Dartmouth Class of 1985
Transcription
Dartmouth Class of 1985
2 color stitching or silkscreening THE CLASS OF 1985 DARTMOUTH DARTMOUTH NEWSLETTER Dear Dartmouth Classmates, Greetings Dartmouth Classmates, Finally, another long overdue newsletter. Thank you to those of you who have been in contact. I enjoyed hearing Finally, a long overdue newsletter. So much for my goal of mailing at least two per year! Maybe I can accomfrom thekind news, pass it along in my thisemail Shades of Green. Sorry if some it is a bit plishyou, thatappreciate this year. It’s of and sad,am buthappy neithertomy mailbox nor inbox has been stuffed withofclass outdated. I am going with the better late than never theory! news. In fact, they both have been rather disappointingly empty, despite pleas for news and updates. Don’t you have a special talent, interest or opinion that you would like to tell us about? How about some free p.r. for a book or business venture? Bring on youryears news! Seems like everyone incredibly (Ibusy, and had while It’snew hard to believe that it’s been twenty-eight since we were pea-greenisfreshman. actually topeople count claim to enjoy reading updates about others, apparently they don’t particularly care to provide information twice because it didn’t seem possible). Each year at this time I try to remember what it was like to be 17 andornew read about themselves. So, what are your fellow ‘85’s doing these day? to Dartmouth. I think about being in awe of the beautiful New Hampshire foliage, as I had never seen anything like it.amazing I think about nights spent working the bonfire, standing in front of Dartmouth Hall for the rousing It is how late much one can learn abouton a person through a simple Google search! This newsletter is filled speeches, attending game. Remember wearing our ’85some shirts, andfellow passing kidsofficers, up the and stands with a lotand of news from the our football terrific class president, Margaret Marder, from class some from my own connections and Google. I hope you’ll be inspired to write to me in the very near future at during the game? Interestingly, I have no recollection as to whether Dartmouth won the game. I can’t even sallygoggin@gmail.com. I look forward to in hearing you.that morning! That’s something to keep in mind as remember if we won the field hockey game which from I played weAre lament Dartmouth team’s record! you into Sudoku?football I consider it myrecent daily anti-Alzheimer medicine. If you like Sudoku, try my Dartmouth Sudoku game. Just play it the same way as regular sudoku, but use the letters in “Dartmouth” instead of the I hope by this time all of you have marked your calendars making travel arrangements our numbers 1-9. Obviously since the word “Dartmouth” hasand twostarted t’s, it will be a little different. Harder,for or easier? thI am not including the solution here..if you can’t figYou tell me. upcoming 25 Reunion, only a little more than six months away! ure it out and it’s driving you crazy, email thme. Our 25 Reunion is June 17-20, 2010 R T A D Also, have you read any good books lately? I’d like to include a Thanks in advance to our reunion chairs Todd Cranford, Mimi Reilly Eldridge and Joe Riley and to their committee recommended reading list in the next newsletter. BookSense H U D A fordoes theira efforts andbut enthusiasm. willtobeget hearing from them often in the months ahead. great job, it’s alwaysWe good recommendations from people you know and love. My oldest son will be heading T Wisdom of Crowds by James Surowiecki. As we enter the dog T M R to Dartmouth this Fall, and his required summer reading is The IMPORTANT A th Indays recognition of reaching ourenjoy 25th reunion year webooks are publishing of summer, you might two good dog that I just an aptly named, 25 Reunion Book. The concept is Freshman revisited, a chance to tell everyone finished: The Art ofBook Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein and where you O are, what you have been doing and T Merle’s by Tedmost Kerasote. Whatatare reading? what you Door remember of our time theyou “college on the hill”. Please take a few minutes to go to our website, T be included R WWW.DARTMOUTH85.COM, click on 25th Reunion and complete YOUR PROFILE. Every classmate will Enjoy the summer! in the reunion book whether you complete a profile or not. However, wouldn’t details and memories be a lot O U T more Sallyinteresting Goggin than name and most recent address? The Reunion Book will be given to all who submit a profile and all who attend the reunion. The Deadline for submitting a profile is February 15, 2010. Get creative, H T U nostalgic, A sallygoggin@gmail.com 630-253-6749 thoughtful …..or all of the above.! D Looking forward to seeing you in June! Sally Goggin sallygoggin@gmail.com 630-253-6749 SUMMER 2008 - PAGE 1 M T H 25TH Reunion News: Please check out our class website at: www.dartmouth85.com to stay informed