Saturday, July 26, 2014

The Club's historic membership roster, part VIII: members joining 1964-present

Note: no new members joined in 1962 or 1963.



1964



Charles F. B. Richardson — senior vice-president, Berkshire Life Insurance Company. He came to Berkshire Life in 1960 as head of the insurance finance division, after having served as associate actuary of Mutual Life of New York. He was born in Scotland and graduated from the University of Edinburgh. He began is career with the Scottish Life Assurance Company in Edinburgh. In 1931 he joined an insurance company in Canada, and in 1938 moved to the United States. He was, in 1960, a fellow of the Society of Actuaries, and an associate of the British Institute of Actuaries. In 1963 he was named a senior vice president at Berkshire Life with responsibilities including actuarial, health insurance, underwriting, electronic data processing and accounting operations, and all phases of product development and research. He retired from Berkshire Life in October, 1969, and joined the consulting firm of Bowles, Andrews & Towne in Atlanta, Georgia. He died in 1991.



Kelton Miller Burbank ("Kim") — attorney in Pittsfield. Born 1935(?); died June 29th, 2015. He was a graduate of the Hotchkiss School in Lakeville, Conn., and received his Bachelor of Arts from Williams College in 1956, before graduating summa cum laude from Harvard Law in 1959. He was a law clerk to Justice Harold P. Williams of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court for a year before becoming an associate at the Boston Law firm Choate Hall & Stewart. After a year he left Boston to return to the Berkshires where he lived for the rest of his life. In 1961 he joined the firm of Cain, Lewis and Humphrey, and in 1963 became a partner at Cain, Hibbard and Myers. In 1984 he opened his solo practice where he continued practicing until his retirement at the age of 78.



Kim served on the board of numerous Berkshire County non-profits and arts organizations, donating countless hours of his legal skills, including the Berkshire Natural Resources Council, the Pittsfield YMCA, the Elizabeth Freeman Center (which assists and counsels victims of rape and domestic violence), the Audubon Society, the Family and Children Service of Berkshire County, the Berkshire branch of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, the Housatonic River Watershed Association, Shakespeare & Co., South Mountain Association and many others. He also served as a Selectman of the town of New Ashford for nine years.



Kim was an avid skier in his youth and well into middle age. He was captain of the Williams Swim Team and his passion for swimming continued throughout his life and he swam competitively at the master's level where he won several events when he was in his 60s. Kim had a wide variety of interests, including but not limited to, hiking, playing tennis, bird watching, reading poetry, and completing the New York Times crossword puzzle (in ink) before anyone else arose. He loved the Berkshires not only for their intrinsic beauty, but for the ready access to art museums, lectures, musical and theatrical performances, and he attended as many cultural events as he could.



His chief passion was gardening. He spent the majority of his free time digging in the dirt, pulling weeds, and planting vegetables, flowers and shrubs. Kim enjoyed nothing better than to spend the entire day in his garden, coming in at dusk covered from head to toe in the dirt he so loved.



In 1999 the Berkshire Natural Resources Council dedicated a trail on Yokum Ridge in his honor for the then "30 years of mostly anonymous but invaluable service" in ensuring the preservation of vast swatches of land throughout Berkshire County. Kim continued his work for BNRC until his passing. The past president of BRNC noted that the overwhelming portion of Kim's work for BNRC had been without charge, in keeping with his generous nature and dedication to land preservation.



1965



John B. Lidstone — engineer, General Electric Company, Plastics Division. Resigned and moved to the Troy, N.Y. area in 1970.



Robert Austin Acly — retired, U. S. State Dept. His posts included Burma and Panama, where he served as counselor of embassy and charge d'affaires, as well as Honduras, France and South Africa. He headed the Burma desk at the State Department in Washington and also served as a member of the U.S. delegation to the United Nations. Foreign Service postings: U.S. Vice Consul in Montreal, 1930; Tegucigalpa, 1930-35; Strasbourg, 1935; Johannesburg, 1938; U.S. Consul in Johannesburg, 1940-42; Cape Town, 1942-43; Rangoon, 1949. Born Feb. 25, 1906, died July 1, 1973.



1968



Robert M. Henderson — paper manufacturing executive, died October 16, 2017 (the morning of his 68th wedding anniversary).



Born in Livingston, Montana, October 16, 1923, and raised just over the mountains in Bozeman, Bob was a consummate cowboy. Raising and caring for horses in his early years gave him compassion for animals and a high regard for nature and all its wonders. Bob's father, Maurice's career in public service, ultimately retiring as city manager of Bozeman, MT and Colonel in the Montana National Guard as well as the example of his mother, Grace, a former school teacher and community volunteer, taught Bob the value of hard work and sound ethics. Throughout his life people turned to Bob for good advice and leadership. Bob attended Montana State College (now MSU). He paused his education during WWII for service in the Army Air Corps but returned to MSC to complete his engineering degree and as he would always be first to acknowledge, most fortunate to meet the young nursing student who would become the love of his life, Aleva Benjamin. Aleva ultimately attained a degree in dietetics and Bob in mechanical engineering. They married in Bozeman, MT, October 16, 1949.



