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Clark University in Massachusetts. He has moved to a spacious condo near Balboa Park in San Diego, and reports that he is most happy with both decisions.
A.G. Kozak, M'96, has recently published two articles that appear in Classical Outlook, "Erratum Beatum" and "Ovid Turns 2040! (March 20, 1998)". The latter was reprinted in Love and Transformation - An Ovid Reader: Teacher's Guide.
Paul Grimley Kuntz, K'45, published an essay in the summer of 1998 in Modern Age: A Quarterly Review, "Jefferson as a Man of Moderation." Paul has two books and a dozen articles coming soon, and in the next decade hopes to finish more.
Terri LeClercq, E'98, was named a Distinguished Alumna of Southwest Texas State University in 1997. She was awarded the Norman Black Professorship of Ethics in Legal Education in 1997. Terri wrote two books in 1995, Expert Legal Writing and Guide to Legal Writing Style. She was a visiting professor at St. Louis University School of Law in the fall of 1998, and will be a visiting professor at Catholic University in Washington D.C. in the spring of 1999. Terri's daughter Desiree is a freshman at Indiana University in Bloomington and her son Noel is an Army private at Carlisle, Pennsylvania.
Edward Leroy Long Jr., PD'58, wrote a new book, To Liberate and Redeem: Moral Reflections on the Biblical Narrative. His textbook offers a reading of both the Hebrew and early Christian Scriptures, beginning with Exodus, moving back to the creation narratives, then forward to Israel, Jesus, Paul, and the early church. Persons in bondage need liberation, he asserts, but liberated persons need redemptive structures so as not to become oppressors themselves.
Thomas E. McCollough's, PD'70, book The Moral Imagination and Public Life: Raising the Ethical Question, which was published in 1991, is available through Chatham House Publishers, Inc.
Robert Merikangas E'98 plans to retire as a librarian in 1999 and begin writing about
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and working with wisdom communities and peace education. Robert participated in a presentation on wisdom communities at the World Future Society conference in Chicago in July of 1998. He also participated in a conference on Diversity, Unity, and Human Values in September of 1998 at College Park, Maryland. Robert would like to invite members to browse his personal web page, with links to a conference he is planning in Maryland, and an annotated bibliography on values and education. His home page is, http://www.wam.umd.edu/~bobmerik/home.htm The Bibliography page, "Values and Education in a Democracy: Resources for Conversation: An Annotated Heuristic Bibliography," can be located at, http://www.wam.umd.edu/~bobmerik/value.htm
Helena Meyer-Knapp, E'87, wrote an essay in 1997, "Half Breed or Hybrid?" Helena's essay was published in Daughters of Kings, which is a collection of short stories, by Jews and non-Jews, Americans and immigrants, whites and people of color, about growing up a Jewish woman in America. The authors are all fellows of the Bunting Institute at Radcliffe/Harvard 1994-95.
William Pollard, E'98, has been the Dean of the College at Huntington College since 1995. From 1993-95 he was the Associate VPAA at the University of Evansville. From 1990-93, William was the Dean of the College of Leadership Studies at Kentucky State. He was Assistant Associate Professor of English at Belmont University from 1976-81, and again from 1984-86. From 1981-84, he was an Associate Professor of English at Maryville College. In 1997, William published a book, Spirituality and Mysticism in Medieval England.
Renee Rabinowitz,GFW'67, is planning on retiring as Legal Counsel for Colorado College at the end of the 1998-99 academic year. She writes that her future plans are somewhat uncertain, but suggests that she will most likely engage in discrete projects working with educational administrators in resolving difficult personnel problems.
Mary Ann Rehnke, E'83, published a book in May of 1997, Guide to Spiritual Retreats in the Washington, D.C. Area.
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