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Editor's Note
Then as now, annual class letters and magazine class notes help alumni share happy and sad times
By H. Jay Burns, Managing Editor

“John, Grace, and their two children spent Labor Day at my home in North Reading,” reads the class note from Ralph Kendall. “John attended a World Series game with me. He was full of hopes and plans for the future.”

It’s a pretty typical class note about family and friends. But you won’t find Ralph Kendall’s note in this issue. It was published in a Bates class letter a long time ago, in the winter of 1919, by the Class of 1906.

Red Sox fans reading the note will know immediately that the 1918 World Series that Ralph Kendall and his classmate “John” (Albert Johnson) attended was the last Series won by the Sox. The two friends may even have seen Babe Ruth pitch. Maybe they quaffed a few beers together.

But weeks after their visit, on Oct. 19, Albert Johnson would die, a victim of the worldwide influenza pandemic of 1918 and 1919. Johnson was class president, and to honor his memory, his classmates dedicated a class letter to him. Dozens of remembrances, including Kendall’s account of their Labor Day get-together, fill the 36-page letter.

Then as now, annual class letters and magazine class notes help alumni share happy and sad times. Class secretaries are the unsung heroes of this news-gathering operation, and their efforts demand a talented and empathetic editor at the College.

Longtime class news editor Ruth Rowe Wilson ’36 set the standard for her position. Last fall, Bates welcomed her successor, Christine Terp Madsen ’73, an editor with a journalism and technology background who lives in nearby Freeport.

Chris quickly experienced the bittersweet nature of the work. As members of the Class of 1974 celebrated a number of 50th birthday milestones last year, they were also stunned to lose their beloved one-time president, Bert Andrews, to cancer, and another classmate, Chien Hwa, to a freak highway accident.

Chris wrote their obituaries for this issue, and the opening line of her friend Bert’s obit — “The first thing anyone noticed about Carl Delbert ÔBert’ Andrews was his smile” — drives sadness back and conjures a happy memory for his friends and family.

H. Jay Burns
Managing Editor

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The Quito Classroom: The range of human experience is on the syllabus for CBB students living and studying in Quito, Ecuador.
A Sense of Fair Place: Celebrating the many notions of Bates 'place,' the inauguration of Elaine Tuttle Hansen was a swirl of music, ceremony, and intellectual vigor.
Different Strokes: The Bates varsity rowing program strokes to the beat of a different drummer.
Ice Anniversary: Memories -- and the Bates trees -- come back five years after the great January ice storm.



Letters: Has Bates, in the two years since a young alumnus left the College, genuinely become a great place to be queer?
Editor's Note: Then as now, annual class letters and magazine class notes help alumni share happy and sad times
On & Off Campus: Bates Professors help make sense of Lewiston's ongoing controversy surrounding Somali migration to the city
Introducing the 2003 Alumni Trustee Candidates: Read about this year's slate of alumni Trustee candidates. Then vote!
Scene Again: Heroic Bates students helped snuff the great Fire of 1947. Or did they?
Sports Notes: The glory belongs to others, says Sean Atkins '03.
Vital Statistics
Deaths
Class Notes: Latest news from Bates alumni.
Your Alumni Voice: Should Bates change the way alumni Trustees are elected? You can help make the call
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