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Connecting Beyond the Classroom

Spring 2022

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BY WAY OF BUCKNELL
POSITIVELY IN THE RED
It’s spring at Bucknell, and the blossoms are a-poppin’.
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-by-10 print.
photograph by Emily Paine
red blossoms in Bucknell

BY WAY OF BUCKNELL

POSITIVELY IN THE RED
It’s spring at Bucknell, and the blossoms are a-poppin’.

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-by-10 print.

photograph by Emily Paine

Pathways

From a Hungarian Home to Bucknell typography

by Bryan Wendell

Flora Beleznay ’25 was born in the U.S. but spent her summers in Hungary. She remembers meals with extended family, water polo matches on TV and rousing discussions about physics.

Pretty much everyone on Beleznay’s father’s side is a physicist, including her grandmother.

“For her to be in such a vigorous scholastic field and pursue it amid the struggles of being female is really what influenced me to pursue this major,” Beleznay says.

Pathways

Flora Beleznay smiling
From a Hungarian Home to Bucknell typography
by Bryan Wendell

Flora Beleznay ’25 was born in the U.S. but spent her summers in Hungary. She remembers meals with extended family, water polo matches on TV and rousing discussions about physics.

Pretty much everyone on Beleznay’s father’s side is a physicist, including her grandmother.

“For her to be in such a vigorous scholastic field and pursue it amid the struggles of being female is really what influenced me to pursue this major,” Beleznay says.

Pathways

From Bison Athletics to A Sales Career

by Patrick Broadwater

Bob Rhein ’85 was a junior at Bucknell when he began building the momentum that has been the catalyst of his career in industrial sales.

Rhein played soccer for four years at Bucknell and joined the lacrosse team for his final two years, playing in memory of a childhood friend killed by a drunk driver. Rhein credits the encouragement he received from his future wife, Cheryl Conrad ’86, and Hall of Fame lacrosse coach Sid Jamieson, among others, with helping to refocus his grief and instill much-needed discipline.

Pathways

Bob Rhein smiling
From Bison Athletics to A Sales Career
by Patrick Broadwater

Bob Rhein ’85 was a junior at Bucknell when he began building the momentum that has been the catalyst of his career in industrial sales.

Rhein played soccer for four years at Bucknell and joined the lacrosse team for his final two years, playing in memory of a childhood friend killed by a drunk driver. Rhein credits the encouragement he received from his future wife, Cheryl Conrad ’86, and Hall of Fame lacrosse coach Sid Jamieson, among others, with helping to refocus his grief and instill much-needed discipline.

Gateway

Letters

LOVING THE QUIZ KIDS:

Thanks for the [winter issue] ‘College Bowl’ story. In 1963, it was a very big deal at campuses across the U.S.

Toby Decker ’65
Naples, Fla.

Recalling the Harrisburg 7

I was very surprised to not see any mention of The Harrisburg Seven trial in the fall issue’s “Living History” story. I was a freshman at Penn State in 1970, but I transferred the next year to Bucknell in part because of the federal indictment of antiwar activists that included Philip Berrigan and five other Roman Catholic nuns or priests.

The group stood accused of plotting to raid federal offices, blow up U.S. Capitol steam tunnels and kidnap Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in a bid to end the war in Vietnam. The defendants were represented by former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark and renowned civil-liberties lawyer Leonard Boudin, and the much-publicized trial, held in Harrisburg in spring 1972, ended with a hung jury.

Berrigan was imprisoned in the Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary, where he was befriended by another inmate, Boyd Douglas, who was on work release at Bertrand Library. Douglas, a convicted forger who became the government’s chief witness, had portrayed himself on campus as an antiwar activist as he involved students in the smuggling of letters to Berrigan. Bucknell librarian Zoia Horn was jailed for several weeks after refusing to testify for the prosecution, citing academic freedom.

Bucknell students, faculty and staff, including me, attended the trial. I learned more there about conspiracy law, jury selection, illegal wiretapping and other government misconduct than in any college political science class.

Don Michak ’74
Northampton, Mass.
Editor's Letter Title
Portrait illustration of editor Sherri Kimmel smiling
Illustration: Joel Kimmel
Sherri Kimmel, Editor

A New Path

I’m sure most of us have known someone who helped us believe we could do the improbable. For me, it was my brothers, Dale and Gary, who were 19 and 16 when I was born. They were the first in our southwestern Ohio farm family to pursue higher education, and there was never any question that I would join them on the college track.

To get me started, Gary bought me a cobalt-blue IBM Selectric typewriter and my first camera, a Canon AE-1, giving me the physical tools to pursue a journalism degree — and potential career. I had the tools, but wasn’t convinced I had the talent.

It was Dale’s faith in me that led me to take those tools and begin building a career. When I was 19, and home one weekend, I wrote a personal reflection on a massive blizzard that had buried my northwestern Ohio campus. Uncertain though I was about my writing talent, I gave Dale the essay to read. I was surprised when he asked to keep it. And even more surprised to later learn that he took it to the editor of the paper of record, The Dayton Daily News. Standing in his office doorway, essay in hand, Dale pled my case: “My sister wrote this. It’s good. You should publish it.”

He didn’t, but Dale’s belief in me provided the confidence to approach a different editor the next summer, and he retained me as a freelance writer and photographer. By then, my dear Dale was dead of a heart attack, but the breath of confidence he’d given me helped me press on.

Thanks to my brothers’ early push, and my own will to work hard and improve, I have had the career I always wanted: first with daily newspapers, then editing alumni magazines for three colleges and one university. My dedication to evocative storytelling remains strong, as does my love of orchestrating the total reading experience — from choosing the best writers to the best artists and photographers, all in the service of advancing a compelling narrative for our readers.

