Classmate Profiles
To edit your profile or add photos please follow these steps:
1) Find your name on the list of Classmates below and click on the "Edit Profile" button that appears to the right of your name. If you don't find your name immediately, try searching by first name or maiden name or last name.
2) Enter a Username and Password that will be required to edit your profile in the future.
*If the administrator of the website has already provided your email address, you will instead be asked to enter your email address, and the Username and Password will be sent to you by email. Once you receive the email, proceed to step 3.
3) Edit or add your information to your profile.
4) Upload Then and Now photos by clicking on the "Browse" button that appears below Then and Now and find the image on your computer.
5) Click on the Submit button at the bottom of the form to save the changes.
Please note that your profile will temporarily be removed the website after your first edit; however, it will re-appear shortly.
If you try to edit your profile more than once, you will need to follow the same instructions; however, you will be asked to enter the Username and Password that you created the first time that you edited your profile. If you forget the username and password, please click on the link that says, "I forgot my username and password." The username and password will only be sent to the email address listed in the profile. If you have changed your email address or didn't enter an email address, you will need to use the Contact Us page to ask the administrator of the website to add an email or edit the profile.
1) Find your name on the list of Classmates below and click on the "Edit Profile" button that appears to the right of your name. If you don't find your name immediately, try searching by first name or maiden name or last name.
2) Enter a Username and Password that will be required to edit your profile in the future.
*If the administrator of the website has already provided your email address, you will instead be asked to enter your email address, and the Username and Password will be sent to you by email. Once you receive the email, proceed to step 3.
3) Edit or add your information to your profile.
4) Upload Then and Now photos by clicking on the "Browse" button that appears below Then and Now and find the image on your computer.
5) Click on the Submit button at the bottom of the form to save the changes.
Please note that your profile will temporarily be removed the website after your first edit; however, it will re-appear shortly.
If you try to edit your profile more than once, you will need to follow the same instructions; however, you will be asked to enter the Username and Password that you created the first time that you edited your profile. If you forget the username and password, please click on the link that says, "I forgot my username and password." The username and password will only be sent to the email address listed in the profile. If you have changed your email address or didn't enter an email address, you will need to use the Contact Us page to ask the administrator of the website to add an email or edit the profile.
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Joan Warady (Oster)

City: | Chicago, IL 60610 |
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Steve Wasserman

City: | Smyrna |
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Country: | US |
State / Province: | GA |
Grade school attended: | Bryn Mawr |
James Weaver


City: | Bahama |
---|---|
Country: | US |
State / Province: | NC |
Grade school attended: | Horace Mann |
Highlights of your life since graduation: I attending Harvard College, and went on to the University of Pennsylvania where I met Anne. We married in 1967, and have two children, Bill and Sarah. We lived in Cleveland for 10 years, and I finished a residency in General Surgery. Moved south in 1981, and finished two more years of residency in Cardiothoracic Surgery. We have lived in Durham since 1983, and I retired from practice in January 2011. I practiced thoracic and vascular surgery until them. What a full life! | |
Memories or anything else you'd like to share: We all grew up in a dreamland. South Shore was a special place where we had the opportunity to gain the confidence and courage to head into the future. We were very fortunate. |
Edgar Weber

Marvin Weinstein

Grade school attended: | Bryn Mawr |
---|---|
Highlights of your life since graduation:
After South Shore High School, I received my BS in pharmacy and MS in Pharmaceutical Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago. I practiced community pharmacy on 87th and Bennett and in Hyde Park. Then I joined the faculty of the University Of Illinois College Of Pharmacy and was responsible for the college’s continuing education program. I taught pharmacy practice courses as well as courses on the history of pharmacy. I was also involved in hypertension management in community pharmacy settings. While on the faculty, I did advanced graduate work in Adult and Continuing Education at the U of I College of Education in Urbana. I am currently the President of Pharmacy Institute a continuing education provider. And, I am the CEO of High Style Interactive a web design and development company that creates web based applications for educators, organizations and businesses. Like some of my classmates, my family attended The South Side Hebrew Congregation at 74th and Chappel. Today, the congregation is known as Central Synagogue of Chicago, The South Side Hebrew Congregation and it is located at Water Tower Place and I am the President. South Shore was a wonderful community to grow up in. It had the best chocolate chip ice cream in the world at Mitchells (which you can still get and it’s exactly the same at the Mitchells located on Wells at Ontario,) South Shore had religious diversity with its mix of catholic, protestant and other churches, synagogues of every Jewish denomination and kosher meat markets. When I was growing up in South Shore I thought that I would be living there for the rest of my life and I didn’t know everyone was going to leave. I continued to live in South Shore until 1992. Unfortunately, very complex socioeconomic factors interplayed resulting in the fact that our generation did not produce another generation to follow us in South Shore. I got married in 1992 and we moved close enough to Wrigley field to see into the stands, but I never set foot in the place as a life long White Sox fan. Today, my wife and I live on the northwest side, but I still consider myself a SouthSider. We both love Chicago and we plan to stay here. Sometimes, when I drive north on Pulaski I can’t figure out how I ever wound up in what seems like the other end of the world from South Shore. But, many of you live a lot farther away then I do from our old neighborhood. What we all share is the fact that we lived and learned in the same space 5 days a week for 4 years, and for some of us it goes back another 8 years at Bryn Mawr. Although it was a small part of our lives, from a developmental standpoint those were important years. A few years ago I attended my wife’s high school reunion in Amarillo Texas and I found it fascinating. So, I am looking forward to learning how my cohort group spend the last half century. I guess I have a warped sense of time, because it doesn’t seem possible that it could be that long ago. |
Warren Weisberg

