2023:
Mongolian A.A. celebrated its 25th anniversary with a hybrid meeting, both
in-person and online, at Steppe Arena
[left]
in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
[right: inside the arena during the celebration].
A speaker at the event highlighted the organization’s achievements:Today, Mongolian AA is a non-governmental organization registered in Mongolia that serves its members and has about 3,000 members and 172 registered groups. We are a society registered with the World AA General Service Office, and we have a General Service Board consisting of two Class A or Non-Alcoholic Trustees and seven Class B or A.A. Trustees as outlined in the New Service Manual, Annual Service Conferences, 2-yearly National Conferences, and 5-yearly International Conferences [translated from Mongolian].
July in A.A. History—day unknown
1921: Unemployed and directionless, Bill W. was, according to his wife Lois, “restless and his drinking increased” [all quotes are from Lois Remembers].
Lois, an occupational therapy aide for the Red Cross
at Brooklyn Naval Hospital
[far left: exterior, 1940s; near left: a group nurses at the hospital,
1920], used her vacation time to embark with Bill on a camping trip. They hiked
along the 300-mile Long Trail* [right: map]
, which traces the peaks of Vermont’s Green Mountains—a trail Lois’s father
and brother had helped clear. For Lois, trips like these were a chance to
“think things over” and encourage Bill to moderate his drinking.During this particular trip, Bill resolved to attend law school. His grandfather, who had raised him since age 11, had always wanted him to be a lawyer. Though Bill was “not sure he wanted to be an attorney,” he believed that “knowledge of the law would always be useful.” Upon their return, Bill enrolled in night classes at Brooklyn Law School
[left: Brooklyn Eagle Building, home of Brooklyn Law School, 1923], a division of St. Lawrence University. He continued his studies for four
years. Lois later recounted, “After paying the fifteen-dollar fee
[~$294 in 2026]
for his diploma [in 1924], he was too drunk to leave the apartment the next
day to pick it up. He never bothered to get it. It could still be there.”However, Lois’s memory was not entirely accurate. David G. Trager, Dean of Brooklyn Law School from 1983 to 1993, reviewed Bill’s records from the early 1920s. He found that Bill failed a course on Executors and Administrators (concerning wills, estates, and trusts) in his final term in 1924. Although he returned in the fall to retake the course, he ultimately left the law school without completing the required examination, rendering him ineligible for a diploma. (New York state law does, however, allow individuals with at least one year of law school to take the bar exam after completing three years of law office study under the supervision of a practicing attorney or judge.)
*The Long Trail, constructed from 1910 to 1930, follows the main ridge of
the Green Mountains from Massachusetts to Canada. It is the oldest
long-distance trail in the United States and later inspired the creation of
the Appalachian Trail.


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