November 2014

             
                           
President : Newsletter Editor: Communication Officers:
Denny Denniston Thomas S. Conger Harris B. McKee (Webmaster)
266 West 91st St 6326 Bonita Rd, Apt H104 5 Cunningham Ln.
New York, NY 10024-1101 Lake Oswego, OR 97035 tcink85***gmail.com Bella Vista, AR 72715-6550
Vice-President: Co-Bequest Chairs Robert H. Conn (Editor)
Ken DeHaven Peter M. Palin 3025 Loch Dr.
19 Sky Ridge Dr 1323 Southeast 17th Street # 129 Winston Salem, NC 27106-3007
Rochester, NY 14625-2159 Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316-1707  
Secretary : John Damon Arts & Legacy Committee
Victor S. Rich Jr. 79 Bayberry Lane, PO Box 218 David Birney
5 Red Ground Rd. Barnstable MA 02630-1801 20 Ocean Park Blvd, Townhouse 11
Old Westbury, NY 11568-1119   Santa Monica, CA 90405-3589
Treasurer : Mini-Reunion Chairman: Hanover Oscar Arslanian
Ivar A. Jozus Maynard B. Wheeler 2489 North Edgemont St
73 Main St. P.O. Box 538 Los Angeles, CA 90027-1054
Middletown, CT 06457-3408 Grantham, NH 02753-0538 Pete Bleyler
Co-Head Agents :   43 Berrill Farms Lane
Henry Eberhardt
( 727) 289-1681
300 Beach Dr N.E. Apt. 309
Saint Petersburg, FL 33701
Mini-Reunion Chairman:
Non-Hanover
Dave Prewitt

279 Warner Road
Wayne , PA 19087-2156

Hanover, NH 03755-3216

Class Historian/Necrologist
George Bland

Harris McKee    
  55th Reunion Chair  
Alumni Council : Jim Baum  
Roger McArt from 7-01-13  
26 McKinley St Class Web Site:

Rowayton, CT 06853-1530

http://www.dartmouth.org/classes/61/
     
   
     

 

             

Bar of color

Go Directly to:   Fall Mini    Green Cards

Class Member Updates:

Nyla Arslanian, Baum, Bland, Bleyler, Boss, Breed, Burton, Cook, Daley, Dalglish, DeHaven, Denniston, Eberhardt, Eicke, Figilis, Forester, George, Gitchel, Greenfield, Hargraves, Holmberg, Horan, Husband, Jackson, Jacobson, Johnson, Kaminsky, Keith, Knox, Low, Rich, Rozycki, Turnbull, Wheeler, White, Whitehead, Wybranowski,

         
                                     
Maynard on Moosilauke
Maynard and Serafina stop Moosilauke

 

 

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Hanover-Mini Chair Maynard Wheeler submits this chronicle of the happy fall mini-reunion October 3-5:  “On a glorious NH fall day with beautiful colors, many arrived early enough to see ‘BASIC at 50,’ a documentary about early computing at Dartmouth. Emeritus Professor Tom Kurtz was present to answer questions and talk with us about just how game-changing Prof. Kemeny was by putting computing in the hands of undergraduates.  It can be found on YouTube under ‘Birth of Basic.’ We retired to the Hanover Inn for cocktails, dinner and camaraderie in the lovely new Hayward Room, overlooking the Green filled with students and families enjoying the mild fall weather. George Whitehead and Tim Knox where able to attend some of the events.


Saturday brought us together once again in Moore Hall to hear from the students to whom we give awards. Lisa Luo ’15 led off with a follow up from last year on her trip to China to uncover her ‘roots/routes’ in a small village where people marveled at her tall stature and ability speaking a dialect of the elders but not the Mandarin of younger generations. She plans a film or DVD come spring. Our Academic Student for this year, Julien Blanchet ’15, spoke about teaching computer programming skills to grammar and high school students in the Hanover area with the help of classmates whom he’d recruited. He also told us about his term teaching at the Dartmouth program in Micronesia.  Our Arts Initiative student, Gavin Huang ’14, a native of Chinatown in NYC, showed us his Film Department project ‘Freedom Swimmers’ about his uncle’s escape from Communist China on his third attempt by swimming from the mainland to Hong Kong. It can be seen at: https://vimeo.com/95931972 (Password: dataogang – it has not been released publicly yet as he plans to cut it down for competition in the documentary film world) We were all very impressed and moved by it.  This year the rain cancelled softball scrimmage so Tiffany Dyson ’18 came by.  She plays outfield or midfield and our stipend to the Athletic Department paid for her visit to campus to attend a summer week of softball camp. For her First Year trip she spent time at the organic farm ending up with the traditional DOC games and mountain climb at the Moosilauke lodge.  She said the hills of Malibu did not prepare her for the White Mountains.


