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1965Class Notes Archives----- From December 2011 AALFNY Newsletter ----- ● Renée Marton wrote: "After spending many years running restaurant kitchens, I now teach in culinary school, and research and write about food history. My book on the history of rice will be published in 2012. My next project will be to translate an old French cookbook into English." ● "Berit de Koenigswarter is the perfect example of the multi-faceted artist. In the early days of her career, she worked as a commercial graphic artist in New York City. More recently, she concentrates on creating artwork as a printmaker. She works primarily in Monotype, Etching, Collagraph, Woodcut and Lithography. Her career exhibits the balanced and talented hand of the consummate professional......Berit's pieces have been exhibited at the Musee D'art Moderne, Paris and the New York Printmakers Show. Exhibitions in Scotland include: the Dundee Contemporary Art Center, the Dundee Heritage Trust, Dundee Repertory Theatre, the Society of Scottish Artists at the Edinburgh Royal Academy, the Watermill Gallery-Aberfeldy, the Fortingall Art Exhibition, and the Glasgow Print Studio Summershow. Berit was born in Norway, now lives in New York City. She has received the Venture Magazine Cover Award and studied at the Academie Julian in Paris, The School of Visual Arts and Art Students League. She is also a graduate of Parsons School of Design in New York. Her work can be found in private collections around the world." (http://www.yourart.com/go.php?id=95530&url=aHR0cDovL3d3dzQud2VibmcuY29tL2Jlcml0ZGVrLw==) ----- From November 2010 AALFNY Newsletter ----- ● Victor de la Serna told us that he "is still Deputy Editor of El Mundo, a newspaper in Madrid, and that he has just completed the tenth harvest at his Finca Sandoval wine estate in southeastern Spain." ● Renée Marton wrote that she "has written a culinary memoir about food and family, and especially about making cheesecake-- a family tradition-- with her mother, who had Parkinson's disease for many years. The memoir, and recipe, can be found in "Storied Dishes: What Our Family Recipes Tell Us About Who We Are and Where We've Been," a compendium of 50 essays, memoirs and recipes which will be published this November, 2010, by Praeger. The book can be pre-ordered at amazon.com and bn.com." (click on link below) ● "Bonnie Bailer, J.D. is the Director of the Center for Healthier Communities at Northridge Hospital Medical Center. She is responsible for the overall CATS [Center for Assault Treatment Services] program administration and fiscal management. She has more than 20 years of experience in nonprofit organization management, in her capacity as Directing Attorney for two public interest programs at Public Counsel Law Center, Los Angeles, and professional fundraiser for the NAACP and the United Nations Association, New York. Ms. Bailer joined Northridge Hospital Medical Center in 1999. She holds a Masters degree in Education from Queens College of the City University of New York, and a law degree from Columbia University." (http://www.abuse-assaultservices.org/about.html) Videos of LFNY alumni on the internet: ● Danielle Schulein Steel talks about her book, SOUTHERN LIGHTS (Click on link below) ----- From December 2009 AALFNY Newsletter ----- ● "Before reviving her long standing interest in the relationship between food and culture by acquiring a Master’s degree in Food Studies at NYU, Renee Marton worked in restaurant kitchens for 15 years, including twelve as Executive Chef. While at NYU, she taught in culinary schools in NYC, always with an emphasis on gastronomy, as well as textbook and technique. In addition to teaching, Renee has been published on subjects as varied as the history of the grilled cheese sandwich, American confectionary companies and restaurants, commercial fishing, immigrant students and French culinary vocabulary, and the history and prevention of foodborne illness." ----- From January 2009 AALFNY Newsletter ----- ● "World renowned novelist Danielle Steel granted audience to AfricaNews over the weekend on wide ranging issues. The author of the over 60 books of 570 million copies worldwide spoke about her career, the ideal woman, the African woman, the global economic crisis and the election of Barack Obama." (AFRICAnews, January 26,2009. You can read the article by clicking on the link below.) ----- From July 2008 AALFNY Newsletter ----- ● Tuyet Ha Vinh wrote: "I'm afraid I have not been in touch with anyone for decades, so I'd love to catch up. I live in a wonderful little town called Arles, and if any of my ex