April 30 marked the 100th anniversary of the Ledyard Canoe Club, a very special place.
Articles tagged with '20200701'
July-August 2020
With the 2020 Tokyo Olympics (now 2021?) so much in the news, I asked our own class Olympian, Ed Williams (1968 Grenoble Winter Olympics, in biathlon), to reflect on what enabled him to reach that platform and the effect it had on
I write this column in San Francisco during week seven of California’s Covid-19 stay-at-home order.
Classmates Ric Gruder, Richard Livingston, Terry Lichty, and Andy Hotaling made contact. More in the next edition.
An unexpected benefit of restrictive social distancing regulations: Some of us non-techy troglodytes have been inspired to experiment with Zoom and Skype as a way to stay in touch.
In February, when visitors were still coming to N.Y.C., Liz Epstein Kadin hosted the grandson of her language study abroad family from Bourges, along with his wife and children.
This month I asked ’90s, “Please tell us one positive thing that’s come out of the Covid-19 pandemic for you or a member of your family or one life-adjustment or habit change you have made that you expect will continue as we all ease into the new
Richie Wolff checked in from his senior living residence in Portland, Oregon, to let me know his brother, John ’46, had died. Richie and Beth returned from Bali in December on probably their last international excursion.
I write this as the hideous pandemic rages on. I hope that when you read this, we have survived this holocaust with a more humane sense of our fellow worldly tenants and a renewed zest for life itself rather a search for its frills.
I know I say this every time but never have I valued the bonds formed around a beautiful New Hampshire college Green more than during the past several months.