CLASS NOTES

1949

SEPTEMBER | OCTOBER 2021 John Adler
CLASS NOTES
1949
SEPTEMBER | OCTOBER 2021 John Adler

1949

Plaudits to piano-player par excellence Skip Unger, who recently retired after many years as the Forty-Niner newsletter editor. Skip told me his health was good but it was “just time for a change.” Maybe he ran out of limericks. In Skip’s honor, here’s my favorite from all-time limerick champ Ogden Nash.

“There was a young man from Japan Whose limericks never would scan When asked why this was He replied with a buzz Because I always try to j am everything into the last line that I possibly can.”

Skip’s successor is the San Francisco foghorninitials Q.K.—who likes to write as well as vocalize. Make his life easier by sending in your Green Cards.

Charlie Russell called in from his townhouse opposite NASAheadquarters in Houston, where he continues to live independently. Almost 96, Charlie still drives and has no major ailments. Charlie earned his master’s and Ph.D. from Columbia and spent his career teaching and administrating in smaller colleges and universities in New York, New England, and Texas.

Paul Woodberry sent me an article from the Brunswick (Georgia) News about his great adventure during multiple missions on a B-26 bomber during the Korean War. That aspect of Paul’s life was the springboard for an illustrious business career.

Joel Berson has relocated to Sarasota, Florida, from his 65-year residence in New York City. Battling Alzheimer’s disease, he is in the same assistedliving facility as Tom Towler, who is dealing with Parkinson’s.

George Willard Piper died on April 10 in Chattanooga, Tennessee, where he was raised and where he returned after graduating from Dartmouth. George spent his career as a sales executive with Mueller Co., a Chattanooga-based manufacturer and distributor of fire hydrants, valves, and other water-related products. He is survived by four daughters and a son.

—John Adler, 75 Silo Circle, Riverside, CT 06878; (203) 622-9069; (203) 637-3227 (fax)

John Adler