radar, remote sensing and numerical modeling — to find out how the glaciers flowing through the moraine, and the entire ice sheet, have changed over time. The work has important implications for climate change, among many other things.
Cool Class clipart
Professor Robert Rosenberg, English, taps the rich vein of comedy in literature
Photo: Emily Paine
" "
Professor Robert Rosenberg, English, taps the rich vein of comedy in literature.
Comedy & Satire Workshop
What Class?
Comedy & Satire Workshop
Who Teaches It?
Professor Robert Rosenberg, English

We have so many talented, funny students at Bucknell, and over the years I’ve taught students from theatre, improv and stand-up groups who naturally wrote in a comic mode. But the majority of student fiction is just the opposite: earnest and serious, as if they feel literary writing must be formal or stuffy. That couldn’t be further from the truth. The greatest writers, from Boccaccio and Chaucer to Shakespeare to our own Philip Roth ’54, have always balanced thematic gravity with rich doses of humor — not to mention profanity and bawdiness. Pushing boundaries is a kind of bravery required of great writers, so I wanted to teach a fiction workshop that explores how comedy helps to unearth and deliver truth.

Comedy is one of the richest forms of human connection, and deepens our understanding of the world. We know what successful comedy feels like. But even in my own writing I’ve never understood what makes a joke work. The more you analyze it, the less funny it gets, right? We try to get to the bottom of how comedy not only entertains but also enlightens, and how it can effectively be used as political, philosophical and social commentary.

Canadian Kimbal Mackenzie ’19 has made himself at home on the American basketball courts
Photo: Marc Hagemeier
" "
Canadian Kimbal Mackenzie ’19 has made himself at home on the American basketball courts.
Leading Loudly
by Kathryn Nicolai ’20

Helping to guide the men’s basketball team to two Patriot league championships was no easy feat for Kimbal Mackenzie ’19, especially when it meant often leading from the sidelines. The Ontario, Canada, native underwent surgery midseason last winter for a sports-related hernia, missing 12 games.

Leadership, a role teammates and coaches call Mackenzie’s most valuable asset to the Bison squad, comes easily to the guard. “I’m not afraid to voice my opinions,” he says. “I’m naturally a pretty loud person, so I let that carry over into the basketball realm.”

Leading the team through early-morning wakeups and an intense workout and practice schedule requires Mackenzie to always be on time and the hardest worker in the gym on top of his schoolwork as an economics major. To elicit the same work ethic from his teammates, Mackenzie says, “The work comes first and asking that of my teammates comes second.”

Ask the Expert text
Helping Your Garden Grow
Illustration of Jen Schneidman Partica
Illustration: Joel Kimmel

" "As Bucknell’s farm & garden manager, Jen Schneidman Partica oversees both the Lewisburg Community Garden, an initiative that connects local residents and addresses food insecurity, and the new 5-acre farm that the University launched this fall. She’s also a “vegecator” and has already helped more than 200 Bucknell students learn about and connect with their food supply at the University’s fledgling farm. She shares her tips for making the most of your home garden.

Focus on the Humanities
Of Dalí, Miró and more
Surrealism’s enduring impact celebrated throughout the year
by Susan Lindt

I

n 2016, so many people researched a single word after the U.S. presidential election that it was named Merriam-Webster’s Word of the Year.

But long before “surreal” became the go-to word for life’s strangest moments, it referred to a movement that shoved unsettling ideas at the establishment, begging people to tap their unconscious by rejecting society’s chains.

Julia Shapiro ’19 (left) and Paige Braun ’20 learned about the richness of surrealism.
Photo: Emily Paine; Art: The Samek Art Museum
" "
Julia Shapiro ’19 (left) and Paige Braun ’20 learned about the richness of surrealism.

“People forget the weight, rigor and passion of the political movement behind surrealism,” says Samek Art Museum Director Richard Rinehart. “They tend to just pay attention to the image of a giant fork in a bedroom.”

Those politics are largely unknown today — surrealism is simply the eye candy of Salvador Dalí’s gravity-defying mustache and his liquid clocks.

Q&A
Illustration of David Scadden ’75, H’08
Illustration: Joel Kimmel
David Scadden ’75, H’08
The Cell Whisperer
by Michael Blanding
As a young medical student, David Scadden ’75, H’08, changed his career direction when his mother was diagnosed with cancer. As he describes in Cancerland: A Medical Memoir, Scadden vowed to go into cancer research to help alleviate the suffering of families like his. Now one of the world’s pre-eminent researchers in using stem cells to fight cancer, the former Bucknell trustee and co-founder of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute is translating that research into potential cures.
Features
NOT FORGOTTEN: WWI researchers return to France.
photograph of Patricha Williams ’19 by Andreas Krueger
Pedagogy Behind Bars
Bucknell Students Explore Mass Incarceration from the Inside Out
by Sherri Kimmel

photographs by Dustin Fenstermacher

Man wearing D.O.C. uniform
Pedagogy Behind Bars
Bucknell Students Explore Mass Incarceration from the Inside Out
by Sherri Kimmel

photographs by Dustin Fenstermacher

O

n a gray, rainy fall day, 14 Bucknell students make their way tentatively down a long white corridor, past a sign posted beside a security door:

If you have integrity, nothing else matters.

If you don’t have integrity, nothing else matters.

On their left they pass what looks like a high-school shop class — except all of the “students” working the machines wear brown uniforms with D.O.C. (for Department of Corrections) on the back. The Bucknellians enter what looks like a traditional classroom, with a desk near the door where a prison staffer sits, a blackboard and circle of desks. Seven men, wearing smiles and those same brown jumpsuits, extend their hands to welcome the students. Professor Carl Milofsky, sociology, who teaches this class at the State Correctional Institution (SCI) at Coal Township, 28 miles from Lewisburg, asks the students to sit between the men.

Students
Photo: Dustin Fenstermacher
Molly Montalvo ’19 leads Bucknell students through the prison yard to the classroom where they will meet the inside students
Prison Class Helps Student with Career Prep
Every week during the fall semester, Molly Montalvo ’19 left the tranquil confines of the Bucknell campus and traveled 28 miles to SCI Coal Township, a medium-security prison. Montalvo was the teaching assistant for Experiencing Prison — a new class led by Professor Carl Milofsky that aimed to introduce students to new views on how individuals are shaped and affected by the community around them.