But like many others during these pandemic years, I pondered passions I’d not pursued, and a new path became clear to me: public service.

Perhaps ironically, it was my concern for a Bucknell family that helped me reach that conclusion. When Afghanistan fell to the Taliban in August, my friend, Professor Jamie Hendry, management, told me she was trying to help the family of Yasameen Mohammadi ’20 and her brother Omid ’24 flee Kabul.

My own efforts to help them led me to Church World Service (CWS), one of nine national organizations working with the U.S. government to resettle the 76,000 Afghans lucky enough to reach our country. Although the exiles did not include the Mohammadis, I wanted to aid other Afghans in building new lives in America.

Another Bucknell connection, Religious Studies Professor Brantley Gasaway — an Anabaptist like me — helped me forge a partnership between his church and mine. I enlisted one more congregation, and soon found myself leading a three-church welcome team, working with CWS to resettle a young Afghan family of four in Carlisle, Pa. The dad, 27, is a film studies graduate of the University of Kabul who worked with the U.S. military. Thanks to a generous donation from another Bucknellian, Lewisburg Photography Club President and Professor Emeritus of Computer Science Dan Hyde, our Afghan dad now has a Canon Rebel camera with all the trimmings.

After this issue, I’ll be leaving Bucknell Magazine to focus more fully on this initiative. For me, this move into public service is not a retirement but a repurposing — and again, one inspired by my brothers. Dale helped troubled youths through the Big Brothers program, and Gary, an oncologist, started the Cancer Foundation For Life. Although he died in 2018, the Texas nonprofit, which enhances the quality of life for cancer patients through exercise and healthy eating habits, is still thriving.

Like Peyton Manning, I feel I’m leaving my team at Bucknell at the top of my game — not limping off the field. I’ll always be a writer, just not a full-time one. I’ll miss my Communications Division colleagues — and all the readers I’ve come to know these last nearly seven years. I’m a better writer, editor and person than I was before I arrived at Bucknell. And I hope, through my work, I have enriched your lives in some small way as well.

Appreciates ‘Indigenous Origins’

The articles in the Winter 2022 edition about the Susquehanna River and the Indigenous people who lived on the land before Bucknell came into being were both very good — and interesting! I guess it’s fun to observe and think on how very naive we as Bucknell students were about the area and who lived there before the University was founded.

Kendra Budd Townsend ’64
The Villages, Fla.
Table of Contents
Blossoms are poppin’.
From a Hungarian home to Bucknell.
From Bison athletics to a sales career.
GATEWAY
Our readers share their thoughts.
A new path.
Anthony Morgan is committed to community policing.
In Lewisburg and far afield, Bucknell’s students and staff make a positive and palpable difference.
Intro course aims to better prepare students for a new reality.
Google award fuels study of bias in decision-making.
Professor JiaJia Dong reveals her faves.
Andrew Meyer ’71, P’08 made the leap from producing concerts to producing famous films.
Professor Beeta Baghoolizadeh examines the history of the Middle East in comics.
Wrestler Zach Hartman ’22 makes his fourth trip to the NCAA Championship.
Richard Mold ’81, P’14 offers advice for hiring a home contractor.
Student farmers dig their studies at Bucknell’s living laboratory.
Kristen Kusek ’94 is a science communicator whose COVID-focused op-ed went viral.
FEATURES
50 years later, the Bucknell community reflects on a deadly storm’s impact.
These alumni are applying their Bucknell experience to the continuing education of others.
An intrepid faculty family is the first to share residential space with students.
’RAY BUCKNELL
A Maxwell Award for all at Bucknell.
Sarah Pretz Foster ’02 aims to make STEM cool for girls.
Musician Jonathan Sprout ’74 offers a bright rejoinder to the world’s troubles.
Playwright and professor Jan Balakian ’83 follows a literary legacy.
Chad Farrell ’92 and Blake Sturcke ’93 are clean energy entrepreneurs.
Kendy Alvarez ’06 is Lewisburg’s new mayor.
As life coaches, these Bucknellians help individuals make changes for the better.
Emily Meringolo ’16 honors a beloved classmate.
Remember your friends, family and classmates.
Trustee shaped the future of the College of Engineering.
Trout Auditorium’s name honors French & Francophone studies benefactor.
Your opportunities to get involved.
Robert Martuza ’69 is a surgeon turned sculptor.
Bucknell

magazine

Volume 15, Issue 2

Vice President For Communications
Heather Johns

Editor
Sherri Kimmel

Design
Amy Wells

Associate Editor
Matt Hughes

Assistant Editor
Bryan Wendell

Class Notes Editor
Heidi Hormel

Contributors
Brad Tufts
Emily Paine
Brooke Thames
Mike Ferlazzo

Editorial Assistant
Kim Faulk

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 15, number 2, 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
49,000

Postmaster
Send all address changes to:
Office of Records,
301 Market St., Suite 2
Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA 17837
© 2022 Bucknell University
Please recycle after use.

Mix Paper from responsible sources

Bucknell Welcomes New Chief of Public Safety

by Mike Ferlazzo

VETERAN LAW ENFORCEMENT leader Anthony Morgan began work as Bucknell’s new chief of public safety in February. Most recently chief of police at Cal Poly Humboldt in Arcata, Calif., Morgan brings 19 years of law enforcement and community policing experience to the University.

“Chief Morgan has a proven track record of implementing practices that enhance the public’s trust between law enforcement and the community,” says President John Bravman. “He is well-prepared to both maintain safety within our campus community and provide vision and direction for key departmental diversity initiatives moving forward.”