Bob started his career at Westinghouse in Portland, OR, where four of his five children were born but moved to Massachusetts to work at Dalton's E.D. Jones Division of Beloit Corporation in large paper machinery sales and engineering. His success in sales could be attributed to his adeptness at listening and his ability to provide and execute solutions for his customers' needs. Their fifth child was born in Pittsfield.



Bob stayed in paper machinery sales and engineering with ED Jones/Beloit Corporation then went to Bielomatic, a German enterprise and finally, Clark Aiken, Lee, MA, where he bought the business which he eventually sold to a German concern. Bob never really retired, always dabbling in some project or another. He and Aleva lived on Main Street, Stockbridge and were active in the community for over 40 years.



Besides the Monday Evening Club, he was also a member of The Lenox Club, Monday Lunch Bunch, the Sweater Club and the Stockbridge Golf Club. He sang in the choir at the First Congregational Church of Stockbridge for many years serving as Moderator and supported its varied causes.



1969



William A. Selke — paper company chemist. Born in Newburgh, N.Y., June 16, 1922, died in Pittsfield, Mass., February 25, 2013.  He received his undergraduate degree in chemical engineering, from The Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with the class of 1943. He entered the Naval Reserve, and served with a motor torpedo boat squadron in the Pacific theater. He returned to M.I.T.for a master's degree in 1947, and received a doctorate in engineering from Yale University in 1949. In 1952, he married Martha Whitney Floyd, a native of Pittsfield, then living in New York. Their weekend trips to the Berkshires introduced him to the many pleasures of the Berkshires, including skiing and Tanglewood. He joined the faculty of Columbia University, where his research and publications were in the fields of ion exchange kinetics, thermodynamics and heat transfer. In 1951 the U.S .Atomic Energy Commission established its Heat Transfer Research Facility at Columbia. After working for the DuPont Corporation on the design of the Savannah River reactors, Mr. Selke became the manager of that Columbia laboratory. In 1955, he moved to the Berkshires to establish a research and development department for Peter J. Schweitzer Inc. manufacturer of specialized technical papers. The laboratory was built at a mill site in Lee. The work that he did with his colleagues resulted in a number of U.S. and foreign patents on specialized papers, and novel applications of the papermaking process. The company was acquired by Kimberly-Clark Corp. in 1982, and was merged with other portions of the company. In 1982, Mr. Selke moved to Atlanta to be Vice president of the Corporate Science and Technology Group. He retired in 1986, and returned to Stockbridge. From 1986 through 1996, he was a consultant for several major companies, and served as a professor of environmental Engineering at The Lenox Institute for Research. He served as Chairman of a United States committee of the International Standards Organization, and represented that committee at meetings in Beijing and Berlin. He was a member of the board of investment of The City Savings Bank in Pittsfield. In 1966, Mr Selke became a member of the newly formed Massachusetts Board of Education. In retirement, he taught reading and English as a second language with the Southern Berkshire Literacy Network, and read science books for Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic here in the Berkshires. Mr. Selke served the town of Stockbridge on a number of committees, including chairing an attempt to establish an historic district in Stock bridge Village. He was chairman of the committee on Affordable Housing, which promoted and helped develop the Pine Woods project in Stockbridge. He served on the Planning Board for eight years, and was chairman from 1976 through 1980. He was also a member of the Zoning Board of Appeals. In 1993, he was elected to the Stockbridge Housing Authority, and was a member of the committee which formed the Berkshire Hills Regional School District., and built the Monument Mountain Regional High School. Twenty years later, after retirement, he became a substitute science teacher at that school. After serving as co-chairman of the Council of Tanglewood Friends in 1974, he became an overseer of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and from 1979 to 1985 served as a atrustee of the orchestra. In 1984, while living in Atlanta, he joined the board of The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. He was a member of the boards of The Laurel Hill Association and The Berkshire Museum, and served as president of the Old Corner House-Stockbridge Historical Society, and the Stockbridge library Association. He was a member of the Western Regional Committee of The Trustees of Reservations, and on the Advisory Council of the statewide organization. He had a lifelong love of music, especially classical music and "good" jazz. He also loved sailing, and spent a lot of time on the water, both here and in far off lands. He loved traveling. He and his wife saw a good deal of the world together. [Berkshire Eagle obituary]





1970



George W. Low — actuary, Berkshire Life Insurance Company. He was born August 25, 1913 in Glasgow, Scotland, and graduated from the University of Edinburgh as an insurance actuary in 1934. He was associated with the Scottish Equitable Life Assurance Society until 1958 and its assistant London secretary from 1946 to 1948. From 1949 to 1958 he was actuary and investment secretary to the Scottish Insurance Corporation in Edinburgh. He married Queenie F. Morton in 1940, and moved with her and their children to the United States in 1958. He served first as an associate actuary of the Mutual Service Insurance Company in St. Paul, and then in 1959 became associate actuary and assistant secretary of the Western Life Insurance Co., also in St. Paul. The family moved to Pittsfield in 1962 when he was appointed associate assistant actuary at Berkshire Life.