of reunion plans, provide input on reunion activities, submit your updated profile for the reunion book, and to let everyone know that you are coming. The 1985 Reunion Committee: Co-Chairs: Todd Cranford, Mimi Reilly Eldride, Joe Reilly Treasurer: Dave McIlwain Entertainment Chairs: Food Chair: Marcy Marceau Beverage Chairs: Mike Davidson and Barbara Whipple Entertainment Chair: Rick Joyce Reunion Book: Margaret Marder Souvenir Chair: Claudia Egger Publicity/Attendance Chairs: Sue Finegan, Dee Ifill and Joanna Tsiantas Registration Chair: Becky Blake Alumni Fund Head Agents: Mark Caron and Doug Fulton Reunion Giving Chairs: Gabrielle Guise, Mark Koulogeorge, Rick Kleeman, Laura Hicks Roberts Reunion Websmaster: Jeff Weitzman Reunion Chaplain: Rabbi Shirley Idelson Sports Chair: David Hall Arts and Culture Chairs: Pam Cohen Hallagan and Gabrielle Guise Moosilauke Chair: Katie Harris Robbins Reunion Class Project: Linda Blockus Committee Members: Beth Parish, R. Christian Call, Jennifer Gabler REFLECTIONS January 2009 marked the inauguration of the 44th President of the USA. Several of our classmates were lucky enough to witness this event and share in the festivities. W I N T E R 2 0 0 9 - PAG E 2 Todd Cranford writes: I volunteered in Denver at the DNC Convention in August 2008 where I saw 85s Jim Kreitman, Jacquie Hayot, and Eric Kearney, as well as Eric’s wife Jan-Michelle ‘79. I later learned that Lenny Gail and Michelle Duster were there as well. I know that Lenny, Jacquie and Michelle were here in DC for the Inauguration as well as Deidre Ifill, Eric Woods, Sophie Folly and Sonia (Reece) Myrick. Witnessing these historic events has been a blessing. My wife, Jackie, and I got a chance to attend one of the official balls and got close enough to both the Obamas and Bidens to get several great photos. Sadly, they did not come down to shake hands, but we were thrilled nonetheless. Todd was recently appointed to serve on the Board of Visitors for the Rockefeller Center with classmate Sue Finegan. The Nelson A. Rockefeller Center was built and opened in ‘83 while we were still there. It has grown into the premier undergraduate public policy program in the country through multidisciplinary education, skills training, and public policy-oriented research across the social sciences. The Center seeks to inspire undergraduates to become effective leaders in their communities through on and off-campus programs and it offers a very popular public policy minor. The Board of Visitors, appointed by the Board of Trustees, assists the Center’s director in defining the Center’s goals and objectives and implementing them through programming and fund raising. Linda Blockus writes: “I dragged my 7th grade daughter and her friend to the “We are One” Inauguration Concert on the Mall on Sunday. The weather was warmer and the crowds fewer than the Inauguration on Tuesday (which we watched from the warmth of our living room!) We secured spots about half way down the Reflecting Pool and our view of the jumbotron was partially blocked by a giant tree limb, but it was GREAT to be there and see all of the other people excited to be there too. Aside from the thrill of being in the presence (albeit at a distance) of Presidentelect Obama, the opportunity to see the star-studded line-up of music legends was fabulous. Each act was great. It was a bit surreal when Garth Brooks started to lead the crowd in “American Pie” but by the time he got to “Shout!” the crowd was rocking, and my daughter was duly perplexed as to why her mom was jumping and singing ....I guess the time has come to introduce her to “Animal House”. The other highlight of the weekend was attending a quickly-organized concert by the Dartmouth Gospel Choir, in town as an invited guest for one of the Inauguration breakfasts. Wonderful music and interesting to see this group of Dartmouth students from all over the world singing together. My family is in Washington DC for a year so that my husband can do a science policy fellowship with NIH. I am working downtown (5 blocks from the White House, and I admit to walking over during lunch to gawk with the tourists!) at the American Association for the Advancement of Science in their higher education/diversity W I N T E R 2 0 0 9 - PAG E 3 consulting unit. We’ve taken leave of absences from our jobs at the University of Missouri, but return in August 2009. The kids (7th and 3rd grade) have adjusted with no problem. And it is nice to have a Dartmouth Alumni Club to participate in (as you might imagine, Columbia Missouri isn’t the hotbed of Dartmouth Alumni activity!) It was great to reconnect with Todd Cranford during the club holiday dinner.” Lenny Gail writes: “In life, I’m living in Chicago, married with three kids, and have just gotten back into the law business with one of my oldest and dearest friends. See www.masseygail.com. As for the inauguration, I was, like