Class Notes

Class of 1921

November, 1924 Robert W. Elsasser
Class Notes
Class of 1921
November, 1924 Robert W. Elsasser

Chester, N. Y., January 19, 1924, to Miss Lois Isabel Paddock.

William Plumer Fowler was married March 16 in Brookline, Mass., to Ellen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sprague.

Thomas Vose Cleveland was married at the Wayside Chapel, New London, N. H., September 1, to Miss Agnes B. Starrett.

Norman William Crisp was married in Hanover June 19 to Miss Margot Patricia Maloney.

Edward Grosvenor Plowman was married in Boston May 24 to Miss Genifred Homer, daughter of Mr. and .Mrs. Fred F. Homer of Cleveland, Ohio. Plowman is an artist, with his studio at 101 Garden St., Boston.

Roger Conant Wilde was married in Winchester, Mass., September 27, to Miss Caroline Farquhar Shawhan. Robert Burroughs was best man, and Malcolm Johnson, Donald Smith, James Chilcott, and Charles Kerwin were among the ushers.

Walter B. Wolfe graduated last spring as M.D. from Washington University, and has been commissioned lieutenant (junior grade) in the Medical Corps of the U.S.N. He is staioned at the U. S. Naval Hospital, San Diego, Cal.

George W. Ferguson was ordained to the diaconate of the Episcopal church in Lenox, Mass., last June, and during the summer months served at Grace church, Chicopee Center and the Trinity mission in Chicopee Falls. He has now returned to General Theological Seminary, New York, to complete his studies.

Many '21ers were not content with just one reunion this year,—the "thunderous third" at Commencement time. So they staged a most appropriate, unofficial, and distinctly informal reunion of their own, which was called the "premature fourth." They returned in groups -of twos and threes from every corner of New England, most of the boys just returning with their golf clubs and an appetite for Hanover, while three of them, Ort Hicks, Dan Ruggles, and Bill Alley, brought their wives along. Hank Cook, Cor Litchard, Jack Hubbell, Chick Stiles, Tom Norcross, and Harvey Burton were in town for the entire last week in August (as were the three aforementioned over burdened members). El Harper was in town for a few hours, Norm Crisp was on hand for a few days, while Bob Burroughs and Mac Johnson played a conspicuous part in the last act. Golf was the chief diversion in the daytime, while good old "sessions (use your own interpretation) was the rule at night. This promises to be an annual party, being the second of the series, as many of this year's clan were on hand a year ago. It will be well for all '21 men to put that idea in their hat for 1925 use.

Secretary, Hanover, N. H. Orton Havergal Hicks was married in Ro