He joined the Rotary Club in Pittsfield in 1975 and served as bulletin editor, secretary, director and vice president before being elected president in 1985. He was also the third recipient of the club's annual award in memory of Donald G. Butler, former mayor of Pittsfield. He was a member of the Friends of Hancock Shaker Village, and from 1977 until 1989, treasurer of the board of trustees of the Berkshire Athenaeum. A member of the First Church of Christ, Congregational, he served as its assistant treasurer, treasurer, and finally financial secretary. He was an occasional contributor of columns to The Berkshire Eagle. In early 1989 he moved to Corvallis, Oregon, where his son David Low resided, and died there on July 18, 1989.



Rev. Arthur L. Teikmanis — minister, First Church of Christ in Pittsfield. Born in Ranka, Latvia, April 8, 1914, son of Roberts and Marija Apsha Teikmanis. He was educated in both Latvia and the United States, and ordained into the ministry in 1941. He received a doctorate from Harvard University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in 1953, and a B.D. degree from Andover-Newton Theological Seminary in 1949. From 1941 to 1944, he was minister of the First Baptist Church in Priekule, Latvia. Thereafter he served the Refugee Church in Augsberg, Germany (1945-1946); the Community Congregational Church, West Peabody, Massachusetts (1950-1952); the Highland Congregational Church, Lowell, Massachusetts (1952-1957); the Sayville Congregational Church, Sayville, New York (1956-1961); First Congregational Church, Winter Park, Florida (1961-1967); First Community Church, Columbus, Ohio (1967-1969); and First Church of Christ in Pittsfield (1969-1980?). He served in the Latvian Army as a telegraphist, being honorably discharged as a corporal in 1936. During the Russian occupation of Latvia he served as a superintendent of government buildings in Riga. (Resigned 1980?)



R. Michael McNaught — headmaster, Berkshire Country Day School. Originally from England, McNaught attended Trinity College
at Oxford, receiving an undergraduate degree in history.
He then did his post-graduate study at Oxford University
in the education department. In 1961 he came to the US to teach. In 1968,
he became the Headmaster of the Berkshire Country
Day School. In 1976, he became the new upper
school Headmaster of the New Canaan Country School in Connecticut.
After 20 years there, he stepped down to become the Dean of
Faculty and Math Department Chairman of the upper
school. He retired in 2004 and moved to Falmouth, Mass., where served on the board of the Oyster Pond Environmental Trust  board. He was also Vice-chairman of the Berkshire Choral Festival, and a US Civil War authority
and a genealogy expert. (Resigned 1976)






Drawing by Douglas McGregor — People by Norman Rockwell

Douglas McGregor — retired, General Electric Company. A resident of Stockbridge, he created the well-known line-drawing of the Red Lion Inn, with the help of Norman Rockwell. His former home is now a part of the Red Lion Inn's accommodations. Born June 27, 1901; died September 1977.



1973



Albert Easton — actuary, Berkshire Life Insurance Company



1974



Arthur Waring "Skip" Paddock — teacher, Pittsfield High School. Born in Orange, N.J., on Aug. 7, 1926, son of Arthur H. and Helen Rochelle Paddock, he graduated from Colgate University in 1946 and his master's degree in education in 1965 from Springfield College. He died June 26, 2006. He served in the Navy as a V12 candidate. He taught English at Pittsfield High School from 1966 to 1996. (Resigned, date unknown)



1980



Ronald A. Trabulsi — real estate investor, born 1932. (Resigned 2016) Ron died July 26, 2018 at Kimball Farms Nursing Home in Lenox after a fall.



He was a gentle man and a gentleman. Ron was best known in the community for easily making trifle for 300, as well as endless quantities of demi-glace that he kept in his freezer to whip up sauces for weeknight sautes.



He was drafted 2 days before his 26th birthday and claimed that he fulfilled his duty baking cookies in the Natick Quartermaster Test Kitchens. He and his wife, Ann, moved to Pittsfield in 1966. In 2015, they moved to Kimball Farms Retirement Community where he enjoyed making new friends, keeping up with old ones, socializing, and dining out.



Ron built, owned, and ran Pittsfield Bus and Travel for over 30 years while also pursuing a successful career in real estate where many of his tenants became long time friends. His true loves, besides his family, were, unsurprisingly, cooking, and gardening. He was alternately known as the Plant Dude or the Plant Doctor. His happiest times were when the house was full of guests enjoying his latest culinary adventure. During his 50 years of community involvement, Ron volunteered for the Pittsfield Housing Authority, was president of Pittsfield Rotary, and oversaw the greenhouses at Soldier On and Pittsfield High School.



