Class Notes

1955

DEC. 1977 BRUCE B. ALEXANDER
Class Notes
1955
DEC. 1977 BRUCE B. ALEXANDER

There wasn’t much material stored up for this column. We were planning to collect all sorts of news at the Harvard game but the seats allocated to our Class were so bad that we took advantage of fifty-yard-line seats offered by a Harvard friend. This proved to be one of our least rewarding decisions. Not only did we have to watch the Green go down to defeat but we had to suffer the biased comments of the John rooters. At least we didn’t have to watch the white hankies as they were mostly behind us.

To put the icing on the cake, the only classmate we got to talk to was Dana Hennigar and he offered no news. He and Jull were there in four weather gear looking like a couple of Maine lobstermen who’d had a bad day with the traps. (The Green defense had the same problem all day.)

By the time this column appears, CharlieWilliams may be the mayor of Berlin, Conn. He won the Republican nomination to run against an incumbent of eighteen years. Charlie has* been a resident of Berlin for only four years. A former resident of New Britain, he served in that city’s municipal government in a number of capacities. From 1966-68 he was claims in- vestigator for New Britain’s corporation council and served on two charter revision commissions. He was a member of that city’s building appeals board and served a two-year term on Connec- ticut’s five-man draft board of appeals.

Charlie, a graduate of Cornell Law School, is a partner in the New Britain law firm of Camp, Williams, and Richardson. Presently he is a director of the New Britain-Berlin Fresh Air Camp for underprivileged children and is also player agent for the Berlin Babe Ruth League (a title that conjurs up visions of hold-outs and multi-year contracts among fifteen-year olds).

A clipping from the New Haven Register reveals that Zsolt de Papp has been named director of the internal medicine section in the Hospital of St. Raphael’s primary care unit. A native of Canada, Zsolt graduated from the University of Rochester School of Medicine and served his internship and residency at Strong Memorial Hospital. Prior to going to New Haven, he was in the private practice of internal medicine and endocrinology and was a clinical professor of medicine and nuclear radiology at the University of Rochester School of Medicine. He has recently been appointed an assistant clinical professor of medicine at Yale Med.

According to a news release from Citizens and Southern Investment Counseling, Inc., Neal Allen has been named senior vice president of that firm. He joined C&S in 1972 as the director of the personal counseling division. Neal earned his M.B.A. from New York University.

Lou Cavaliere dropped a note to say that he had run into ex-roomie Joe Bachman in Milwaukee last summer. Lou was there attend- ing a national conference of the Driver and Safety Education Association (he is president of the Connecticut association) and Joe was relax- ing from his medical duties before flying to Maine for a vacation.

Finally, Bill Lenderking writes from Bangkok that he is enjoying his work there as press at- tache of the Embassy and information office for U.S.I.S. He is planning a trip to the Anapurna Sanctuary and another to Burma but admits that he holds the world record for aborted trips. Bill is one of our most faithful correspondents from his post half-way around the world. It would be nice if some of you guys on the north side of Boston would take the time to provide some grist for the mill.

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