Class President George Southwick displayed an uncanny knack for astute planning by selecting the Harvard-Dartmouth weekend, rather than the following debacle, for a minireunion. The excitingly surprising results of the game overcame the extreme moisture present in the air to set the tone for an excellent postgame class get-together.
Among those in attendance, Ron Roth and Wanda certainly should get the prize for traveling furthest. Ron and Wanda reside in California, having recently moved inland to the mountains from the beach south of Malibu. Ron and Wanda have managed to develop a family of four during their three years of marriage (one set of twins) not bad for one of the class's most confirmed bachelors.
Ron recently resigned the vice presidency of Universal Studios in favor of a more relaxed lifestyle. He continues to produce motion pictures but finds he is able to adjust the pace now and get off the merry-go-round at will a most delightful change.
Dan Rosof is now practicing optometry after a number of years of pedantic pursuits both educating himself and subsequently in a professorial capacity at the University of Alabama Medical Center. The Rosofs have two daughters and reside in Panama City, Fla.
Arthur R. Johnson has been elected a vice president of Wells Fargo Bank. Art represents Wells Fargo Investment Advisors in institutional marketing. Originally from Livingston, N.J., Art attended Amos Tuck School after being graduated from Dartmouth.
George Reichhelm has again hit the financial news with his election as vice chairman of the American Stock Exchange Board of Governors. George heads Drexel Burnham Lambert American Specialists, a subsidiary of Drexel Burnham Inc., on the Amex trading floor. He served on the board from 1970 to 1972 and has been an Amex governor since 1975. George and his wife Bobby-Lou have three children Scott, 21, a sophomore at Middlebury Cpllege; Kimberly, 19, a freshman at the University of Colorado; and Todd, 16, a student at Stratton Mountain School, of which George is a trustee.
Charles Tseckares' firm, CBT/Childs Bertman Tseckares & Casendino, Inc., received an urban design citation in the fourth Urban Design Awards program sponsored by the Urban Design Newsletter in New York City. The Clarendon Street Playpark, located in the Back Bay Historic District of Boston on Commonwealth Avenue and Clarendon Street, was cited for "reinforcing the existing fabric" and for "reclaiming and linking urban spaces" with immediate effects. The Neighborhood Association at the Back Bay shared a major role in the design of the park. Careful consideration was given to the visual relationship between the new playground, formerly an empty lot, and the existing environment. Natural wood play equipment placed within sand areas provide safe and varied play activities for children. The park is enclosed by a wrought-iron fence to protect the park from vandalism and to relate it to the sidewalk line of Commonwealth Avenue. CBT is a planning and design firm, active in the areas of landscape architecture, architecture, urban design, and historic preservation.
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