1970
1967-1973
Chip Cody is still in N.Y.C. with an academic practice (breast surgical oncology at Memorial Sloan Kettering). His spouse, Myung-Hi Kim, is retired from a long career with the New York Philharmonic (violin). All three daughters are in the N.Y.C. area. On the minus side, his mediocre squash and tennis are in decline, and deer continue to eat his garden (“deer resistant” is an oxymoron). On the plus side, cycling and skiing are still okay and the Lionel trains are coming out of storage—a Proustian experience on entering the “grandparent zone.”
Bob Fraser is retired from his radiation oncology career in Charlotte, North Carolina. His wife, Norinne, and he enjoy duplicate bridge, gardening and trips abroad. During Covid they spent lots of time at their beach house on Figure 8 Island (Wilmington, North Carolina). They raised two sons as “Tarheels,” but it stuck for just one (Jamie), who is an orthopedic surgeon in Charlotte. He and his wife Lisa are raising three girls under 8 years old. Their older son, Rob, chose Stanford and fell in love with surfing and a California girl. He’s in private equity and lives in Manhattan Beach, California.
“Arbus” Whitcomb keeps fairly busy because his and his family’s health remains “pretty good.” He writes aweekly columnfornews website G0L0cal24.com, runs a little site called newenglandiary. com, and does book proj ects, the latest being Maine Oysters: Stories of Resilience and Innovation. (Hint: It’s about more than oysters and Maine.) He’s also been promoting the nonprofitLap/iam’s Quarterly, ajournal ofhistory and ideas. For most of his career, he held senior editorial positions at the Providence Journal Bulletin. He also did a three-year stint in Paris. He and wife Nancy are still living in the old house in Providence, Rhode Island, which they moved into in 1990. One daughter still lives in Providence, the other in New York.
—Stu Zuckerman, P.O. Box 85, Bridgehampton, New York 11932; (917) 559-0063; stuartz@gmail.com
Stu Zuckerman