At Bucknell, Morgan will lead a University public safety department of 24 full-time staff composed of commissioned and armed police officers, communications officers, a parking coordinator, an administrative assistant, and supervisors for traffic, safety and medical transportation.

Morgan’s past roles include 14 years in the Kalamazoo (Mich.) Department of Public Safety and leadership of police departments in Mount Rainier, Md., and Covington, Va. — cities that desired community policing. In each agency, Morgan implemented significant reforms and enhanced the trust between law enforcement and the community.

A photograph of Anthony Morgan smiling
Photo: Emily Paine
" "
Anthony Morgan became Bucknell’s new public safety leader in February.

News Ticker

LEARNED-SOCIETY LEADER

Professor Sue Ellen Henry, education, was elected vice president of the American Educational Studies Association, the key professional group representing sociologists, historians, philosophers and anthropologists of education in the United States.

EARLY-CAREER COMMENDATION

Professor Elif Miskioglu, chemical engineering, won the 2021 Ray W. Fahien Award from the American Society for Engineering Education, given annually to educators who have shown evidence of vision and contribution to chemical engineering education within their first 10 years of employment.

HONORING BISON VOTES

CNN recognized Bucknell’s Bison Votes campaign for its success in increasing student voter turnout during the 2020 presidential election. The University received a gold seal from the network’s ALL IN Campus Democracy Challenge, awarded to schools with a voter participation rate between 70% and 79%.
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.
Noreen Mastascusa in uniform
Courtesy of Noreen Mastascusa ’83
" "
Noreen Mastascusa ’83 at her 2021 graduation from the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center.
" "Calexico, Calif.
In her workplace at the U.S.-Mexico border, Noreen Mastascusa ’83 climbs into cargo truck trailers and digs through boxes of green onions, leafs through bunches of kale, pokes around bales of hay. But Mastascusa, an agriculture specialist with U.S. Customs and Border Protection, isn’t looking for smugglers (who she hopes are caught at a previous X-ray inspection). Instead, Mastascusa’s eye is trained on insects, ticks, blight, weed seeds and soil-borne diseases.

How She Got There
After Bucknell, the biology major earned a second B.S. in horticulture from Penn State, then studied for an M.S. in horticulture at Texas A&M. But before finishing her thesis, Mastascusa joined the Peace Corps, serving nearly three years in the Dominican Republic. Preparing for her latest job as an ag specialist required two months of Department of Agriculture training in pest identification and regulation, then seven weeks at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center. Ag specialists spend a shorter time in law enforcement training than officers because they are not armed and learn only defensive tactics.

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.
Design Realization students gathered near a playhouse
Photo: Emily Paine
" "
Design Realization students, from left, Erica Weiss ’23, Megan McInerney ’22, Brooke Tuttle ’23, Josie Lippincott ’22, Missy Wrede ’22, gather at the Tree House.
" "Lewisburg, Pa.
When Professor Collin Smith, markets, innovation & design (MIDE), heard that interactive exhibits at the Lewisburg Children’s Museum needed reimagining, he knew the perfect group of innovative thinkers for the task. In December, students in Smith’s Design Realization class added enhancements to the museum’s nature-themed Tree House exhibit.

What They Did
The original exhibit left little to explore for curious and energetic visitors. Activity was limited to a small campfire setup and a treehouse that kids could climb into, with an attached slide for swift and easy exit.

A photograph taken of a student group activity inside a ENGR 100 course at the Bucknell College of Engineering building
Photo: Emily Paine
" "
A reimagined ENGR 100 takes a more hands-on approach.

Re-engineering ENGR 100

Intro course aims to better prepare students for a new reality

by BRYAN WENDELL

PAY NO ATTENTION to the job title in the email signature.

Today’s engineers must be multi-talented and able to partner with colleagues on projects that span traditional dividing lines.

At Bucknell, a reimagining of the College of Engineering’s cornerstone course aims to better prepare students for this new reality. ENGR 100 immerses students in hands-on, project-oriented assignments that help them experience multiple engineering disciplines and understand the ways they overlap.

Google Award Fuels Study of Bias in Prison Decision-Making

by MIKE FERLAZZO

THE U.S. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT relies on an algorithmic tool known as Pattern to help decide who gets a shot at early release from prison and who must remain behind bars. But, as NPR reported in January, it turns out the predictive algorithm used to determine someone’s risk of a return to criminal behavior appears to give biased results, treating people of different races differently.

Three Bucknell professors are now at work probing the roots of this algorithmic unfairness. Professors Darakhshan Mir, computer science; Vanessa Massaro, geography; and Nathan Ryan, mathematics, were awarded a $60,000 Google Award for Inclusion Research. Their yearlong project will compare quantitative data collected on 280,000 incarcerated individuals during the last 30 years from the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections with the realities incarcerated people describe when interviewed for the project.

What I'm Reading

What I’m Reading

Illustration of JiaJia Dong
Illustration: Joel Kimmel
JiaJia Dong

PROFESSOR, PHYSICS & ASTRONOMY

ASSOCIATE DEAN OF FACULTY, COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES

A book cover of The Tyranny of Merit by Michael Sandel

Michael Sandel, The Tyranny of Merit

I have been very puzzled and, frankly, disturbed by the rise of nationalism around the world. I looked to political philosopher Michael Sandel, whose work I have followed for years, for some clarification. In this book, he argues that meritocracy, even a perfect one, exacerbates social inequality, leading the “winners” to “breathe in the meritocratic hubris” while the “losers” are left demoralized and looking for scapegoats. The latter outcome contributes to xenophobia, racism and the rise of nationalism. He also argues that the meritocratic selection process upheld in higher education entrenches privilege rather than provides social mobility, which in turn corrodes democratic values.
A book cover of I'm Still Here by Austin Channing Brown