More than a year ago, Montalvo was the first Bucknell student to enter the prison with Milofsky to lay the groundwork for the course. After a successful trial class last spring, Milofsky selected Montalvo to help lead a more intensive course, through the auspices of Temple University’s Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program.

Restoring the Truth
by Jim McCloskey ’64
as told to Robert Strauss
AFTER THREE YEARS as a naval officer, one spent in Vietnam, and 12 years in the management consulting business, I found myself in my mid-30s. I was starting to feel an emptiness, a disinterestedness in my business career. At the same time, percolating in me was a spiritual awakening.

I saw my pastor, the Rev. Richard Streeter, was touching the hearts and minds of a lot of people. I was touching the lives of no one.

I ended up going to the Princeton Theological Seminary, and as fieldwork in my second year, I went to Trenton State Prison as a student chaplain. My work there was simple and straightforward; I would go through two cell blocks of 20 inmates each and just talk to them.

One of the 40 men was Jorge de Los Santos, and he would insist to me day after day that he was innocent of the murder in Newark that he was serving a life term for.

I always thought that the American justice system was infallible. If you were convicted of a crime, surely you must be guilty.

But after listening to de Los Santos and reading his trial record, he really shook me. Could he really be innocent?

The Path to Forgiveness
by Matt Hughes
THE 19TH-CENTURY FARM where Walter and Nancy Bellmeyer Everett ’58, P’83 live is close enough to the Lewisburg federal penitentiary that they can hear the guards calling prisoner numbers across their corn and soybean fields.

They don’t like the practice, Nancy says, because it strips those incarcerated of their names and individuality, but it offers a reminder “that there are people there that need me.”

The Everetts are adamant that “Everybody in prison is a human being and has a story,” according to Nancy. For decades, the couple have made it their life’s work to hear those stories and to be the inmates’ voices outside the prison walls.

Through volunteer visitation programs like the Pennsylvania Prison Society, Walter, a retired Methodist pastor, and Nancy, a retired juvenile prison counselor, make regular visits to nearby prisons and exchange correspondence with incarcerated individuals across the country. They’re also advocates against the death penalty who led a successful campaign to abolish the punishment in Rhode Island.

Bucknell & Local Prisons — Connections Span Decades
How Prison Hits Home
UNLIKE MOST who study the American prison system, Professor Vanessa Massaro, geography, focuses not on life inside prison, but on the families left behind.

Massaro looks at how racial disparities in the criminal-justice system contribute to high rates of incarceration in some communities. She analyzes the economic toll, such as how the cost of a bus ticket can keep families from visiting incarcerated loved ones. She believes the prison system can better engage with families and communities to reduce rates of recidivism, saying, “The families of inmates are the system’s best allies in reducing the chances of reoffending.”

Making Connections through Scholarship
When Associate Provost and Professor of Geography Karen Morin came to Lewisburg more than two decades ago to teach geography, she began seeking ways to connect to the local community. After attending a meeting of the Lewisburg Prison Project, which Morin describes as “a local nonprofit dedicated to protecting the civil and human rights of people incarcerated in the Middle District of Pennsylvania,” she knew she’d made the right choice.

Since then Morin has published five books, two of which relate to the prison-industrial complex, 2015’s Historical Geographies of Prisons: Unlocking the Usable Carceral Past, co-edited with British geographer Dominique Moran, and 2018’s Carceral Space, Prisoners and Animals.

In her latest book, Morin says she took her “interest in carceral geography and expanded it to include captive animals. I find there are many common denominators across the mass exploitation of animals and mass incarceration of humans, which originate in the ‘animalization’ of certain beings.

The late Ben Willeford
Dedicated ’til the Very End

The late Ben Willeford’s commitment to social justice ran long and deep. Since Willeford arrived at Bucknell in September 1950 to teach chemistry, he was known as a social conscience not only on campus but in Lewisburg, where he joined a group of graying activists most Saturdays in front of the U.S. Post Office quietly advocating for peace on Earth.

Willeford first became involved in prison ministry during the Vietnam War era, and for the last 39 years he visited incarcerated men at the Lewisburg Penitentiary as part of the Prison Visitation and Support program. Shortly before his death at 96 on Sept. 22, Willeford visited the magazine office to speak with Julia Stevens ’20 and me about Bucknell’s — and his — enduring connections to the local prisons. Below is an edited transcript of what is most likely his last recorded conversation.

Local prisons, by the numbers
United States Penitentiary, Lewisburg

Built: 1932; Currently Incarcerated: 1,433 (938 at the penitentiary and 495 at the connected minimum-security camp)

notorious Inmates
Al Capone, Jimmy Hoffa, Whitey Bulger, Henry Hill, Bayard Rustin, Alger Hiss

Originally named the North Eastern Penitentiary; Infamous for the 1995 prison riot started by 10 inmates. Resulted in more than 400 inmates being transferred. More than 20 inmates were hospitalized. In 2009, the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) designated USP Lewisburg as a “Special Management Unit” to hold the most violent inmates.

The federal penitentiary in Lewisburg is often the focus of LPP's work.
Lewisburg News Agency
The federal penitentiary in Lewisburg is often the focus of LPP’s work.
Group Advocates for Prisoners’ Rights

Immersed in the bustle of daily life on Bucknell’s scenic campus, students and community members are often oblivious to the reality of those behind bars, who are living less than three miles away in the Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary. Hoping to raise awareness at the University, the Lewisburg Prison Project (LPP) sponsored a screening this fall at the Campus Theatre of From Behind the Wall. The series focuses on the unjust conditions and treatment prisoners face in reform centers across the nation.

“The project’s aim with events like this one is to keep the project and the prison on people’s radar and try to create and maintain awareness that we have this huge federal penitentiary just down the road,” says LPP board member Deirdre O’Connor, Writing Center director.

Inside the Walls
Superintendent fosters better decision-making through prison exchange class
Walking through the walled-in world of the State Correctional Institution (SCI) at Coal Township with Thomas McGinley is like walking through the 21 Club with Frank Sinatra back in the ’50s. He may be the superintendent of the prison rather than the “chairman of the board,” as Sinatra was called, but McGinley definitely is the man of the hour. From every direction, men in brown jumpsuits greet him. This one wants to check on the status of his appeal, this one wants McGinley to push along his request for a haircut, and another one just wants to shake his hand. A correctional professional for 21 years, Thomas McGinley has been the superintendent of SCI Coal Township for three of those years. Although his job involves a lot of paper processing, he’d much rather be out mingling with the men, hearing their stories and learning how he can make their lives better. He first encountered the Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program when he worked at SCI Muncy. Following is an excerpted transcript of his conversation with Editor Sherri Kimmel.
Offering a lifeline
by Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux
In 2016, after working for more than a quarter-century as a psychologist in the Navy, Bryce Lefever ’80 began to care for the mental health of a very different group: prisoners. Every day, as director of mental health at York County Prison in York, Pa., Lefever would visit inmates in their cells or talk to them in his office, sometimes seeing as many as 20 patients per day.

