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Editor's Note
Ok, the topic is "Croquet". Ready, set, Debate!

This issue's back cover shows several Quimby debate alumni, quite happy to be back at Bates in March to judge a tournament. My first thought when I saw the photo—probably yours, too —was, "What's with the croquet mallets?" I e-mailed a student debater, who forwarded the question to Quimby alumna Barbara Raths '96. "During Short Term," she wrote, "Bob Branham used to have a barbecue at his house for the team and we would play croquet. The team enjoyed the game so much that we bought a set and would play during Short Term."

Raths' story (one of the many bittersweet anecdotes about the late Branham we hear) illuminates just a tiny bit of Bates history; yet it also reminded me of the Founders Day talk last year by Wellesley president Diana Chapman Walsh. "Living our stories well" was her theme. She talked about how a community's stories—known, told, and lived well—help us "build character and community."

This issue includes several such stories, including Merry Stockwell '65 telling the story of her husband, Dan '64, a two-time Carnegie hero who understands the ambivalence of heroism.

Relevant, too, is the page-72 column by Alumni Council president Jamie Merisotis '86. He describes Batesnet, the new Web-based resources for alumni. Such technology, though new, is merely the latest tool to help Bates alumni build their community and—to use Walsh's words—"explore the common truths that reside somewhere in the spaces between us."

H. Jay Burns
Managing Editor

[Note: BatesNet services have been folded into the Bates Alumni Community.]

 

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Deeds Not Words: Bravery has twice allowed Dan Stockwell '64 to save lives while risking death. Compassion has kept him from talking about it.
Suffer the Children: All children are equal in the eyes of God -- but not in the eyes of America.
The Education of Dr. Szlyk: High up in the Himalayas, a medical student learns to respect the limits of Western medicine.
The Playwright and the POW: Theater professor Martin Andrucki's new play emerges from the haunted memories of a World War II prisoner of war.



Bates Bookshelf: A Washington Thriller, a Mount David Denouement, and a Kennedy Campaign.
Letters: The decision to install an AstroTurf Field was a "no-brainer" in more ways than one.
Round Table: On the eve of his classmates' 50th Reunion, Bill Dill '51 remembers the legendary Bobby Berkelman.
President's Column: Bates' financial investment in Lewiston-Auburn community projects could be a farsighted move, writes President Harward.
Sports Notes: Alumni Gym is the stuff of legends, writes sports information director Adam Levin.
On & Off Campus: Bates begins the search for its sixth president.
Editor's Note: Ok, the topic is "Croquet". Ready, set, Debate!
Vital Stats: Weddings, Endowments, Births, and Obituaries.
Deaths: Bates Obituaries.
Class Notes: What are your friends doing these days?
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