Moya Connelly writes, “I moved to New York a year ago from Luxembourg. I am working in the impact investing group (investments that have a social and/or environmental return as well as financial) at Deutsche Bank.” Banker White lives in San Francisco with his wife, Anna Fitch, and their 2-year-old daughter, Dylan Tilly White. They own a documentary film-production company together. Their most recent film, The Genius of Marian, will screen again in Boston at the Museum of Fine Arts January 15 through 22, 2014. The film is a visually rich, emotionally complex story that follows Pam White (Banker’s mother) in the early stages of Alzheimer’s. The film paints a powerful contemporary portrait of the impact of Alzheimer’s disease, the power of art and the meaning of family. Pam and her husband, Ed White, live in Dedham, Mass. The Genius of Marian premiered in spring 2013 at the Tribeca Film Festival. Since then, the film has been invited to more than a dozen
1992 CLASS CORRESPONDENT
Lynne Dumas Davis 703-623-4211 LynneDumas@aol.com
1993 CLASS CORRESPONDENT
Sam Jackson 978-409-9444 sambjackson@hotmail.com
Banker White ’91 with wife Anna and daughter Dylan Tilly White
1994 CLASS CORRESPONDENT
Annie Stephenson Murphy film festivals worldwide, including AFI Docs in Washington, D.C., the Independent Film Festival Boston, the Moscow International Film Festival in Russia and the EBS International Documentary Festival in Seoul, South Korea. The Genius of Marian took home the Grand Jury Prizes from the Camden International Film Festival, the Washington West Film Festival and the Heartland Film Festival.
415-377-4466 annie_stephenson@yahoo.com Annie Stephenson Murphy writes, “Greetings from the West Coast, where I am writing this update while dressed as a Red Sox superfan (beard and all) for Halloween. What an exciting World Series! There’s been so much going on around the world with the Class of 1994—new jobs, new homes,
new spouses, new babies and new degrees. It was great to hear from so many of our classmates. I forward to catching up while at the 20th reunion in May 2014. Karen Anderson was living the words of one of Dick Baker’s favorite morning assembly books when she decided to make a change. She writes, ‘One day I had a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day and decided to move to Australia. I’ve been working for Lindt Chocolate for the past six years since I got my MBA at Babson. I’ve been managing the Lindor brand (the truffles) for Lindt USA and an opportunity to manage Lindor in Sydney for six months while a product manager was on maternity leave could not be passed up. I arrived at the beginning of September and will head home at the end of February. I’m living just across the bridge in North Sydney and traveling all over the place while I’m here.’ Phil Higgins is pleased to report, ‘I successfully defended my doctoral dissertation in social work and am now a full-fledged Ph.D.
Left: Tim Russell ’88 on the album “End of Beginnings”; middle: Nick Lundgren ’89 with his kids, Oona and Mookie; right: In July 2013, 32 people, including current and past parents, graduates and faculty, participated in the Nobles Cup, hosted by Nobles parents Jim and Kristen Atwood at the Shelter Harbor Golf Club in Charlestown, R.I. From left: Tim Jones ’89, Patrick Sheehan ’89, J.P. Plunkett ’89 and Dave Aznavorian ’88 were this year’s winners.
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