Suicide rates are much higher in prison than in the general population, and Lefever aimed to identify and respond to inmates who might be at risk for self-harm. But he also worked with many patients who had serious mental illnesses such as schizophrenia or other psychoses. “Many of the state mental-health facilities have closed down, which meant we were caring for extremely mentally ill people who needed a lot of attention,” Lefever says.

Bryce Lefever ’80, counselor for inmates
Photo: Dustin Fenstermacher
Counseling inmates was meaningful for Bryce Lefever ’80.
World War I research team makes second trip to Europe to honor fallen Bucknellians
What Time
Has Not
Erased
by Julia Stevens ’20

photographs by Andreas Krueger

World War I research team makes second trip to Europe to honor fallen Bucknellians
What Time Has Not Erased
by Julia Stevens ’20

photographs by Andreas Krueger

members of the research team walking and exploring Europe
Shrouds mark the graves of World War I casualties at the Thiepval Memorial to the Missing of the Somme in Authville, France.
W

ith an autumnal chill in the air and a sense of anticipation written on our faces, the Bucknellians in World War I research team set out for the first task on its second commemorative trip. Our destination: the Henri Rollet Association, now called ESPEREM after recently merging with another organization. The new name — a play on the French words mère (mother), père (father) and espoir (hope) — reflects the changes within the organization, as well as ESPEREM’s goals of providing shelter to young, at-risk women.

On ESPEREM’s leafy Paris campus stands a building that memorializes Katherine Baker, Bucknell Institute, Class of 1892, a World War I nurse who helped found the organization 100 years ago. Over tea, coffee and pastries, we discussed with ESPEREM’s leaders our desire to keep this connection alive by installing a pedagogical garden where the girls can learn to grow their own food. Baker’s impact on the young women seems to only grow with time. When I noticed her portrait, which we gifted during our first visit in 2017, the president of ESPEREM’s board of directors, Véronique Goupy, told us that it’s good for the girls “to have someone they can look up to, a woman, someone they can relate to.”

Family Life: The Great Juggling Act
The Great
Juggling Act
Successful alumni couples share secrets of balancing family and career
by Michael Agresta
Sandra Moreno Shazier ’12 and Daryl Shazier ’11, with Savannah, work hard to find the right home/life balance.
Family Life: The Great Juggling Act
Photograph: Sally Montana
Number 1
Hands-on parenting meets hand-in-hand relationships
So, you’ve found the love of your life, the person you want to support through thick and thin and maybe even start a family with. Your partner even feels the same about you! Congratulations — that’s the easy part.

Welcome to the great juggling act, the main event in the three-ring circus of modern American family life. For today’s professionals, marriage and children more often than not mean keeping two hands constantly circulating between (at least) three crucial objectives: steering an ambitious career; hands-on parenting; and maintaining a loving, hand-in-hand relationship with one’s partner.

Nobody said it was going to be easy, but has it ever been harder than it is right now? Among the latest challenges: 24/7 connection to employers and clients through mobile devices, ever-expanding extracurricular obligations for today’s busy grade-schoolers, and an increasingly globalized business world that can put partners on different continents at a moment’s notice.

  1. Doing Double Duty
Justin ’01 and Catherine Rasch Miller ’01 met at ROTC orientation camp in August 1997. Called to service and to each other, they went on to become active-duty Army officers. They legally married in 2003 but waited to throw a wedding until 2005, after both had returned safely from tours of duty in Iraq.

Now Justin and Catherine are raising three young kids while Justin serves on staff at The United States Military Academy at West Point, in upstate New York, and Catherine pursues a Ph.D. at the University of Maryland. After completing her degree, Catherine will teach at the National Intelligence University in Bethesda.

“Some things are out of our control,” Catherine says. “The military has final say on our assignments and does not have to keep the two of us assigned to the same location at the same time. We do our best to select assignments that will keep us together while also meeting the needs and requirements of the Army.”

Number 3
“It’s important to know what your priorities are, and your spouse’s priorities. Talk about your priorities, life goals and career goals, so you can figure out how to accomplish those goals as a team.”
Catherine Rasch Miller ’01
Dual-career couple Justin ’01 and Catherine Rasch Miller ’01, with Caroline, Andrew and Evan, see the value in domestic labor.
Photo: Diane Grady Miller
" "
Dual-career couple Justin ’01 and Catherine Rasch Miller ’01, with Caroline, Andrew and Evan, see the value in domestic labor.
charcoal drawing of Richard '03 and Monique Boley Alexander '05
Illustration: Peter Field
 the number four in an orange block
On the
Same Track
On the
Same Track
The family of Richard ’03 and Monique Boley Alexander ’05 bleeds Bison blue and orange. The pair met on the track-and-field team as student-athletes. Richard is now a coach for that same track-and-field team. After spells in northern New Jersey and Detroit, the pair returned to Lewisburg in 2010, not long before the birth of the older of their two children.

Like the Millers, the Alexanders find themselves in a situation where one spouse — Monique, who teaches at Slippery Rock University, more three hours away in western Pennsylvania — must commute long distance a few days per week to pursue her career. The decision for Monique to take that job, and for Richard to remain at Bucknell, was difficult, balancing career goals and the best interests of the children. But, Monique says, “If we sit back and look at our lives right now, we’re both doing things we really love.”

5. Mutual Supporters
“Be each other’s number-one supporter.Sometimes that means being the one who needs the support — for instance, if you’re making a career change — and sometimes it means you’re the one taking a step back from your path to support the other person.”
Kate Foy Cole ’03
Matt '01 and Kate Foy Cole '03 and their three kids at the beach
Photo: Julia Cumes
Matt ’01 and Kate Foy Cole ’03 met in New York City after graduation, then moved to Cape Cod and were married in 2008. Matt runs his family’s construction business, and Kate works remotely for Accenture.
charcoal drawing of Caroline Sevier '03 and Tom Elliott '03
Illustration: Peter Field
the number six
GLOBETROTTING PARTNERS
Caroline Sevier ’03 and Tom Elliott ’03 met on their first day at Bucknell, in 1999, though they took their time getting married, waiting until 2011. Today, they represent a 21st-century phenomenon — the intercontinental marriage.

