Class Notes

1960

April 1977 WILLIAM H. McCARTER JR., ARNOLD E. SIGLER
Class Notes
1960
April 1977 WILLIAM H. McCARTER JR., ARNOLD E. SIGLER

In Massachusetts we celebrate Patriots Day on the third Monday of April. For the past eight years I have honored this occasion by attending the only morning game of the Red Sox season, often in a near-freezing drizzle, and catching a glimpse of the finish of the Boston Marathon afterwards.

Tim Holland was recently appointed senior vice president of American Security Bank and is now in charge of the retail banking division which focuses on the banking needs of individual and commercial customers. Tim served as a product manager for Chese-brough-Pond's Inc. and with with Citibank in New York prior to joining American Security Bank. He and his family live in Darien, Conn.

Antony Rodolakis is co-author of a book entitled Buying Options: Wall Street on a Shoestring, mentioned in the Dartmouth Authors column of the December issue of the ALUMNIMAGAZINE. According to the authors, options are the best hope for the small private investors in today's market. 1 think I'll stick to poker. At least I can tell when I'm losing my shirt.

John Youle writes of his experiences at the American Consulate in Medellin, Colombia: "Am living as quietly as possible on our six-acre 'finca' in Medellin, Colombia, with Ines, our three children (now eleven, nine, and eight years old), nine pigs, two chickens, one dog, lots of orchids and a magnificent vegetable garden. In my spare time, I dodge kidnappers and am U.S. Consul for this city and the surrounding one-quarter of Colombia, which has the lion's share of the nation's student agitation, labor unrest, and guerrilla activity. Sometimes I go on muleback trips thru the Darien Gap area (where the Pan-American Highway may someday be completed) near the Panamanian border. These trips are relaxing; a Sunday drive on the narrow, potholed roads is what is harrowing. This is a three-ring circus in one ring. I love it, but hope that we'll soon be transferred to Paris where we couldn't afford to live on a State Department salary. Maybe they'll let us ship our pigs as 'household effects'!"

Pat Morris and his wife Suzanne made the hard decision last summer to "abandon fame and fortune" with the Air Force Logistics Command in Daton, Ohio, and opted for an opening with the U.S. Forest Service in Libby, Mont. Pat and Suzanne are now in the midst of the Kootenai National Forest eight miles from a wilderness area and delighted with their enhanced environment.

Tom Kirby is now making sleeping bags, flotation devices and backpacks in Jackson, Miss. He has left New Jersey for a position as president of M.H. Corp., a division of A.R.G. Corp. Tom would like to hear from any classmates around Jackson. Coincidentally, BillDavidson notes that he is "down here in Jackson, Miss.," as chairman of the orthodontic department of the University of Mississippi Dental School along with wife Joan, two boys, one dog and one cat and wonders whether there are "any other '6os down here y'all."

Marc Loveman, a vice president of Loveman Steel Corp. of Bedford Heights, Ohio, has been making trips to Alaska to discuss problems with officials of the Alaskan oil pipeline. Marc's family-owned business makes safety-boxes which protect workers who go into trenches to inspect and sometimes repair the pipeline which has had problems with some of its welds. Here's hoping Marc can get the oil flowing before we have another winter like this past one.

Allen and Hazel Greenberg spent several days in Las Vegas last fall with Neil and DorothyKoreman attending the annual meeting of the American Academy of Opthalmology and Otolaryngology. Allen reports that the Koreman's recently moved to a beautiful new home in Miami Lakes.

Dudley Smith and family moved from Minnesota last June to Princeton, N.J. Dudley is still with Chubb & Son, insurance underwriters, but now commutes to Philadelphia. He watched the Princeton game with Sam andMary French and Dick and Lois Griggs.

Gail Warden is now executive vice president of the American Hospital Association based in Chicago. Mel Converse has been named direc- tor, reservations operations, at Auto-Train Corp. He lives in Leesburg, Va. FrederickRoesch now travels overseas a great deal, having been appointed last summer to head up a unit coordinating Citibank's business with foreign governments. Tony Roisman notes an Evans & Novak report that rumors of his appointment to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission send chills of fear through the nuclear power industry.

Don Weitzman notes that his daughter Deborah recently placed tenth in the Morris County cross-country meet for seventh graders, helping her team to finish first. Son Jeff, 14 years old, is playing midget football as outside linebacker. Don was recently elected president of the Morristown, N.J., Jewish Community Center and is first vice president of the Morristown Lions Club.

Secretary, 21 Mt. Pleasant St. Winchester, Mass. 01890

Treasurer, 181 Prospect St. Ridgewood, N.J. 07450