Katherine “Dewie” Buechner Arthaud
Catherine “Catie” A. Camp
Eleanor “Ellie” A. Dwight
Mary Atwater James
Lee Woodsum Jones
Alyce Jones Lee
Patricia “Tish” Churchill Lewis
Charlotte “Holly” P. Lyman
Susan A.T. MacGrath
Elizabeth “Lili” Hanna Morss
Naomi Pollock
The Rev. Maria Eddy Tjeltveit
Not pictured: Megan D. Gadd
Susan MacGrath: “I am living in Bozeman, Montana, with my husband, Martin, and fourlegged ‘son’ Zori (an Aussie). My daughter, Lorea, is at Holderness School in New Hampshire, climbing, ice-climbing, and backcountry skiing, studying hard, and super involved with the community. She is off to Spain for her senior year to sharpen her Spanish skills, immerse herself in another culture, and push past her comfort zone. Ironically, the farm we have in the Basque Country is only two and a half hours from where she will be living next year (Zaragoza), whereas for the past three years, Lorea has been two plane rides plus a two-hour drive away.”
Lili Hanna Morss: “I am a landscape architect with my own practice, living in Concord, Massachusetts, with my husband, Steve. We are the proud parents of three daughters who all graduated from Groton. With no more soccer games and crew races to watch, we enjoy spending our weekends doing our own outdoor activities: hiking, biking, skiing, and more!” Naomi Pollock: “In 1988, my husband and I moved to Tokyo. Nearly thirty years later, we’re still here. Japan has been wonderful for both of us professionally and was a terrific place for our two, now college-age, daughters to grow up. An architect-turned-
journalist, I write about design in Japan. In addition to magazine work, I am the author of seven books. Being a writer has enabled me to remain connected to my profession in the United States, become an expert on architecture in Japan, and still be at school in time for pick-up when my children were young. In my spare time, I work on a crisis hotline and enjoy exploring Japan’s nooks and crannies with my family.” Maria Eddy Tjeltveit: “I am the rector of the Episcopal Church of the Mediator in Allentown, Pennsylvania, and Canon for Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations for the
Episcopal Diocese of Bethlehem. I am married to Alan Tjeltveit, a psychology professor at Muhlenberg College, and we have two children — William, a freshman at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut, and Anna, a sophomore at William Allen High School in Allentown, where I am the president of the PTSA. I have been an Episcopal priest for thirty years, serving in West Virginia, Virginia, New Jersey, and now Pennsylvania. I attended Swarthmore College and Yale Divinity School. I have continued to row, where I could, in community rowing programs, but mostly I just run with my dog.”
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