Caroline is vice present for strategy, defense and space for Airbus, Europe’s leading aerospace company. Her career has taken her family to postings around the world, so much so that their soon-to-be three children will have been born on three different continents — the oldest in Canada, the middle child in Korea, and a little one on the way now in Spain.

the number six
GLOBETROTTING PARTNERS
Caroline Sevier ’03 and Tom Elliott ’03 met on their first day at Bucknell, in 1999, though they took their time getting married, waiting until 2011. Today, they represent a 21st-century phenomenon — the intercontinental marriage.

Caroline is vice present for strategy, defense and space for Airbus, Europe’s leading aerospace company. Her career has taken her family to postings around the world, so much so that their soon-to-be three children will have been born on three different continents — the oldest in Canada, the middle child in Korea, and a little one on the way now in Spain.

'ray Bucknell
HOMECOMING HOOPLA: BARBARA BARR P’21 CHEERS ON SON P.J.
Photo: Gordon Wenzel
From the President
Illustration of John C. Bravman, President
Illustration: Joel Kimmel

Reading and Remembrance

There are few things I enjoy more than spending time with a good book. Often those books deal with history, both ancient and modern, because I believe that to be a useful and purposeful citizen you need to have an understanding of history. In years past, I’ve regularly consumed books on World War II, in which my father served. But in the last year, as the days drew nearer to the 100th anniversary of the end of that first world war, I’ve found myself digging into accounts of World War I.

Some are old favorites. Like many high schoolers in the 1970s, I was compelled to read All Quiet on the Western Front, a classic by Erich Maria Remarque that was made into a devastatingly realistic movie in 1930, told from the German point of view. I reread it often.

I recently reread Paul Fussell’s The Great War and Modern Memory, because it is such a powerful work. Fussell tells the story of the war through the voices, lives and writings of four authors — Siegfried Sassoon, Wilfred Owen, Robert Graves and David Jones, analyzing them and their works in an unsparing manner. But he also brings to life “the troglodyte world” of the trenches and reminds us that “this war to end all wars” also introduced the world to chemical warfare.
Bucknell Book Talk
books
A Slant of Light
by Richard Anderson

Whether it was in the classroom or the Bison, John “Jack” Wheatcroft ’49 nurtured generations of budding writers, putting Bucknell on the national literary map in his 45 years of teaching. With the encouragement of President and Professor of Biology Emeritus Gary Sojka, two of Wheatcroft’s stellar students — Bruce Smith ’68 and Peter Balakian ’73 — have gathered contributions from 18 former students who have gone on to be writers, academics and teachers as well as colleagues and friends such as former presidents Sojka and Dennis O’Brien. The collection celebrates the professor emeritus of English, who published 25 books of fiction, poetry and plays before his death in 2017. Wheatcroft’s most notable work was Catherine: Her Book, a 1983 prequel to Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights.

A Slant Light Cover
Released in November, the essays in this tribute book, by former students, colleagues and friends are a testimony to an extraordinary teacher and writer.
Bucknell Book Talk
A Slant Light Cover
Released in November, the essays in this tribute book, by former students, colleagues and friends are a testimony to an extraordinary teacher and writer.
books
A Slant of Light
by Richard Anderson
The Pupils Become the Editors
Longtime friends Smith (a professor of English at Syracuse University and two-time National Book Award finalist) and Balakian (a professor of English and director of creative writing at Colgate and recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 2016) worked with Sojka to envision the project. “We were moved and honored to put together a collection of pieces to pay tribute to Jack for his five decades at Bucknell,” says Smith. “His role as a prolific writer, teacher and builder of a literary community in Lewisburg and Bucknell is being celebrated in this collection,” adds Balakian.
Alumni Photo Gallery
Images will scroll automatically

1953

Pictured at the Bucknell Cottage, 1949–50, from left, are Barb George Frazer ’53, Sue Appleyard Martucci ’53, Nancy Boyer Danahy ’53, P’80, P’84, G’13, G’15, Katherine “Kitsy” Bell Brown ’53 and Nancy Schreiner Hubley ’53.

The photo was submitted by Nancy’s daughter Debbie Hennel ’80.

1967

Dick Emmitt ’67 with with daughter Meg ’06 and grandson Liam on Emmitt Field, the soccer field that bears their name. Meggie was a four-year soccer player and member of the 2005 Patriot League Championship team. When she moved to Madrid a few years ago, she played professionally. In addition to the soccer field, Dick made a gift in the early 2000s that funded the additional faculty position that was necessary to create a Department of Biomedical Engineering. This faculty position is named for his late parents, William ’30 and Gertrude Brooks Emmitt ’30. Additional Bucknellians in his family are sister Ginny Emmitt Chitwood ’59 and brother Bill ’69.

2009

Erin Kairys ’09 and Sam Cutler married Aug. 31 in Washington, D.C., with more than 20 Bucknellian in attendance. The wedding party included sister Caitlin Kairys ’10, Kelli Lipson ’09, Laura Meditz ’09, Laura Crawford Owens ’09, Lauren Fellner ’10, brother Matthew Kairys ’12, Rebecca Cottrell Bentzen ’09 and the bride’s father, David Kairys ’74, M’74. Erin is head of client services at a small financial technology company. Sam will finish his law degree in May and then start at the law firm Sullivan & Cromwell. The couple resides in Washington, D.C.

2010

Cale ’10 and Jaime Kianka Cadman ’13 married June 22 in Princeton N.J., with numerous Bucknell alumni in attendance.

2013

Christine Bange Pritchard ’13 married Ryan ’12 May 25 in Lyons, Colo. Many Bucknellians attended, including, pictured from left, Katrina Hefele ’13, Erica Brado Parilla ’14, Matthew Lamore ’12 and wife Hannah, Fitz Williams ’12, Kevin Nagle ’15, Kathryn Modugno Tamburro ’14, Jared Snyder ’09, Andrew Solomon ’12, Christine and Ryan, Jason White ’12 and his fiancée, Kara Baumgardner, Nicholas Barnett ’12 and wife Courtney, Aleem Naqvi ’12, Smik Lakhani ’11, Foster Perlmutter ’13 and Amanda Slaboden ’13.

