Now that I have entered academics, I have had the opportunity to take up golf. In Macon, where you can play almost all year long, golfing possibilities are endless. I was invited to play at a nearby South Carolina beach, and, armed with my mother's reject clubs and a putter I found in the woods at Calloway Gardens, I loaded up my trunk and met my friends at a beautiful resort overlooking the Colletin River. As usual, unprepared for such a luxury, I was shocked to see the brand-new range balls were far superior to my regular golf balls. I got a few stares as well because of my Georgia Tech baseball cap. But my game improved steadily as I got used to playing on grass as opposed to the patchy, dusty fairways still being nurtured into spring play here in Macon.
Thanks to Chris Nicholson, who has done a lot of planning for our lunch for women graduates at the reunion. Chris is presently studying for her master's in labor and employment law at Georgetown in Washington, D.C. Her husband, Cal, is an architect. They have two children, Alexandra 8 and Blair 6.
Bill Geiger is now employed with Steelcase, the office-environment company. Bill Moved to Grand Rapids from Birmingham, Ala., to continue his operational and financial consulting and equity investment work.
Whit Wall reports that he has opened a real-estate agency in Richmond, Va., specializing in Dartmouth relocations. He is a soccer coach for eight-and ten-year-olds.
Peter Conway has left North Carolina after six years as the head of a boys' boarding school and has returned to the University School in Cleveland. He will be the director of the lower school, kindergarten through eighth grade, with a campus of 450 boys.
May Winthrop promises that she will be able to return to Hanover for the reunion although she is in the midst of writing her third novel.
To those who read about the 1973 football team reunion in the March magazine column, I would simply point out that any fool knows that certain inaccuracies crept into my text. Anyone could be forgiven for reversing numbers 3-0 should have been 0-3. And the confusion between Joe Montana and Joe Namath is as apparent as the difference between Jay Fiedler '94 and Kenny Anderson, the former Cincinnati quarterback who now coaches Bengal QBs for Dave Shula '81. Jay is obviously taller and was throwing bullets when Anderson evaluated him during a Leverone Field House workout in March prior to the NFL draft.
Dean's Office, Mercer Law School, 1021 Georgia Ave., Macon, GA 31207-0003