Class Notes

1973

March 1975 STEPHEN H. QUIGLEY, JAMES T. BROWN
Class Notes
1973
March 1975 STEPHEN H. QUIGLEY, JAMES T. BROWN

Come aboard '73s - All '73s are cordially welcomed aboard the Good Ship "Little Current" year-round . . . whether in person or in spirit, via the post! Don't be afraid to jot us a line or two every now and then - we've all got huge appetites, and we're always prepared to bite.

This month's tidings bring us communiques from three main lifelines: those mates either (1) married or about to be, (2) on-the-job, or (3) still attending their studies. Perhaps the greatest shock of them all rests in the rather sudden (but not without plenty of forethought - let me assure you) announcement of holy wedlock by one shy (?), consciencious (?), reliable (?) Don Reynolds. If the Cap'n finds this lower than whales' - just imagine what the Good Bro SAE will think? Even Jim Metzler of baseball fame has struck home base - so to speak (remember such terminology is out of the Cap'n's ball park). After a rather lengthy engagement (rumored to be at three or more years), Metz and Lisa Hollander (Tufts '73) are to be married in Chicago this August . . . depending, of course, upon his ability - should one say capability - to leave the sports writer's desk at The Evening News of Newburgh (N.Y.). Also among newly engaged couples are ChristopherLey to Janette Tolento and Don Cutter,, who's now in Hanover working his buns off at Cook Construction.

Newlywed notables now nuptially knotted include Bobb Barr to Tricia Ober (Billings Lee '74), now settled in Millis, Mass. selling hydraulic motors; and Peter Luthy, whose partner's name has temporarily been misplaced below deck.

Art Goldsher, having just completed his English Master's at UVa and presently broadening his horizon(s) studying and teaching frosh composition as part of the Ph.D. program at the Univ. of Illinois, writes and tells us that Helen Kemp is trudging her way through fourth grade as a school teacher in a grammar school outside Phillie. If all goes well, Helen will leave Havertown, Pa., for the High Country - and top on her list is Hanover. Mike Hanitchak's job-bound as well in that he has recently become the fifth '73 to be appointed assistant admissions officer at the College. Mark Graziano, who's living with BU Law man Ted Daiber in Boston, recently hoisted anchor with the National Health Service in D.C. for who knows what - but, then, he's close to Vermont. Soph Carinos has decided that a job in an auto parts store is the safest way he can afford to keep his MACH 1 alive and afloat, While Jon "Bunuchi" Bonelli boats off to Europe every now and then off the greenback earned as a private swim pool management consultant in Connecticut.

Warren Jurovaty already has spun the wheel of success and was recently promoted to assistant real estate analyst in Connecticut Mutual Life's investments division in Hartford. Warren joined the company last year after graduation and lives in his hometown of Columbia, where kayaking seems to dominate most of his extra-cur-ricular activity. He was Commodore of the Columbia Canoe Club and National Jr. Canoeing champ for a number of years, and finds it hard to give up part of the paddle for future success. All things considered, he seems to have hit a happy medium point thus far.

Tom Fisher's reportedly looking for a teaching position in Aspen, but we all know better than that! The white stuff must be temporarily blinding his path. Charlie Arnolds grown an inch (yes, an inch!) flying Uncle Sam's best in the Marine Corps. And Jim Simonson, after graduating from the Univ. of Washington - and skiing, is now pushing steaks and salmon on an unsuspecting public for the - now get this - Tacoma Clinkerdagger, Biggerstaff, and Pett public House Restaurant. Say that five times fast!

Short and sweet, but to-the-point, are the whereabouts of these more "educated" mates: Debbie Groisser at UVa working on her MA in Spanish and marking time with a '74 named Tom; Jim Mazur at Harvard following B.F. Skinner's footsteps - and earning Ph.D. credits on the side; Todd Stern at Harvard Law where, after a year's tooling in Paris, he's not portraying anything as close to pressured, paranoic, or pickled as the Paper Chase would have one believe; John Tate at Vanderbilt Law dreaming of his future summer trip to the exotic Pacific Ocean; Dale Pope at the American Graduate School' of International Management where international studies, modern languages, and world business are a way of life; Mike Havern still at Tuck and still winning all sorts of honors and praise, the 1949 Fellowship being listed among the most recent; Dave Clement at Dartmouth Med after a year's ski patrolling in Sun Valley; Dave Wender in his last year at Dart Med; Jon Wood at Colorado Graduate School of Business, close to women, skiing, and the night life, in that order; Fred Meyer at Tuck; and Tom "T.H." Tuchy at the Univ. of Puget Sound Law School.

That about wraps it up for March . . . with the exception of the following brief excerpt from Doug Noll's recent correspondence, which I find most suitable for the inquisitive ear (e.g. defies paraphrasing): "As you know, I am having an affair with my law books at the Univ. of Pacific's McGeorge School of Law. The relationship thus far looks to be life-long (with the books, that is), but is strictly Platonic. As yet, I don't need a paint scraper to pry the pages apart. McGeorge reminds me much of Dartmouth - 90% male, 1% female, and the other 9% I leave up to you. Besides studying 10-12 hours a day, I eat, sleep, . . . Mostly the latter." The Cap'n certainly hopes he can keep it up.

LAST CALL: Will the real Wayne Gregg please write?

Once again, that's all for news that's fit to print. Remember the Maine!

Secretary,

9314 Cherry Hill Road Suite 9 College Park, Md. 20740

Treasurer, 97-20 57th Ave., Apt. 9G, Rego Park, N.Y. 11369