Class Notes

1960

NOVEMBER 1966 AXEL L. GRABOWSKY, BRUCE M. CLARK
Class Notes
1960
NOVEMBER 1966 AXEL L. GRABOWSKY, BRUCE M. CLARK

Jo and Guy Piltz reportedly spent their vacation in the East - although I'm a bit puzzled why one would want to vacation in the megapolis when one lives in Hawaii. Jo wrote that Marty Zipser had visited them in Honolulu on his way home from Vietnam. That part of the world is getting a replacement for Marty, though, in the form of Jay Emery who's been issued a F4C (this civilian guesses,, that it is something that flies) and to use Jay's words "some bombs and other things to drop from it."

I am told that Peter Klaren, who's working for a doctorate in history at UCLA, is presently in Lima, Peru, with wife Sara. He's there on a research grant and is concerning himself primarily with his dissertation and seviche de corvina. Mai Churchill and wife Nita are back in Djakarta, Indonesia, where Mai enjoys diplomatic immunity as a member of our Embassy. Aside from ducking Molotov cocktails and mobs - only occasionally is it necessary, he hastens to add — he has fun mountain climbing and watching a country "emerging."

President Johnson has named Ernie Latham as a Foreign Service Officer of the United States. Ernie has an M.A. from Roosevelt University and had been an instructor at Lowell Technological Institute in the department of language and literature. By now he and his wife Judy may be in Washington or in any of the 113 countries with which the United States maintains diplomatic relations.

I spent a few days in Chicago last week and was brought up-to-date on doings a bit. Tom McBurney, my predecessor in this information department, is working for Tatham-Laird & Kudner Inc., an advertising agency, as account executive for one of the products of America's master merchandisers, Procter and Gamble. At least two Chicagoans apparently were so stimulated by their Hanover culinary experiences that they have entered that business. Bob McClure is working for Beatrice Foods and Walt Freedman for Sarah Lee, the pastry people.

Mort Kondracke is the Springfield correspondent for the Chicago Sun Times. (A word of explanation for non-Mid-Westerners: contrary to all appearances, Chicago is not the capital of Illinois; Springfield is.) Jim Branne, I hear, is working for the First National Bank of Chicago and has become a thorough suburbanite with all attending attributes. Tom Machura, on the other hand, is yet another member of the Left-Over Club and leads the normal dismal life of a bachelor in a big city.

Upon completion of his army tour of duty, Dr. and Capt. Marty Weiss was presented with a medal for meritorious service at West Point. He and wife Deborah now live in Cleveland, where Marty is doing his residence at University Hospital. Earlier this year Dick Aronsohn was appointed as the supervisor of compliance for the New Jersey Division on Civil Rights. Previously Dick had been a deputy attorney general.

Although it has slowed down a bit, I'm still being well supplied with wedding notices. (I apologize for some of the rather late reports; some people apparently are reluctant - I guess.) John Stephenson' married Lucretia Larkin earlier this year in Los Angeles. Also earlier this year, Mike McGinnes was married to Elizabeth Fitzhugh Bartlett in Bronxville, N. Y. Mike works for IBM in New York. Ed Hanauer went across the Atlantic to find his bride in Munich, Germany. Renate Lehmann and he were married in Needham, Mass. A bit more recently, Jon Brown married Sandra Bacher in New York. Jon, with a Ph.D. from Princeton, is presently an assistant professor in the department of art and archeology at that school. In Gloucester, Mass., Joan Linnell became the wife of Nat Gorton in August. Nat works for Nutter, McClennen and Fish. And that ends the wedding corner for the month.

Dave Hull left his post as the college's film program director during the summer and joined the literary department of Universal Pictures in New York. Dave, according to Universal Pictures, "will function as direct liaison with young writers in the U.S. who have not previously been given the opportunity to be heard." Dave, himself has written for U.S. British and German publications and a book of his will be published next year. John Hanson, in August, became a member - the youngest one — of the Rutland, Vt., Board of Aldermen. lohn, who has a law degree from the University of Virginia is one of the members of the law firm Corsones and Hanson. Pete Stagg, after completing his military service in the Air Force, returned to Medfield, Mass., to practise medicine. He will work with his father who is also a physician.

At the June wedding of Maynard B. Wheeler '61 and Sandra Lade in Weston, Conn.,Dartmouth was well represented by both families. (l to r) Stewart Lade (her brother),Anthony Horan '61, Maynard C. Wheeler '25 (his father), Robert Clark '22, ArchLade '33 (her uncle), Donald Lade '41 (her father), the bride and groom, CharlesBoynton '61 (his cousin), and Carroll Boynton '32 (his uncle).

Secretary, 169 Marlborough Boston, Mass. 02116

Treasurer, 52 Avon Circle, Port Chester, N. Y. 10573