Stuart Weisberg (see Memorials)
Barry Weiss

City: | Highland Park, IL 60035 |
---|
Michael Weiss

Jeri Welch

Joan Warady (Oster)

City: | Chicago, IL 60610 |
---|
Steve Wasserman

City: | Smyrna |
---|---|
Country: | US |
State / Province: | GA |
Grade school attended: | Bryn Mawr |
James Weaver


City: | Bahama |
---|---|
Country: | US |
State / Province: | NC |
Grade school attended: | Horace Mann |
Highlights of your life since graduation: I attending Harvard College, and went on to the University of Pennsylvania where I met Anne. We married in 1967, and have two children, Bill and Sarah. We lived in Cleveland for 10 years, and I finished a residency in General Surgery. Moved south in 1981, and finished two more years of residency in Cardiothoracic Surgery. We have lived in Durham since 1983, and I retired from practice in January 2011. I practiced thoracic and vascular surgery until them. What a full life! | |
Memories or anything else you'd like to share: We all grew up in a dreamland. South Shore was a special place where we had the opportunity to gain the confidence and courage to head into the future. We were very fortunate. |
Edgar Weber

Marvin Weinstein

Grade school attended: | Bryn Mawr |
---|---|
Highlights of your life since graduation:
After South Shore High School, I received my BS in pharmacy and MS in Pharmaceutical Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago. I practiced community pharmacy on 87th and Bennett and in Hyde Park. Then I joined the faculty of the University Of Illinois College Of Pharmacy and was responsible for the college’s continuing education program. I taught pharmacy practice courses as well as courses on the history of pharmacy. I was also involved in hypertension management in community pharmacy settings. While on the faculty, I did advanced graduate work in Adult and Continuing Education at the U of I College of Education in Urbana. I am currently the President of Pharmacy Institute a continuing education provider. And, I am the CEO of High Style Interactive a web design and development company that creates web based applications for educators, organizations and businesses. Like some of my classmates, my family attended The South Side Hebrew Congregation at 74th and Chappel. Today, the congregation is known as Central Synagogue of Chicago, The South Side Hebrew Congregation and it is located at Water Tower Place and I am the President. South Shore was a wonderful community to grow up in. It had the best chocolate chip ice cream in the world at Mitchells (which you can still get and it’s exactly the same at the Mitchells located on Wells at Ontario,) South Shore had religious diversity with its mix of catholic, protestant and other churches, synagogues of every Jewish denomination and kosher meat markets. When I was growing up in South Shore I thought that I would be living there for the rest of my life and I didn’t know everyone was going to leave. I continued to live in South Shore until 1992. Unfortunately, very complex socioeconomic factors interplayed resulting in the fact that our generation did not produce another generation to follow us in South Shore. I got married in 1992 and we moved close enough to Wrigley field to see into the stands, but I never set foot in the place as a life long White Sox fan. Today, my wife and I live on the northwest side, but I still consider myself a SouthSider. We both love Chicago and we plan to stay here. Sometimes, when I drive north on Pulaski I can’t figure out how I ever wound up in what seems like the other end of the world from South Shore. But, many of you live a lot farther away then I do from our old neighborhood. What we all share is the fact that we lived and learned in the same space 5 days a week for 4 years, and for some of us it goes back another 8 years at Bryn Mawr. Although it was a small part of our lives, from a developmental standpoint those were important years. A few years ago I attended my wife’s high school reunion in Amarillo Texas and I found it fascinating. So, I am looking forward to learning how my cohort group spend the last half century. I guess I have a warped sense of time, because it doesn’t seem possible that it could be that long ago. |
Warren Weisberg

Stuart Weisberg (see Memorials)
Barry Weiss

City: | Highland Park, IL 60035 |
---|
Michael Weiss

Jeri Welch
