indictment of the Soviet system. She later worked as a foreign policy assistant on Capitol Hill, eventually joining the staff of then Sen. Joseph R. Biden (D-Del.) and later serving as a special adviser to the State Department under Lawrence S. Eagleburger and Michael H. Armacost. For the last two decades of her life, she worked for the nonprofit Fabergé Arts Foundation, organizing major exhibitions and coediting Fabergé Flowers (2004), a book that documented Peter Carl Fabergé’s botanically inspired jewelry. She was predeceased by Shub and by her second husband, Leonard Reed. Her survivors include two children from her first marriage, Rachel Shub and Adam Shub, and two grandchildren.
’51 Steven John Covey died on January 30, 2010, in his home in Broomfield, Colorado. He was the son of Lois Lenski Covey, a renowned children’s book author, and Arthur Covey, an artist and muralist. After graduating from Bard, he earned a master’s degree from the Cranbrook Academy of Art. Upon leaving the army in 1955 he met his first wife, Yolanthe, in Holland; they were married in Paris and settled in Phoenix. He was employed by the city’s park and recreation department for more than 30 years as an art teacher and supervisor of the arts and crafts program. His children with Yolanthe— Michael, Vivian, and Jeanine—survive him. He is also survived by his wife, Joy, and four grandchildren.
’50 Isabella von Glatz died on August 4, 2010, in Maryland. She was raised in New Jersey, then attended Bard and Columbia University, where she met her husband of 58 years, Richard A. von Glatz. They lived in the Chicago area for the 10 years, where their children were born. Richard then joined the foreign service, and together they spent the next 25 years living in India, Sri Lanka, Turkey, and Pakistan. In addition to her husband, she is survived by two daughters, Adrienne and Jocelyn, and two grandchildren, Lewis and Natalie. Reporter Anthony Hart Harrigan died on May 28, 2010, in Charlottesville, Virginia. He started his career in 1948 with The News and Courier (now The Post and Courier) in Charleston, South Carolina, working there for 20 years and eventually becoming associate editor. After retiring from the newspaper business, Harrigan enjoyed success as a columnist, author, and contributing editor to the National Review. He wrote several books and dozens of essays on military affairs, foreign policy, and domestic issues, particularly economics. He is survived by his wife, Elizabeth; four children, Anthony, Elliott, Chardon, and Mary; a sister; and 12 grandchildren.
’49 Charlotte Hahn Arner died on February 21, 2011. She was a native of Germany, where her family survived Kristallnacht in Berlin before fleeing to the United States in 1938. She majored in sculpture, and was among the earliest women to graduate from Bard. She went on to study in New York and Paris, and had a one-woman show in Italy in the mid-’50s. She married her classmate Robert Arner, whose paintings are in collections throughout the world, including two paintings on permanent exhibit at Bard. They had two children, Charlotte and Franz. She maintained close ties to Outward Bound, the organization founded by her late uncle, Dr. Kurt Hahn. After Robert’s death in 2002, she began working with a neighbor to document her husband’s life and work, as well as her own family’s story of survival, in words, photographs, and documents. Hundreds of pages had been completed at the time of her death.
’48 Morton Leventhal died on April 23, 2010. He majored in psychology at Bard and went on to earn a Ph.D. in clinical psychology. He had a long career,
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including work as a consulting psychologist for the U.S. Navy, a therapist at the Hines VA clinic in Chicago, and as chief of psychological services at the VA Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky. He was also a therapist in private practice in Chicago, Louisville, and Ft. Myers, Florida. He is survived by his wife, Elaine; a son, Mitchell; a daughter, Valerie; and a sister, Lucille. Janet Reinthal Nash died on May 29, 2010. She majored in social studies at Bard. She was the mother of David and Daniel Nash; grandmother of Benjamin, Lucas, Julia, and Hannah; and sister of the late Robert Reinthal.
’47 Christina Frerichs Person died August 9, 2010, after a long illness. She studied drama/dance at Bard, and went on to be a dancer on the Jimmy Durante Show; a June Taylor dancer on the Jackie Gleason Show; a Rockette at Radio City Music Hall; and a dancer in Broadway and vaudeville productions. She later taught at Calvin Leete School, an elementary school in Guilford, Connecticut. She is survived by three daughters, Sarah, Martha, and Abigail; five grandchildren; and her dear companion, George Hatch. Elaine Postal died on October 10, 2010, in Palm Beach, Florida. After majoring in economics at Bard, she attended the Columbia School of Business and went on to a career that culminated in her position as chairman and chief merchant of Judy Bond, Inc. She is survived by her husband of 64 years, Bob Postal; their children Andrew, Louise, and Debora; and six grandchildren.
’44 Jin Kinoshita died on August 20, 2010, in San José, California. His research focused on treating diabetic cataracts, and he was internationally recognized as a researcher, administrator, professor, and adviser to many young scientists. He was a pioneer in the biochemical study of cataracts and his research continues to have a profound influence on ophthalmic biochemistry. During World War II, the Kinoshita family was relocated from San Francisco to Santa Anita Assembly Center and then to Topaz Relocation Camp in Utah. He was allowed to leave camp to attend Bard. He then received his Ph.D. in biological chemistry from Harvard University and joined the Harvard Medical School faculty. In 1967 he was awarded an honorary doctor of science degree from Bard. In 1971, Kinoshita was appointed chief of the Laboratory of Vision Research in the newly formed National Eye Institute, where he later became scientific director of basic and clinical research. He retired from NEI in 1990 and moved to California to be a clinical research professor of ophthalmology at UC Davis. His awards include the Friedenwald Award, Proctor Medal, Alcon Research Institute Award, and the Distinguished Service Award of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. He was also a two-time nominee for the Nobel Prize and a recipient of Japan’s medal of honor, The Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays. His wife, Kay Kimura Kinoshita, predeceased him, as did his brothers Reiju, Satoshi, and Tadashi. He is survived by his sister, Emiko Chino.
’43 Henry C. Hopewell Jr. died on May 19, 2010. A native of Massachusetts, he graduated from The Choate School, then studied for two years at Bard before enlisting in the U.S. Navy. He served in the Pacific from 1942 to 1945, then returned to his childhood summer home of Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, where he pursued multiple business interests. In the 1960s, he moved to Maine to continue real estate development and building projects. He is survived by his wife, Vicki Cahill Madden; two daughters from a previous marriage, Hillary and BlakeLee; a brother, Frank; two stepsisters, Margaret and