It seems true that with age comes ‘wearing out.’ However, I have been fortunate to be able to keep moving, making my own meals, and partaking in my annual one- to two-month ‘walkabout’ trips to visit children. For these two films both filmmakers are interviewing and filming me at my home in Sarasota.”Įlizabeth Alexander Weis (Osprey, FL) wrote: “Hello! If you are reading this, you know the feeling of envy when you see someone running up the stairs or jogging down the street. Two documentary films will be made about the stewardesses’ struggle for equal rights: one by Sarah Colt Productions for PBS and the other by British-American filmmaker Hugo Berkeley for international distribution. I drafted the decision of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 1968, finding that those sexist policies violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. airlines, which at the time, among other things, terminated or grounded stewardesses (now called flight attendants) based on marriage or turning age 32 or 35. “The book tells the story of the airline stewardesses’ successful fight against sexist policies by certain U.S. The book has been selected by the Washington Post as one of the top nonfiction books of 2022. For example, Sonia Pressman Fuentes (Sarasota, FL) wrote in: “On April 19, 2022, a book was published called The Great Stewardess Rebellion: How Women Launched a Workplace Revolution at 30,000 Feet, by Nell McShane Wulfhart, which featured a trio of women, of whom I was one. Please send your news! ❖ Ray Tuttle ( email Ray) | Alumni Directory.Ī current pleasure of this class correspondent’s job is learning about our nonagenarian classmates still actively involved in their life’s work. We also received a short update from Jane Schenker Gelman, who reports that she has moved to Ann Arbor to be near her daughter Susan. “It is very satisfying when we come up with the right answer, especially if the contestants do not!” In closing, she says, “I credit my years at Cornell with guiding me to my paths of employment and pleasure. Joyce cites an interesting activity wherein she and two friends jointly watch “Jeopardy!” daily by telephone and endeavor to answer the questions. Joyce Van Denburgh Doty ’48, MFA ’50, and two friends jointly watch ‘Jeopardy!’ daily by telephone and endeavor to answer the questions. I’m so glad to see her having a rebirth, and I think she’s doing very well at it.” Joyce writes, “My daughter Edith has retired from Abbott Labs and gone back to school-studying art! I tried to interest her in art as a child, but she’d have none of it. Granddaughters Elizabeth (mother of one) and Jennifer (mother of two) studied at Oklahoma University and Boston College, respectively, and grandson Christopher studied at Texas Christian University. Her children: Harold ’73, Janet, Edith, and Michael attended Cornell, Rice, University of Houston, and CalTech, respectively. Perhaps invigorated by the oxygen she uses (though she never smoked, she presumes she inhaled others’), she goes beyond her own TV watching of both old black-and-white shows and modern news to describe her extended family in some detail. I also remember drinking beer out of any container we could find and sliding down Libe Slope on trays from the cafeteria.” ❖ Class of 1947 ( email c/o Alexandra Bond ’12) | Alumni Directory.Īt our age, members of the Class of ’48 have an abundance of free time-and Joyce Van Denburgh Doty, MFA ’50, made excellent use of it with a detailed response to the Share Your News form. I remember ice skating on Beebe Lake and many parties we architecture students had. I still play golf and keep busy with bridge, etc.”Ībout Cornell, Joan writes, “I remember Junior Week dances in the Armory with big name bands at either end of the building. He is a professor at the University of California, Chico. “When Pat died, I moved to an active adult community in Chico, CA, where my son, daughter-in-law, and granddaughter live. I remember Junior Week dances in the Armory with big name bands at either end of the building. During those years we took many cruises, as well as golfing and fishing trips. In 1988 he retired, and we spent 21 years in Sonoma until he died in 2009. “We later moved to Foster City and Pat opened his architectural office in San Mateo. Another roommate, Rosemary Williamson Colgate, and her husband, Stirling ’48, PhD ’52, lived in Livermore, also close. “My Alpha Phi roommate, June Johnson Reynolds, and her husband, Hugh, lived in Sunnyvale, not too far away. We then returned to the West Coast and lived for 18 years in Sacramento, where our daughter Gail and son Tom were born. “After being married, we spent a year in Seattle and returned to Ithaca, as Pat needed one more term to get his degree. We received a wonderful letter from Joan Dall Patton, who fondly reflected on her life with husband Ed “Pat” Patton, BArch ’49.
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