class-mates or friends visits the south of France, please do drop by, I'd be delighted! Warm greetings from Provence." ● Renee Marton, CCP: “Before reviving her long standing interest in the relationship between food and culture by acquiring a Master’s degree in Food Studies at NYU, Renee Marton worked in restaurant kitchens for 15 years, including 12 as Executive Chef. While at NYU, she taught in culinary schools in NYC, always with an emphasis on gastronomy, as well as textbook and technique. In addition to teaching, Renee has been published on subjects as varied as the history of the grilled cheese sandwich, commercial fishing, Spanish speaking students and French culinary vocabulary, and the history and prevention of foodborne illness.” (From: Astor Center, http://www.astorcenternyc.com/instructor-renee-marton-ccp.ac) See Alumni Creative section of this newsletter, or click on link below, for an article by Renée. ----- From December 2007 AALFNY Newsletter ----- ● Tuyet Ha Vinh wrote: "I only spent the first trimester at the Lycée, but it remains a very strong memory, and I would love to hear from former classmates." ----- From June 2007 AALFNY Newsletter ----- ● Béatrice Tabah est peintre et sculpteur; elle travaille et vit à Troyes. « Exploratrice de l'avenir, entre dimension corporelle et idée spirituelle. Exploratrice de l'avenir, la quête passionnée de l'artiste est, de plus, paradoxale. En effect, la peintre est également Conservatrice......des Musées de Troyes. Alors attention, ses papiers sont à l'oeuvre et, tel un palimpseste, un(e) Béatrice TABAH peut en cacher un(e) autre ! » (http://artactif.fr/indext/tabahb.htm) ● In a review of Elizabeth (Kramon) Harlan's latest book, George Sand, the Yale University Press said: ".....Drawing on archival sources —much of it neglected by Sand’s previous biographers— Elizabeth Harlan examines the intertwined issues of maternity and identity that haunt Sand’s writing and defined her life. Why was Sand’s relationship with her daughter so fraught? Why was a woman so famous for her personal and literary audacity ultimately so conflicted about women’s liberation? In an effort to solve the riddle of Sand’s identity, Harlan examines a latticework of lives that include Solange, Sand’s mother and grandmother, and Sand’s own protagonists, whose stories amplify her own. Elizabeth Harlan is the author of two novels, Footfalls and Watershed. She lives in Paris." (http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=0300104170) ----- From December 2006 AALFNY Newsletter ----- ● (Picture was reprinted with permission from Vintage Poster Works--http://www.vintageposterworks.com) "1963 Villars Gala of Ice Figure Skating Advertising Sporting Poster. This......design poster advertises a gala ice skating event......The ice skater names printed on the poster are:........Joya Utermohlen ['65] Olympic champion at Innsbrook......." ● Dominique Tabah ('64) wrote: "Ma soeur Béatrice Tabah ('65) est peintre et conservateur de musée, elle vit à Troyes." ● Jacqueline (Pujol) Lincy ('65) and Jean-Claude, daughter and son-in-law of the original owners, closed their Pierre au Tunnel restaurant on August 13, 2005. The restaurant had been owned and operated by the same family since 1950, and was one of the oldest family-run restaurants in New York City. Tis is an excerpt from a review by Bryan Miller (New York Times, 11/8/1991): "Owned by Jacqueline and Jean-Claude Lincy, 41-year-old Pierre au Tunnel has a warm, inviting aura. You pass through the spacious bar with several tables along one wall en route to the dining room, which has brick walls on one side, stucco on another, timbered beams overhead, red banquettes and a fireplace adorned with a giant stag's head. Don't expect lanky 22-year-old aspiring actresses as waitresses. The small French women who seem to have been here since the Eisenhower Administration appear timeless. They go about their ministrations with alacrity, although the pace can be slow sometimes at dinner." ● Considering a vacation apartment-rental in Paris? Learn from Renee Marton's experience (and woes), which are cited in a December 2006 Travel and Leisure article. (http://www.travelandleisure.com/articles/short-term-rentals-101, or click on link below.) ----- From February 2006 AALFNY Newsletter ----- Victor de la Serna wrote: "My second career as a wine producer with Finca Sandoval is progressing steadily. A look at what we do here.... [see link to 'On the Internet' newsletter section, to the right]" ----- From June 2005 AALFNY Newsletter----- DECÉS: Bianca Pujol ('95), daughter of Jean-Claude Pujol ('65) (See http://www.lfnyalumni.org/en/news/no.22/50/431 