1983



Rev. Richard L. Floyd — Pastor Emeritus of the First Church of Christ in Pittsfield, Congregational (UCC) in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Previously he had two pastorates in Maine and was Chaplain at the Bangor Theological Seminary in Bangor, Maine. Floyd holds a B.A. from Coe College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa (1971), a M.Div. from Andover Newton Theological School (1975) and a D.Min. from Bangor Theological Seminary in Hanover, New Hampshire (1994). During sabbaticals he has done post-graduate study in Britain at the Universities of Oxford, Cambridge, and St. Andrews.



He was selected to be a member of the Pastor-Theologian program at the Center of Theological Inquiry in Princeton from 1999 to 2001. He has lectured widely on the Christian understanding of the atonement both in the United States and Britain. He is the author of A Course in Basic Christianity (Birch Hill Press, 1997) and When I Survey the Wondrous Cross:  Reflections on the Atonement (Pickwick Press, 2000, Wipf and Stock, 2010). His articles, book reviews and sermons have appeared in a number of anthologies, periodicals and journals. (Full list of publications)



He is a writer of hymn texts, many of which have been set to original music and sung in churches. He has been an occasional contributor of book reviews and op-ed articles for The Berkshire Eagle. He has been an active participant in the theological renewal movement in the United Church of Christ, was on the drafting committee of the first Craigville Colloquy, and is a founder and member of the convening committee of “Confessing Christ.” He served as president of the Pittsfield Area Council of Churches and the Central Berkshire Clergy Association.  He represented the Massachusetts Conference of the U.C.C. on the Massachusetts Commission on Christian Unity from 1984 until 1996.  In 1989 he was an official ecumenical observer of the United Church of Christ to the General Assembly of the United Reformed Church in Great Britain. He was a convener for the Lutheran–Reformed dialogue in the mid 1980's. He was a theological consultant to the Ecclesiology Subcommittee of the General Synod Committee on Structure of the United Church of Christ.  He was moderator of the Berkshire Association of the United Church of Christ, and a delegate to the General Synod of the United Church of Christ



In the Berkshires, he was a member of the Patient Ethics Committee at the Berkshire Medical Center, and a member of the Human Rights Committee of the former Berkshire Mental Health and the Psychiatric Unit at Berkshire Medical Center. He helped found the chapel at Berkshire Medical Center and was chairman of the pastoral care department when it was approved as a Clinical Pastoral Education site. He was chaplain to the Berkshire Chapter of the American Guild of Organists and preached the opening sermon at the 1997 New England Regional Convocation of the AGO in Pittsfield.



In 2004 he stepped down from his pastorate of 22 years because of disability from traumatic brain injury as the result of a bicycle accident. Since that time his ministry has been chiefly as a writer and blogger.  In 2010 his popular blog “Retired Pastor Ruminates” (now renamed “When I Survey . . .”) was one of the 50 top theological blogs on Facebook’s Networked Blogs. He is a contributor to the United Church of Christ’s StillSpeaking Daily Devotional, an e-mail service with 30,000 subscribers. He also contributes to the UCC's versions of Advent and Lenten Devotionals.



Dr. Thomas Spurr Morse — pediatric surgeon, Lenox. Died August 26, 2012 the age of 87. He was raised on Green Meads Farm in Richmond, Mass., the son of Darwin and Kate Morse. He ttended The Eaglebrook School, where he served as trustee for many years, and Deerfield Academy. He served in the U. S. Marines and planned to return and study agriculture. His experiences in the Marines set him on a different course and he went on to medical school at Cornell University. He rained at Bellevue Hospital, New York City in pediatrics, and then moved to Boston, MA where he decided to train in pediatric surgery. He then took a job at Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio where he spent most of the rest of his career. He was very interested in trauma, running the Emergency Room, training pediatricians in emergency care and working on the delivery of emergent care both at the hospital and with the City of Columbus. He was the author of over 60 articles on various topics in pediatric medicine and surgery, and was a founding member and President of the American Trauma Society. He was a member of numerous other medical and surgical societies as well. He was the author of "A Gift of Courage" (Doubleday, 1982). Berkshire Eagle obituary, Oct. 12, 2012.



1986



Dr. David T. Noyes — urologist (resigned 2019)



John M. Fuchs — librarian, Berkshire Athenaeum. Later director of the library of Burbank, California (resigned 1995)



1989



Richard Whitlock Nunley — poet, writer, professor at Berkshire Community College. Richard Whitlock Nunley, born July 31, 1931, in Scituate, Massachusetts, died from a brain hemorrhage on March 3, 2016 in Portland, Oregon. Dick was a teacher, poet, cook, gardener, and lover of the natural world. Childhood mentors fostered a love of books and learning, which led him to Dartmouth College and Kings College, Cambridge in England. There he met Susan Stroud, whom he married on December 19, 1965. They spent the majority of their lives together in New Lebanon, New York, where Dick was a teacher at Darrow School. They raised two daughters, Diana and Felicity, at their "Garden Hill" home, surrounded by flower and vegetable gardens with a spectacular view across Lebanon Valley.



