Nov - Dec 2012
The nominating committee, headed by John North, for new class officers for the period 2012 through 2017, deferred their decision from the traditional time period at the current reunion to reflect the timing of the next reunion.
Class Notes
The nominating committee, headed by John North, for new class officers for the period 2012 through 2017, deferred their decision from the traditional time period at the current reunion to reflect the timing of the next reunion.
Once again it is a pleasure to report that our class under the leadership of class agents Jim Churchill and Ev Parker has outdone itself in its support of the Dartmouth College Fund.
It is hard to believe, but almost a year has passed since our record-breaking 60th reunion. However, there is still a lot going on.
The request made two columns ago for recollections about class members’ participation in the pioneering efforts that brought rugby back to campus in the spring of 1951 brought responses from Vince Jones and George Rambour
Although these notes are being written in mid-February, when the prospects for additional cold and snowfall in the record-setting winter in the Midwest and Northeast still loom large, they’ll be published in mid-April, when those classmates who s
We’ll call this one the “West Coast Report,” at least partially. For about the 25th year in a row, on December 10, 2012, the class held a year-end luncheon in San Francisco at the Bohemian Club with the usual cast of regulars in attendance.
It was a no-brainer for the college officials preparing to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Dartmouth’s association with the Peace Corps to look to Doc Dey to participate, if only as a knowledgeable historian of the early days.
In recounting the festivities at the annual luncheon for Washington, D.C., area classmates that he hosts at the Cosmos Club each November—and which was attended last Veteran’s Day by stalwarts Doug Corderman, Ted Fellowes, Jim Fowler
During our undergraduate years friendships are developed that gradually fade away as time goes by but, fortunately, many remain strong—even after some 60-plus years.
Putting together these notes is a bit challenging since I write in mid-April for a publication date after our 60th reunion, where it now appears that at least one-third of our living class members will have been on hand to exchange in person news
A brief trip down Memory Lane: The recent New York Times obituary of Italian film producer Dino Di Laurentis mentioned his early film Bitter Rice, which brought to mind the frenzy that overwhelmed the Dartmouth campus when it arrive
At this stage of the game you might think all of our accomplishments are in the book and the book is closed. Not so fast.