(Photo credit: Kathryn Kim Photography)

2013

U.S. Army Capt. Patrick Towery ’13, right, works in the 4th Attack Reconnaissance Battalion, Combat Aviation Brigade, 4th Infantry Division in Fort Carson, Colo., alongside Capt. Adam Wendoloski, an intelligence officer and fellow member of the Bucknell ROTC Battalion.

2016

Bucknell alumni celebrate at the marriage reception of Katie Price ’16 and Brian Duncan ’16 (center) at the Bel-Air Bay Club in Pacific Palisades, Calif., Oct. 4.

Catch up with Bucknell alumni in pictures.

Submit your own photos to Bucknell Magazine by contacting your class reporter or emailing classnotes@bucknell.edu

profile
An Enduring Allure
Love of acting born at Bucknell persists for David Ackroyd ’62
by Andrew Faught
It wasn’t until his senior year that David Ackroyd ’62, on the advice of a roommate, took an acting class with Professor Harvey Powers, theatre.

The aspiring attorney, suddenly drawn to the allure of the stage and to Powers’ dedication to the craft, unexpectedly found himself on a new career path. He also met his future wife, Ruth Liming ’65, who played Lady Macduff to Ackroyd’s Macduff in a campus production of Macbeth.

David Ackroyd in The Best Bar in America
David Ackroyd ’62 (driving motorcycle) starred in the 2013 independent film The Best Bar in America.
“I was raised on the East Coast and saw a lot of theatre in New York when I was a kid,” says Ackroyd, an English major. “I always loved it and thought it was great fun, but I never for a moment considered it as a career. Harvey walked the walk and talked the talk. It was really special, now that I look back on it.”
Career
Clusters
Catwalks and face primers aren’t on any Bucknell syllabus, but our graduates working in the mercurial world of fashion and beauty are in the thick of these billion-dollar global industries. The skills these alumni learned and adapted are grounded in a Bucknell experience that upholds academic freedom and creative exploration.
Career Clusters Bucknell
Career Clusters Bucknell
profile
From the Ivies to Gates
Carolyn Neely Ainslie ’80 brings new financial leadership to foundation
by Patrick Broadwater
As the new chief financial officer of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Carolyn Neely Ainslie ’80 knows full well that financial support, when applied and used wisely, can have long-term, wide-ranging significance.

During a 32-year career in university finance and planning, Ainslie made difficult decisions about how to allocate resources to best support an institution’s mission — providing the best possible education while supporting financial-aid policies that expanded opportunities for highly qualified students from various socioeconomic backgrounds.

Ainslie served two Ivy League institutions — Princeton and Cornell. She spent 22 years at the latter, lastly as vice president for planning and budget, and the past decade as Princeton’s vice president for finance.

Carolyn Ainslie '80 headshot
Photo: Jon Roemer
Carolyn Ainslie ’80 left a long career in university financing and planning for the Gates Foundation.
Ainslie also knows about the power of properly applied resources from her experience at Bucknell. Her father passed away while she was in middle school, and to supplement her mother’s nursing salary, Ainslie worked in dining services and was a resident adviser for three years.
profile
Supporting Self-sufficiency
Colleen Zakrewsky ’91 lends a hand to low-income entrepreneurs overseas
by Patrick Broadwater
Two months after graduating from Bucknell, Colleen Zakrewsky ’91 took her first trip to Africa. Her year-long Department of State internship at the American Embassy School in Ivory Coast would prove to be influential, leading her to a career in nonprofit fundraising, marketing and communications, and serving the underserved.

“I was always curious about the world, especially while I was at Bucknell. I credit [Professor of English Emerita] Marilyn Mumford for nurturing that within me,” Zakrewsky says. “I feel that the side of me that’s committed to serve was fostered at Bucknell.”

Colleen Zakrewsky ’91 headshot
Photo: Tamzin B. Smith
Colleen Zakrewsky ’91 works to empower women worldwide.
Flashback
Photo of Taylor Lukof
Photo: Ben Hider
a dynamic career
Following a successful career as an equity options specialist/market maker, in 2010, Taylor Lukof ’03 launched the parent company of what would eventually become ABR Dynamic Funds LLC, an international global-investment firm. A management major, he is a member of the advisory board for the Student Managed Investment Fund and the Bertrand Society. He was a member of the New York/Connecticut cabinet for WE DO, the Campaign for Bucknell University.
1. How did Bucknell shape your career?
I shaped my education, both at Bucknell and in my study abroad in Vienna, in a way that prepared me for a dynamic career. When I started out as an options trader on the floor of the American Stock Exchange, little did I know that one day I would be conducting international business on a daily basis.
2. What class opened your eyes the most?
Management 101 with John Miller. The difference between a “shareholder” and a “stakeholder” was completely new to me at the time, and now stakeholders factor into every decision we make as a firm.
profile
Making It to the Island
Christian Hubicki ’07, M’11 fulfills his dream to join ‘Survivor’ cast
by Benjamin Gleisser

Christian Hubicki ’07, M’11 wanted to survive Survivor, so as soon as he learned he was named a contestant on the latest season of the reality show, he began a Superman-like training regimen.

“I thought, ‘Gosh, what kind of shape am I in?’ ” says Hubicki, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering specializing in robotics at Florida State University. “Within a few months, I was doing 300 pushups a day. I knew I wouldn’t be the strongest one on the island, but at least I wouldn’t be the weakest link.”

Hubicki admits to being a fan of the show since it first aired in 2000. He was 14 then and told himself he’d be on it someday. Over the years he applied, and the fourth time was the charm.

Interviewed before the series ran, September through December, Hubicki was contractually forbidden to say when or if he was voted off the island or if he used his robotics know-how to create any contraptions on the show. However, he believes his science background, which includes his Bucknell mechanical engineering degree, intrigued producers enough to make him a contestant.

Christian Hubicki ’07, M’11
Photo: Robert Voets/CBS Entertainment ©2018 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.
Christian Hubicki ’07, M’11 went from fan to Survivor contestant.

Hubicki calls Professor Keith Buffinton, mechanical engineering, his mentor. “He set me on the path to robotics,” he says. “He was very open-minded and encouraged me to follow my passion.”

profile
Many Miles on Their Tires
Couple promotes sustainable tourism while providing bikes to those in need
by Alexander Diegel

In May, William Harris ’12 and his girlfriend, Nahia Antoranz, embarked on a trip full of big ambitions — a nearly 7,000-mile journey, not by car, plane, train, boat or even horse but by bike.