In 1970 Dick became a professor of English at Berkshire Community College in nearby Pittsfield, Massachusetts. An exacting teacher with high expectations for all, many former students credit him with changing the course of their lives. For 25 years beginning in 1980 Dick wrote a weekly "Our Berkshires" column for The Berkshire Eagle. His columns challenged readers to connect the dots between vignettes of Berkshire life and his favorite poets and thinkers, and revealed the thoughtful, caring and generous man that he was. For the last 12 years of his life, Dick and Sue lived near Felicity in Portland, Oregon, where he turned his eye on the lush environment of the Pacific Northwest and enjoyed the city's art and musical offerings. He delighted in his grandchildren, Helen and Norris Meigs of Portland and Hanna and Elena Johnson of Minneapolis. "How simple happiness is, really," concludes one of Dick's poems. That lesson may be Dick's greatest legacy to all who remember him whether it's to be found in a delicate spring bloom, a morning walk, or a fresh-baked loaf of bread. (Dick resigned from the Club upon moving to Portland in about 2003.)



Charles F. Sawyer — attorney, real estate professional



1990



John H. Spencer — teacher, principal. Born September 15, 1936 to John Haines Spencer and Pauline Simmons Spencer, Jack was raised in Adams, Massachusetts. After graduating from Williston Prep School and Amherst College, he received a Masters in Education from Purdue University. While teaching at Williams High School in Stockbridge, he had the good fortune to meet and fall in love with Social Studies teacher Judith Leahey. On February 20, 1965, he had the good sense to marry her and continue a love affair that spanned more than fifty years.



Mr. Spencer was an educator for 47 years. He taught Social Studies at Williams High School and Monument Mountain Regional High School and was Principal of Searles Middle School. He encouraged students to be conscious seekers and doers, to be disturbers of the universe. He was chair of the Monument Social Studies department from its inception in 1967. The department created the first Holocaust curriculum for high school students in the country. Jack and Roselle Chartock coedited the anthology that came out of that curriculum.



Jack had a love of Stockbridge and its citizens, community activism and participation in government. He served on numerous committees and boards, including the Stockbridge Planning Board (chairman) and Zone of Appeals, The Stockbridge Library (president and member of the Board of Trustees), The Fund for Excellence and School Center, Inc. He was instrumental in writing the zoning bylaws for Stockbridge.



Jack died on Sunday, February 19, 2017 in Stockbridge.



Peter C. Webber — bartender at the Red Lion Inn, Massachusetts state senator (1981-1991); Massachusetts commissioner of environmental management (1991-2004) (resigned 1991)



Ronald B. Latham — librarian, Berkshire Athenaeum. (Resigned about 1999.)



1997



Dr. Michael A. Shirley — anesthesiologist (resigned 2017)



Lawrence J. Yerdon — executive director, Hancock Shaker Village; later of Strawbery Banke, Portsmouth N.H. (resigned 2004)



2000



Martin C. Langeveld — newspaper executive. Graduated with an MA from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1970) and an Master of Professional Studies degree in Hotel Administration from Cornell University (1975). Innkeeper, The Flying Cloud Inn, New Marlboro, Massachusetts, (1975-1978). Marketing director, general manager of Eagle Publishing Company (1979-1995), publisher of The Berkshire Eagle (1995-2000); North Adams Transcript (2000-2006); Brattleboro (Vermont) Reformer (2006-2008); independent marketing consultant and newspaper industry analyst, 2008-present.  He served twice as chair and once as treasurer of Hancock Shaker Village. Founding trustee of the Colonial Theatre Association, director of the Berkshire Chamber of Commerce, and director and treasurer of the Massachusetts Newspaper Publishers Association. In Vermont, he serves on the boards of SeVEDS (Southeastern Vermont Economic Development Strategies), the Windham-Windsor Housing Trust, Brattleboro Community Television, the Resilient Design Institute, and on the Vernon Planning Commission.



2002



Erik Bruun — journalist, investment manager



Craig F. Smith — nonprofit fundraising manager (resigned 2019)



2005



Stuart Chase — executive director, Berkshire Museum (resigned 2012)



William J. Bartz — engineer, Crane & Company (resigned, 2015)



2006



Brad Spear — radio personality, marketing executive (resigned 2011, returned to membership 2018)



2009



Rev. Robert G. Anderson —certified hospital chaplain supervisor and ordained minister in the Reformed Church in America (resigned 2013)



2011



Rev. James Lumsden — minister, First Church of Christ in Pittsfield (resigned 2016)



Ethan J. Berg — management consultant, investment manager, owner/manager of The Lenox Athenaeum and The Winthrop Estate



2014



Rabbi Joshua Breindel — Temple Anshe Amunim (resigned 2017)



2016



William P. Densmore — Bill Densmore is executive director of the Information Trust Exchange Governing Association.  He is a Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute (RJI) fellow and author of its white paper, “From Persona to Payment: A Status Report on the News Ecosystem, and a Challenge to Create the Next One.” (2015).



