I never went into the Peace Corps--with what was happening in Vietnam at the time, I did not feel I could be a representative of US policy, no matter how worthwhile the work I might have done. Instead stayed in Syracuse, worked as a social psychology researcher, campaigned against the war, and in 1968 moved to England, where I have lived since.
The first seven years were in Cambridge, where I had a son (1971) and worked for an academic microfilm publisher. In 1975 I moved to London and was coordinator of the Campaign Against Arms Trade until 1980. Since then I have been a freelance trainer and consultant for not-for-profit organisations (in the UK called voluntary organisations), specialising in governance and legal issues and working primarily with community-based and user-based organisations.
I have written a number of management and legal books for the voluntary sector, one of which has become a minor classic since it was first published in 1989. It is now in its 4th edition (January 2006), has been translated into a number of obscure languages (Catalan, Hungarian, Romanian, Serbian, Azeri, and Bulgarian) as well as Portuguese, and is, I am told, quite widely used in Africa. It's called Just About Managing? Effective management for voluntary organisations and community groups. Information about this and all my work and publications is at www.sandy-a.co.uk.
I still look back fondly at that first summer at Dartmouth, and sometimes wonder what would have happened if I had made different choices in 1964-5. I've kept in sporadic contact with Michael Kass over the years, and recently when sorting through my record collection found one by Fred Engelberg, brother of Gary who was in our training. I did a Google search on Gary and found him in Senegal.
I'm looking forward to reading about what happened to others from the group. If anyone visits London, do get in touch if you remember me! (or even if you don't)