Started in Bilbao, Spain, this cross-continental trip will end in Thailand this spring. Their adventure is about more than daily cardio and sightseeing. It’s about giving back and spreading a message.

Antoranz and Harris set out from Bilbao, Spain, in May.
Antoranz and Harris set out from Bilbao, Spain, in May.
profile
A Place in the News
BBC job keeps Morgan Gisholt Minard ’17 in the thick of things
by Paris Wolfe

When Morgan Gisholt Minard ’17 chose an international relations major she didn’t expect it would lead to a journalism career.

“I chose that major because I loved the idea of learning how the world works,” she says. “I didn’t have a real plan for what to do with it. Most people work for government agencies or NGOs or in academia. Those all seemed like they would make a difference in people’s lives.”

Portrait of Morgan Gisholt Minard ’17
Photo: Emily Paine
Morgan Gisholt Minard ’17 is making her way at the BBC in Washington, D.C.
IN MEMORIAM
Remember your friends, family, classmates and others by posting a comment on our online Book of Remembrance. Go to bucknell.edu/bmag/InMemoriam.
1936
Madeleine Park, July 31, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
1938
Lois Monie O’Brien, Aug. 12, Ashland, Mass.
1940
Annabel Kreider Schnure P’66, P’69, P’72, Sept. 5, Bethlehem, Pa.
1942
Charles Fehlinger, Aug. 24, Montoursville, Pa.
Spencer Roberts, Aug. 19, Brooklyn, N.Y.
1944
Jane Sortore Lindenthal P’86, G’20, July 11, Manalapan, N.J.
1945
Miriam Krise Young P’84, Sept. 25, Acton, Mass.
1946
Donna Ray Bowen P’70, Aug. 13, Hanover, Pa.
Betty Hess Jelstrup P’83, July 8, Burlington, N.C.
Joseph Laing, July 3, Arnold, Md.
Adriane Krawit Lorin, Sept. 15, Los Angeles, Calif.
Margaret “Peggy” Soars Sosa P’87, Aug. 19, San Francisco, Calif.
Jean Whitaker-Maharay, July 29, Salem, N.J.
1947
Marion Bee, Aug. 29, Niskayuna, N.Y.
Rhoda Robertson Edwards P’78, Sept. 2, Endicott, N.Y.
Marvin Rombro P’66, Aug. 2, Baltimore, Md.
Ann Alston Ryder, Aug. 22, Mansfield, Pa.
Katharine Voulelis Tsambassis, April 13, Fernandina Beach, Fla.
Entrepreneur Spotlight
Mark Philippoussis wears JACQUES tennis whites on the court
Photo: Sebastian Sabal-Bruce
Mark Philippoussis wears JACQUES tennis whites.
JACQUES
by Matt Hughes
Tennis has been an essential passion throughout Gregg Cohenca 12’s life, from his childhood competing in juniors tournaments to his four years on Bucknell’s varsity squad. But the clothes he wore while competing didn’t reflect his personality, on or off the court.

Cohenca says that JACQUES, the performance-wear brand he launched in 2017, fills a hole in his closet by discarding neon colors and garish logos in favor of unadorned shorts and tees in colors inspired by nature.

“I really wanted to put out a product that was more understated and more sophisticated in its presentation,” he says.

Manufactured in New York City’s Garment District, Cohenca’s clothing line is a reflection of his personality and aspirations, from its low-key chic to the company’s name — an homage to Cohenca’s grandfather, who immigrated to the U.S. from Egypt and started a business.

WAYFINDER
Kat Sokirka ’18
In November of my senior year I was offered a job in professional baseball with the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders, the Triple-A affiliate of the New York Yankees. I couldn’t pass up this incredible opportunity, but I hadn’t graduated yet, so I decided to try and do it all. I would drive back to Moosic, Pa., two to three times a week, stay at home, do my laundry and head to work as our corporate servicing and social media manager before driving back to campus. Besides my schoolwork and extracurricular activities, I had various roles with Bucknell Athletics, and it was the communities within these two organizations that helped me balance it all.

Through the Undergraduate Executive Intern Program and the Coca-Cola marketing internship, I worked in the athletics department for three years. I helped run the Bison Rec social media accounts, worked on an extensive tailgating project, penned countless thank-you letters to varsity athletics donors and ran our in-game promotions for football and men’s and women’s basketball. If you’ve ever heard, “Hey there, Bison fans!” you’ve heard me. If you’ve seen a woman run around Sojka Pavilion in bright orange shorts, you’ve seen me, and chances are, if you’ve been to a game in the last three years, you know exactly who I am.

Portrait of Kat Sokirka ’18
Photo: Noelle Richard
Homecoming
A Salute To Engineering — And more
The orange and blue was out in full force Homecoming Weekend, Oct. 19–21, when more than 600 alumni and family members mingled on campus. Highlights were the celebration of 125 years of engineering education at Bucknell, the staging of Antigone by the Department of Theatre & Dance (right), lots of fun and games for the kids and an opportunity to meet members of the Bucknellians in World War I research team. Save the date to join us for Homecoming Weekend 2019, Oct. 4–6.
The staging of Antigone by the Department of Theatre & Dance
The orange and blue was out in full force Homecoming Weekend, Oct. 19–21, when more than 600 alumni and family members mingled on campus. Highlights were the celebration of 125 years of engineering education at Bucknell, the staging of Antigone by the Department of Theatre & Dance (above), lots of fun and games for the kids and an opportunity to meet members of the Bucknellians in World War I research team. Save the date to join us for Homecoming Weekend 2019, Oct. 4–6.
A boy playing a fair game
Meeting members of the Bucknellians in World War I research team
The spirit of the fans
Left: The Bison fell to Lafayette in a close 27-29 game, but the spirit of the fans remained undiminished.
Below: Alumni had the opportunity to meet current engineering faculty and students, tour the facilities and observe current engineering students as they provided hands-on engineering activities for children.
Above: The Bison fell to Lafayette in a close 27-29 game, but the spirit of the fans remained undiminished.
Below: Alumni had the opportunity to meet current engineering faculty and students, tour the facilities and observe current engineering students as they provided hands-on engineering activities for children.
Alumni supporting the Bison team
The Bison team on the field
Alumni supporting the Bison team on the field
Engineering students showing their projects
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YOU’RE INVITED
JOIN THE HERD
Bucknellians around the country kicked off the fall semester with NeighborHERD Socials, one of the anchor events for Regional Clubs held each year. Alumni, parents, students and friends in 28 cities gathered at restaurants, on rooftops and in parks to meet their neighbors, show Bucknell spirit, network and plan additional activities for the year.
" "
To learn how you can join the fun next year, contact your local Regional Club team or the Office of Alumni Relations at alumni@bucknell.edu.
Regional Clubs
Arizona
Bucknell Club of Arizona
Stephanie Moulton Fornoff ’96
stephieyork@gmail.com
California
Bucknell Club of Los Angeles
Emily Baker ’08
emilycbaker@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of N. Calif.
Phil Kim ’12
thisisphilkim@gmail.com

