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 Los 
                  Angeles may be the city of angels, but its hard to know 
                  who your friends are in Tinseltown.  All 
                  the stereotypes you hear about L.A. are true, says Curley 
                  Bonds 87C (below), president of the Los Angeles chapter 
                  of the Association of Emory Alumni. This is a city of 
                  transplants, and it can be very hard to make solid connections, 
                  real friends. It really does help to feel like you have a genuine 
                  connection with someone.  Connecting 
                  with friendly faces who share a common bond is one of the primary 
                  purposes of the L.A. alumni chapter, which has seen a surge 
                  of growth and activity in recent months. Bonds, a psychiatrist 
                  who works with heart-transplant patients at a major cardiac 
                  center, has been in L.A. since 1992 and was recently made president 
                  of the group. He and his partner live in Santa Monica.
 So 
                  far, its been really fun, says Bonds, over breakfast 
                  at a favorite Third Street diner. Theres a core 
                  group of about fifteen people who have really expressed a lot 
                  of interest. This is a town where everyone is young, so there 
                  are a lot of young alumni here. People seem very enthusiastic 
                  about showing support for the Emory club. There 
                  are reportedly some twelve hundred Emory alumni living in the 
                  Los Angeles area, but the size and sprawling nature of the city 
                  make it challenging to plan events at central locations, Bonds 
                  says. Still, leaders of the chapter, including Staci Weiss 
                  97C, who keeps tabs on young L.A. alumni, are aiming 
                  to offer five events a year. They have held parties at Beverly 
                  Hills Porsche, owned by Geoff Emery 
                  86L, and at the home of West Wing screenwriter 
                  Mark Goffman 90C. 
                  Chapter officers also organized an effort for Emorys National 
                  Volunteer Day, working at an L.A. food bank, and attended the 
                  Regional Leadership Conference at Emory in November. The 
                  Food Bank volunteer day was kind of a continuation of 
                  something that was part of our Emory experience, Bonds 
                  says. This was like the L.A., grown-up version of Volunteer 
                  Emory, for people who enjoyed that. Bonds 
                  was one of those, as well as a Martin Luther King scholar, a 
                  leader in residence life (my first introduction to counseling, 
                  he says), editor of the Phoenix, and a member of the Stipe Society. 
                  Emory was a great experience for me, says Bonds, 
                  a native of Mobile, Alabama. Emory 
                  is becoming more well-known on the West Coast, which is helping 
                  to promote the alumni chapter, according to Bondsparticularly 
                  among the young graduates in the area. I 
                  see young alumni as both our future and our present, he 
                  says. The other day, I was driving along and I saw a young, 
                  attractive person driving a nice car, and I looked, and they 
                  had an Emory alumni sticker on the window. I never used to see 
                  that. It was kind of exciting.P.P.P. |  |