How are the Morgans? Just fine thanks. Bob Morgan has after six years left Boston University, where he was director of the theater arts division, to resume freelance theater design. He and Wendy, deputy director of Vermont Legal, live in Peacham, Vt., along with their four young children, Caitlin Tucker, Alec, and Eli, all under seven.
And Will Morgan has logged 23 years as professor of fine arts at the University of Louisville, where he teaches the history of arts and architecture and writes books and articles. Carolyn is also an art teacher, at Louisville Collegiate School, and is a potter. They have four children: Whitney, an architecture student at the University of Virginia; Jamey, a Bowdoin graduate off to study in Berlin; Joel, a civil-engineering graduate from Union; and Lindsay, a high-school senior.
The Northern Trust Bank in Naples, Fla., has promoted Robert Wilson to senior VP. He has been with the bank for 20 years. Bob was a carrier pilot aboard the U.S.S. Ticonderoga and U.S.S. Hornet during Vietnam. He's currently president of the Dartmouth Club of Southwest Florida. He lives with Sally and their two children on Marco Island.
Who do you think manages an advanced telecommunications/ computer network project to give public-health agencies access to enhanced health monitoring and remote resources over multiprotocol, wide-area networks? If you named Tony Moulton, director of development, health information systems at Emory University, you win a megabyte of praise. Tony and his wife, Monica Eischen who works at the Centers for Disease Control, are in the two hottest areas of U.S. business—health and computers. And daughter Zoe is in the third: she's enrolled in the Scottsdale, Ariz., Culinary Institute.
Tony, who served in the Peace Corps from 1964 to '66, graduated with the class of 1968. He earned a Ph.D. in political science at the University of Chicago and later was director of the governor's Budget & Planning Office from 1989 to 1993 in Missouri.
Here's the Dean Mathews update. Dean is president of Marathon Foods in (where else?) Minneapolis, a small industrial food brokerage that supplies nutrients to Pillsbury, fruit concentrates to General Mills, chocolate to Haagen Dazs, and packaging to Cargill. He's been married to Susan for 27 years. Son Dean's graduating from the University of Minnesota and daughter Kelly will spend the first semester of her senior year at St. Lawrence in Vienna.
In the It s never too late department, Dean recently visited old linemate Bill Jevne in Washington and met Bill's year-old son William, a prospective member of the class of 2014.
And Greg McGregor, a partner in his own Boston environmental law firm, married Sharon, a Massachusetts environmental official, on June 11.
Bruce McKissock is president and Principal shareholder of McKissock & Hoffman, a mid-size litigation law firm in Carversville, Pa., 35 miles north of Philly, Bruce and Nina have three children, ages five through 12.
It seems Mike Bromley, a lawyer in Colorado Springs, and I have at least one thing in common—daughters who were accepted into the Dartmouth class of 1998. Mike's ultimately chose Amherst. (Mine, Maggie, will be going to Hanover. Anyone else?) Mike's wife, Rebecca, is a county court judge, and his son has completed two years at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Wash. Keep in touch.
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