Colorado
Bucknell Club of Denver
Sharon Muli ’11
sharonl.muli@gmail.com
CONNECTICUT
Bucknell Club of Fairfield
Douglas Bogan ’13
dmb054@bucknell.edu

Scott Singer ’87
ssinger65@gmail.com

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Bucknell Club of Washington, D.C.
Wes Pyron ’12
wes.pyron@gmail.com
FLORIDA
Bucknell Club of Naples
Buz Jones ’64
sjones490@verizon.net

Karen Larson Jones P’90
sjones490@verizon.net

Bucknell Club of Southeast Fla.
Richard Karp ’86
richardkarp64@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Tampa Bay
Peter Christiano ’79
pjchrist@tampabay.rr.com

GEORGIA
Bucknell Club of Atlanta
Caroline Karlberg ’06
caroline.karlberg@gmail.com
ILLINOIS
Bucknell Club of Chicago
Vacant
If you are interested, write to alumni@bucknell.edu
MARYLAND
Bucknell Club of Baltimore
Eric Brod ’13
ebb015@bucknell.edu

Cassie Greenhawk ’13
cbg011@bucknell.edu

MASSACHUSETTS
Bucknell Club of Boston
Melissa Fox ’13
melissafox02@gmail.com
MISSOURI
Bucknell Club of St. Louis
Julie Schmidt Peters ’05
juliepeters11@aol.com
NEW JERSEY
Bucknell Club of Northern N.J.
Bob Scott ’85
rws@rwscott.com
NEW YORK
Bucknell Club of New York City
Teddy Mottola ’13
eddy.mottola@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Rochester
Jennifer Shulman ’95
shulmanj73@gmail.com

Shela Giess ’95
shelagiess@hotmail.com

NORTH CAROLINA
Bucknell Club of Charlotte
Cara Brillhart Shields ’96
cara@helenadamsrealty.com

Bucknell Club of Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill
Vacant
If you are interested, write to
alumni@bucknell.edu

OHIO
Bucknell Club of Central Ohio
Michael Troper ’85
mtroper@wowway.com
PENNSYLVANIA
Bucknell Club of Greater Susquehanna Valley
Connie Tressler ’62
ctressler@tds.net

Bucknell Club of Harrisburg
Jeremy Spicher ’01
jsspicher@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Lehigh Valley
Emily Conners ’14
eac020@bucknell.edu

Stacey Morrow ’09
staceylynnhaas@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Philadelphia
Grace Ragold ’13
grace.ragold@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Pittsburgh
Daniel Weimer ’10
daniel.weimer10@gmail.com

TEXAS
Bucknell Club of Dallas
Jake Hodges ’14
jakehodges8@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Houston
Scott Gosnell ’09
scott.gosnell@gmail.com

WASHINGTON
Bucknell Club of Seattle
Vacant
If you are interested, write to
alumni@bucknell.edu
INTERNATIONAL
Bucknell Club of China
Brad Feuling ’03
bradley@kongandallan.com

Bucknell Club of London
Sarah Simmons ’08
sdotsimmons@gmail.com

Arizona
Bucknell Club of Arizona
Stephanie Moulton Fornoff ’96
stephieyork@gmail.com
California
Bucknell Club of Los Angeles
Emily Baker ’08
emilycbaker@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of N. Calif.
Phil Kim ’12
thisisphilkim@gmail.com

Colorado
Bucknell Club of Denver
Sharon Muli ’11
sharonl.muli@gmail.com
CONNECTICUT
Bucknell Club of Fairfield
Douglas Bogan ’13
dmb054@bucknell.edu

Scott Singer ’87
ssinger65@gmail.com

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Bucknell Club of Washington, D.C.
Wes Pyron ’12
wes.pyron@gmail.com
FLORIDA
Bucknell Club of Naples
Buz Jones ’64
sjones490@verizon.net

Karen Larson Jones P’90
sjones490@verizon.net

Bucknell Club of Southeast Fla.
Richard Karp ’86
richardkarp64@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Tampa Bay
Peter Christiano ’79
pjchrist@tampabay.rr.com

GEORGIA
Bucknell Club of Atlanta
Caroline Karlberg ’06
caroline.karlberg@gmail.com
ILLINOIS
Bucknell Club of Chicago
Vacant
If you are interested, write to alumni@bucknell.edu
MARYLAND
Bucknell Club of Baltimore
Eric Brod ’13
ebb015@bucknell.edu

Cassie Greenhawk ’13
cbg011@bucknell.edu

MASSACHUSETTS
Bucknell Club of Boston
Melissa Fox ’13
melissafox02@gmail.com
MISSOURI
Bucknell Club of St. Louis
Julie Schmidt Peters ’05
juliepeters11@aol.com
NEW JERSEY
Bucknell Club of Northern N.J.
Bob Scott ’85
rws@rwscott.com
NEW YORK
Bucknell Club of New York City
Teddy Mottola ’13
eddy.mottola@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Rochester
Jennifer Shulman ’95
shulmanj73@gmail.com

Shela Giess ’95
shelagiess@hotmail.com

NORTH CAROLINA
Bucknell Club of Charlotte
Cara Brillhart Shields ’96
cara@helenadamsrealty.com

Bucknell Club of Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill
Vacant
If you are interested, write to
alumni@bucknell.edu

OHIO
Bucknell Club of Central Ohio
Michael Troper ’85
mtroper@wowway.com
PENNSYLVANIA
Bucknell Club of Greater Susquehanna Valley
Connie Tressler ’62
ctressler@tds.net

