Turning this month to the teaching profession, we report the news of Bob Dow's return to English instruction at New York University, after a year of study at Harvard. For the benefit of those who don't know their N. Y. U., it should be made plain that Bob does his teaching at Washington Square College, in the heart of the late lamented "Village," and lives at the Faculty Club on University Heights—ten miles up in the Bronx, via the popular Interborough Subway.
Bill Carter, Dartmouth's newest economics instructor, has no such commutation problems to deal with. He assures us that all goes well with the Carter family, now pleasantly located in Prof. E. R. Greene's house on East Wheelock St. When last heard from, Charlie Stevens was serving as assistant professor of Spanish at Rutgers University. He took his A. M. degree at Middlebury College in 1927, after a year in Spain, and is now tearing along toward a Ph. D.
Claude Farwell has been located in Manchester, Mass., where he also is teaching, though the details are not specified. Another Bay Stater, glad to be back where he came from, is Jim Powell, graduated to the home office of the Flintkote Company in Auburndale, Mass., after seven preparatory years at the Rutherford, N. J., factory.
Among our select but growing group of executives, Hal White joins the ranks as associate manager of the Cincinnati branch office of the Standard Accident Insurance
Company. Hal rather misses the great southwest, but the move makes every day Old Home Day for his wife. Dick Shoninger's card proclaims him resident manager of Greenbaum Sons Investment Company out in St. Louis.
Speaking of things like that, we note that Jim Parkes is now with Phelps, Ells and McKee, investment bankers of New York. Quite properly he chose Red Bank, N. J., as a place to live, but the analogy with his business should stop right there. His home is at 66 Reckless Place. Dean Travis, another Jersey commuter, is an officer of the ChathamPhenix National Bank, which, as you may remember, graces the first of the Singer Building's innumerable floors.
Twenty has lately been going big for chain stores. Ken Hussey, for long the most movable object in the W. T. Grant chain, now has an ally in Warrie Gault, who is affiliated with the Grant store at Brockton, Mass. Horace Masse chooses the well-known Butler Brothers of New York, and officiates as their merchandise department manager.
For those whose good intentions toward life insurance are hampered by a horror of physical examinations, we recommend the services of Dr. Pop Rollins, now assistant medical director for Connecticut Mutual. Pop lives in West Hartford, as does Randolph Eddy, who is connected with Paine, Webber, and company.
Warrie Chamberlain reports himself back in the advertising game and now doing his stuff for Collins and Aikman Corporation of 25 Madison Ave., New York city.
Editor, 3226 54th St., Woodside, N. Y.