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Photos? If you have any photos of the reunion that you'd like to share, you can send them to me via e-mail. I may select a few to post here (I won't be able to post them all). Similarly, if you post your pictures on an internet photo site, and would like to share them with the class, send me the link, and I'll put it up on this page. During a brief business meeting at the museum, our class officers were re-elected, to serve for another five years. We are:
Another position, appointed by the class president every five years before each reunion, is that of Gift Chair. It was ably filled this year by Martin Schrage. At the Technology Day luncheon, Martin announced the Class of 1963's 45th reunion class gift of $7,200,000, with 47% participation! Thank you to all who contributed. I'd like to thank the Alumni Association, and particularly their representative to our class, Robert Dimmick, for all the help they gave us in planning and carrying out this reunion. Although I wasn't elected class president until our thirtieth reunion in 1983, I served on reunion planning committees well before that. Over the years, I've watched the reunion planning assistance given by the Alumni Association get better and better, until it became a well-oiled machine. For this reunion, the Reunion Planning Committee picked a theme, and layed out the general outline of events. We made a few site visits, and approved the venues, caterers, and menus, but Robert Dimmick and his assistants took care of all the details. Reunions are a great opportunity for our class secretary, Mike Bertin, who went around talking to classmates, taking copious notes. I'm sure he's collected enough material for quite a few columns in Technology Review. I'm also sure that he still would like to hear from more of you! Don't hesitate to write him at MCB1@aol.com. He'll even be happy to take care of the actual writing himself! Just call him, at (949) 786-9450. At our Sunday brunch in the Stata Center, a couple of books deserved mention: Since we billed this event as a "Victory Brunch" for our Class of '63 crew (which it turned out to be), Jack Lynch mentioned his recent book, Nice Row, MIT. Click on the title to go to Jack's web page on the book, which says in part: This memoir, written by Jack Lynch, a Junior Varsity oarsman from the class of 1963, relates how a squad of unathletic kids at a non jock school carrying the normal heavy academic work load that all MIT students carry somehow managed to live up to a legendary sprint and in their senior year became the "lightweight crew to beat." Jack's page also contains a link you can use to buy the book from Amazon.com. It was noted that the class web pages have a great deal of material on rowing at MIT, including Bob Vernon's Henley Memoir. Finally, classmate Phil Marcus's son Gary has recently written a book, Kluge, on "The Haphazard Construction of the Human Mind ". It's gotten many good reviews, and a great deal of press recently, including a review in the New York Times. Our next reunion, in five years, is a big one. For the fiftieth, attendees traditionally wear cardinal and gray jackets throughout the reunion weekend, and march in the graduation procession. Planning and preparation starts earlier than for other reunions, and turnout is generally high. If you'd like to be kept abreast of the planning process for our fiftieth reunion, you can join the MIT Class of 1963 Reunion Planning Committee's e-mail mailing list. This in no way obligates you, and you can leave the list at any time. But if you join, you'll see the conversations going on among the members of the Reunion Planning Committee. These will be infrequent at first, but the traffic will pick up as our fiftieth reunion approaches in June of 2013. To add yourself to the list:
It's not too early to start thinking about our fiftieth! Join the mailing list, or just send me ideas. If you didn't make it to the forty-fifth, I hope to see you at the fiftieth. Larry Krakauer
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