Chuck Vernon thinks all of his classmates are either professors, bank presidents, law partners, or company owners. He's issued a call for the rest of us to speak out and be counted. Chuck himself claims to be "a low-level administrator at a secondary school in Connecticut" with two kids, a beat-up station wagon, a love of woodworking, and a new passion for jogging and an old one for lacrosse.
Paul and Barbara Semple will be celebrating Anne Piper's first birthday this July in their Manchester, N.H., home. Alan Mac Donald, a lawyer for General Electric, has been elected a selectman in Winchester, Mass., his "home town" for 30 years. Alan had been an assistant district attorney in Massachusetts and a Washington lobbyist for Gulf Oil before re- turning to Winchester two years ago.
Rick Olsen has been promoted to full professor in the Department of Biochemistry in the Division of Biomedical Sciences at the University of California at Riverside. He teaches neuropharmacology and neurochemis- try at the undergraduate and graduate levels and has published 50 research papers in -i. field of molecular pharmacology.
As a service to those of you who mav v traveling this summer, here are th whereabouts of classmates at various locatio (We can't guarantee a uniformly high levels- enthusiasm should you and your brood "dro in" on a classmate for a few days.) Bill Wegener, Corona del Mar, Calif.: JohRonayne, Charlestown, Mass. (right near th Bunker Hill Monument); Jerry Reitman. Wev- mount (Montreal), Quebec; Peter La'tnpron Piraeous, Greece; David Freeman, Mexic City; Richard Kernochan, Casablanca, Moroc- co (ask for "Rick," of course); Howard London, England; Roger Buckhout, Men!; Park, Calif.; and Peter Cleaves, Mexico Cit\
Wherever you're bound for, be safe, well, anc happy.
93 Greenridge Avenue White Plains, N.Y. 10605