CLASS OF 1958 | 2023 | SUMMER ISSUE

The responses were few, maybe good news. Bob Blubaugh had no news, at our age very welcome. Dan Woodhead had nothing to report, just awaiting the start of the MLB season.

Bob Furber expects to be on campus this May. He is planning on our reunion and a retirement party for Bill Herbst, the John Monroe Van Vleck Professor of Astronomy. He hopes Kate Lynch will alert him of the earliest opportunity to get a dorm room. After the reunion he plans to visit his father’s relatives in Maine.

Burr Edwards hopes to spend some time in NYC this summer as a teaching assistant for a financial-training institution (for which ageism does not seem to work).

Bart Bolton will be in Sarasota in April.

Neil Henry is still in Richmond. His pacemaker is working well and he made it to 85. He hopes to spend three weeks in Ocracoke this September. His daughter Betsy has a college-bound son and maybe Wesleyan.

It has been about a year since Bill Barnes lost his wife and he is adjusting to the changes. He stays active with the Rotary Club and his music. He has been a member of the Farmington Valley Symphony Orchestra for 35 years, playing the viola. His biggest thrill was playing at Carnegie Hall a few years ago. “Breathtaking to realize I was on the same stage as the world’s greatest musicians.”

Recently Kay and I drove to the East Coast and had lunch with Dick Goldman and a lady friend. We dined at the Sawgrass complex. Dick is wintering at Key Biscayne. Dick says that he is in contact with John Watson regularly.

Rick Pank is recovering from a stroke. I spoke to Brenda recently and Rick enjoys cards from well-wishers. Send to 33 Burchard Lane, Rowayton, CT 06853.

Tony Codding was expecting a half foot of wet snow in March. He did spend a week in Florida earlier in the winter. And he is finishing his fifth and last term as condo association president.

Regards,

Cliff