We had a fine turnout of 1970’s for the Harvard game and my infamous legal pad with attached pen was there and was passed from hand to hand picking up gems of wit and wisdom along the way. Some of the commentary turned out to be printable and the following is a distillation of what I found. I apologize in advance for any errors. The day was a bit soggy and the pen a bit erratic. The net result was that a few of the messages appear to have been written in dis- appearing ink. Anyway . . .
Bill Wilson, who also made it to the Yale game, is now at Boston College at the Graduate School of Management following seven years as a naval officer, four on destroyers and three teaching in Newport. An anonymous source has indicated that Dave Masselli is now in Washington, D.C. The former Nader Raider, who also has worked for Common Cause, is reportedly now doing independent consultant work. The same source also passed on the infor- mation that Windy Loopesko has taken a posi- tion as an investment banker in New York. Windy was formerly with the S.E.C.
Friends on the lacrosse team will be pleased to learn that Bob King is happily married and living in Newark no, not the Newark in N.J. or the one in Delaware, either, but the one in up- state New York. Bob and Cheryl have a son Steve, Class of 1998, which makes him a little over one year old if my arithmetic is correct. Bob is a controller for the international divisions of Sarah Coventry International, a jewelry firm. Bob thus finds himself traveling to Canada, Great Britain, and Australia. Sure sounds like nice work.
Others with special reasons to be celebrating include Larry DeVan who has become engaged to Ann LeVan. A December wedding is planned. Larry is now an assistant treasurer of Chase Manhattan Bank in their New York City cor- porate banking department. Harry P. Ano is also engaged. A June wedding is planned. Harry is currently living in Boston and working for a firm involved in work processing equipment. One of his roommates is Bruce Leiter ’72, a former denizen of the ground floor of Woodward Hall. (We were all known as cellar rats in those days.)
Anyone who maintains that doctors have no sense of humor is just plain wrong. Fred Meier is currently “playing out his option at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital.” Steve Fahey, for his part, is a “free agent looking to be drafted into an orthopedic surgery residency.” JeffBlomstedt, when asked to expound at the Yale game, had the following to say: “The kid is currently in a nephrology fellowship at the local sick house, newly returned from a stint with the Zuni Indians in New Mexico. It’s good to be back near New England, even if it happens to be New Haven (previously referred to as kennel- city). All ’7os welcome to visit, crash, imbibe at my ghetto penthouse, 123 York St.”
Others reporting in include Mark Pfeiffer, who is doing graduate work in physics at U.N.H., and Greg Pickering, who is teaching there. Iver Olson reports that he is pursuing and enjoying a life of quiet domesticity in Brookline.
Earl McEvoy reports the birth of his third child. Tom Tiemann is teaching economics at Clarkson College and will be on leave in the spring when he will teach finance at the Univer- sity of Kansas. Andy Lewis is in New York City practicing law with Donovan, Leisure, Newton, and Irvine at 30 Rockefeller Plaza. Andy in- dicates that he is really happy with the city, his work, and with the way things are going per- sonally. He has really developed an interest in running averaging about twenty-five miles a week.
Tom Evans is in his second year of develop- ment work with The Carroll School in Lincoln, Mass. The work is particularly interesting, he reports, because it involves considerable preparation of proposals for foundations, an aspect of fund-raising not usually associated with independent elementary schools. His free time continues to be spent in restoring the 200- year-old (plus or minus) home he and his wife Jan bought in Harwich, Mass,, (on the Cape) about five years ago. Restoration has been slowed by a newly discovered love for blue fishing in Cape Cod Bay. Jan has been teaching kindergarten, while nurturing a booming week- end business in antiques.
3! Brooklawn Avenue Stamford, Conn. 06906