Running To Reunions: Looking forward and back
By Chris Schroder
Having organized two of my high school class reunions this past decade, I’ve been intrigued how some folks find it more comfortable to avoid the past. I nearly stalked some former classmates to urge them to attend, but after they didn’t respond to my series of emails, phone calls, handwritten notes, I finally let them continue in peace.
I suppose those folks would not have enjoyed my 2010. Not only did I attend an all-classes college fraternity reunion in April, a couple of weeks later I retraced my move right after college to a Mississippi River town for a reunion of my first job. Dozens of reporters – including every one from my era – who worked for the Delta Democrat-Times gathered to re-tell stories of covering the civil rights struggles as part of that city’s cultural festival.
In October, an elementary school classmate organized a reunion. Classmates flew in from all over to reminisce how a group of nuns shepherded us through childhood at a Buckhead Catholic school. After decades of not seeing each other, we vowed to get together again soon.
I attended family reunions, roommate reunions – and a few unions. One, my son’s wedding, was foretold in a column in this very newspaper. Readers in 2002 smiled yet were no doubt skeptical when Thomas wrote in Atlanta INtown about a girl he had just met in his sophomore year of high school. “She’s a keeper,” he announced in the paper. Through years of attending different colleges and working in different cities, they persevered. At Thomas and Amanda’s wedding in June, everyone entering the reception signed a framed copy of that prescient 2002 INtown column.
A few weeks ago, Wendy Binns, INtown’s owner, asked if I’d write a few words for this issue – another reunion of sorts – as I used to write a monthly column here in the 1990s. A few months after I started the newspaper in 1994 I hired Ward Binns to be its editor and first employee. Little did I know he was also a salesman. A few years into his tenure I introduced to the staff a bright young college graduate who was starting as a salesperson. Ward ended up selling her: she said yes when he proposed a couple of years later. They just celebrated their 10th wedding anniversary.
I met my lovely wife Jan while working together at the paper. A few weeks ago, I attended another wedding of a couple that met while working at my PR firm.
Seventeen years after its founding, this paper thrives with Wendy’s guidance through tough economic times in a newspaper industry that has been battered by technological and demographic shifts. Wendy says she may host a reunion of this newspaper’s employees soon. I’ll be there, of course and I hope it happens – next year!
Read Chris Schroder’s columns published between 1994-2001 at his blog, Ink By The Barrel, at wwwchrisschroder.com. Schroder is president of Schroder PR, a full service communications firm, and the founder of Atlanta INtown. You can reach him at chris@schroderpr.com.





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