Class Notes

1963

APRIL 1994 Harry Zlokower,
Class Notes
1963
APRIL 1994 Harry Zlokower,

Diamonds are forever, that's what Adam Heyman says, and especially in April, when prestigious jewelry stores are doing their planning for the Christmas season. Adam is a director of Oscar Heyman & Brothers Inc., one of the nation's largest and oldest jewelry companies. Located in midManhattan, the Heyman family concern employs some 100 jewelers, gem setters, engravers, and polishers who design and produce earrings, bracelets, and rings for boutiques on Fifth Avenue, Newbury Street, Michigan Avenue, Rodeo Drive, Worth Avenue, the fashionable streets here and overseas. Adam spends much time traveling to the far reaches of the world in search of the perfect gem, places such as Sri Lanka, India, and Thailand. He also goes to Hanover, not just to visit Ward Amidon, one of his customers, but to visit Gregory Heyman '96. Douglas Heyman '98 will follow in his father and brother's footsteps next September. Adam and Joanne have a daughter Katherine aged ten.

Paul Wagner of LaGrange Park, Ill., studied for die Lutheran ministry. He also travels the country collecting old books, particularly those by or relating to Thomas Jefferson. But what Paul does most of the time these days is keep alleged and convicted murderers off of death row. A graduate of Kent College of Law, Paul has a criminal practice in Chicago which extends to white-collar and drugrelated crimes. When he's not in the jailhouse, court or his office, he's scouring rarebook dealers on the East Coast searching for late 18th-century and 19th-century manuscripts, a hobby stemming from 1970s graduate work in ethics at the University of Chicago. Wife Lois, now retired, was a credit executive at Marshall Field & Co.

Brace Coggeshall, a familiar face at Dartmouth Homecomings, practices a different kind of law in a different kind of setting. He's head of the corporate and finance department at the 100-lawyer Portland, Maine, firm of Pierce, Atwood, Scribner, Allen, Smith & Lancaster. Bruce joined the firm immediately out of Cornell in 1967 and helped build his department from 11 to 18 lawyers. Bruce Jr. recently graduated from the University of Denver, and Jack is at Syracuse. Phyllis retired as pharmacist with Hannaford Brothers, a supermarket chain.

Mark Corey, formerly associate dean of the J. William Fulbright College of Arts & Sciences at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, has been named director of humanities. In his new position, he shapes curriculum, schedules classes, raises money, and advises students for studies in gender, religion, and other interdisciplinary programs. He also is professor of German, specialist in 20th-century, including Thomas Mann, an interest dating to his Dartmouth major. An Indiana University Ph.D., Mark taught 12 years at the University of Nebraska, joining Arkansas in 1982. Mark and Judith, also a Ph.D. and a German teacher at Arkansas, have three daughters, Genevieve, an honors graduate student in German at Fulbright College, Robin, an anthropology major at the University of California, and Stephanie, a high-school senior.

David Dawley, Washington, D.C., is Executive Senior Black Belt National Karate Champion, having won two gold medals at the National Tae Kwon Do championships in Minneapolis. New Yorker Rich Braddock returned from a bike tour of Provence in southern France with wife Susan and Dartmouth friends.

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