“President Denniston brought us up to date on our class’s favorable performance over the year while we had our bag lunch from Lou’s. The much needed rain began slowly at kick off time with PENN. Eberhardt, George, Holmberg and Jackson represented the ’61 section until they were sure the BIG GREEN had the game in hand. Art Jackson was elsewhere in the crowd as was Ron Boss.  Robert Frost went without a visit during the drenching downpour.


“We made our second appearance at the Wilder Center for cocktails and dinner.  The crowd included: Carol and Jim Baum, Gene and George Bland, Ruth and Pete Bleyler, Marge and Ron Boss, Eileen and Gim Burton, Chris and Denny Denniston, Laurie and Henry Eberhardt, Helen and Larry George, Mel and Ben Gitchel, Ann and Bob Hargraves, Judy and Hop Holmberg, Karin and Bob Jackson, Ellie and Art Johnson, Marcia and Curtis Low, Helene and Mike Murphy, Sandy and Maynard Wheeler.


“Amit Chakrabarti from the Computer Science Department spoke to us about his attraction to Dartmouth from Princeton where he received his PhD.  His work centers on ‘big data’ and ‘difficult’ computer problems. More understandable was his activities in tournament Scrabble and the logic of winning at the game. He was very enthusiastic about the students he teaches.
“Sunday’s finale was brunch at the Hanover Inn before everyone went their various ways on a beautiful sunny fall NH day.  Altogether 19 classmates and their companions participated in the weekend.  A straw poll was strongly in favor of gatherings early in the fall separate from the congestion of Homecoming weekend.”

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Al Rozycki got advance word that our ol’ football Captain, Ken DeHaven is to be inducted into the Ivy League Football Hall of Fame at the annual banquet in New York January 22. 2015. Here’s the background on his honor:

             
               
Ken Dehaven

2015 Honoree,
Ivy Football Hall of Fame

Kenneth DeHaven, M.D 1961

                                             

 

A native of Dayton, Ohio, Kenneth DeHaven graduated from Fairmont High School in 1957, and attended Dartmouth College, playing on Dartmouth's first Ivy League championship football team under Coach Bob Blackman, and captaining the 1960 team. After graduating in 1961, he entered Dartmouth Medical School, receiving a BMS Cum Laude degree in 1963.

He then transferred to Northwestern University Medical School where he was AOA and received his MD degree in 1965.His postgraduate education was at the Cleveland Clinic, finishing his Orthopaedic residency in 1972. This was interrupted by serving as a medical officer in the US Navy from 1967 to 1969.
After completing residency he remained on the faculty of the Cleveland Clinic Orthopaedic Department until moving to Rochester, NY, in 1975 to join the full-time faculty of the University of Rochester Department of Orthopaedics as the Director of Athletic Medicine. In July 2005 he transitioned to part-time Professor of Orthopaedics, continuing to be involved in teaching, clinical research and providing non-surgical care for sports related knee problems. From 2004 to 2008 he served as the Senior Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs at the University of Rochester Medical Center and Director of the University of Rochester Faculty Practice Group. He is currently Professor Emeritus, Department of Orthopaedics at the University Of Rochester. In 2009 he launched his " hobby career" servicing and repairing mechanical clocks ("Ken's Clocks").


Beginning in 1972, Dr. DeHaven was one of the first to utilize arthroscopy in an Orthopaedic Sports Medicine practice. He has been a full-time faculty member involved in teaching, patient care and clinical research his entire career, and has been a mentor to many residents and fellows. He has also served as team physician for high school, college and professional teams, beginning during residency and continuing today. Throughout his career he has authored or co-authored more than 86 scientific papers, contributed 36 textbooks or chapters in textbooks, has done 46 visiting professorships, and given numerous other invited lectures nationally and internationally. He is probably most recognized for his work on the meniscus, especially meniscus repair.
Dr. DeHaven is a past president of the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine, the Arthroscopy Association of North America, the International Society of the Knee (a parent society to ISAKOS) and the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.
For information and Tickets to January 22, 2015 Event:
https://www.ivyfootballassociation.org/home

