Howard Murray Tibbetts, registrar of Dartmouth College, contemplated, but never took, a trip to Pinehurst, N. C., this winter.
Letters from the class indicate a record attendance at the Twentieth Reunion, to be held in Hanover in June. There will be a small army of men, wives, and children. The program is already laid out, and it promises to be one of the greatest reunions of the many the class have had. Owing to the unusual winter we have had, one of the features will probably be an exhibition of ski-jumping by the two children of Mr. A. P. Fairfield. The members of the class no doubt noticed from photographs and accounts of the winter carnival that one of the features was the skijumping of Marion Fairfield, who was born in Hanover, April 23, 1908.
Mr. and Mrs. D.. B. Rich and Mr. Henry N. Teague and family made a trip to Bermuda this winter. Needless to say, both parties had a fine time, which recalled the old roundups at Ipswich of days gone by.
Mr. Charles J. Boyle has been made a vicepresident of Paul Block, Inc., a fitting reward for many years of hard work.
We understand that Dr. James Buckley has moved to Keene, N. H., where he will continue the practice of medicine.
About fifteen 1900 men, including Joe Wentworth, attended the annual dinner of the Boston Alumni Association.
Several months ago we announced the marriage of two heretofore considered hopeless members of the class of 1900. There may be another very important announcement very soon.
Harold Hastings is now located at 146 West Lanvale street, Baltimore. He is with the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company.
In the New Hampshire state presidential primary, Robert Jackson was elected a delegate to the National Democratic Convention, which is to be held in San Francisco.
C. T. Miller is now connected in an important capacity with Frank Seaman, ,Inc., 470 Fourth Ave., New York city, one of the largest advertising agencies.
Arthur Norris is now a freshman in the Hyde Park High School, having graduated as an honor pupil from the Grammar School. He expects to enter Dartmouth with the class of 1923. He is six feet tall at the age of fourteen.
The Secretary is prompted to list the names of the remaining bachelors, but previous listing of these names in the MAGAZINE aroused a great deal of comment. We will, however, add that Mr. Joseph Wentworth, formerly of Sandwich, N. H., is still unmarried.
Everett Walton Goodhue has been appointed acting professor of economics at Cornell University for the year 1920-1921. He has been granted a leave of absence from Colgate so that he could accept this position. He is to have charge of the work in elementary economics, and is to give an undergraduate course in money and banking. There are four or five hundred students taking the elementary work, and Mr. Goodhue will, have a corps of four to six instructors under him. He will give the general lectures. This is certainly a fine appointment, and the class is proud of the record Goodhue has made.
Secretary, Natt IV. Emerson, 10 State St Boston