Class Notes

CLASS OF 1915

October 1919 Leo M. Folan
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1915
October 1919 Leo M. Folan

George Dyke has accepted an excellent business opportunity with Hodges, Dunham and Company, members of the New York Stock Exchange, 14 Wall St., New York city.

Phil Murdock is representing an electrical contracting firm of Bridgeport, Conn., in the Greater New York field. He is living at 273 West 73d St., New York city.

Ed Rice is connected with the Holbrook, Cabot, and Rollins Contracting Company of Boston.

"Zeke" Carpenter has bought a house at 518 South 40th Street, Omaha.

John Loomis, so we hear, has bought a lot in Dundee, a suburb of Omaha, where he is building. It is safe to assume that John Is making the venture without calling on the class treasury.

Les Dunn is working for his Ph. D. at the Bussey Institute, the laboratory of experimental biology under the Carnegie Foundation, connected with Harvard University.

Walt Flood has returned to the American Woolen Company in Boston.

"Jiggs" Donahue is working at 303 Congress St., Boston, when he is not at home admiring his new baby.

Bob Griffin can be found at 6 Avon Place, Cambridge, Mass.

A lunch club has been organized, meeting every Saturday noon at the Boston Tavern at one. In the three meetings held to date the following men were present: Dunn, Griffith, Healy, Hill, Johnson, King, Pray, Priddy, Rice, Tuck, Turner, Wyman, St. Clair, Meader, Barker, Ballou, and H. C. Richardson.

John J. Healy is working in Naugatuck, Conn., which town he writes "is dead; died years and years ago. If I can stand- the town I guess I will like the work."

Chester B. Jordan, who graduated from Harvard Law School in 1918, and has been practicing his profession in Keene, N. H., has been appointed associate justice of the municipal court of that city by Governor Bartlett.

Walter Wanger, late aviator in Italy and now theatrical manager, was married in New York city September 13 to Miss Justine Johnstone, an actress in his company. They will live at 379 Lexington Ave., New York.

Announcements of the marriages of the following 1915 men have lately been received by the secretary: Roger Winship, who was married to Miss Ruth Sanders; William R. Reynolds, Jr., who was married to Miss Jeannette Fenton Bailey; Robert Frothingham, Jr., who was married to Miss Elinor Mackenzie Schiff of London, England.

A very interesting letter was received by the secretary from Russell Durgin, who at present with 'his family, Mrs. Durgin and a junior, whether boy or girl is not known, is acting as secretary of the Y. M. C. A. in Tokyo, Japan. "Russ" writes that after he has mastered the language of the Japanese he is going to a larger center to act as instructor for the Japanese secretaries. He has had the pleasure of meeting many Dartmouth men who were in Siberia either in the army or in allied war services. He sets 1925 as the time for his first reunion in Hanover.

Ev Graves, a captain in the Ordnance Department, still fights the "Battle of Paris . He hopes to be home in time for the celebration in October.

The class organization, which was greatly disarranged during the war, is being lined up again by the executive officers. A class report is to be compiled this fall, and a drive for sufficient money to conduct the class affairs as they should be conducted will be started at once. The present organization of the class other than the four executive officers now consists of four regional sub-committees, a reunion committee, and a constitution committee. The latter was elected at Commencement this year to act with the class officers to revise the constitution, which has been found not sufficiently inclusive to meet the needs of the class organization.

The present address of the secretary is 144 Duane St., New York city. Telephone, Worth 985.

Secretary, Leo M. Folan, 144 Duane St., New York.