Class Notes

CLASS OF 1921

NOVEMBER 1929 Herrick Brown
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1921
NOVEMBER 1929 Herrick Brown

As this is written, the tang of fall has crept into the air, and the sporting pages are full of news for the football fans, and all the advance indicates that Norm Crisp is whipping a good old-fashioned Dartmouth line into shape for the big games ahead. Just how it is you will know more definitely by the time you read this, for by then Columbia, Harvard, and Yale will have been played. In any case every Twenty-oner knows that if the material is there Norm will produce a line worthy to rank with the one in which he played back in the Golden Era. As usual Norm has obtained a leave from his work with the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., to assist in the coaching at Hanover.

'2l also has a representative on the staff of freshman football coaches in "Brainy" Bower, who again also is to be head coach of varsity hockey this winter.

In addition to the athletic coaches Dartmouth's best class is well represented on the faculty this year, with Nels Smith teaching economics, Joe Folger instructing the lads in Spanish, and Franklin McDuffee and Jack Hurd in the English department. George Frost is back in Hanover once more this fall after two years of graduate work at Yale, and he too is a member of the English department.

From the Pacific Coast word that Marion Sherwood has joined the 1921 contingent out there, having kept going on west from Ogden, Utah, to San Francisco. He is still in the milling game, however. His business address is care of Sperry Flour Company at 195 Berry St., San Francisco.

Ye Sec. was recently in receipt of a letter from Jake Garfein, another of our California representatives. Jake reports attending the Coast Pow Wow of Dartmouth men which was held at Wawona, Cal., early in September. During the party the San Francisco delegation put on a skit presenting the famous Dartmouth characters of Eleazar Wheelock, Daniel Webster, Richard Hovey, and the Earl of Dartmouth, and in this skit Jake played the part of Hovey. He also reports having lunch with A 1 Dunn, the engineer, arid that he himself is still connected with the sales department of the American Bosch Magneto Company's San Francisco branch.

Mrs. Mattie Louella Nance has announced the marriage of her daughter, Miss Mary Gause Nance to Arthur Henry Ross '2l. The wedding[took place in Washington, D. C., Monday, October 7. The newly-weds are to reside at 2123 Eye St., Northwest, in Washington, where Art is working for Uncle Sam.

Tex Kouns has moved from New York up to Yale's home town. He gives as his occupation "automotive finance," and his business address as 109 Church St., New Haven, Conn.

The good word from Great Britain indicates that Connie Keyes is still in the banking game in dear ol' Lunnon. His firm is the Bankers Commercial Security, Ltd., and his address 260 Regent St., London, England.

Dr. Walter Wolfe was recently appointed psychiatrist for the Children's Court of Manhattan in New York city. In addition Walt is the translator of Erwin Wexberg's "Individual Psychology," which was published by the Metropolitan Publishing Corporation during September.

A quartet which sang over the radio for the benefit of the Byrd expedition one recent Saturday night included none other than our own Rog Bird.

Ken Sater was a recent visitor at Gotham and New Rochelle, where ye Sec. initiated him into the mysteries of Westchester suburban life. He came on from his native Columbus to usher at one of New Yawk's swell fall weddings, and judging from the demonstration staged on the porch of the Brown homestead during his stay, he looked right swanky in his top hat. He is still lawyering with his dad in Columbus. He told ye Sec. that he didn't think the old boy looked quite as ancient as he had figured he would, which set ye Sec. up quite some plenty.

Ort Hicks, just returned from a recent trip to Boston, reports Permission Dan Ruggles still ably looking after the business end of the Boston Herald, while Manny Manchester takes care of the editorial department. He also reports Don Sawyer safely settled in the Boston office of P. H. Korff and Company, the firm for which Ort himself and "Coot" Carder work in New York.

Addison Warner is an investment annalist with Kissel, Kinnicutt and Company at 120 West Adams St., in Chicago.

Hoy Schulting is both an insurance man and a real estate man in Passaic, N. J., which ought to keep the ex-basketball player quite free of spare time. Incidentally his business address has shifted from 36 Bloomfield Ave., to 38 Broadway.

Eli Smith is now connected with the Southeastern Petroleum Corporation at 627 Meldrum St., Atlanta, Ga., in the capacity of salesman.

Bill Owen, the Boston banker, is now residing in suburban Wollaston at 15 Chester St.

Traveling out from Manhattan on the old New Haven the other night, we learned that Furb Haight was a neighbor of ours, having settled down at the Brompton Apartments in Larchmont. He works in New York at 135 Madison Ave., where he is a salesman for the Duplan Silk Corporation.

Jim Sabin is fast becoming one of the leading barristers in Colorado, with headquarters at 492 Midland Savings Building in Denver.

And now ere we part we beg leave to remind you that these notes will appear in subsequent issues bigger and better than ever, and that your dues of $3.00 when duly forwarded to Ned Price at 21 South 11th St., Reading, Pa., include a year's subscription to the ALUMNI MAGAZINE.

Your class news will appear regularly in the Alumni Magazine. Haveyou renewed your subscription?

Secretary, 7 Lotus Road, New Rochelle, N. Y.