In the Boston Herald of April 5, Bob Dunbar writes :
"Harry 'Rip' Heneage, who has charge of sports at Dartmouth, personally conducts a moving picture treat for the boys at Tabor Academy, Marion, tonight. He is an expert in motion pictures, and through friends of his own and of Jess Hawley has patched up an admirable special football film from bits of Pathe reels of the the Harvard-Dartmouth, Yale-Dartmouth, Harvard-Yale, and Yale-Army games of 1927. These he will put on the screen for the private school boys, who include his son Richard."
The following is a letter received by the Secretary, from Ted Greenleaf:
"Many Dartmouth men will mourn with our class the untimely death of U. G. Paris. His congenial spirit and hearty laughter will be greatly missed at our reunions.
"G. and I were brought together by one of the Dean's marriages, and we lived in 16 Richardson Hall for three years. It would have been four years, if I had not entered the Thayer School. We both agreed that our room had too many callers to admit of the study supposed to be applied to the Thayer School course. So U. G. moved his possessions to the Tri Kap house, and I moved up one flight in Richardson to a single suite, but many times I found old G. lounging in my chair, seeking the companionship we both enjoyed so much.
"Although naturally inclined to be facetious in his casual contact with his fellows, he was capable of a depth of feeling that few realized. He was very generous with his friends, and was a most charming conversationalist, for he read widely and was well informed. My father visited me once during my college course, and I think that U. G. enjoyed his company even more than I, for he was always one jump ahead of me in suggesting ways of entertainment.
"What a flood of memories comes back to me, as I think of those happy days and the_ host of good fellows who used to stick their feet under our table. I am reminded of one beautiful Sunday, in the spring of our sophomore year, when as the result of the smiles of Lady Luck, U. G. chartered a one-lunged Cadillac at the Junction, and a party of us went over the Green Mountains to Rutland, and Frank McDavitt cheerfully footed the bill. G. wanted us to go on to Sandy Hill. N. Y., that we might enjoy the hospitality that was so generously dispensed at his home, but the roads were not what they are today, and gas buggies were cranky, so we declined.
"He came back to our Fifth Reunion, nd found me sick in the hospital at Hanover. I must have looked pretty bad, for he took the next train for home, and told his mother that I was not long for this world. He missed our Tenth Reunion, but was there last June, and although his business did not admit of his staying through, it is safe to say that few got more enjoyment out of seeing his old classmates than G.
"It is hard to realize that he is gone, but when I took over the list of those who have gone before him. I think of him as being with Frank McDavitt, Swan Dana, Gig Gallagher, Spike Blythe, and other kindred spirits, whose company he so much enjoyed and whose voices used to echo with his through Richardson Hall.
"Charlie, we are all getting on in years. Most of us have lived over half of our allotted time, and it is comforting to realize that there is such a fine company of congenial souls waiting to welcome us when we have passed through the Great Adventure."
The following are new addresses, recently received:
Philip H. Chase—Business, Edison Building, 900 Sansom St., Philadelphia, Pa. Residence, 125 Levening Rd., Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. Albert M. Farrier—Paradox, N. Y. Louis C. Gerry—79 Williams St., Providence, R. I. Carl A. Newton—12318 Chesterfield Ave., Cleveland, Ohio. Clarence E. Langley—Box 246, Rockingham, N. C. Otto S. Mayer—215 4th Ave., New York city. Charles W. Staples—Box 45, Spokane, Wash. Russell B. Wright—Room 503, 250 Stuart St., Boston, Mass.
Bremer W. Pond has been appointed to succeed Prof. James S. Pray as chairman of the council of the School of Landscape Architecture at Harvard.
Secretary, 131 State St., Boston