Austin Channing Brown, I’m Still Here

The author, whose first name is commonly associated with white males, recounts her experiences growing up as a Black Christian woman in Ohio. My personal background (Asian, from China) doesn’t have much overlap with hers, and yet the stories Brown tells are relatable, raw and illuminating. They also remind me of the intersectional lens through which we can observe the clash of power and privileges.
A book cover of Barnyard Dance by Sandra Boynton

Sandra Boynton, Barnyard Dance

I have probably read this book aloud more than 50 times. The author engages readers, old and young, with melodic prose and whimsical illustrations of her characters — a bunch of dancing barnyard animals. The opening paragraph is particularly suitable for practicing body coordination: “Stomp your feet! Clap your hands! Everybody ready for a barnyard dance!” This is my 1-year-old’s go-to book. It brings a distinct sense of joy and simplicity after a long day of work.
What I'm Reading

What I’m Reading

Illustration of JiaJia Dong
JiaJia Dong
PROFESSOR, PHYSICS & ASTRONOMY
ASSOCIATE DEAN OF FACULTY, COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
A book cover of The Tyranny of Merit by Michael Sandel

Michael Sandel, The Tyranny of Merit
I have been very puzzled and, frankly, disturbed by the rise of nationalism around the world. I looked to political philosopher Michael Sandel, whose work I have followed for years, for some clarification. In this book, he argues that meritocracy, even a perfect one, exacerbates social inequality, leading the “winners” to “breathe in the meritocratic hubris” while the “losers” are left demoralized and looking for scapegoats. The latter outcome contributes to xenophobia, racism and the rise of nationalism. He also argues that the meritocratic selection process upheld in higher education entrenches privilege rather than provides social mobility, which in turn corrodes democratic values.

A book cover of I'm Still Here by Austin Channing Brown
Austin Channing Brown, I’m Still Here
The author, whose first name is commonly associated with white males, recounts her experiences growing up as a Black Christian woman in Ohio. My personal background (Asian, from China) doesn’t have much overlap with hers, and yet the stories Brown tells are relatable, raw and illuminating. They also remind me of the intersectional lens through which we can observe the clash of power and privileges.
A book cover of Barnyard Dance by Sandra Boynton
Sandra Boynton, Barnyard Dance
I have probably read this book aloud more than 50 times. The author engages readers, old and young, with melodic prose and whimsical illustrations of her characters — a bunch of dancing barnyard animals. The opening paragraph is particularly suitable for practicing body coordination: “Stomp your feet! Clap your hands! Everybody ready for a barnyard dance!” This is my 1-year-old’s go-to book. It brings a distinct sense of joy and simplicity after a long day of work.
Pop Quiz

Andrew Meyer ’71, P’08

Andrew

Meyer ’71, P’08

The Producer

Meyer jumped into the music industry feet first after graduation, relying on his experience from the Bucknell Concert Committee and chutzpah. After working with rock legends such as George Harrison and Peter Frampton, he became, with zero experience, a producer of such iconic films as Fried Green Tomatoes and The Breakfast Club (giving John Hughes his first directing credit). Since 2004, he has taught film and TV at The Savannah College of Art and Design.
Cool Class clipart

Comic Book Histories of the Middle East

An image from Diaspora Letters, Baghoolizadeh’s multimedia art project
Illustration: Beeta Baghoolizadeh.
" "
An image from Diaspora Letters, Baghoolizadeh’s multimedia art project.

What Class?

Comic Book Histories
of the Middle East
Who Teaches It?
Professor Beeta Baghoolizadeh, History and Critical Black Studies
Sometimes when we read history books, we are inclined to think they present “The Truth” with a capital T. We don’t realize that most history books are written by normal people with their own perspectives and intentions guiding the narrative. With a graphic novel, it is easier to see how a person’s perspective guides how a particular moment in history is remembered and retold.
Because graphic novels incorporate a visual aspect, they lend themselves to sharing information that text-based books don’t include — such as patterns of traditional textiles, facial expressions and emotions, landscapes and more — all of which contribute to an enriched understanding of the history and peoples. Some of those we study are The Apartment in Bab el Louk, Baddawi, A Game for Swallows and Lissa.
Zach Hartman (left) during a wrestling match
Photo: Matt Hawley
" "
This spring, Zach Hartman ’22 (left) qualified for the NCAA Championship for the fourth time in his career.

Pulling His Weight

by Andrew Faught
Household objects weren’t always safe when Zach Hartman ’22 was growing up in Sewickley, Pa.

That’s because he and his brother, Mitch ’20, started their wrestling careers — at the encouragement of their father — in elementary school with “mad dog” matches in the living room.

“We definitely broke a lot of things,” Zach Hartman remembers. “We were always horsing around. It was a great time.”

Ask the Expert text

How to Manage a Home Contractor

Illustration of Richard Mold
Illustration: Joel Kimmel
" " Richard Mold ’81, P’14 majored in art & art history at Bucknell before shifting gears and launching a 40-year career in the construction trades. After decades of working on smaller projects, he is now site supervisor on the construction of a $3 million vacation home in the Catskills. He lives in New York’s Hudson Valley.
Hands-on Education

Connecting with the Land

Student farmers dig their studies at Bucknell’s living laboratory
by Brooke Thames
O

n Sam Pring ’23’s first visit to the Bucknell Farm, biology professor and farm adviser Mark Spiro plucked a ripe cob of corn off the stalk and grilled it up for Pring on the spot. It was one of Pring’s earliest experiences at Bucknell during first-year Orientation, and it “made a really good first impression to have a professor make us fresh food,” Pring says.