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Bruce Forester has had his new book When A Stranger Knocks available in stores and Amazon for some time now, but your editor was ever so slightly distracted by a cross-country move and took a while to review it. Brief notes between tc and author should entice you to add it to your reading list—Duke: “Don’t be cheap, get it on Amazon. You will love it. Lots of amazing sex. And all royalties go to Alzheimers.” tc: “As usual, the plot line wouldn't allow me to put it down—so roared right thru it in typical Forester novel fashion. Fun story, and Mort & Millie can kinda grown onya.”

Speaking of writers, John White addresses history and our sad involvement in French Indochina thus: “This past August 4 is the 50th anniversary of the real start of the Vietnam War.  Fifty years ago, an alleged attack upon two U.S. naval ships in the Gulf of Tonkin was used as an excuse by President Johnson to stampede Congress into passing the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which provided him with legal authority to wage war in Vietnam.  
In 1967 I "blew the whistle" on that lie.  Here's an article from today's newspaper:

http://www.cheshirecitizen.com/news/allnews/3718448-129/gulf-of-tonkin-whistleblower-publishes-memoirs.html

And here's the book on Amazon in paper edition and Kindle ebook.  It's entitled THE GULF OF TONKIN EVENTS—FIFTY YEARS LATER.

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=The+Gulf+of+Tonkin+Events

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As time inevitably doth pass, the truths of history slowly emanate from the floorboards of the stages upon which ‘twas played. May we eventually learn for good what our country’s role is on that world proscenium . . .
Dave Cook, in the Uppah Valley and partying at The Ledges, reports: “Things are going along just great.  Nancy and I are still in good health; she had a little bout with breast cancer two years ago, but is doing just fine now. We are now living at our summer home in Grand Haven, Mich. on the shores of Lake Michigan. We go to Fla. for 5-6 months and have a home in Englewood, Fla. At Boca Royale Golf Club. I retired in 1999, and enjoy boating, swimming, biking, and some golf( but no a good golfer). I have only been to a doctor only for my annual checkup, so life has been very good for Nancy and me.”

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Here’s some serendipity experienced by long-time [former] mayor of WallaWalla, Wash. Jerry Greenfield:
Alum Discovers History of ‘Thayer Drive’
BY ANNA FIORENTINO
AUGUST 2014 • COOLSTUFF

 

Thayer Drive Sign
Thayer Drive in Richland Washington

Every week Jerry Greenfield ’61, Th’62, T’65 turns down Thayer Drive in Richland, Washington to attend Kiwanis Club meetings, visit the dog groomer, and advise the high school’s Key Club.
He first noticed the street—near George Washington Way and Robert E. Lee Boulevard—when he moved to Richland 35 years ago. “I just knew the road must have been named for Sylvanus Thayer. I asked someone who had been involved in the research of the streets and she said instead it had been named for a private in the Continental Army,” says Greenfield.
But a few weeks ago, he learned his hunch was correct. Thayer Drive is without a doubt named for Thayer School founder, General Sylvanus Thayer.

“My Kiwanis Club recently had a speaker who had worked as a volunteer for the city, researching and documenting all the city street names,” says Greenfield, who worked under the pioneers of aviation before World War II, on rockets for the Apollo moon shoot, and later in both financial computing and as a lawyer for Westinghouse. This local volunteer, Karen Miles, told him the Army would never have named the road for a private over a general, especially a general who was so important to the history of West Point – The United States Military Academy.


After graduating valedictorian from Dartmouth in 1807, Thayer entered West Point and upon completion was quickly promoted to major during the War of 1812. He returned to West Point as superintendent and over the next 16 years transformed it into the world’s leading military academy. In 1833, Thayer went on to serve as chief engineer for the US Army Corps of Engineers in Boston where he finished out his career over the next 30 years, overseeing the construction of Fort Warren and Fort Independence to defend Boston Harbor.
A century later, in 1943, a new generation in the Army Corps of Engineers took over about 600 square miles of the Hanford plateau along the Columbia River to build the first atomic bomb in an effort known as the Manhattan Project. While there were sites all over the country, within the Hanford site sat the towns of Hanford and Richland, home to just a few hundred people at the time—and today, Greenfield. The government chose to produce uranium and plutonium for the atomic bomb at the Hanford site due to the areas’ plentiful water supply and sparse number of inhabitants, who were given only a month or two to move out.   

