After writing a full autobiography, getting it all on 1 page is quite a task. I left OHS and went on to graduate from McGill as a Civil Engineer. I started my career with a small consulting firm in Montreal and quickly got hired away from them by Canadian National, my dream job since I was 4 years old. I started as an Assistant Junior Engineer in Belleville, Ont. I moved wherever the jobs were, including Prince George BC, and Edmonton, Alta, before I left Engineering. I stayed with CN and moved through Research Services, Costing, Marketing, a year on a team that started the push to privatization, and finally Financial Planning, where I retired in 2001. Along the way I worked in all 10 Provinces, the 2 Territories, about 35 US states. I built the most northerly tracks of CN (Pine Point NWT) and retired the tracks in Nfld, PEI and on Vancouver Island. I had a ball, holding 17 jobs in 31 years. I married Sandy Friedman, who went to Northmount High, in 1969 and we have moved across Canada. Since we retired we were able to travel, and have visited 75 countries so far. We have 3 children and 8 grandchildren, living in Montreal and Bradford, Ont. One granddaughter is in McGill going to be a genetic ethicist, while the oldest grandson wants to be an RCMP officer. One grandson was the Canadian Karate champion for 3 years and was scheduled to try for the Tokyo Olympics. Pre-Covid, we had a very busy, fruitful and wonderful life. We cruised 4-5 times a year (the highlight being taking our grandchildren on their post-Bar/Bat Mitzvah cruise to the places they chose), volunteered (at the Jewish General Hospital where I was the first Patient Representative/Advisor, Patients for Patients Safety Canada and the WHO, at JPPS teaching reading to young kids with problems, at our walking club and in our Synagogue, Dorshei Emet), bowling (only one 300-game), reading, writing my autobiography and now trying to edit over 25,000 pictures and slides for inclusion in the bio. While living in Edmonton I was the only Habs fan there, and am still an ardent fan. When I retired I told those at the party I had spent 22 years getting ready to work, 33 years working, and that I wanted to spend the next 44 years enjoying the pleasures I have earned in the last 55 years (for those of you who recall, that's an Arithmetic Progression). Finding out about this reunion has been a great pleasure, and I'm sure "meeting" all of you will bring me much more. A ce soir, Bernie