Class Notes

1936

DECEMBER 1996 Barry Sullivan
Class Notes
1936
DECEMBER 1996 Barry Sullivan

Wasn't summer wonderful (this was written earlySeptember), sunshinecrisp days rain after five (remember "Camelot") not so many "normal" days with searing heat, wilting humidity. Let's hope first quarter 1997 winter will be acceptable not like this year: snow, snow, snow; falling freezing slush; bone-breaking ice, ice, ice.

Jane and John Bouker live in a retirement community in Naples, Fla. Golfing three times a week, he has been on the resident's council, also president of the resident's association.

On a recent trip to Maine they visited daughter at Sabego Lake, other relatives, as well as long-term friends in WinstonSalem, N.C., and Ormand Beach, Fla. They moved to Florida after eight years retirement living in Bernardstown, Mass.

Long-term Baltimore area resident (he lives in Lutherville-Timonium) James M. Fortune III early in life was with Grace Steamship Cos. And then with the Steamship Trade Association of Baltimore, greatly involved with port concerns so essential to the area and state of Maryland. Cathie Lynch, Paul's survivor, who was instrumental in the formation of an organization for assistance of handicapped children, died in August of respiratory heart failure. She leaves their son and three daughters.

Jackie and Paul Guibord after a numbers of years living in Etna have moved to Cape Cod.

Class members, sometimes with participation by the full class, over the years have undertaken maintenance of goal posts at Alumni Field, the Ernest Martin Hopkins bronze relief in the courtyard between Hanover Inn and Hopkins Center, the program by which a memorial book for each class member is provided for Baker Library, and the Phil Mclnnis Award for the outstanding woman of the senior class.

Prospective future class projects are invited by President Boyce Price.

Are your teeth put on edge by effluvia of the anti-everything '6os? Such require newspaper style to non-"irregardless" of the flow of the sentence almost always split the infinitive, at least so far as The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and The Washington Post, probably others, are concerned.

10570 Main St., Apt. 8041, Fairfax, VA 22030-7113; (703) 2735456

Author Budd Schulberg '36, p 46