Jerry Greenfield
Jerry Greenfield '61 Th'62, T'65
           

The Army Corps of Engineers got right to work researching atomic energy, replacing most of the buildings in Hanford with labs and reactors and laying out an entirely new city with new streets named for army men—notably, Thayer Drive. The Hanford site became home to an eventual population of 50,000 during the war (Richland’s approximate population today), though most didn’t stay long.
“Few of the people involved in the project really knew what they were building,” explains Greenfield. “Everyone else was here for a few months, then sent elsewhere so they wouldn’t learn too much about the project.”


The first atomic bomb was ultimately tested in White Sands, New Mexico in 1945 and by the time word spread of what had taken place, two of nine bombs had already exploded over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan. Within weeks, Japan surrendered and a truce was signed in Tokyo Harbor. Today, 70 years later, the government is still cleaning up the environment in Richland and surrounding areas, with no end in sight.
“Our city itself is a little piece of history. Were it not for the activities that occurred here during World War II, it is possible we might be part of the German or Japanese empires. At least we would not have won World War II,” says Greenfield. “I am particularly proud that the Army Corps of Engineers deemed General Thayer to be important enough to the history of our country to name one of the main arteries of our little town for him.”
“Although I’m sure most citizens are unaware of what contributions he made to the US, all Richland residents over ten years old must know of Thayer Drive, and if they look around, they’ll see a plaque in his name,” says Greenfield
A bronze plaque stands tall today at Thayer Drive, like those posted at nearby roads honoring each corresponding military officer. It reads: Brigadier General Sylvanus Thayer 1785-1872 ... In 1867 he endowed the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth and spent his last years arranging its curriculum.

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Back in July, Bill Figilis thefig***discountpress.com updated Webmaster McKee: “NEWS=Well I moved back to New York after splitting with my 3rd Wife... although we are still married.  I am listed in the phone book and live on East 79th Street...If you are so inclined, give me a call or drop me an email.... who knows, I might even (probably) respond...” 

 

And in early Sept., Capt. FJ Eicke posted this gustatorial account: “AN ADVENTURE WITH SOFTSHELL CRABS—This Labor Day weekend was different - with the main course being a delicacy of the bayou, marsh, and bays that we have enjoyed in restaurants but seldom recently in a home setting. My sister Vi will, more times than not, order softshell crabs when out at a seafood restaurant (e.g. Mary Mahoney's) and we enjoyed ‘cocktail softshells’ with the [family] once at the same named source—when is the last time you cooked this delicacy?  When a source for these delicacies entered my realm, the only thought  was when we would have the [family] Softshell Crab Feast. Turned out to be this Labor Day weekend - and everything fell into place.The weekend started Friday night on an unrelated note with the first gathering of the new Gulf Coast Squadron of USPS. That behind us, the next adventure was a trip to south Louisiana - specifically Lafitte - to obtain the delicacy from a source I will withhold and reveal only reluctantly and with strict adherence to a code of silence.

Kathy and I left for Lafitte Saturday morning and encountered thunderstorms almost the entire trip there and back. But we made it to the maker of softshells on the banks of Bayou Barataria - quite an operation - and were schooled in the catching, making, cleaning and cooking by the softshell crab-maker himself. A trip to Lafitte is not complete without a visit to Boutte's Restaurant, just over the humpback bridge on the other side of the bayou. Satiated with delicious gumbo and oyster po-boys served with Cajun friendliness, we sought the additional help of the master chef, Suzy, with words of wisdom on preparing the softshell delicacy, something she was preparing to do that day after Richard, our/and Boutte's crabber, delivered the softshell crabs. With two-dozen + 1 large, fat, living creatures in the ice chest, we returned to home base and kept the crustaceans well protected until the trip to [family] in Mobile on Sunday morning. That is when the cooperation of our (mine and Sister Vi's) family became evident - Kathy the cleaner, Cathy the applier of the well-prepared batter, Nancy the provider of utensils and kitchen-tender, Chelsea the go-fer and provider of beverages to the crew and onlookers, and Joe the fryer-tender - a team effort. The ensuing meal was delicious - and that may be an understatement. Home-fried softshell crabs - not seen in this family since Mother Eicke's earlier days - with trimmings of eggplant casserole, smashed potatoes, french bread and other fixings.  Hope you enjoy this little tale of a family adventure that may tickle certain readers in sundry ways - from the Crab Ladies to aquaculturists to marine scientists to old friends.” 

