Class Note 1975
Issue
Though the mailbag is light this month, the big news is that many of your classmates have been extremely busy working on our upcoming reunion in June of 2010. Though early, the schedule is quickly taking shape with an opening reception on June 14, followed by a full day of activities and our class dinner on the night of June 15 at the DOC house and a special Livingston Taylor concert that follows. We expect to have a sizeable crowd and Lon Cross and his able committee is working hard to make the reunion memorable. Our class housing will be centered at the McLaughlin Cluster and our tent will be nearby.
Lon and I are always looking for volunteers, so please get in touch with Lon or me if you’d like to join the team. Lon’s e-mail is lcross@lmi.org. I think for those of us who have been working on this, it’s fair to say that we have never had a more focused and organized reunion chair than Lon. Thanks, Lon, for spearheading this effort.
Of equal note is the appearance of the second class newsletter in less than a year. Robert “Simmy” Sinsheimer and his able co-editor Jim Erwin may have set a new class record of two newsletters in a three-year period. If you have postings you’d like to put in the newsletter, just e-mail them to Simmy at rsinsheimer@sinsheimerlaw.com. There are great current (thanks, Simmy) updates from Paul Parsons, Mark Oettinger, Joe Yastrow, Peter Darbee, Rob Calcaterre, Simmy and Robbin Derry (who invites all classmates to join the class of 1975 Facebook site).
Cliff Ennico sent me a copy of his new book, The Legal Job Interview, just published by Kaplan. Cliff practices law in Fairfield, Connecticut, and is the editor of the New York State Bar Association’s handbook on corporations and specializes in the “legal problems of entrepreneurs”—what problems could those be? Don’t all startups succeed? You get the point. In any event it’s a helpful book for those of us with kids applying to law firms.
Finally, I was up at the College two weeks ago and though we had yet to win a football game and it was snowing, there was a true excitement about Dartmouth’s new president, Jim Yong Kim. He has a bold agenda and it is very student-focused. For more specific information you can find excerpts from his recent talks on the College’s Web site.
Nancy and I look forward to seeing you in June, if not before, and do keep sending those e-mails.
—Jim Bildner, 5 Boardman Ave., Manchester, MA 01944; (617) 737-1100; jbildner@tpi.org
Jan - Feb 2010
Though the mailbag is light this month, the big news is that many of your classmates have been extremely busy working on our upcoming reunion in June of 2010. Though early, the schedule is quickly taking shape with an opening reception on June 14, followed by a full day of activities and our class dinner on the night of June 15 at the DOC house and a special Livingston Taylor concert that follows. We expect to have a sizeable crowd and Lon Cross and his able committee is working hard to make the reunion memorable. Our class housing will be centered at the McLaughlin Cluster and our tent will be nearby.
Lon and I are always looking for volunteers, so please get in touch with Lon or me if you’d like to join the team. Lon’s e-mail is lcross@lmi.org. I think for those of us who have been working on this, it’s fair to say that we have never had a more focused and organized reunion chair than Lon. Thanks, Lon, for spearheading this effort.
Of equal note is the appearance of the second class newsletter in less than a year. Robert “Simmy” Sinsheimer and his able co-editor Jim Erwin may have set a new class record of two newsletters in a three-year period. If you have postings you’d like to put in the newsletter, just e-mail them to Simmy at rsinsheimer@sinsheimerlaw.com. There are great current (thanks, Simmy) updates from Paul Parsons, Mark Oettinger, Joe Yastrow, Peter Darbee, Rob Calcaterre, Simmy and Robbin Derry (who invites all classmates to join the class of 1975 Facebook site).
Cliff Ennico sent me a copy of his new book, The Legal Job Interview, just published by Kaplan. Cliff practices law in Fairfield, Connecticut, and is the editor of the New York State Bar Association’s handbook on corporations and specializes in the “legal problems of entrepreneurs”—what problems could those be? Don’t all startups succeed? You get the point. In any event it’s a helpful book for those of us with kids applying to law firms.
Finally, I was up at the College two weeks ago and though we had yet to win a football game and it was snowing, there was a true excitement about Dartmouth’s new president, Jim Yong Kim. He has a bold agenda and it is very student-focused. For more specific information you can find excerpts from his recent talks on the College’s Web site.
Nancy and I look forward to seeing you in June, if not before, and do keep sending those e-mails.
—Jim Bildner, 5 Boardman Ave., Manchester, MA 01944; (617) 737-1100; jbildner@tpi.org