Pring’s interest in the farm grew through the Environmental Residential College, which engages first-year students in the planet’s most pressing sustainability and climate issues through immersive experiences in nature. Now, the biology and linguistics double major is just one of many students pursuing hands-on education in one of Bucknell’s most dynamic living laboratories.

student Sam Pring examines a bushel of garlic bulbs in a field
student Maya Asante waters plants in a field using a long handled hose
Photos: Emily Paine
" "
Above: Sam Pring ’23 uses the University Farm as a site for biological research. Below: Student farmer leader Maya Asante ’24 aims to make the farm a more welcoming and accessible place for students of color.
QA
Illustration of Kristen Kusek
Illustration: Joel Kimmel
Kristen Kusek ’94

An Ocean of Stories

by Michael Blanding
Kristen Kusek ’94 fell in love with the ocean during childhood trips to the Jersey shore. Now, as director of strategic communications for the University of South Florida College of Marine Science, she combines a passion for science and storytelling to demystify the sea. Kusek also leads a new outreach program, Guardians of the Gulf, to teach marine science to disadvantaged youth. This fall, she made waves with a viral op-ed for the Tampa Bay Times decrying the rise of disinformation about COVID-19.

Features

HOMEBODY Mort the pug is a beloved resident of Roberts Hall
Photograph by Dustin fenstermacher

Features

HOMEBODY Mort the pug is a beloved resident of Roberts Hall
Photograph by Dustin fenstermacher

Features

HOMEBODY Mort the pug is a beloved resident of Roberts Hall
Photograph by Dustin fenstermacher

A Flood of Memories

A Flood of Memories title

50 years later, the Bucknell community reflects on a deadly storm’s impact

by John Tibbetts
Illustration by Matt Rota
"B text

“Before Agnes” and “After Agnes.” That’s how many longtime Lewisburg-area residents talk about their communities in the central Susquehanna Valley. History got split into two distinct eras. In 1972, massive floods spawned by Tropical Storm Agnes decimated the hearts of many river towns. The recovery has been long and arduous. Scars from Agnes and landmarks of resilience are visible if you know where to look.

In June, Bucknell and local communities will commemorate the 50th anniversary of Agnes. The storm killed at least 128 people in several states, including 48 Pennsylvanians. It destroyed 70,000 homes and left hundreds of thousands without electrical power, telephone service or clean drinking water. President Richard Nixon declared that it was “the greatest natural disaster in the history of the United States.”

“Before Agnes, people in Lewisburg and other river towns thought they were prepared because they did take precautions,” says Professor Andrew Stuhl, environmental studies & sciences. “If floodwaters collected in a location, they knew from experience to move their things out of harm’s way to the second floor or even evacuate their house. They thought it couldn’t get any worse than the flood of 1936, the most damaging one on record at that time.”

In March 1936, heavy downpours and melting winter snows flooded most of Lewisburg and other river communities.

But Agnes was worse — a lot worse.

Leading the Way department heading

Shaping
the
Future

These alumni are applying their Bucknell experience to the continuing education of others
by Eveline Chao
photograph by Darren Elias
“I always believed education is one of the biggest ways to make a difference in the world,” says Cheryl Lesser ’85, who recently became president of Great Bay Community College.
Leading the Way department heading

Shaping the Future

These alumni are applying their Bucknell experience to the continuing education of others
by Eveline Chao
photograph by Darren Elias
“I always believed education is one of the biggest ways to make a difference in the world,” says Cheryl Lesser ’85, who recently became president of Great Bay Community College.
1
1

Alumni are making a difference in higher education

1. Alumni are making a difference in higher education

Higher education has transformed the minds — and lives — of generations of people: opening new vistas, imparting critical-thinking skills and introducing students to professions and fields of study they might never have imagined. Their Bucknell experience has propelled some alumni into higher education itself, as both career and calling. Bucknellians have become professors, deans, provosts, department chairs and presidents, helping to shape the next generation of minds at a wide range of institutions, from community colleges to small liberal arts colleges to sprawling research universities.

“We’re educating people to be good citizens and great leaders,” says Karin Wilkins ’84, dean of the School of Communication at the University of Miami.

Collin and Tara McKinney (with Mort the pug) have made a second-floor apartment in Roberts Hall their home since late 2018.

Professor

in the

House

An intrepid faculty family is the first to share residential space with students
by Kristin Baird Rattini
photographs by Dustin Fenstermacher
'ray Bucknell logo
CHERRY BEAUTY Malesardi Quad is an ideal spring study spot
photo by Emily Paine
From the President department heading
Illustration of John C. Bravman, President
Illustration: Joel Kimmel

A Maxwell Award for All at Bucknell

As of this writing in late February, we are fewer than 90 days from Commencement. This May, we’ll celebrate, for the first time, two on-campus Commencements in one weekend. On May 21, we’ll honor the Class of 2020, whose in-person graduation two years ago was stymied by the virus. The next day, members of the Class of 2022 will walk across the stage on Malesardi Quad.

By giving our 2020 graduates a ceremony, albeit a delayed one, we’re once again demonstrating, as we have many times during the last two years, that we’ll not let the wily virus have the last word.

Book Talk circle

Making STEM Cool for Girls

by Bryan Wendell
When her youngest son was in elementary school, Sarah Pretz Foster ’02 volunteered at his school, bringing to the classroom her years of experience as a research and development engineer for biotech companies.

As she shared fun STEM lessons with the youngest students — kindergarten, first grade, second grade — Foster noticed that the girls were just as eager to raise their hands as the boys. But something was concerningly different when she moved to fourth- and fifth-grade classrooms.

“The girls were a little more reserved at that point,” Foster says. “They weren’t jumping in as often as the boys were. It really surprised me to see that gender gap happening so early.”