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Eicke and Bride Dec '61
Fisherman and Bride, ca. Dec. 1960
Recycled Cap'n Keith

And, while we’re in maritime mode, Dick Keith confesses: “Either old age or watching too many political news shows has addled my brain and I've bought another boat. This is a Ranger Tug built in Seattle. After selling our sail boat, we missed being on the water, so Nelda and I will periodically cruise the new ‘Alibi’ on the East Coast, the Great Lakes, and the Bahamas.  In truth, the lengthening list of our class obituaries weighed on my mind and we'd all best use the time we have.”

In from Oscar in late October: “Nyla recently stepped down as President of the Hollywood Arts Council, a position she held for 33 years, and has assumed the lifetime  position of President Emeritus. She was honored by the  Hollywood community with a reception in the lobby of the venerable Pantages Theatre at Hollywood & Vine. As the reception was to be a surprise, I told her that we had to attend a meeting there to discuss an issue the Nederlanders, who own the Pantages, had with the Greek Theatre which they also own. As we approached the theatre, her world was rocked by the Pantages’ glowing marquee on Hollywood Boulevard, “Congratulations Nyla Arslanian on 33 years of service to Hollywood”. It was all [hoopla] from there as she was feted by the community with accolades as well as a wonderful video in which Los Angeles leaders proclaimed there were not many great things that had occurred in Hollywood over the past 33 years that did not have Nyla’s name attached to them in some way.  Needless to say, she was blown away!”

Nyla-Oscar +2

Nyla Sign

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More SoCA doings at that time include Fritz Kern’s 75th birthday; here he is, with Janis, both looking 57 . .

Green Cards! 

Art “Jersey” Jacobson <ajocobson***aol.com> reminisces: “For those of you who do not remember me... I was the short guy running out on the basketball court to give Dave Gavitt ’59 gum, and teach him how to shoot foul shots with Doggie yelling “Jersey, get back here!”  Fun times in basketball in those years... I speak to Gerry Kaminsky once in a while, and he just keeps making me money so I can live like him...?”  Norm Page is “still finding stories for rocks and what they mean in geology. Retired from the USGS almost 20 years ago, the next day took on consulting jobs, and presently am senior geologist for Entree Gold Inc., working in Yerington, NV. My first family consists of two sons and grandchildren; one 53-year old and one 46-year old. The second family consists of two sons, a 21-year old in college and a 15-year old. The oldest is considering becoming  geologist as well. Look for his Stratus Space Flight on Youtube.” 
Fritz Kern's Birthday Party

Tony Horan speaks frankly: “Re. occupation of the President’s office: this is foreign to me. I thought I had applied to a large liberal arts college in order to learn at least part of the collective wisdom of world civilization, to learn what to think about.  These occupiers assume they already know what to think about. Even though headed for a narrow technical life, subspecialty surgery, the best courses for wisdom were Gramlich’s Human Nature and Scott-Craig’s Aesthetics. From S-C I learned ‘aesthetic distance’ to appreciate beauty. The occupiers have not had time in grade to develop aesthetic distance.”  [nor much else of appreciable value, it would appear... ed.]       Fred Fields, Esq. recalls: “I was reading a report from the Varsity Soccer Coach which reminded me of something that for some reason I’ve never forgotten: The classic headline in the Daily Dartmouth after our freshman soccer team handily won our first game: ‘Pea Green Booters Swamp Chase Field.’ ” [whoa—some kinda drinking game...! Ed.]

Now for some not so good stuff. Class Poet Laureate and Obituarist extraordinaire Tom Dalglish has had to resign his post after [successful] open-heart surgery: “It's been apparent for a while that I just don't have the time, energy, and general wherewithal to continue writing obituaries of our passing classmates, and so am writing with a certain sadness and relief to resign as class necrologist.  As some of you may know, I work full time as a reporter for a community newspaper, putting in slightly over 40 hours weekly on a persistently irregular and unpredictable schedule — some weekday nights, occasional weekends, some 14-16 hour days non-stop, and so forth. Timing and logistics (I work in a small newsroom) have made class officer conference calls an impossibility. I'm unable to attend our meetings. Retirement is out-of-the-question. I had a quad-bypass/open heart procedure in mid-April (from which I am recovering well, but which still entails about 6 hours of weekly rehab) that chewed a two-month chunk out of my life recently. And I have a daughter in her third year at Wheaton College [Norton, MA]. Dalglish
Class Poet, Forty Days Post-Op

