The cry of "Hey, you, '70" can now be heard all around the campus. I overheard one young neophyte talking to an old experienced Dartmouth man who was explaining that a good time to pick up some furniture was during Rush Week when all the fraternities sold furniture out on their lawns. After they get stung, they can always console themselves with the prospect of the Class of '71 arriving next year.
The social event of the Mahwah High School set occurred last June with the marriage of Herb McCord and Judy Stewart. It was quite a wedding. Lew Eisenberg was best man and Don Kubit, Geoff Brod, and some other guy I can't remember were ushers. The last we saw of Herb and Judy on their way to Nassau was the country club manager running after the car trying to retrieve all the junk tied to their car.
On a more serious note (but not much), the annual June graduations unveiled a flock of '64's. Ed Kirch got an MBA from Rutgers, and Bob Strichartz got a Ph.D. in Mathematics from Princeton. Carnegie Tech graduated Paul Young with a B.S. in Civil Engineering and Chuck Goldman with a M.S. in Industrial Administration.
"In a setting of mauve, hyacinth, and white carnations" (Boston Sunday Herald, July 31, 1966) Bob Reidy married the former Miss Kathleen Kenneally. Bob is now a third-year student at Cornell Medical School and they will be living in New York this year. On the same subject, young, debonaire, man-about-town Bob Patterson has gotten engaged to Miss Deanna DeAngelus. An Oct. 22 wedding is planned. Gil Kruschwitz was married last June to the former Miss Sarah Perry. The Xerox copy of the article is so bad that's all I know.
Dave Hess married Judy Nord in Pennsylvania last June. They spent their honeymoon in Bermuda before coming up to Hanover for the summer. Here, they both worked on the campaign staff in William R. Johnson's bid for the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate. Two other '64's were also up here for the whole summer, Hank Smith and Rob Arthur.
Two '64's now with the Peace Corps in India are Steve Blake and Slade Backer. During his training at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Steve studied the Hindi language and Indian history and culture. He also received special instruction in surveying and soil study and will assist in rural construction projects designed to increase food production and provide employment. Slade completed his training at the University of Hawaii, Hilo. He is with a group assigned to poultry development, gardening, and nutrition projects in the Indian states of Maharashtra, Mysore, and Orissa. Steve and Slade are among some 700 Peace Corps Volunteers now in India.
Backer
Blake
Secretary, Moose Mt., Etna, N. H.
Treasurer, Forsyth Houses 6515 Wydown, Clayton, Mo. 63105