Class Notes

1968

MARCH 1983 David Loring
Class Notes
1968
MARCH 1983 David Loring

The solidified plans for our gathering in June are enough to whet the appetite of any man, woman, or child picnics, parties, seminars, dinners, sports, and a myriad of activities for the kids, with a liberal sprinkling of flexible time to choose among a variety of activities or just relax and enjoy Hanover and.being with old pals. Don't miss it!

On December 16, the board of directors of Time Inc. elected eight new officers, including Chris Meigher, director of corporate circulation, who now carries the title of vice president of Time Inc. Chris served as president of Time Distribution Services Inc. from June 1979 until April 1981, when he was appointed director of corporate circulation. He began his career with Time in 1968, working in the circulation department and later as assistant to the advertising director. He was circulation director of Fortune (1972—1974), Sports Illustrated (1974 1976), and Time, starting in 1976, when he also served as chairman of American Family Publishers. He is a past director of Dial America Marketing Inc. and the International Periodical Distributors Association and is currently on the board of Book-of-the-Month Club.

Last issue I briefly noted the appointment of Peter Weston, vice president of Bay Bank Valley Trust Company, Springfield, Mass., to head the trust department. Pete joined the bank in 1972 as a management trainee. He received his master's degree from Western New England College and, in August 1982, graduated with distinction from the National Graduate Trust School, a three-year program conducted by the American Bankers Association at Northwestern University.

Henry "Hank" Paulson was named a partner in Goldman, Sachs and Company and is based in the firm's Chicago office. He joined Goldman, Sachs in 1974 as an associate in the investment banking services department in the Chicago office and became a vice president in 1974. Prior to joining the firm he served from 1970 to 1972 in Washington as a staff assistant to the assistant secretary of defense (comptroller) in the Pentagon. From 1972 to 1973 he was on the staff of the President's Domestic Council in the White House. Hank is a Harvard M.B.A. and lives in nearby Barrington, Ill., with his wife Wendy and two children.

I note that Peter Fahey also became a partner at Goldman, Sachs last year. John Lazarus wrote he is v.p. of marketing for Zircon International, a manufacturer of consumer electronic products in Campbell, Calif. Sandy Dunlap and his wife Gale have been enjoying England and their two children. Sandy manages a small company in Winchester and reports he's getting another education in Hampshire, having received his first layer of same in New Hampshire. Looking forward to the reunion are Major Burt Quist, his wife Cathy, and their two boys. The Quists are pleased to be back in Quantico with the Marines, following a fouryear tour with the Navy. Burt is teaching strategy at the Marine Corps Command and Staff College. Dick Lindeborg moved from Colorado to Madison, Wise., in his new capacity as chief editor, U.S. Forest Products Laboratory. Jon Page was promoted to senior vice president of Dean Witter Reynolds Inter Capital last summer a money-management team which provides financial services for Dean "Witter and Sears.

Bill Jaeger is now living in Evergreen, Colo., is married, and is vice president of Natomas Coal Company. Bob and Charlene Benoit moved to Asuncion, Paraguay, where Bob has been country manager for Chase Manhattan Bank. He and Jim Sutherland '66, at last writing, were in the'process of trying to find recruits for a Dartmouth Club of Paraguay, and the Benoits also had a daughter born there last June. Bob and Charlene made the Christmas party at the Dartmouth Club of Bridgeport and won a long distance award for that, I'm sure. Pete Pfeifle, a Dallas entrepreneur has tripled the sales of his linen service, has a soccer-playing son and a "future rock star" daughter, and was planning to remarry in January. Dick Olson was married to Deborah Groban in February 1981 and the Olsons announced the arrival of twin boys on Mother's Day, May 9, 1982. At his writing, Dick said he was working for the U.A.W. in Detroit, in the public relations and publications department, and Deborah is a labor attorney. Bob Lynn's brood increased to three after another arrival last June, as did Ted and Donna Gundy's with the arrival of a daughter last September. Ted has started a private practice in orthopedic surgery in his hometown of Rye, N.Y. Jim Smith wrote that his second son was born last March. I think our offspring may well out number us in June!

Here's hoping we'll see a record number of the class in Hanover on June 16-19. Let the "can't make it" become a "maybe" and the "maybe" a "yes"!

Yoshihiro Nakamura '68, the subject of one ofthe alumni profiles in the supplement on theDickey Endowment for International Understanding in the December issue of this magazine, sent several pictures to Hanover for consideration for the supplement - including thisfamily shot that was not used there. He's shownwith his three children - left to right, Kazuiro, seven; Michiko, ten; and Yoji, six. Hiswife Yoko was presumably behind the lens of thecamera.

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