Foster saw an opportunity for change.

Sarah Pretz Foster headshot
" "
“I wanted to provide a resource for girls to see what you can do at any age,” Sarah Pretz Foster ’02 says.
PROFILE

A Force for Good

Musician Jonathan Sprout ’74 offers a bright rejoinder to the world’s troubles
by Benjamin Gleisser
Disillusioned by the negativity that he perceived was enveloping the world, from climate change to homelessness, musician and activist Jonathan Sprout ’74 didn’t sit idly by. He used his creative gifts to offer an alternative — highlighting the beauty of life and spreading kindness to others through music and imagery.

Force For Good, founded in 2016, creates short films based on Sprout’s instrumental music, which he calls “New Age Classical.” A team of fellow artist/activists works with Sprout. So far, international film festivals have shown 67 of the films, 19 of which have won awards.

“Our films reflect my belief in the importance of protecting the natural world while promoting gender and racial equality. It’s not just what you do in life, but how you do it,” explains Sprout, a third-generation Bucknellian. “I hope the work my team and I do uplifts the organizations and people who are doing heroic things in the world.”

Sprout has performed more than 6,600 concerts since his first appearance — at Rooke Chapel — and he credits the late Chaplain James Gardner for nudging him onto the stage.

Jonathan Sprout holding his guitar
Photo: Hillary Black
“Twenty-five years of researching and writing about heroes compelled me to become an activist and turn my art and music into something that was a force for good,” says Jonathan Sprout ’74.
Alumni Photo Gallery
Images will scroll automatically
Classes 59, 77 — Taken at the celebration of life for the late David Ott ’59, who passed away in May 2020, are, from left, Tom Clark ’59, Jeff Clark ’77 (no relation to Tom) and Roger Conners ’59. Jeff practiced law with David in York, Maine. “David was a beloved husband, father, grandfather, law partner and friend,” Jeff Clark said.
2015, 2017 Wedding — Liza Fitzgerald ’15 married Jack Geduldig ’17 June 26 in Osterville, Mass. They reside in NYC, where Liza works for TJX Companies, and Jack is pursuing his medical degree at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. Some of the couple’s best friends from Bucknell, including both of their first-year roommates, are pictured here along with a range of Bison from the classes of 2008, 2014, 2015 and 2017 as well as the bride’s mother, Margaret Boles Fitzgerald ’77.
Catch up with Bucknell alumni in pictures.

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

Flashback
Jan Balakian, professor of English

Photo: Ally Balakian ’23

Following a Literary Legacy

Jan Balakian ’83, a professor of English at Kean University in New Jersey, teaches American drama and modern American literature, inspired by Bucknell’s legendary English professor, Jack Wheatcroft ’49. Her most recent play, Dreams on Fire, is set before the 2016 presidential election and explores the experiences of college students, mental health and the transmission of trauma across generations. It premieres April 20-27 at Kean.

1. How did Bucknell shape your career?

Jack Wheatcroft’s beautiful lectures on literature inspired me.

2. What class opened your eyes the most?

Wheatcroft’s drama survey ended with the American plays that shaped my career.

3. If you could go back to college, what would you do differently?

I’d take psychology, philosophy and wish I’d taken Joe Fell, sociology. If I were scientific, I’d study neuroscience, since I am interested in anxiety/depression and the brain. I’d take more risks, since I’m fearful of the new! I’d make more time for so many special people.
Entrepreneur Spotlight
Chad Farrell in a suit
Photo: Courtesy of Encore Renewable Energy
Chad Farrell ’92, founder and CEO of Encore Renewable Energy, is hoping to turn the tide on climate change.

Encore Renewable Energy

by Lori Ferguson

Everywhere Chad Farrell ’92 looks around his Burlington, Vt., hometown, he sees troubling signs of climate change: ski seasons are becoming progressively shorter, maple sap runs are increasingly unpredictable, and tick-borne diseases are creeping farther north. The shifts only increase his determination to confront climate change. “I want to be able to look at my kids and tell them honestly that Dad is engaged in meaningful work that will help secure their future,” he says.

As founder and CEO of Encore Renewable Energy, Farrell is knee-deep in the fight. A leader in the field of community-scale clean energy generation projects, including solar project development, brownfield redevelopment and energy storage, Encore is committed to demonstrating that renewable energy is practical, competitive and economically feasible.

PROFILE

A Familiar Face

Kendy Alvarez ’06 is Lewisburg’s new mayor
by Brooke Thames
Anyone who’s lived in Lewisburg, Pa., long enough has likely encountered Kendy Alvarez ’06. From organizing the annual ice festival and holiday light display to serving on the leadership boards for the local Rotary Club and chamber of commerce, Alvarez is nearly as much of a fixture of the borough as its iconic three-globe lamp posts and historic Victorian homes.

“It had been a running joke among my family and friends that I was the ‘unofficial mayor,’ ” says Alvarez who immigrated to the area from Trinidad at age 5. “They’d kid that if you need something, just call Kendy — she’ll make it happen.”

After running unopposed in the 2021 mayoral race, Alvarez’s status as the community’s go-to resident is no longer unofficial. In January, she was sworn in as the new Lewisburg borough mayor, succeeding Judy Wagner M’71. Alvarez is Lewisburg’s second woman and first woman of color to hold the position and is among the youngest to lead a Susquehanna Valley town.

Kendy Alvarez Headshot
Photo: Emily Paine
Strengthening Lewisburg’s relationship with Bucknell is a goal for Kendy Alvarez ’06.