A career journalist, publisher and tech entrepreneur, Densmore has been an editor/writer for The Associated Press in Boston, Chicago and San Francisco and for trade publications in business, law,  insurance and information-technology in Boston, Chicago and New York. He co-owned and published The Advocate newsweeklies for the Berkshires/southwestern Vermont, from 1983-1992. Densmore founded Amherst, Mass.-based Clickshare Service Corp., which provides user registration, authentication, content access control and transaction services to Internet web content sites and publishers.  He is co-founder of Taxonometrics Inc., a New York-based company incubating a news- and information-personalization service called LifeStream®.



He’s a founding member and director of Journalism That Matters and also served eight years on the board of the New England Newspaper & Press Association and four years on the board of Shires Media Partnership, Inc.  Densmore also served as director/editor of the Media Giraffe Project at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst from 2005-2008. It was an effort to find and spotlight individuals making sustainable, innovative use of media (old and new) to foster participatory democracy and community. He is a member of the editorial advisory board of The Berkshire Eagle. Densmore holds a B.A. from the University of Massachusetts-Amherst in environmental policy and communications.



Richard Felver — librarian, Berkshire Community College (resigned 2018)



2018



Laurie Norton Moffatt — Laurie Norton Moffatt is the director and CEO of Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, MA. A leading scholar of American illustration art, she authored the Norman Rockwell catalogue raisonné and led the growth of the museum from a small house in the artist’s hometown to be a global leader in illustration art exhibitions, scholarship and digital collections connectivity. She founded the Rockwell Center for American Visual Studies, the nation’s first research institute in American illustration art, which is a hub of illustration art collections, museums, libraries, universities, scholars, curators and professors across the country.



In recognition of the Museum’s national service, President George W. Bush bestowed the National Humanities Medal to the Museum and President Barack Obama invited her to the White House with Norman Rockwell’s painting The Problem We All Live With to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Movement. She was a cultural specialist to Ethiopia and Russia with the US State Department and brought Norman Rockwell’s art to the United Nations. A national arts leader, she has served on the boards of the American Alliance of Museums and Association of Art Museum Directors, and delegate with National Arts Strategy. She has served on numerous not-for-profit boards in the Berkshires, and currently serves on the boards of Berkshire Bank, Berkshire Health Systems and Connecticut College. She holds a bachelor of arts degree in art history from Connecticut College and her MBA from the University of Massachusetts Isenberg School of Management.



2019



Lucy Prashker — attorney, Cain Hibbard & Myers, Great Barrington



2020



Ellen Spear — Chief Philanthropy Officer, Norman Rockwell Museum, Stockbridge
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Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Do the Bell: The remarkable career of Evan Dobelle

Presented to the Club on Monday evening, March 24, 2014 by John H. Spencer






Evan Dobelle during his presidency at the University of Hawaii

In my ninth-grade classes I used to give lollypops for various things: first A-minus, most footnotes. One student actually got one for misspelling his own name, but also I gave one, each time a paper was assigned, for best title (even though some students worked harder on the title rather than the content of the essay).



Megan Cort was the best I ever had and I told her she would one day make a fortune in advertising (she is now 23; I need to find out what she is doing). She was so good I had to ban her for a while. I am sure she will groan at the title I came up with for tonight — although she might smile.



Who has a guess what it means?



I am a political junkie and what makes people tick, especially in the use of power — from all the King's Men with its view that man is conceived in sin; to the marvelous biography of Lyndon Johnson by Robert Caro, three volumes complete and the fourth to come; to Citizen Kane and Rosebud.



So, I pick a person not as powerful, not as complicated, but still remarkable and with local connections — Evan Dobelle. ("Do the Bell" — sorry, Megan.)



Did he have his Rosebud? Did he have a fatal flaw? Or has his journey through life been overlooked by the fact that he, at times, lived that journey high on the hog and loved credit cards other than his own? As I tell his tale, you judge.



Where do you go nowadays for research? There are no books on Dobelle. I did not organize in time to do interviews, but started with an article cut out from The Berkshire Eagle of November 24, 2013. Written by Jim Therrien, it was titled "Ambitious from the beginning." It caught my interest, and a lightbulb went off that it would be a good subject for a Monday Evening Club paper.



"Local boy" — known by some members of the Club. (Wish I could have talked to Roger Linscott.) Carter administration, college president five times, gets in trouble for lavish spending but lands on his feet each time, a survivor, a big thinker, etc. etc.



