As parents of wedding couples have often learned, making up lists can be a hazardous chore. "How did we ever forget the one person who most surely should have been included?" And now your class scribe has slipped on the same ice. In the November notes he listed the. 13 Twoters who had won their D's in football. Naturally, the list was complete except for one very fondly remembered classmate, our Clif Watson. Whether they noticed the goof or not, apologies go to Clif's wife, Madelaine, his son-in-law, Lloyd Krumm '48, and Clif's grandsons, Randolph Krumm '77 and Barry Krumm '80. Meanwhile, the class scribbler has arranged a memory revival session with his shrink.
Some of our '22 progenies are saying their grandparents don't gad about as much as they used to. Well To celebrate his 80th birthday, Harvey Moses took two of his grandsons, ages 15 and 17, on a two-week trip through the Canadian Rockies. Harvey says the trip was completely successful, and no demur has come from the grandsons.
Jerry Bates and his wife, Doris, did more than many Twoters would attempt when they went on a 3,400-mile auto trip to the Midwest. They visited son Stephen and his family near Sioux City, lowa, and they made extensive side trips. They also visited one of their three daughters, Mrs. Thomas Walnut, in Syracuse, N.Y., where:her husband is a tenured professor of physical chemistry. Jerry and Doris have eight grandchildren, all good students, active in sports, and each plays a different musical instrument. What an octet that must be when they all assemble and blare out.
When Bill Pope flew to Paderborn, Germany, it was to visit his daughter, Sue Pope Forster, her husband and their family of three boys. Wit)} five daughters and apparently ten grandchildfpn, Bill need never walk alone.
But most sadly, in recent months altogether too many classmates have made the final journey. Bob Armstrong, Bob Baldwin, Ben Bishop, Francis Collins, King Fauver, Bill Gallagher, Gene Hotchkiss, Frank Hutchins, Don Marsh, Jack Traylor, and Don Tobin, some of our finest classmates, have gone. Obituaries have been or will be prepared.
Likewise, with the passing of beloved Allie Hoyt on December 15, 1980, in Indianpaolis, the entire '22 family shares in profound bereavement with her children, Carter Jr. '49, Barbara, Nancy, and the nine grandchildren. Allie was the truly Dartmouth wife of our dedicated Carter.
A memorial service for kindhearted Harriott Miller was held December 20, 1980, in the Wren Room, Sanborn House, Hanover. The class family was represented by Ray and Doris Atwood, Warren Daniell, Harley and Amalia Greenwood, Stan and Catherine Miner, Len and Margaret Morrissey, Louise Olsen, and Jeanne Robinson. They joined Ike, son Fred '53, his wife Betty, and their children, Martha and George, in their affection and respect for a benign friend.
From Cape Cod, Larry Healy says that although he is in good health, his wife, Marjorie, has had a stroke and is in a.convalescent home in Shrewsbury, Mass., near their daughter Elizabeth and her family. The oldest Healy son lives in New Jersey and has three children in college. (Lord help him.) Another son and family live in Harwich, Mass.
Oscar and Bea Rice write from Monterey, Calif., "We surely miss all of you and those Hanover get-togethers. All fine here, but where are those frosty mornings? Here's to the 60th; we're looking forward to it."
And aren't we all!
11 Brockway Road Hanover, N.H. 03755