Career Clusters

Career
Clusters
Not all coaches are looking for a trophy or championship ring. As life coaches, these Bucknellians work with individuals who want to make a change for the better, whether personally, professionally or spiritually.
Infographic detailing sacred and secular coaching, women-centered coaching, and personal and professional coaching
Infographic detailing sacred and secular coaching, women-centered coaching, and personal and professional coaching
WAYFINDER

EMILY MERINGOLO ’16

My most cherished Bucknell friendship was with the late Katherine “Kate” Miller ’16, my whip-smart and bubbly friend and fellow art lover. As an Arts Merit Scholar intent on furthering my classical ballet training, I met Kate shortly after we arrived at Bucknell when we both enrolled in Professor Er-Dong Hu’s ballet class. We quickly bonded over our love of pugs and daily readership of our school’s Message Center digest.

By sophomore year we were not just friends but roommates. When I told Kate that I wanted to study Mandarin and double major in international relations and East Asian studies, without missing a beat, she said, “Emmy, that’s the thing about you: Once you set your mind to something, you go out and do it!”

KATE, THE ENCOURAGER

That year, Kate, an art history major, would often return to our Vedder Hall room to find me bent over my desk scrawling hundreds of Mandarin characters. She was always eager to offer words of encouragement — and it was not lost on Kate that despite my appearance as an Asian American, this was my first encounter with Chinese culture. I was adopted from China as a baby and raised in an Italian American household in New Jersey.
Emily Meringolo painting
Photo: Angel Luis de la Cruz
Emily Meringolo ’16 knows that the late Katherine “Kate” Miller ’16 would champion her new career as an artist.

IN MEMORIAM

Remember your friends, family, classmates and others by posting a comment on our online Book of Remembrance. Go to bucknell.edu/bmagazine.

1943

Clint Hegeman P’70, Oct. 29, Scotia, N.Y.

1944

Mary Strohecker Milligan, Nov. 11, Mechanicsburg, Pa.

Dorothy “Dot” Sonn P’75, Sept. 22, Stamford, Conn.

1945

Luther Pierce, Dec. 15, Gainesville, Fla.

Cal Sholl P’70, Nov. 10, Peterborough, N.H.

Richard Skibbens, Oct. 17, North Canton, Ohio

1946

Carolyn Berkheimer Rosser P’76, Dec. 29, Williamsport, Pa.

1947

Peter Caprari P’75, Nov. 6, Harding, Pa.

Mary Walter Ruggieri, Sept. 14, Kennett Square, Pa.

Bea Dobbs Shoemaker P’80, G’16, Oct. 12, East New Market, Md.

1948

Elaine Grudin Denholtz, Dec. 6, Livingston, N.J.

Milton Mensch, Oct. 7, Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.

Anita Rosenberg Millar, Nov. 27, Champaign, Ill.

1949

Don Carss, Nov. 20, Garden City, N.Y.

Bill Frederick M’49, P’78, P’80, G’08, G’09, G’10, G’13 Oct. 29, Allentown, Pa.

1950

Shirley Mathieson Jackman, Nov. 27, Glen Allen, Va.

Larry Saphier, Oct. 18, Venice, Fla.

Leanne “Le” Freas Trout ’50, P’74, G’99, G’01, G’06, Feb. 9 in Fort Myers, Fla.

Dick Villforth G’94, Nov. 17, Wyomissing, Pa.

in memoriam

Lauren “Larry” Breakiron ’52, H’09, G’09

Lauren “Larry” Breakiron ’52, H’09, G’09, whose support helped shape the future of Bucknell’s nationally ranked engineering program, died March 8 in Gilbert, Ariz.

His notable contributions to Bucknell include funding of the Breakiron Engineering Building and numerous scholarships.

“When it opened in 2004, the Breakiron building made an immediate and significant impact on what we could do with programs and students,” says Erin Jablonski, interim dean of the College of Engineering. “It was immediately 100% occupied. Sentiments at that time were, and continue to be, incredibly thankful that Larry Breakiron made such a much-needed investment in our college.”

in memoriam

Leanne “Le” Freas Trout ’50, P’74, G’99, G’01, G’06

Leanne “Le” Freas Trout ’50, P’74, G’99, G’01, G’06, a passionate champion of Bucknell’s French & Francophone studies program, passed away Feb. 9 in Fort Myers, Fla.

For more than 50 years, Trout poured her heart into her alma mater, endowing multiple scholarships, giving enthusiastically to capital projects and cheering on the Orange and Blue through her generosity to Bison Athletics in honor of her late husband, David ’50, P’74, G’99 G’01, G’06.

But her most significant impact will forever be felt in the Department of French & Francophone studies.

DO

JOIN US!

Save the date for Reunion

Join us June 3–5 to celebrate: class years ending in 2s and 7s, emeritus classes and 50th reunion classes 1970, 1971 and 1972.
Registration is now open.

Mark your calendar!

Plan ahead to join us on campus for Family Appreciation Weekend, Sept. 16–18, and Homecoming Weekend, Sept. 30–Oct. 2.

Answer This:

What’s one lesson from Bucknell you still use every day?

FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK TO SUBMIT YOUR ANSWER

Crowdsourced

What Was Your Favorite Winter Break Adventure?

Jan ’83. Super-fast toboggan run on the Bucknell golf course.
Brad Seamans ’83
Jan Plan ’71 to Paris, Vienna, Budapest and Munich.
Pat Drobnek ’73
Rowing on the St. Johns River in Florida.
Professor Kim Daubman
Rooke Chapel Ringers tour to Switzerland and Austria with the Chapel Choir.
Christian Tordahl ’89
Jan Plan ’80. Tuba City, Ariz., working with Navajo children in a boarding school.
Joellyn Means Zimmerman ’82, M’90, P’18
New Year’s Eve 1999. Traveled to D.C. for the president’s Y2K bash.
Stephanie Farnsworth ’00
Jan Plan ’76. Did research at Monkey Jungle in Miami.
Marti Mitchell Kinsel ’76

Nominate a Bucknellian!

