Class Notes

CLASS OF 1916

April 1920 Richard Parkhurst
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1916
April 1920 Richard Parkhurst

Bill Banton is living at 391 Cross Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. He is on the job in New York in the Russian department of the Y. M. C. A., following a long term of service for the Y in Russia. On his way back to the States, via Japan, he ran across Chuck Durgin in Yokohama, Chuck being in the banking business in the Japanese metropolis.

Jesse Fenno and Bob Dana report great goings on in South Africa. When wool buying lags, elephant shooting is the game. Average of four per week-end for some time, says the former member of the Boston Committee. How many miles from South Africa to Scotland, Fenno?

Karl Shedd is an instructor in French at the University of Michigan.

Jack Little—editor of the U. S. Bulletin. Washington, D. C.

A line from Phil Stackpole: "Just got back from the other side on Dec. 23, 1919. In Paris I saw quite a few Dartmouth men, among them a bunch of 1916 men. Bruce Bundy and I worked in the same office for some months. The banquets that were held in Paris were great affairs. I took in as many of them (meaning, of course, banquets) as I could, and every one seemed to be happy with what they took in." (Well-filled sentence.—Ed.)

Five 1916 doctors, Doctors Hayden, Shaw, and Wyman of the Presbyterian Hospital, New York city; Doctor George Paine of the Mercy Hospital, Chicago; Dr. Parsons of Whitefield, N. H.

Al Caiman is studying for his M. A. in Paris.

Shorty Hitchcock says that after April 1 his address will be 876 Lothrop Ave., Detroit. But listen to what else he says: "Yesterday morning (March 11), Robert Charles Hitchcock was born. He is a big, husky eightpound boy and looks like good football material." Shorty is working for Parke, Davis, and Company, manufacturing chemists.

Ruby McFalls is said to be in Detroit. Any one concurring or differing is asked to notify the Secretary, with particulars.

Hap Ward says he hopes to get home from China in the late summer of 1922. Can't you make it for the Fifth in 1921, Hap?

J. Gile, Bob Steinert, Bones Joy, Louis Bell, Max Bernkopf, Frank Bobst, Gran Fuller, Bill Mott, Ernie Cutler, John Monahan, Freddy Fredericksen, Ed Kiley, and Dick Parkhurst have been on hand at some or all of the weekly Dartmouth March lunches at the Boston City Club.

Secretary, Richard Parkhurst, Winchester, Mass.