Kellogg World Alumni Magazine

1997 — Part-Time

Judy (Wu) Von Emloh reports: “After 14 years in China with McKinsey, I moved with my English husband and our two daughters to Oxford in October. I will stop working and become a housewife for a while until I settle the family into our new life in Oxford.”

Debbie Guagliardo passionately volunteers for the Foundation for Angelman Syndrome Therapeutics (FAST), an all-volunteer organization dedicated to finding a cure for Angelman Syndrome, a severe neurological disorder characterized by profound developmental delays, lack of speech, problems with motor coordination (ataxia) and balance, and epilepsy. She writes: “I am thrilled to announce that FAST was the grand prize winner of $250,000 in the 2011 Vivint Gives Back Project, an online charitable campaign that benefits nonprofit organizations throughout the United States and Canada. To learn more about Angelman Syndrome, please visit CureAngelman.org.”