So, I turned to a source not available even 10-15 years ago, Facebook. Evan Dobelle as featured on his Facebook page:




  • He has 5,000 friends. His wife Kit has 278.

  • Sports:  L.A. Dodgers, U.S. Olympic Team, Major League Baseball

  • Music: Frank Sinatra, San Francisco Symphony, Tchaikofski, Aaron Neville, Torn Abdow

  • Movies: Shawshank Redemption, Casablanca, The King's Speech, Le Concert, Life is Beautiful

  • Television: Rome, ESPN News, Johnny Carson, 60 Minutes, BBC, Bill Green's Maine

  • Books: Sister Carrie, The Fountainhead, The Republic, John D. MacDonald, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas

  • Apps: Poker

  • Quotes:


    • "You are now entering a stress-free zone."

    • "People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel." — Maya Angelou

    • "Every student needs someone who says, simply, 'You mean something. You count.'" — Tony Kushner

    • "It does not matter if the glass is half empty or half full, be grateful that you have a glass and there is something in it."

    • "If we learn nothing else from the tragedy, we learn life is short and there is no time for hate." — Wife of a Flight 93 (9/11) pilot




Just the facts, ma'am:






  • Born April 22, 1945 in Washington, DC. His father was Martin Dobelle, orthopedic surgeon, who had a job at NASA in Florida, later in Pittsfield.

  • 1962: Graduated Cocoa Beach Senior High School, Florida. Attended Citadel Military College and American University.

  • 1966 - March 1977; Young Republican; Massachusetts Gov. John A. Volpe's statehouse staff

  • 1969: Register of Wills, New Castle County, Delaware

  • 1970: Staff member for the Presidential Commission on Campus Unrest

  • 1971: Boston office of Sen. Edward Brooke (Republican, Massachusetts)

  • 1971: Assistant Superintendent in the Temple City, California school system

  • 1971: Berkshire Community College Advisory Board

  • 1973: Republican primary for the state Senate seat from Berkshire County — loses to Jack Fitzpatrick 2795 to 2712. (What if he had won?)

  • 1973: At the age of 28, wins the primary for Pittsfield mayor, 5647 to 2776; and the November election 12,242 to 7,753 (both races against Albert Bogdan)

  • 1975: Served on the steering committee to direct Gerald Ford's election campaign in Massachusetts

  • Jan. 1976: Sworn in for a second term as Mayor of Pittsfield.

  • Jan. 1976: Leaves the Republican party to campaign for Jimmy Carter. Met Carter for the first time at the Pittsfield airport.

  • Oct. 1976: Becomes head of the Massachusetts Division of Natural Resources.

  • March 1977: Appointed United States Chief of Protocol, with the rank of ambassador, in the Carter administration

  • 1978: Treasurer of the Democratic National Committee

  • 1980: National Chairman of the Carter-Mondale Presidential Committee. (As such, Dobelle played a role in unseating Tim Kraft as campaign manager by alleging to have witnessed Kraft using cocaine, a charge of which Kraft was later cleared.)

  • 1981-86: A quiet time; Dobelle almost disappears. This could have been the end of the story. Amazingly, he is only 35. He was an investment banker, part-time, and obtained a second Master's Degree at Harvard, as well as a BA and a Ph.D. from the University of Massachusetts. (He had obtained an MA in 1970 but had no BA.)



Then, the third phase, a remarkable run as president of higher educational institutions:




  • 1987-1990: President of Middlesex Community College in Lowell, Mass. The library there is named for him.

  • 1990-1995: President and Chancellor of City College of San Francisco

  • 1995-2001: President of Trinity College, Hartford, Conn.

  • 2001-2004: President of the University of Hawaii

  • 2004-2007: President of the New England Board of Higher Education

  • 2007-2013: President of Westfield State University, Westfield, Mass.



In 1987, he became the president of Middlesex Community College in Lowell. He was there three years. There is not much information on this, but it is the job that launches him on his higher education career and contains the seeds of what is to become his mantra — breaking down town/gown barriers, encouraging kids to do community service, and seeing (except for Trinity) his students as being on the fringe.






The next move continues this, but on a larger scale. President and Chancellor of City College of San Francisco — same mantra. After five years, he leaves to take a presidency that, at first look, seems to deviate from the norm: president of a small, prestigious liberal arts school, Trinity College.





But it is not, for Trinity is located in Hartford, the college is surrounded by failing neighborhoods, applications to the school are declining, students and parents are worried about safety. Dobelle comes in as a former mayor, an urban school president, and says: "This is what Trinity must do and I am the man to do it." He was described as "a force of nature."





And he did it. He took a nine-acre plot next to the school and tore down a gas station and city bus garage, creating a "learning corridor" walk, with schools, police substation, Boys & Girls Club, and 150 new housing units.





At Westfield he had dorms built, started a speakers series, changed the name from "college" to "university." He thinks big, but he also spends big. 





