Rebecca D’Harlingue
Rebecca D’Harlingue, LA74, GR76, penned The Lines Between Us (She Writes Press, 2020), a dual-timeline novel set in 17th-century Spain and Mexico, and in 1992 St. Louis. The book was a finalist in the best new fiction category for both the Best Book Awards and the International Book Awards in 2020. Kirkus Reviews called D’Harlingue’s book “an ambitious, engaging novel that explores the power of finding personal connection to the past.”
William Campbell
William Campbell, GA74, retired as a licensed architect/city planner.
Gail Capper Altman
Gail Capper Altman, UC73, earned a graduate of arts degree in teaching English as a second language from Avila University, Kansas City, Mo., in August 2020.
Jayprakash Raisoni
Jayprakash Raisoni, SI72, SI74, writes of his appreciation to WashU for making events available online during the COVID-19 crisis.
Ronald Klein
Ronald Klein, BU72, has had two stem cell transplants in the last decade and recently received a kidney from his wife, Susan Klein. He says his wife’s gift was “like getting half my life back.” Klein has been with CAMICO, the nation’s largest CPA-owned and -directed program of insurance and risk management for the accounting profession, for 35 years. He and his wife have a son, a daughter and three grandchildren.
David Dietrich
David Dietrich, LA72, GR79, continues in the private practice of clinical psychoanalysis. Dietrich also supervises psychiatrists and psychologists who are in training at the Michigan Psychoanalytic Institute and is on the clinical faculty of the Wayne State University School of Medicine.
Chung-Kwang Chou
Chung-Kwang Chou, SI71, earned the IEEE Standards Association’s Lifetime Achievement Award for his participation and leadership in the IEEE International Committee on Electromagnetic Safety for almost five decades.
“Terry” Richard Koch
“Terry” Richard Koch, LA70, continues his work with the National Lawyers Guild- San Francisco Bay Area. Currently the treasurer of the Bay Area Community Law Foundation, he helped start the legal observer program in 1984 to protect the First Amendment rights of protestors. Koch, who is semiretired, continues to represent severely mentally ill incarcerated individuals.
Daniel Freeman
Daniel Freeman, LA68, penned The House Was My Home: My Life on Capitol Hill and Other Tales (Cadmus Publishing, 2020). The book covers the 30 years he spent as majority counsel and parliamentarian in the House of Representatives, where he worked on four impeachments and with three judges and a president. Freeman is a professor and fellow at American University’s Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies.
Victoria Lonergan
Victoria Lonergan, LA67, and her husband, Richard, moved to Clayton, Mo., after 50 years in San Francisco. Lonergan writes that St. Louis is a much easier city to live in than San Francisco, and they don’t have to worry about drought or wildfires.