And my wife, Ellen, with whom I want to spend some of my spare time. Bottom line: I just can't muster what it takes to do the job well, and feel badly about not keeping up in the last year or two. My contributions to Paths We've Taken were only possible because the project was a one-shot deal, and because I took vacation time to do it, which I'm reluctant to do again. I'm further daunted by the rapidly accelerating pace of our collective demise, and don't see how I could keep up going forward anyhow.  So, it's time to pull the plug. Thank you for honoring me with the position, and the greatly rewarding support for the work I did manage to do in the past. There was no great magic to the method, just an effort to capture a sense of each of our departed from the records they themselves created along the way, and to stitch together a narrative that conveyed to the reader who they were. Each man was different and unique. That's what impressed me as I moved along. Looking back on them all after they have died, occupying the field we all shared for a time in our lives, is really humbling. (I wonder if other men and women who've graduated from other colleges look back and feel the same. Maybe so. Isn't that sort of amazing?) Anything I can do to facilitate a transition to the next in line, I'll do. Let me know. I apologize for having made a commitment it turns out I couldn't keep, and wish it were otherwise.”

 

Learning of this development, Rich Husband contacted Jim “Scotty” Turnbull, our charter class Prez., and suggested he assume the mantle. However, once Dalglish spelled out the strictures and perseverance of doing the job properly, Scotty decided the whole megilla was beyond his ken and gracefully declined the honor.  Since that time George Bland has stepped forward to accept the position, and that selflessness is reflected in the current WWW masthead.  A big, big mahalo to George for taking on so ambitious—and growing—an assignment! 
Sadly, one of those next obituaries would involve a dear friend and fratbro, George Breed. Bruce Johnson sent us the following on June 5: “This evening I met Bill Breed, class of ’52, George’s brother, who told me that George had passed away today. He was living in Jackson Hole and had a lung ailment that had hospitalized him about a year ago. George was in a hospital in Salt Lake City in a respiratory ICU, where he landed six years ago with pneumonia and septic shock.  George was my roommate for two years, one in middle Thayer and the second at Phi Gam. I had seen him a  number of times over the years, and had skied with him in Jackson Hole and Grand Targhee. At times he led a fast paced life and was married twice and had three daughters. George was always a generous and fun loving guy, and I miss him.” Ditto - Ed.

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A ’61 Upper Valley lunch August 29 at Bistro Nouveau in Eastman served as swan song for the witless sucker who originated the program. A lovely serenade by Ford Daley and his backup sent the ol’ Hawaiian off in style, and unprecedented attendance gave proof that the real barrier to interest in such activity was the founder himself . . .



Record Crowd
Record Crowd!

Daley Duo
Daley Duo

Flash: another ’61 UV lunch! Maynard Wheeler: “8 of us gathered at the tetradecagon home of Mel and Ben Gitchel in Piermont NH where they served a generous lunch.”

D'61 Lunch
LtoR: Wybranowski, B Johnson, Rozycki, Wheeler, Gitchel, Baum, Knox, Whitehead
In sports, the undefeated ruggers won their 8th straight Ivy League XV title—15th championship in 18 years—thereby confirming their rank as most successful Dartmouth sports team ever. They now switch to 7-a-side play, the version to be played in the ’16 Olympics. Football is likewise doing well thus far, and hopes for an Ivy title remain rampant. Memorial Field improvements are forthcoming, the highlight being safety railings in the home stands, a direct appeal to, um, older alumni whose tread may have grown a mite chancy in recent years .

Here are selected views of ‘61s at Class Officers and Alumni Council Weekends:

Baum, DeHaven, and Wheeler
Baum, DeHaven, and Wheeler
Vic Rich, Jennifer Casey, and Denny Denniston
Vic Rich, Jennifer Casey, Denny Denniston and ?
McArt, Rozycki, and Bleyler
Esteemed ‘61s at Alumni Award banquet
(LtoR): Rog McArt, Al Rozycki, Pete Bleyler

  Let’s call it a wrap.


  Aloha,


    tc

 

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