The Bucknell University Alumni Association is seeking nominations to join its board, a diverse group of passionate alumni who care about maintaining a strong bond between alumni, the University and its students.
Daisy Auger-Domínguez
Photo: Theresa Engelbrecht

JOIN THE COMMENCEMENT CELEBRATIONS

Catch Commencement Speaker Daisy Auger-Domínguez ’95, chief people officer at Vice Media Group, and the rest of the University’s 172nd Commencement ceremony on May 22. Join the Class of 2020 for its Commencement
on May 21.

The Art of Fabric

Quilting, weaving, collage and embroidery all come together this spring in an exhibition of fiber art by Susan Ball Faeder ’76. On exhibit until April 30 at the Milton Art Bank in Milton, Pa., are a combination of more than 40 fiber works (1991-2022) as well as 100 quilted miniature amulets displayed in glass vitrines. “The title of the show, Blue, references my affinity for and use of Japanese vintage indigo fabric in my art,” Faeder says.

The Bucknell Japanese studies major has spent most of her life immersed in Japanese art and culture. Her artwork has been exhibited nationally and internationally, including in New York City and Tokyo, and is held in private and corporate collections around the world. Faeder’s miniature amulets also will be featured in an art book, due out in April through Pretzel City Press, which is owned by fellow Japanese studies major Marian Wolbers ’75.

a hand-stitched fiber collage
Photo: Elise Nicol
“Three Friends,” a hand-stitched fiber collage, is one of the pieces featured in Blue.
Cast of portrait of Egyptian King Senwosret III
Photo: Jeffrey Mosier
Cast of portrait of Egyptian King Senwosret III (reproduction), c1950, original c1878-1841 BCE.

An Artful Look at Death

Check out Memento: Museums & Their Dealings with The Dead, an exhibition unlike any the Samek Art Museum has ever presented. Consisting of objects from around the world, Memento examines the ethics of museum collections, including Bucknell University’s own collecting history, by looking at the acquisition of objects from tombs and graves as an exploitation of death.

The exhibition runs until June 12 in the Downtown Gallery of the Samek Art Museum, 416 Market St., Lewisburg.

Witty Winners

Here are our favorite caption submissions from the last issue:
“Before the digital revolution, this is how data compression was achieved.”
Dennis Politi ’81
“With this new press developed in the mechanical engineering labs, in just a few minutes I can make a 250-page book into a two-page Cliffs Notes.”
Bill Headley ’64
“These darn kids eating at the Bison are always asking for their sandwiches ‘pressed’. I do my best, but this isn’t Panera!”
Laura Remaly P’20
“The Turn of the Screw”
Jean Nardi Benning ’59
“In a wave of reform in the 1970s, the head press was abandoned as a disciplinary measure.”
Bob Owen ’74
“Let’s see: 1, 2, 3. Yes, all fingers are still here!”
Scott Luttmann ’65
Submit your caption for the retro photo on Page 61 to bmagazine@bucknell.edu or facebook.com/bucknellu by May 1.
old photograph of a man working in a shop
Photo: Special Collections/University Archives
My Favorite Thing typography

The ‘Noble Rose’ Sculpture

" " After retiring from clinical duties in 2017, neurosurgeon ROBERT MARTUZA ’69 put his skilled hands to use as a sculptor while also continuing research on oncolytic viruses for cancer therapy. Of the sculptures he’s created in his workshop in Marblehead, Mass. — where he lives with his wife of 50 years, S. JILL PFIFER MARTUZA ’69, whom he met their first year at Bucknell — one of his favorites is Noble Rose: Beautiful Forever.
Noble Rose: Beautiful Forever sculpture
Photos: Ted Dillard (rose sculpture); Lucia Prosperi (Martuza sculpting)
" "
Robert Martuza ’69’s current sculpting medium is Pennsylvania anthracite.
Inset: Martuza’s Noble Rose: Beautiful Forever sculpture.
Noble Rose: Beautiful Forever sculpture
Photos: Ted Dillard (rose sculpture); Lucia Prosperi (Martuza sculpting)
" "
Robert Martuza ’69’s current sculpting medium is Pennsylvania anthracite.
Inset: Martuza’s Noble Rose: Beautiful Forever sculpture.

The ‘Noble Rose’ Sculpture

" " After retiring from clinical duties in 2017, neurosurgeon ROBERT MARTUZA ’69 put his skilled hands to use as a sculptor while also continuing research on oncolytic viruses for cancer therapy. Of the sculptures he’s created in his workshop in Marblehead, Mass. — where he lives with his wife of 50 years, S. JILL PFIFER MARTUZA ’69, whom he met their first year at Bucknell — one of his favorites is Noble Rose: Beautiful Forever.
My father died in a coal-mining accident when I was 11. So my mother basically raised me. She had terrible migraine headaches. That was the reason I got into neurosurgery. I was very close to her.

She lived to be two weeks shy of 103. I made Noble Rose: Beautiful Forever in honor of her 100th birthday. In Lithuanian, her name is Adele Roze; in English, it’s Adeline Rose — “noble rose.” The sculpture is of two arthritic hands holding a wilting rose, representing my mother going through the process of aging and showing its beauty.

Back Cover

Students cheered on models at the Black Student Union-sponsored fashion show during the Black Arts Festival in February.

photograph by EMILY PAINE

Back Cover

models posing at the end of the runway
Students cheered on models at the Black Student Union-sponsored fashion show during the Black Arts Festival in February.

photograph by EMILY PAINE

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Thanks for reading our Spring 2022 issue!