In accord with the almost unanimous response to the secretary's letter regarding the reunion, no arrangements were made for any definite program at Hanover, and so the Fifteenth Reunion of 1903 gave way to the more important demands of the country and the times through which we are passing. The. call of the College and the lure of Hanover at this season of the year, however, were too strong to be resisted by some of the men, and during this short Commencement sixteen members of the class rounded up in one of the most companionable and intimate reunions the class has ever held. There -was not a man present but wished that all his old chums could have met with the crowd, and we all felt that another permanent tie to the class and to the College was made.
Elsewhere in this MAGAZINE will be found an account of the proceedings and the Commencement program. No Commencement within our memory has had greater dignity or solemnity than this one, and the reading of Dartmouth's roll of honor by President Hopkins will never be forgotten.
No formal class meeting was held or business transacted, but the following men were present: A. E. Hanlon, R. E. Lewers, H. W. Watson and wife, E H. Kenerson and wife, George Reed, P. W. Howard, A. J. Cohen and wife, V. M. Cutter and wife, C. L. Luce, F. W. Baker, Roy Thorpe, N. H. Batchelder, Forrest Hall, A. G. Pratt, P. E. Whelden and wife, and M. R. Brown.