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Class Notes
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James Nabrit '52
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Paul Savello '66
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Valerie Smith '75
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John Moshay '85
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Robert Ayres '01
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Five and Time
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Digging for the Story
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Semper Fidelity
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Class of 1985 reunion 2005
Edited by Christine Terp Madsen '73

Class Secretary: Iben Jensen Eld, 19 Whelden Ln., Stow MA 01775,ibenj@comcast.net

Class President: Colleen Quint, 26 Hadfield Rd., Minot ME 04258, cquint@mitchellinstitute.org

Kendle International Inc. has appointed Doug Campbell its vice president and chief legal counsel. Kendle is a global full-service contract research organization.... Susan Pedreira owns and operates the Java Bean coffee shop in downtown New Bedford, Mass.... Kate Whetten directs the health inequalities program at Duke Univ., and her recent four-year study of North Carolina’s Medicaid funding system raised eyebrows, according to the Herald-Sun  of Durham. Kate found that bringing HIV patients into Medicaid earlier, and thus treating them earlier, could actually save the state $11,500 per patient over a five-year period, and would delay the progression of AIDS. The study shows that low-income HIV patients who qualify for Medicaid actually end up costing the state less than higher-income HIV patients who are excluded from Medicaid coverage until their out-of-pocket spending reaches a certain level. “We found that the people who make even a little more money than those categorically eligible for Medicaid end up costing about twice as much,” Kate told the paper. “That was surprising, because usually we know that the higher your income, the healthier you are. But in this case, higher income may actually make you worse off.” Kate is associate professor of public policy in Duke’s Department of Community and Family Medicine.

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Heard on the Street: Young alums heading off to Wall Street say that pursuing a career in business is no longer a 'solo trip.'
The (Complete) Last Log of 'Shady Lady': From Aborigines to Zeros, navigator John Nash '39 logged an unforgettable World War II bombing mission
Stay in the Game: Despite top-notch management, the Bates endowment continues to lose ground to its peers. Here’s why — and why it should matter to you.
Object Lessons: Bates professors explain the objects of their affections
Bobcat in the Henhouse: A return to the nest hatches business success for Jesse Laflamme ’00



PreAmble: 1904 or 2004, the truth about major fund raising efforts is this: The college is the campaign, and the campaign is the college.
Open Forum: The portrait of Milt Lindholm '35 on the cover of the Summer issue, writes one reader, "signals all that Bates at its best stands for."
Quad Angles: Take a College to Launch
Bates Matters: The Literary Remains
Scene Again: Ivy Milestones
Class Notes: Find out what fellow Bates alums are doing
Your Page: Letting Go, Again
Vital Statistics
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