Class Notes From left: Goodman ‘06 and Noel-Nosbaum ‘07 2005 Kay Healy created a 1,000-square-foot installation in the Central Library of Philadelphia. Called Lost and Found, the work depicts iconic Philadelphia row houses and incorporates 3-dimensional screen-printed, stuffed, and sewn objects— everything from frying pans to Teletubbies, each one symbolizing something lost by a person who wants it back. Interviewee Tim Gibbon ‘04, for instance, spoke about his bike. The stories behind those objects can be heard on recordings made by NPR in conjunction with the installation. Lost and Found will be on display through October 2015. [w] kayhealy.com/lostandfound Kappraff ‘06 Jaffee ‘06 graduates. “We were, by chance, the ‘green’ team,” he writes, noting that two of them bike to the hospital each day, and the other walks. Pictured n Carrie Noel-Nosbaum married Gabe Pinkney on July 13, 2014, in Potomac, Md. Oberlin alumni in attendance included (pictured from left) Ben Stanley ‘05, with his wife, Val, Peter Aron ’67, Meghan Schott ’06, Kate Oberg ’06, mother-of-the-groom Pam Sommers ’77, Lee Stern ’77, Marianne Alweis ’73, Richard Mellman ’71, Callie Sadler ’06, and Lynn Gerbec, as well as Ferd Hoefner ’77 (not pictured). n Rebecca Shaykin, assistant curator at the Jewish Museum in New York, was one of two organizers of Helena Rubinstein: Beauty is Power, on display through March 22, 2015. The New York Times called it “a master class in modernism-as-marketing.” 2008 Marie Barnett and Xander Woolverton were married August 30, 2014, in Lenox, Mass. They were joined by many Obies and lifelong friends: Rebecca Turnbull ’06, Christa Wagner, Mathilda McGee-Tubb ’07, David Perlman, Nat Gelb, Daniil Karp ’09, Dieter Strause, Nivan Khosravi, Henry Schneider, Jacob Fiss-Hobart ’05, Zenith Richards ’09, Krista Lewicki, Steven Kleinman ’05, Stephanie Lowenthal-Savy, Brendan Morris, Molly Wollosky ’09, Jesse Gerstin ’07, Brittany Jordan ’09, Alison Doniger, Caitlin Seeley George, Dan Lesser, Tom Curtin. Loved and missed were: Valerie Alt, Danielle Koplinka-Loehr, Gabo Golden ’06, Ilana Garcia-Grossman, Olivia Sideman ’09, and Kirsten Hansen-Day ’09. Marie and Xander live in Brooklyn, N.Y. n Tiffany Chang earned third place in the college/university orchestra division of the American Prize in Conducting. Tiffany is founder and music director of the New England Repertory Orchestra in Boston and associate professor at the Berklee College of Music. n Ezra and are attending physician John Limouze ’01, Will, and first-year resident Ali Alpert ’98. n Powerhouse, a new play written by Josh Luxenberg and directed by Jon Levin ’07, was a November 2014 critic’s pick in the New York Times. The show, which focuses on the life of jazz musician and inventor Raymond Scott, features Clare McNulty in a leading role. It played at the New Ohio Theater in New York City’s West Village. n Caitlin Goodman and Jonathan Pitts were married September 6, 2014, in Philadelphia. Joining the celebration were numerous Obies (pictured from left): Sam Rauch ’07, Charlie Gill, Charlie Brown, Emily Guendelsberger, Scott and Gretchen Pritchard Max Willens, Alli Katz, Hannah Greene, Myra Hellerstein, Ricardo Lagomasino, and Meghan Donnelly. Sarah DeGiorgis also attended, but does not appear in the photo. 2006 Jonah Kappraff married Beth Willer in Trumansburg, N.Y., on June 21, 2014. Obies in attendance were (pictured from left) Ryan Miller and Cara McKibbin, both ’05, and Ben Fox ‘01. n Will Jaffee, a fourth-year medical resident at Cambridge (Mass.) Hospital, was surprised to learn in November that three of the five people on his internal medicine team are Oberlin 2007 The first novel by Kate Axelrod, The Law of Loving Others, was published in January by RazorBill, an imprint of Penguin Young Readers Group. Dan Chaon, Delaney Associate Professor of Creative Writing at Oberlin, says the book “creates the kind of complex heroine readers will long remember.” 38