In major 1964 news from the College, Ron Schram (Hingham, Mass.) was awarded the Dartmouth Alumni Award at the fall dinner of the Alumni Council. Ron is the third member of our class to win the prestigious award, joining BobBartles (Meriden, N.H.) and Fred Rothenberg (Tampa, Fla.).
Now my report on the rest of the Fayerweather residents. Jack Kaufmann (Pelham, N.Y.) is a New York City lawyer. Don Warnecke (Dallas, Texas) and Jim Greer (Fairfield, Conn.) are management consultants, Don with Deloitte & Touche and Jim with Kensington Management Consultants. DonPratt (Glastonbury, Conn.) is a financial planner in Hartford. Also living in Connecticut is George Kitchen (Andover), who has been self-employed as a manufacturer's representative for more than 27 years. In 1975 George received Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord, and became a volunteer chaplain with Transport for Christ in 1991.
Two former residents of Fayerweather are in the insurance business: Don Radish (Somerville, Mass.) in the greater Boston area and Joe Rob, who is the president and CEO of ISE Sentinel in Montpelier, Vt. Moving South, Jim Stewart (Boca Raton, Fla.) is president of Boca Biomedical Inc., an agent for Johnson & Johnson Orthopaedics. However, Jim and his family have recently "gone Western" following a recent vacation in the Southwest, and Jim has taken up barrel racing on his favorite mount, Broadway Dude. Steve Bachman recently moved from Maryland to Lexington, N.C., where he is still president of a company specializing in on-site recycling of solvents. But more importantly, in the basement of his new home he oversees his Lionel standard-gauge train collection, an interest he shares with Frank Loveland (Gettysburg, Pa).
Moving over to banking and finance, DougJudah (Ridgewood, N.J.) is now a senior vice president with Princeton Bank and Trust. After 20 years commuting to New York City, Doug now travels less than a mile to the office and therefore is better able to watch his twin sons, who are nationally ranked players in platform tennis. Warren Moskowitz (Short Hills, N.J.) is still commuting into the city, where he is a senior economist specializing in developing countries for the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. In Washington, D.C., WhitneyFoster is back in the U.S.A. as a senior country officer with the World Bank. Whitney provided a lot of information in response to my questionnaire, which I will pass on to Bob Paterson for use in the next newsletter. But I'll include here the important question he rasied: "Bill Dubocq (Fayerweather '60 and Richardson '61), where are you?" In the corporate world, George Roth (Easton, Conn.) is an assistant treasurer in charge of North American capital markets with Xerox, and Steve Dichter (Roslyn, N.Y.) is president of Marlin Machinery Corporation, specializing in marine equipment. Jim Bell (Los Altos, Calif.) is an engineering director for Hewlett-Packard, and Richard Payne (Andover, Mass.) is director of advanced accelerometer development with Analog Devices Inc. In case you were wondering, he is in charge of research on micro-machining structures.
Next month, North and South Fayer. So long for now.
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