Class Notes

Class of 1922

DECEMBER 1926 Frank H. Horan
Class Notes
Class of 1922
DECEMBER 1926 Frank H. Horan

Bob Dewey has been transferred to the San Francisco office of the New York Reciprocal Underwriters. For the past three years Bob has been pretty much all over the United States in his work of inspection. Now he is to frolic in that section west of Denver, which the maps show to be no mean country. Bob's address is Room 711—heh, heh !—, American Bank Building, San Francisco.

Miss Florence Knox and Herm Oliver were married at Buffalo, N. Y., October 9. They will live at 99 Wallace Ave., Buffalo, after November IS.

Grey Bates begs to suggest that recently he forswore the manufacture of paper to become a realtor in Newton, Mass., where he is working for Alvord Bros.

Dick Lichtenstein came to see the Secretary after a trip to various Middle Western cities. In Cleveland Dick walked miles to find Joe Herren, but the Lochinvar could not be found. Burghers of the vicinage told our agent that Joe had started for Alabama some time before. Let everyone keep an eye peeled for Joe.

Gene Hotchkiss is going to be our earnest worker in Chicago to urge the shot-riddled 1922 delegation there to come back to Hanover in June. It is our fervent wish that his task may be an easy one.

Among the many notables glimpsed at the Yale game were Bill Pierce and Roy Ball. They are singled out for mention because of the distances they traveled to be present. One who was contemplating a long trip to get away from New Haven was Tom Carpenter, off that night for his home in Florida after four months on the Cape.

This New Haven junket was productive of many other items for your long-nosed reporter. Ralph Reid, come to a very mature appearance, let it be known that he has left Florida to labor in Manhattan. Andy Marshall, no less tall and worried, planned to leave New York for Boston November 1, there to labor for the Ryerson Steel Company, with which infant industry he has been for long.

Ted Davidson has been working in Chicago since June, for his father's company. Jack Dodd has taken a new portfolio with the A. T. & T. in Gotham, after a period in the lush Oranges.

Another to establish his commercial ties in New York is Jimmy Austin, after a term in Worcester, Mass., with time off for good behavior.

C. N. ("Chick") Hopkins, for some time an insurance promoter in Burlington, Vt., has recently undertaken to conquer the field in Greenwich, Conn.

Numberless members of the Most Illustrious Class expressed penitence that they had not so far contributed to the class news. I await their letters skeptically.

Miss Shirley Ann Hamilton announces that she was born at Hanover October 18, and adds as an unimportant afterthought that her parents are Mr. and Mrs. James Hamilton.

Another equally important vital statistic is the arrival of a daughter, Natalie, at the domicile of Mr. and Mrs. George Shattuck. I would not be like Hey wood Broun unless I added that George, in his announcement of the natal event, came out strongly for the Twenty Twoter as a leading publication.

Here is news for any who are a bit tired of office work: Clarence Sanders writes to me that he is to spend the winter poking around northeastern New Mexico looking for oil. Sandy is a geologist in the employ of the Roxan Petroleum Company, Tulsa, Okla., and took this job after a spell teaching at Washington University, St. Louis. Mrs. Sanders is with Sanders on the trip. Last summer he was in Colorado with his divining rod.

Ted Robie, our one psychiatrist, has taken up his work at the Hudson River State Hospital, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. He has passed Part III of his National Board Medical Examinations.

His Highness Duke Van Vleck Von Von Hampstead Vosßurgh is busy in Connecticut as a vendor of bonds for Harris, Forbes, and Company. Duke made his first trip back to Hanover this fall to his great satisfaction.

It can now be denied, since Mr. George F. Baker's name is out, that Stanley P. Miner, our treasurer, gave the million for the library from our class surplus.

First prize for the month goes to Harvey Moses, who filed a long report that I will attempt to pass on. He reports that among those he saw at the Yale game was Bob Turnbull, far from Detroit's glamor.

At the Brown game, among others, Fat Shattuck, Mai Clarke, Larry Campbell, Sterry Waterman, Sam Sparhawk, Dick Willis, John Carleton, Phil Threshie, Bill Gallagher, and Bunny Bunnell.

Bunny, it may be said, is in Hanover as a manager for Charley Dudley's Main Street emporium. Any who remember his brilliant sticker candidacy for Best Dressed Man can see that Jim Campion is doomed.

Miss Charlotte Hawkins and Jere Robinson were wed October 6, and will live in Akron, Ohio, 173 North Portage Park. After a long silence Jere crashed through with large news.

Charlie Throop is" with a coke company in Jersey. He sent a long descriptive letter to Mose, which the latter was tempted to mark A plus, and return.

Secretary, 240 Waverly Place, New York