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164 AN T I OC H CO L L E G E C L A S S O F 19 6 5 5 0 t h A N N I V E R S A R Y B O O K S T R I C H A R T Z laincy visit, to the sick and the dying and their families there is a spiritual thread held, shared, recognized, that contributes to weave the world to- gether. That I might be part of that whole fabric is a blessing. Antioch’s recent rise has been exciting and inspiring to me. Just be- fore the college closed I had started serving on a science advisory board, and some of us alumni, e.g., John Dawson, for whom I was a teaching assistant in physics,worked together to develop a new science and math curriculum for the reborn college. Its recent accreditation progress is a shared joy and I am grateful to all those folks who made it so. I look for- ward to returning toYellow Springs, to teach, to listen and to learn from the college where so much of myself first took wing. Bernie Guyer calls me when he’s in town and we kibitz over cof- fee. Barry Singer, with whom I was a hall “mother” in Mills for a year, writes from Southeast Asia, when provoked. Hausman and I reminisce through increasingly faulty memo- ries but luxurious imaginations. For years I exchanged letters, then e- mails, even a visit in Vancouver,with my dear friend, the late Steve Straker. I miss him. Our 50th Anniversary Reunion calls loudly to me and I have every intention of joining all of you there. Gary with grandchildren Jake and Genevieve Killelea. Confused and amused by data, with research colleagues Alla Khodorova and Jean-Pierre Montmayeur. A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

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