Class Notes

1951

MAY 1983 Dave Wiggins
Class Notes
1951
MAY 1983 Dave Wiggins

Mike lovenko was married to Nancy Riley Newhouse on March 6 at their home in Manhattan, hattan, by the Reverend Daphne Hawks, an Episcopal priest. Nancy, an alumna of Vassar College, is the editor of the living/style department of The New York Times. She was formerly an editor of House and Garden magazine and at New York magazine. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fenwick Charles Riley, live in Eureka, Calif. Mike is a senior partner in the law firm of Leboeuf, Lamb Leiby and MacRae and is president of the New York State Council of Voluntary Family and Child Care Agencies. He was formerly deputy superintendent and counsel of the New York State Banking Department. Mary Riley Smith was matron of honor for her sister and David Tillinghast was Mike's best man.

The board of directors of the Charles A. Dana Foundation has elected Bob Kreidler as president of the foundation, David Mahoney, the chairman of the board, announced following the board's annual meeting. The Dana Foundation, founded by Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Dana in 1950, is a private, philanthropic foundation with primary interests in health and higher education. Bob was previously vice president of the Carnegie Institution of Washington and a consultant to several independent foundations and private institutions such as the Klingenstein Fund and the Teagle Foundation. In making the announcement, David Mahoney said: "Mr. Kreidler comes to the Charles A. Dana Foundation with long and varied experience with us as we take up the challenges facing the private, non-profit sector in the 1980's and beyond." After Dartmouth, with graduate degrees from Harvard University, Bob served as a member of the White House staff from 1958 to 1962. After leaving the White House, Bob joined the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, serving as executive vice president from 1968 to 1980. In addition to publishing many reports and articles in the general fields of science and public policy, and science and technology for international development, Bob can claim the following affiliations: fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; member of the Council on Foreign Relations; trustee of Barnard College (1981); for the National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council, member of the National Academy of Science Board on Development. (1965-1975 and 1980-81), chairman of the panel on science and technology in Jordanian development (1979), and chairman of the visiting group on administration and finance to the International Center for Insect Physiology and Ecology (1978); and member of the Lincoln Center Media Development Advisory Committee.

Dick Halloran, of The New York Times, was awarded the George Polk Award in the 1982 national reporting category for articles on Department of Defense planning for a possible nuclear war. It has been reported to me from several reliable sources that even though the Polk Awards aren't as well known publicly as the Pulitzer Prizes, they are highly sought-after in the journalism profession. Established by Long Island University in 1949 to honor the memory of a CBS correspondent killed in 1948 while covering the Greek Civil War, the Polk Awards recognize outstanding jounalists in several different categories.

Word has come in that the official team colors for Berl Berhard's newly-organized Washington Federals are not red, white, and blue but green and white. Good work, Berl.

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