Hanover is beautiful in the spring and Class Officers Weekend was extremely interesting. Woody Flowers, SandyMcGinnis, and I represented the class. The emphasis was on getting together and the exciting future of the physical expansion of the College as reported in the Planning Steering Committee run by Provost John W. Strohbehn. Sandy, as the incoming chairman of the Alumni Fund, wrote a powerful letter to the Planning Committee emphasizing that Dartmouth should not get itself into the "F.W.M.T.S. trap" Forgetting What Makes Them Successful. We certainly will have our input on these changes.
Wah Hoo Wah for Tom Zitrides, president of Bioscience Management, Inc., in Bethlehem, Pa., who has been elected vice president of Applied Bio Treatment Association, Washington, D.C. Harvey Tettle-baum's interesting and successful careers keep moving. His law firm located in Jefferson City, Mo., has merged with the firm of Husch, Eppenberger, Donohue, Cornfield and Jenkins. Harvey, who specializes in administrative and health care law, served as assistant dean at Washington University Law School, worked as the attorney general of Missouri for seven years, and has been treasurer of the State Republican Party since 1977. Rand Stowell has been named to the board of directors of The New England, one of the largest asset-management companies in the country, managing over $55 billion in assets. Rand is president and CEO of United Timber Corporation of Dixfield, Maine, a holding company for Rand's family-owned forest-products businesses. Rand was also admitted to the Maine Bar in 1967 and has served on numerous community, business, civic, and charitable organizations and governmental committees on the state level. Frank Rath's exciting and interesting career path was brought to my attention by Tom Helfrich '73, a colleague of his. Frank has been chosen by the board of directors of General Psychologic Services, Inc., to be its first Alfred W. Wellner Fellow. Frank is currently a practicing consulting and clinical psychologist and is staff psychologist at the Walter P. Carter Center in Baltimore, Md. Frank recently made important professional presentations at the annual Army Psychology Conference in Europe, i.e., "Mass (Military) Psychiatric Casualties" and "Transitions in Practice." After leaving Dartmouth, Frank served as a second lieutenant in field artillery in Vietnam, and also served in the infantry as a deputy district advisor. After getting his doctorate at Chapel Hill he earned his diplomate status in clinical psychology from the prestigious Board of Professional Psychology. Frank served in the Army for 23 years before retiring in 1989, having directed three clinical programs as deputy surgeon and the psychology consultant for the U.S. Army in Europe. Tom described Frank as establishing a wide-ranging private practice and remaining in the forefront of professional issues of clinical psychology.
Please keep the news coming.