NAUGHT-EIGHT'S SIXTIETH HANOVER, JUNE 14, 15, 16, 1968 "There Are Those Who Love Her"
Presumably all classmates are now giving serious consideration to attending Naught- Eight's Sixtieth. A full scale announcement has preceded this notice by separate mail. The total response will give your committee urgently needed material to bring developing plans to maturity. Needed principally is more exact information on attendance. If you have not already returned the postal enclosed with the letter, please do so now. Then we will really be in the swing. All for 'OB, F. H. Munkelt.
"THE PLACE TO REMEMBER." In the October issue of "Yankee" Magazine is an interesting article with the above title by George O'Connell on the history of the "Hanover Inn" under various names and managers from Ebenezer Brewster, 1778 to the present manager, "Big Jim" McFate with pictures of the Inn as we knew it and of the Inn as now rebuilt.
NEWS FROM' CLASSMATES. Charles M. Hall from his notes for the 60-year- book: Charles entered college wishing to study for the ministry but fate intervened until 1951 when he was ordained for the priesthood of the Manton Protestant Episcopal Church as rector of St. Peters in the town of Johnston, R. 1., after serving as a lay reader. He is now serving as parish visitor of the Cathedral Parish of St. John's in Providence, R. I.
Tom Morrissey reports on August 18 that he was on a heavy therapy of vitamins with the emphasis on blood.
Dana Parkinson to your editor: "For the past 11 years I have tried to keep out of mischief by working at a light job at the Sheraton Park Hotel. This year our daughter's son, James Parkinson Speck, graduated 'cum laude' at Dartmouth. Next year another grandson, Gerald D. Parkinson from Winnipeg, son of Dr. Dwight Parkinson '38, hopes to graduate and his brother Terence R. Parkinson will be a freshman this fall." Dana's family is surely carrying on the Parkinson Dartmouth tradition.
Ralph Pease to your editor: "We are struggling along, don't get much done. Since 1954 I have been (when able) chauffeuring members of a 'blind Circle' to meetings once a month. They meet in various churches in the surrounding towns. The aim is to give blind people a chance to get together. Each blind one must have a sighted companion." Ralph now has a substitute to take his place as on Thanksgiving in 1965 he had to undergo a hernia operation with heart complications from which he is gradually recovering.
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