Potash Hill

And more

A group show at the Brattleboro Museum and Art Center, featuring new work by Marlboro art faculty Marina Lantin (ceramics), John Willis (photography), Cathy Osman (painting) and Tim Segar (sculpture), opened in November. Titled Four Eyes: Art from Potash Hill, the show will continue through February 5. Photo by Joanna Moyer-Battick

  

Last June, a few of Marlboro’s former Oxford classics fellows, math fellows and alumni gathered with Ellen McCulloch-Lovell, president, Ted Wendell, trustee, and Mary Wendell for a reunion at the British Academy in London. Those attending included (from left to right) Ted Wendell, Nicolas Barber, Geoffrey Fallows, Robin Jackson, David Middleton, former math fellow Charlotte Watts, ecologist Chris Carbone ’88, Robert Wendt, artist Pat Kauffman ’74, Ellen McCulloch-Lovell, Mark Pobjoy, Philip DeMay, Emma Park, former math fellow John Arhin and current classics fellow William Guast. Photo by Claudine Hartzel

 

John MacDonald of Shaftsbury, Vermont, who was born in Hendricks House in 1927, stopped by the campus for a visit in October. His family owned 1,300 acres here and farmed and logged the land. After his father died, his mother, pregnant with twins, sold the farm to Marlboro founder Walter Hendricks and moved to the Northeast Kingdom. Photo by Dianna Noyes