for further details.) ----- From Winter 2003-2004 AALFNY Newsletter ----- Sandra Haas shared with us the sad news that her classmate, Tibou Lubart '65, was killed in an automobile accident on September 26, 2003. For further details, and a biography, please visit this website: http://hometown.aol.com/rogernyc/TibuObituary.html ----- From November/December 2001 AALFNY Newsletter ----- ● Yves le Scieller writes: "I really did lose all contact with the Lycée since '65, but felt nostalgic after the recent tragic events in the U.S. I've moved around a bit since 1965 (Canada, France, Canada again, Colombia, France again) and have ended up in Madrid, Spain (cherchez la femme!) where I am now dedicated to enjoying a 5 year old kid (it came late in life, but it would have been a shame to miss this experience). I am now tryng to contact my ex-camarades, for possible chit-chat through e-mail or maybe even meet with them since I do have to travel quite a bit for my work - I try to run the international operations for a Spanish Information Technology firm which takes me to the States and south, south, south and farther south of the border - and let’s face it, also just out of curiosity about where life has led everybody. Since the late 60s and early 70s when I saw a lot of Francis Jacot ’65 and Charles Pinto ’66 because we all lived in Montreal and studied at McGill, the only people I have seen are Michèle Tremblay ‘65, in the early 80s, once, in Paris when she exhibited her paintings at a show at Le Grand Palais, and Pierre Allain ‘65, with whom I talk to regularly over the phone and get to see from time to time in Paris. I hope this gets read and somebody feels like initiating contact." ----- From July/August 2001 AALFNY Newsletter ----- Fabrizio Franzi emailed us from Brussels: «It's been a long time and my oldest son is older than I was when I left the Lycée ! I have just discovered the web site, thanks to Steve Ditlea '65 who told me about it. Learning that Mssrs. Brodin, Galy, Kiefer and Choquet were gone has been a shock, I would have seen them again with pleasure and fondness. I was stupid enough to procrastinate and now ...it's too late. I was happy to hear about Tessie Arpels '67 and Oudi Recanati '67; for one year we were in the same 5e classroom at 72nd. For those who are interested, my old old friend Alberto Cordero di Montezemolo '67 is in Santiago de Chile Many years ago, I saw Brigitte Sallebert '65 in Paris. The sad thing for those of us who went to the Lycée is that we all spread out after the Bac and it's been so easy to lose track of one another. Now, thanks to Internet, we can correct this. I spent 5 years at the Lycée but went through 7 classes, so I remember many people. Someone said that in November 1963, when Kennedy was shot, he was going ice skating (Central Park at 63rd no doubt). Personally, my 3e class was going to play soccer against another school: I think that after our coaches discussed it, we ended up playing the game.» ----- From November/December 2000 AALFNY Newsletter ----- ● Victor de la Serna emailed us, just before our May 30th Spring Cocktail: "Many of us throughout the world will be unable to be there, but the fact that we now have a way to communicate will certainly make us pause for a moment on May 30th and think of old friends and good days at 95th St., way back in another era..." ● Francis Jacot emails " Dominique Ferran was my "best friend" for several years. I was very touched to read his letter. Keep up the good work. I will certainly do what I can to spread the alumni network." ● Geneviève (Giraud) Boulinier nous écrit de Paris en nous remerciant pour le bulletin de liaison: «C'est toujours un formidable voyage dans le temps et dans l'espace que ces nouvelles en même temps toutes fraîches et si lointaines...» Elle travaille au Service de Presse du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle. «Je suis une des nombreux six Giraud qui ont fréquenté le LFNY entre '56 et '62 et qui ont gardé de cette période un merveilleux souvenir.» ----- From March 2000 AALFNY Newsletter ----- Dominique Ferran est venu visiter le Lycée en mars après une absence de plus de 40 ans Il est organiste et claveciniste au Conservatoire de Musique-Poitiers. Son frère, Frank ’60, habite aussi la France. ----- From November 1999 AALFNY Newsletter ----- Francis Jacot habite depuis 20 ans le Quebec, dans une region rurale et dans une maison auto-construite. Il est medecin specialise en sante reproductive. Il court des marathons, escalade les Pyrenees, voyage parfois en canot, et joue encore au foot. |
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