The University of Hawaii is the presidency he will most be remembered for. From July 2, 2001 to June 30, 2004, at a salary of $442,000, he led the 10-campus, 45,000-student system. It was a troubled system, but Dobelle said he saw "a system that simply needs to understand and comprehend how good it is."





He went in as a force of nature, proposing a new football stadium, calling for a 4-year school in film the television, $1.5 million for Hawaiian programs, and a $200 million construction program.





But, money issues surfaced. $1 million to renovate his residence, use of foundation money, publicly backing the losing candidate for governor. He was fired by the Regents. But he came up roses. In a settlement, firing for cause was dropped, he remained as a researcher at $125,000 per year for two years. The total settlement package was $3.4 million, including $1.05 million in cash, attorneys fees of $290,000 paid by the Regents, and a $2 million whole life insurance policy, with the family required to pay $400,000 to the university on Dobelle's death. He lands on his feet both financially and career-wise, and becomes president of the New England Board of Higher Education.





After that, Westfield. Accused of lavish and improper spending, on November 7, 2013 Evan Dobelle resigns from the Westfield State University presidency. Two state agencies were poring over records of spending at 5-star hotels, limousines, high-priced restaurants, $150,000 to take a Westfield State delegation to Asia, $10,000 for tickets to Tanglewood, etc.





It started in the fall of 2008, when the school's private foundation gave him a credit card to pay what were meant to be "generally small amounts for fund-raising expenses." In 2010, they closed the account after he had run up more than $200,000 in charges.





But he could not stop. He started racking up charges on his executive assistant's credit card. This is what eventually did him in and triggered a review of this spending habits and a freeze on college funds. The use of his executive assistant's card can be called reckless and a rash side of his behavior. Yet, he justified it in the following way: "I made Westfield State the hottest college in New England.... I'm a change agent, you know I'm going to take a hit.... Accidentally used the wrong card for personal expenses.... 76 out-of-state trips were aimed at improving the lives of Westfield students... I do things for kids.... I channel Horace Mann." 





Yes, he had to resign. He did not get severance. He was not appointed President Emeritus. But he still gets a state pension of $90,000. He believes he did nothing ethically wrong.





Did I discover Evan Dobelle's Rosebud? Do I understand who he is? Of course not. I am not a Robert Caro or Doris Kearns Goodwin. On the other hand, he is not Lyndon Johnson or Abraham Lincoln.





But I did come away with a respect for what he did, and I think some understanding of who he was. He could easily have become a wolf of Wall Street, as he worked there in the 1980s when greed reigned. He could have secured a cushy political job. He might even have become a successful politician, but he chose the educational field.





Why? Did he want to be a John Glenn and go to the moon by changing education? Was his going back to get his B.A. at age 37 and being in class with 20- and 21-year-olds not just a gesture but a real belief in earning your way and the importance of education? Is his praise the University of Massachusetts a belief in public education? Was his presidency of Westfield not only ego and a liking of the spotlight but a belief in the education of Westfield students?





We are both simple and complex creatures. Why did this successful person mis-use credit cards a second time at a public institution? Why not? It was for the the great good. Plus, he came out of Hawaii financed for life. Also, at Westfield he did it for years before the boom was lowered.





I think the answer is simple. One gets used a nice life style, especially if someone else is paying for it. My recent first-class trip to California made me realize how seductive it is. 





The sad thing is that this is what many people remember about Dobelle. When you Google him, article after article is about the conflict at Hawaii and the resignation at Westfield. One has to dig a bit to find his accomplishments. In fact one of the best articles I found was through a link on his wife's Google site. 





Mayor of Pittsfield at age 28, Carter administration official, but what I respect most was his attempts to change education, which, being it in on a small scale myself, his not easy to do. I think his experience in Pittsfield and at Middlesex Community College made him want to break down the town/gown wall. He is not a scholar, he is a doer. He believed with a passion in students doing community service.





As was stated in an article by Faye Wolfe entitled "The Man to do it" (University of Massachusetts Magazine (Winter, 1998): "It is not complicated — you believe him... his power of concentration and the strength of his personality even when he is talking about urban renewal and transforming the decaying neighborhoods around Trinity College."





Dobelle said this about higher education: "Higher education is over-managed. Leadership is accepting accountability, having vision, and being relentless.... Every college wants to be something else. Amherst wants to be Williams, Williams wants to be Duke, Duke wants to be Stanford, Stanford wants to be Yale, Yale wants to be Harvard, Harvard wants to be Oxford, Oxford wants to be Cambridge. Let Trinity be Trinity. Be happy with who you are."





His wife said, "Pittsfield, Massachusetts is our home. I think it is very important to have a home."





So Evan Dobelle has returned to his home. At age 68, at any age, can he retire and stay out of the limelight? I doubt it. 





I would love to have lunch with him and ask him questions. I would even pay for it on my credit card.

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