The Bulletin: Summer 2013

Page 128

Eddie Rosemond ’85, Mark Agent ’85, Rory Muhammed ’85 and Tony Murray ’85.

in Honolulu this fall. Not surprisingly my kids grew up big, I gave them size but they got their athletic and musical abilities from their Mom’s side! My oldest Paul just wrapped up his stint playing football (center and right guard) for Akron and has taken a job in Cincinnati. My son Zachary, 17, is a very good bass player and has his own band, my daughter Caitlin, 14, plays lead guitar in a band and, when we are not watching their gigs, we spend much of our time in gyms and convention centers around the country watching her play volleyball, and my “little” one Tegan, 8, is already 5'3" and playing junior volleyball.” My wife Jennifer and I live in Roland Park with our almost 3-year-old twins. We recently founded an organic food company, B’more Organic. We make drinkable yogurt smoothies and have now gotten them on the shelves at 50 Wegman’s stores and over 20 regional Whole Foods. We donate 10% of the proceeds to M.S. and breast cancer research at Johns Hopkins. Richard Jacobs visited with us last fall and has this to say: “Not a whole lot has changed since last year. Same job and fortunately same wife and child. We enjoyed visiting with the Buerger family this summer and watching my son Ace attempt to break the consumption record for number of B’more Organic smoothies over a the course of a week. He managed to down 10 — take that as a challenge!” It’s a pure coincidence that his son is very accomplished in the martial arts and flag football in Orange County, Calif.

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1985 Ted Winstead tedwinstead@gmail.com “New Orleans was insane, and the game was awesome,” Tommy Horst said after returning from the Super Bowl in February. “The game has become larger than life.” Tommy and his wife Indira had hoped to turn the game into a Gilman reunion of sorts. After the Baltimore Ravens defeated the Patriots in the playoffs, Steve Ciccarone, David Rody and Jay Davidson went online to make arrangements. But after failing to get flights into New Orleans, everyone except Tommy bailed. He and Indira flew from their home in Miami to Pensacola and then drove three hours to New Orleans on Super Bowl Sunday. With tickets from StubHub, they hit the French Quarter, eating dozens of oysters and pounds of crawfish. “The game was stressful, especially after the blackout,” Tommy reported. “When it was over, we were more relieved than excited because of the scary comeback. But the whole experience was a once-in-alifetime event. For any football fan, I recommend it.” Back in Baltimore, Greg Gunning’s upscale pizza restaurant, Earth, Wood & Fire, was doing a brisk business on a recent Tuesday evening. A reviewer for The Sun praised the establishment last year, saying that its charcoal-burning oven was “blazing with promise.” For Richard Weinstein, life in Atlanta has been good. “I’ve been here 20 years now and am happily married with an 8-year-old daughter and 6-year-old son. Although we “lost” Darin Hall to Cincinnati, I still get to see fellow ’85ers Chip Dates, Jeff Grant and Bill Stratton.”

class notes

7/23/13 6:22 PM


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