so many, delighted to be there. We’ve been Obama backers for a LONG time -- since he was in the Illinois State Senate -- so on a personal level it was a “once in several lifetimes” experience. And, I do count myself among the many who thought we as a country needed a big time change in our politics, in our economic priorities, and in our foreign policy. But, even more, I was thrilled that Americans of all political stripes seemingly felt that Obama’s election was an extraordinary ratification of the American ideal. (Have you seen his family tree?) I still cannot help but be moved when I think of the great John (now Representative) Lewis, with his head forever marred by an Montgomery, Alabama, racist mob in Alabama, watching Obama be sworn in on Lincoln’s bible. What an occasion.” IN THE NEWS Philip Giudice ‘85: “Philip Giudice: A ‘confluence of influence” [Boston Business Journal, 10/13/09] As he was celebrating the $99 million initial public offering of Boston energy technology firm EnerNOC Inc. — a company he helped build, he took a call from the governor. Giudice, a 30-year veteran of the energy industry, had been courted by Deval Patrick and his staff to lead the newly created Department of Energy Resources — what would become the implementation arm for Patrick’s energy efficiency and renewable energy offensive — since the governor took office in January 2007. But he had insisted it would be inappropriate to take a state post as EnerNOC was prepping to go public. Now he had no excuse. Two years later, Giudice has become one of the most influential public figures as the state takes on lofty goals for lowering energy consumption and building renewable power in the midst of a sour economy. His philosophy on advancing energy efficiency and clean energy on their merits, and with a vast array of economic data and the mind-set of an entrepreneur, has earned him the respect of a wide variety of stakeholders in the transformation of state energy policy. At the same time, the DOER has taken on the overwhelming task of sorting out the details of five separate energy-related pieces legislation passed last year as well as manage the nearly $220 million in stimulus fund earmarked for energy projects. Gale “Tiger” Shaw ‘85: “Skiing Hall Calls on a Tiger” [Valley News, 10/22/09] Tiger Shaw ’85 was inducted in to the Vermont Alpine Racing Association (VARA) Hall of Fame during the annual Vermont Celebration of Ski Racing Gala at the Sugarbush Resort. He’ll was this year’s lone inductee and the 25th skiing figure to be enshrined by VARA. W I N T E R 2 0 0 9 - PAG E 4 Patrick Byrne ‘85: “From the Corner Office - Patrick Byrne; Beating the Dot-Bust and Downturn” (Success Magazine 6/2/09) http://www.successmagazine.com/from-the-corner-office-patrick-byrne/PARAMS/article/714# Patricia Milon ’85: “Scottrade Hires Bank Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Counsel” (Business Wire, Thursday, May 28, 2009) Scottrade, a leading branch-supported online investment firm, has hired Patricia Milon as executive vice president and chief legal counsel for Scottrade Bank. As executive vice president and chief legal counsel, Milon will provide guidance on all legal matters affecting the Scottrade Bank, particularly with the development of new retail banking products. She will also assist the securities side of the firm in implementing an operating model that blends Scottrade’s online investment firm and banking operations. Milon has more than 20 years of experience in banking regulation and compliance law. Prior to joining Scottrade, Milon provided financial institutions with consultation services on the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) and served as chief legal officer and senior vice president for regulatory affairs at America’s Community Bankers (ACB). Her previous positions also include vice president and deputy general counsel for Fannie Mae and senior counsel for financial institutions for the U.S. Treasury Department. Michelle Duster ’85: I thought you might be interested in this piece on Michelle Duster ‘85 in which she was recently interviewed about her new book on civil rights activist Ida Wells. http://www.wttw.com/main.taf?p=42,8,8&vid=020309f Jacqueline Jones ’85: Our classmate, Jacqueline Jones, was honored as a Dealmaker of the Year in Ontario, Canada. Rich Lindahl ’85: “The Corporate Executive Board Appoints Richard S. Lindahl as Chief Financial Officer” Business Wire - Tuesday, April 28, 2009 Mr. Lindahl brings more than 20 years of financial leadership experience to CEB. Most recently he was Senior Vice President and Treasurer of Sprint Nextel Corporation, a U.S. wireless and wireline communications carrier, where he had also served in Planning and Analysis roles. Prior to joining Sprint Nextel, Mr. Lindahl held the position of Vice President Finance at Pocket Communications, Inc. He previously worked for MCI, Deloitte & Touche, and Casher Associates. Mr. Lindahl holds a M.B.A. from the Darden Graduate School of Business at the University of Virginia and a B.A. from Dartmouth College . The Corporate Executive Board Company is the premier, network-based knowledge resource, and provides executives with the authoritative and timely guidance needed to excel in their roles, take decisive action and improve company performance. W I N T E R 2 0 0 9 - PAG E 5 CATCHING UP WITH OUR CLASSMATES John Glenn has some news: Not quite three years ago, I was still looking to meet the right woman, when a gorgeous redhead crossed my path. We had phone calls, we met again for a drink, and then on our first official date, she saw the Big Green D on the return address label on a letter I was mailing. She asked if I went to Dartmouth, I said yes, and learned this wasn’t just any “Kate,” this was Kate Aiken ‘92. She decided a drink would be a fine way to honor the coincidence, and six months later while kayaking, we were engaged, a week before her reunion. A year later we got married under the redwoods, honeymooned in the Caribbean, and now, another year later, our son Max was born on Father’s Day! We look forward to introducing him to everyone’s kids at the reunion, though I think most of them will be working the kids’ tent as a class of ‘12 summer job while Max blows bubbles!! Colleen Keller is continuing her career as an Operations Research Analyst for the US Navy in San Diego. In her spare time she flies her Cessna Cardinal Aircraft and she just completed her certification as an Airframe and Powerplant mechanic after 5 years of night school. Colleen recently combined her career and hobby by participating in the search for famous adventurer Steve Fossett in Nevada. C.C. Collimore is teaching math at the St. Thomas More School in Oakdale, CT. Although a long way from his Barrington, IL roots, C.C. is still praying the Cubs will win the World Series. (Editor’s Note: Fellow Chicago fan, I share your pain. Another disappointing season in the books, and another year of having to listen to the New Yorkers gloat. Maybe 2010 will be the year for our beloved Cubbies.) I had the pleasure of bumping into Joe McGee in Hanover this summer. I was dropping my daughter off at field hockey camp, and Joe was spending a few days there while his daughters attended ice hockey camp. It was great to see Joe and learn about some of the consulting work that he is doing for the college. I got a nice note from Chip Miller whose son Matt played soccer at Dartmouth and graduated in June. Chip made the trip up to see him and watch him play about 10 times each fall. As he stated, and I’m sure many of us will agree, watching our kids play something they love never gets old. Chip said Matt’s first college goal (vs Penn) was more exciting than any college goal he ever scored at Dartmouth. Chip’s home away from home in the fall was The Norwich Inn…our new home hockey weekend residence. Chip’s 18 year old daughter is also a soccer player, attending Fairfield University. Chip and his wife have lived in Princeton for over 20 years and have had their own business for the past 19 years. We wonder, is Chip our first ‘85 classmate who is an empty-nester? In Chip and Tina’s case that isn’t entirely true because they have a house full of dogs. Tina is a breeder of champion Bearded Collies. Lionel Conacher and family have bought a house in Marin County and moved from Toronto to the Bay Area. Anne Schonfield is living in Berkeley, CA with her husband Peter Miller and their two kids Rebecca (10) and Theo (7). Ann is working as a consultant for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and other clients, and is loving the outdoor life in California - skiing, backpacking, kayaking, etc. Anne keeps in touch with classmates Cathy Wasserman, Fiona Harrison, Elise Miller, Diane Allen, and others. Over a year ago David Hall joined The Hanover Company – a national apartment developer founded in 1981 by legendary Dartmouth football player Murry Bowden ’71 (and yes, named after Hanover, NH). The Hanover W I N T E R 2 0 0 9 - PAG E 6 Company builds luxury apartment projects nationwide and David runs the Boston office covering greater New York and New England. They are currently building over 2000 units in 8 projects around Boston. David and his wife Meredith are healthy and happy in Milton, MA with Kendall (14), Parker (12) and Elizabeth (8) all doing great. They added two additional family members last year in the form of lab puppies - one yellow and one black - brothers named Brutus and Caesar (or as Meredith likes to call them - “get out” and “stay out”). David Searby is currently the Press Attache in the US Embassy in Santo Domingo. He writes: “Believe it or not, despite all the wonderful beaches and hotels and golf courses here, the Dom Rep is considered a “hardship” post in the US Foreign Service. Your taxpayer dollars are paying