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![]() Charlie Pelham |
| Charlie
Pelham '67
says, "I do relief work, a 'floater,' for CVS but I'm really full time
with them. (I got too old to put up with all the crap of running a pharmacy.)
The pharmacist 'shortage' keeps them calling me all the time. ;-(
"I'm doing pretty good. A little arthritic but no high blood pressure or heart disease or the other things felling us old men. And still got most of my hair, which is silver. Here's a foto of me taken about 4 years ago, the only pic I got right now. "It was a bad day...." |
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![]() Max Richberg |
| Max
N. Richburg '67 "After 1967 Auburn graduation, labored for
four years as a drug dealer (webmaster note: pharmacist) in Columbus, GA,
and Tuscaloosa, AL. Then for 30 years in Washington, DC (submitting troop-movement reports to Richmond and Montgomery), labored, inter alia, as a defender of notorious drug dealers (involved in gaining nonprescription status for dephenhydramine, hydrocortisone, and ibuprofen), plus teaching law at George Washington University (1996 awarded Best Professor). Now, with youngest daughter Emily graduating from UVA (and with older daughter Rachel having done her time at William & Mary), returned to drug dealing in Alexandria, VA (on the Confederate side of the Potomac), in order to have mornings off with demanding muse attempting to write the "of Chocolate & Life"© trilogy (LAYERS©; DEVIL'S FOOD©; BITTERSWEET©)--the story of the family whose member committed the last millennium's most notorious unsolved murders, revealed as an interpretation of classical Greek epic storytelling. The jury has not yet determined creative writing competence, but muse declares must at least try. Thus, in pursuit of art, merely changed, did not give up, day job." |
![]() Jack Riley |
| Jack Riley '67 is Dean of the College of Education at the University of Montevallo, where he previously served as Professor and Chair of Early Childhood and Elementary Education. Jack taught in public school in Alabama for ten years, and received his doctorate in elementary education from the University of Georgia in 1980. He previously taught at Spring Hill College in Mobile, at The University of Texas at Tyler, and at Samford University before coming to Montevallo in 1991. In 2000 he received the Ernest Award for Outstanding Commitment to Teaching from the College of Education at UM, and was named to Who's Who Among America's Teachers. Jack lives in Hoover with his wife Dot, who is Principal of Trace Crossings School. They have two sons, Patrick, a teacher in the Cobb County (GA) Schools, and Drew, a sophomore at Auburn. |