Our class has produced its share of managing directors in the financial world. Greg Lee lives in Manhattan with his family. He is a managing director for Goldman Sachs and is head of the transport and infrastructure group. Bob Kent is a managing director in the financial sponsors group at Stifel Nicolaus in Philadelphia. The Kents enjoy life in Bryn Mawr, Pa. Gordon DeKuyper is a managing director in the global banking group at Citibank living with his family in Calgary, Alberta. Roli Breitenecker is doing well in NYC. He still works in private wealth management at Morgan Stanley. Roli, Jooin and Luke, 7, live in Waccabuc, N.Y. They enjoyed a great vacation last year in Hawaii. Roli reports that all those bluegrass festivals he spent with Luke on his shoulders are paying off, “Luke loves Jerry Douglas and wants a banjo for Christmas.” He keeps in touch with Robb Doub and Jeff Tadder, and looks forward to his annual ski trip with them and his brothers to Alta. Peter Tomlinson is a partner at the law firm of Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler in New York and focuses on complex financial litigation. His wife Tracey is a partner at the law firm of Hogan Lovells in New York. They live in Manhattan and have three girls Phoebe (age 10), Zoe (age 8), and Nadine (age 3). They try to spend a lot of time at their place in Northwest Connecticut, and this year took an awesome trip to Big Sky, Montana. Last year Bo Fowlkes took a leave of absence from Fletcher Asset Management in NYC to work on a design job on a small boutique hotel in Marrakech, Morocco. “I was there from May through September, working through 120 F days, dust storms, mud, rain . . . unpleasant but an adventure.” Now back in New York, Bo’s company recently purchased Arthur Frommer’s Budget Travel magazine, where he writes, consults for the editor-in-chief and has been busy trying to turn them into an APP. In March 2011, Bo and his partner Mehul traveled to India where they spent the last 10 days in a Buddhist monastery in Dharamsala on a God-finding mission. “I figure He’s got to be hiding somewhere in the Himalayas,” Bo writes. Andy Layton and his wife Jodi and sons Joshua and Jonathan moved to Chappaqua, N.Y., last year (just a short walk from President Clinton’s house). Andy was promoted to director of Anderson Real Estate Partners, which has him traveling to college campuses across the country. “When I travel to ACC schools, I always leave my Duke basketball hat in the car,” Andy reports. Mark Flaherty works for Virgin Mobile in Warren, N.J., and his family lives in Metuchen. I received an e-mail from Mark while he was traveling in Alaska. “My annual expedition took me above the Arctic Circle, one Northern Lights viewing so far, and several days at -35 F. Skiing at Alyeska.” Randall Krongard lives in East Hampton with wife Allison and two kids. He is still cranking out screenplays for TV and film. Randall’s film “Override” was shown in NYC in February. Back in Maryland, Ted McKeldin continues on active duty (Lt. Col., USMCR) with the new U.S. Cyber Command at Fort Meade. He is working on strategy and policy. Ted stays in touch with Brad Wheeler and enjoys virtual reunions through Facebook. In Fall 2010,
Ted had a great trip hunting with the Zulu in South Africa. “Back to the Motherland in August 2011, to hunt Mozambique, then back to KwaZulu-Natal. Hunting, too, for a house in our native BAWLmer, and for a potential spouse (who won’t object to large African game heads covering her walls).” Paul Sabundayo practices internal medicine with a group out of Mercy Hospital, and his wife Beulah conducts vaccine research at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. They live in Glyndon and their girls, Chloe, 10, and Sophie, 6, attend Friends. Adam Morgan is still working as a radiologist at Upper Chesapeake Medical Center in Bel Air, Md. He spends his weekends watching his sons play soccer/basketball/lacrosse/ swimming. Adam says, “My injury and wheelchair give a new level to the expression ‘living vicariously through my kids.’ “The recession has even hit medicine,” he continues. “Even my group’s large radiology practice is contracting. As my oldest enters middle school, the possibility of becoming a Gilman parent looms even larger on my horizon. I would be lying if I did not admit that the recession has influenced my decision to likely delay him applying to Gilman until high school.” If or when his boys go to Gilman, he reports his youngest would be class of 2020 with Toby Broadus’s and Brad Lebow’s sons. Adam’s oldest would be class of 2017 with one of Tim Oursler’s boys. Toby is finishing his 10th year at Gilman teaching classics in the Upper School. Brad and his family are in Baltimore, and he is working at Horich Parks Lebow Advertising in Hunt Valley. Tim is a partner at Royston Mueller McLean & Reid in Towson where he is spending most of his time in commercial and residential real estate, estate planning and estate administration. He reports, “TJ and Wade are in eighth and sixth grades, respectively, at Gilman and enjoying themselves. Virginia loves tenth age (fourth grade) at Calvert. All three are playing rec. basketball. However, given their parents’ heights, their basketball days may be numbered.” Tim was recently picking up his son from the Haswell Franklin Gilman Duals wrestling tournament and ran into Mr. Finney and Mr. Schloeder. He reported they both looked great. When he asked how they were doing, they responded in unison and with a smile, “We’re here!” Jason Pappas and wife Cindy welcomed their second son, Eric, about a year ago. Their son Luke is almost four. They moved to a new house in Canton this year and are firmly entrenched in raising the family in the city. Jason reports, “Business is great. I am running a management consulting firm downtown that is doing interim CEO and turnaround work.” Jason is a principal at Hannix Consulting, Inc., the chairman of the Board at Big Brothers Big Sisters and The Maryland Mentoring Partnership, and the newly-appointed chairman of the Board of the Greater Baltimore Technology Council. David Long and his wife Liz just had their second son, Eli. David reports, “All are well. We are working in Baltimore; Liz is faculty at Hopkins, and I manage my management consulting business and make short films.” Ed Sharkey practices business law and litigation in Bethesda, Md. His firm celebrates its eighth
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