Bucknell Club of Harrisburg
Jeremy Spicher ’01
jsspicher@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Lehigh Valley
Emily Conners ’14
eac020@bucknell.edu

Stacey Morrow ’09
staceylynnhaas@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Philadelphia
Grace Ragold ’13
grace.ragold@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Pittsburgh
Daniel Weimer ’10
daniel.weimer10@gmail.com

TEXAS
Bucknell Club of Dallas
Jake Hodges ’14
jakehodges8@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Houston
Scott Gosnell ’09
scott.gosnell@gmail.com

WASHINGTON
Bucknell Club of Seattle
Vacant
If you are interested, write to
alumni@bucknell.edu
INTERNATIONAL
Bucknell Club of China
Brad Feuling ’03
bradley@kongandallan.com

Bucknell Club of London
Sarah Simmons ’08
sdotsimmons@gmail.com

Arizona
Bucknell Club of Arizona
Stephanie Moulton Fornoff ’96
stephieyork@gmail.com
California
Bucknell Club of Los Angeles
Emily Baker ’08
emilycbaker@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of N. Calif.
Phil Kim ’12
thisisphilkim@gmail.com

Colorado
Bucknell Club of Denver
Sharon Muli ’11
sharonl.muli@gmail.com
CONNECTICUT
Bucknell Club of Fairfield
Douglas Bogan ’13
dmb054@bucknell.edu

Scott Singer ’87
ssinger65@gmail.com

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Bucknell Club of Washington, D.C.
Wes Pyron ’12
wes.pyron@gmail.com
FLORIDA
Bucknell Club of Naples
Buz Jones ’64
sjones490@verizon.net

Karen Larson Jones P’90
sjones490@verizon.net

Bucknell Club of Southeast Fla.
Richard Karp ’86
richardkarp64@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Tampa Bay
Peter Christiano ’79
pjchrist@tampabay.rr.com

GEORGIA
Bucknell Club of Atlanta
Caroline Karlberg ’06
caroline.karlberg@gmail.com
ILLINOIS
Bucknell Club of Chicago
Vacant
If you are interested, write to alumni@bucknell.edu
MARYLAND
Bucknell Club of Baltimore
Eric Brod ’13
ebb015@bucknell.edu

Cassie Greenhawk ’13
cbg011@bucknell.edu

MASSACHUSETTS
Bucknell Club of Boston
Melissa Fox ’13
melissafox02@gmail.com
MISSOURI
Bucknell Club of St. Louis
Julie Schmidt Peters ’05
juliepeters11@aol.com
NEW JERSEY
Bucknell Club of Northern N.J.
Bob Scott ’85
rws@rwscott.com
NEW YORK
Bucknell Club of New York City
Teddy Mottola ’13
eddy.mottola@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Rochester
Jennifer Shulman ’95
shulmanj73@gmail.com

Shela Giess ’95
shelagiess@hotmail.com

NORTH CAROLINA
Bucknell Club of Charlotte
Cara Brillhart Shields ’96
cara@helenadamsrealty.com

Bucknell Club of Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill
Vacant
If you are interested, write to
alumni@bucknell.edu

OHIO
Bucknell Club of Central Ohio
Michael Troper ’85
mtroper@wowway.com
PENNSYLVANIA
Bucknell Club of Greater Susquehanna Valley
Connie Tressler ’62
ctressler@tds.net

Bucknell Club of Harrisburg
Jeremy Spicher ’01
jsspicher@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Lehigh Valley
Emily Conners ’14
eac020@bucknell.edu

Stacey Morrow ’09
staceylynnhaas@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Philadelphia
Grace Ragold ’13
grace.ragold@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Pittsburgh
Daniel Weimer ’10
daniel.weimer10@gmail.com

TEXAS
Bucknell Club of Dallas
Jake Hodges ’14
jakehodges8@gmail.com

Bucknell Club of Houston
Scott Gosnell ’09
scott.gosnell@gmail.com

WASHINGTON
Bucknell Club of Seattle
Vacant
If you are interested, write to
alumni@bucknell.edu
INTERNATIONAL
Bucknell Club of China
Brad Feuling ’03
bradley@kongandallan.com

Bucknell Club of London
Sarah Simmons ’08
sdotsimmons@gmail.com

Witty Winners
Here are our favorite caption submissions from the last issue:
“I’ve got your back.”
Ramona Rogers Larrabee ’53, P’79
“I think we’re good enough for America’s Got Talent now!”
Mike Looker ’69
“Oh, My Gosh, Bucky, Look At Them Stunt.”
Tammi Stanziale P’20
“Egypt is not the only place to find ancient pyramids!”
Rick Andrews ’73
“Off, you guys. I’m the bottom, and I must get to the men’s room.”
Billie Jane Boyer Maul ’57
Submit your caption for the retro photo on Page 69 to bmagazine@bucknell.edu or facebook.com/bucknellu by March 1.
Vintage photograph of Bucknell male students doing a stacking formation
Photo: Special Collections/University Archives
Bucknell My favorite thing
Bucknell My favorite thing
The Trilobite
" "Ali Reach ’20’s love of geology started with the study of plate tectonics in middle school. When her high-school environmental science teacher gave her a special gift her senior year, her interest grew. Now an environmental geosciences major, she has conducted research at Pennsylvania’s Bear Valley Strip Mine for the last two summers. She also spent spring break in New Mexico with geology professors and students visiting Bandelier National Monument and other sites and also field-mapped the desert landscape of White Mesa and Picuris.
Ali Reach shows her fossils that her high-school science teacher gave her
Ali Reach shows her fossils that her high-school science teacher gave her
Photos: Emily Paine
" "
Ali Reach ’20 loves fossils of all kinds, but the trilobite her high-school science teacher gave her is her favorite.
" "
Ali Reach ’20 loves fossils of all kinds, but the trilobite her high-school science teacher gave her is her favorite.
“My AP environmental science teacher was really passionate about what he was talking about, which was the coolest thing, especially in high school. I basically nerded out over trilobites and fossils. At the end of the year, he gave me a trilobite he found in Arizona as my senior going-away present. Giving someone a fossil that you found is really meaningful.

The trilobite is the Pennsylvania state fossil. He knew I was going to school in Pennsylvania, and I’m also from Pennsylvania. The trilobite combines my high-school experience, my home and also what I’m doing here. That’s why it’s my favorite thing.

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Thanks for reading our Winter 2019 issue!