for a great life here. I live with my wife Christine (Harvard ‘86), son Dave (17 and two inches taller than Dad and growing), and Charlie (2 and the only little gringo in his school). Son Luis (22) graduated from Syracuse and made the unfortunate choice of majoring in finance just as Freddie, Fannie, and Lehman Brothers are melting down. Love the job here as Uncle Sam’s spinmeister. Dominicans were bummed when Hillary didn’t get the head of the Democratic ticket. As Senator from New York, she’s made real efforts to get close to the Dominicans of NYC. She and hubbie Bill are regular guests of celebs like Oscar de la Renta. She even appeared in a wildly popular photo drinking the national beer, the excellent Presidente. Now the Dominicans tend to favor Obama. They are very impressed with the vigor and excitement of our elections process--and utterly confused, too. Wife Christine loves it here. She’s currently teaching journalism (former Bloomberg and CNBC TV producer), writing our Embassy newsletter, and trying to promote a cool project on volunteer tourism. Funny story: while wandering along the beaches of Punta Cana, she wandered into a spacious building on the beach. In her limited Spanish, she asked what the building was, and heard “iglesia” or church. Since churches are open places, she wandered further into the inner sanctum of this enormous tropical edifice, only to be stopped somewhere outside of Sergio Iglesias’ bedroom by one of the staff. Sergio is one of Oscar’s neighbors.” Jackie Hawkey is still working with the same company she joined 12 years ago when she came to Denver. Now, Jackie is running one of the subsidiaries, which she says is fun but challenging. Jackie and husband Hal two daughters, Sarah (12) and Grace (9) are happy little campers and love Denver. Jackie writes, “We are a total ski family in the winter, but are now getting push back from the 12 year old about going up to the mountains every weekend, as it is interfering with her social life. Hmmmmm. New frontiers as we hit middle school. Daughter just started playing field hockey on the school team – 7th grade. It really is fun to watch, although I don’t think it is as fun for other parents who never played, as the whistle blows all the time and no one knows why. It’s kind of funny. I have fond memories of field hockey at Dartmouth – mostly because of the teammates and Josie, and definitely not related to Mary Corrigan. Ed Burns writes: I graduated from The D to a few years of sports writing, first at UPI in New York and then at Sports Illustrated, where I got to cover the 1987 Final Four (trivia buffs: Who beat whom in the final, and on whose last-second shot from the corner?) It was tremendous fun, but not something I envisioned doing for 30-40 years down the line, so I got somewhat respectable and went to Yale Law School. Had a great experience there, clerked for a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Pasadena before joining Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett in New York as a litigator. The clear highlight of my stint there was helping hire Van Tol as a summer law clerk, where I got to take him out to lunch on the firm’s dime and order him to do my research. W I N T E R 2 0 0 9 - PAG E 7 In 1994, I left for Major League Baseball, where I have been fortunate to combine vocation and avocation. I started in the legal department, became deputy general counsel and then moved over to the Baseball Operations department, where I am now Vice President, Baseball Operations and Administration. I help make policy on all sorts of issues involving the playing of the game (as opposed to the licensing of merchandise), largely writing and enforcing rules and regulations that govern the Major League Clubs and their relations with each other, the Minor Leagues, the Caribbean Winter Leagues and the pro leagues in Asia. If anyone needs any advice on waiver rules and 40-man roster management, I’m your guy. As an extra project, for the past five years I have helped nurture the development of the Chinese National Baseball Team to help prepare them for the Olympics, hence my presence in Beijing. I am married to my fellow editor at The Dartmouth (she Arts & Entertainment, me Sports) Miriam Cilo ’84, whom I met in 1983 but didn’t date until 11 years later. We have a wonderful son, Peter (no “i” in the middle; sorry Van Tol), who will turn three in November and should very shortly thereafter fit comfortably into the “MIT 2d FR 150” shirt that was the only spoil of an entire freshman year of toil on the river and in the tanks. We live in a loft in the Financial District of Manhattan, where I have a Concept II (my 40th birthday present to myself) that, alas, is sadly underutilized these days. (I promise to step up the workouts. Really.) I admit that the voices of Karen and Jake float through my head from time to time when I do pull an erg. David McIlwain, another