The College cruelly slashed our Class Notes word limit to 350 owing to our advanced age and numbers. Ouch! Visit the lively website (dartmouth69.org) and read The ’69 Times that comes via snailmail.
Our class ended 2024 saddened and joyful at the same time. The sad news is that Paul Tuhus passed away in November, but we have a boatload of joyous memories of Paul as classmate, class leader, and friend.
Because of old age, DAM has cut our word limit for Class Notes, from 500 to only 350 words! We will have to rely much more on Peter Elias’ excellent website and Allen Denison’s outstanding newsletter.
Because of our old age, DAM has slashed our word limit for Class Notes, beginning with this issue, from 500 to 350 words. Feel free to voice your objections by email and I will forward them. Is this not sadly discriminatory?
The 55th reunion of the class of 1969 shared perfect weather and three memorable days and evenings of memories and fellowship. Bill Stableford summed up our sentiments well: “I wish it hadn’t ended.”
In the Dartmouth fellowship there is no parting, and in this piece we give a rouse for Peter Schaeffer, who is our beacon of resilience, courage, and unwavering spirit.
Tom Cronan looks forward to our 55th and writes: “Jan and I are spending the winter in St. James, North Carolina. We moved back to the Upper Valley [Quechee, Vermont] in 2017 after I retired.
First, this flash from classmate Dona Heller: “Who can forget her sharp and misty mornings? Not us, and now it’s carpe diem time: If not now, when? It’s time to sign up for our 55th reunion June 10-13. Don’t put it off.
An avalanche of news and cheers smothered this month’s mailbox, so if you don’t see yourself mentioned here, Allen Denison is working overtime on the next ’69 Times newsletter. Check there for more names and news.
On YouTube, though hard to find, there is a bit of nostalgia you may have overlooked. Filmed 10 years before we arrived, “Dartmouth Visited (1956)” will take you back in time.