former crew guy, has lived in Summit, NJ for the past 12 years, which seems a bit odd to him given all the moving around he did prior to marriage. He did limited stints in New York, Chicago, Argentina, London and Japan. David and his wife have adopted two kids, Russell from the U.S and Jenny from China. Between work, kids, helping with cub scouts and a bit of recreation...not much room for other action. Worked in Emerging Markets finance, Pharmacuetials, start-up (lots of fun) and for the past 10 years structured investments. Business School at Kellegg with a number of Dartmouth classmates. Jake Lowenstern Since Dartmouth I spent a year in Sicily, went to grad school at Stanford in geology and then headed to a postdoc in Japan. Came back to the Bay Area and started workingfor the USGS in Menlo Park, where I’ve been since 1993. My job currently involves coordinating the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory and doing research on volcanoes and the rocks and gases that come out of them. I travel to Yellowstone for about 6-7 weeks a year, usually split out over 4 or 5 trips. I also help out my colleagues at other volcanoes, usually within the US. I met my wife in 1989 at Stanford and we’ve been married since 1994. We have two girls, Alice (5) and Amanda (8) and live in San Carlos, which is about 25 miles south of SF. I did make it back for our 20th reunion, where I saw a few of you, and hope to get back for #25. W I N T E R 2 0 0 9 - PAG E 8 CLASS PROJECT NEWS Dartmouth Outing Club Centennial This year marks the Dartmouth Outing Club’s Centennial. There are series of great events taking place to commemorate this monumental occasion and all alumni are invited, from those who just went on a Freshman trip and never went outside again, to those who are Chubber to the core. On October 10th, the DOC became the first club to hike the entire Appalachian Trail in a single day. Over Homecoming 2009, the DOC celebrated 100 years in the out of doors by climbing the 100 best mountains in Dartmouth Outing Club country. The DOC wraps up a year’s worth of celebration on the anniversary of the DOC with a special banquet December 14th. The DOC wants to reengage with all of the alumni who care about the DOC and the out of doors! Get in touch with the DOC leadership from your class, gather some of your stories, contact the DOC and tell them you want to be on the mailing list. The DOC is developing an online forum for you to share your experience with others and find out what is happening right now with the undergrads. Visit: www.dartmouth.edu/~doc to find out more. Well the Class of 85 heard the call! This year we have donated $2,500 to help publish Passion for Skiing - A History of Dartmouth Skiing. In honor of the 100th anniversary of the DOC and to honor the contributions Dartmouth has made to skiing a dedicated group of alum has compiled this book which will be published in time for Winter Carnival 2010. To learn more about the book go tohttp://dartmouthski.wiki.zoho.com/homepage.html. IN CASE YOU’VE FORGOTTON HOW GREAT DARTMOUTH REALLY IS…… Dartmouth College commended for its commitment to teaching students. U.S. News and World Report’s “Best Colleges 2010” rankings released August 20 included a new feature, a category called “Best Undergraduate Teaching” -- with Dartmouth College #1 in that category among national universities. Introducing this new ranking category, the magazine explained, “Many colleges have a strong commitment to teaching undergraduates over graduate-level research. The schools on these lists are noted by college administrators as paying a particular focus on undergraduate teaching.” Dr. Jim Yong Kim, who on July 1 became the 17th President of Dartmouth, said, “I am particularly pleased to see that in its first ranking of ‘Strong Commitment to Teaching’, U.S. News and World Report has ranked Dartmouth first -- a most appropriate ranking, considering the longstanding dedication of our faculty to providing the very best in teaching. That commitment includes leadership in helping create and share new knowledge, which at Dartmouth means getting undergraduates involved in faculty research work as well as providing top-quality classroom instruction.” In the magazine’s overall rankings, Dartmouth placed #11 among the best national universities. If you haven’t had a chance to meet Dr. Kim or hear him speak, then there is even more incentive to attend our 25th. With the inauguration of Dr. Kim, Dartmouth is entering an exciting time of renewal and growth. W I N T E R 2 0 0 9 - PAG E 9 RECAP It’s all about REUNION! This newsletter is just a little taste of what our fellow classmates are doing with their lives. Come to reunion, catch up with old friends, make some new friends and see Dartmouth a la 2010 – nearly 30 years since we first stepped foot on campus. HAPPY HOLIDAYS AND A SAFE AND HEALTHY 2010! W I N T E R 2 0 0 9 - PAG E 10