Class Notes

DARTMOUTH LUNCH CLUB OF WASHINGTON

AUGUST 1929 Edmund A. Freeman
Class Notes
DARTMOUTH LUNCH CLUB OF WASHINGTON
AUGUST 1929 Edmund A. Freeman

The Dartmouth Lunch Club of Washington meets the third Thursday of each month, except during the summer. During the past season we have had nine lunches, with good attendances.

We have had a speaker at each lunch and all have been Dartmouth men. In September we entertained the new freshmen, to whom some of the undergraduates and recent graduates poured out wise counsel. What was even more to the point, we had several of their fathers with us, too. At the December lunch, we followed the usual custom of entertaining the undergraduates, two of whom spoke. On Washington's birthday, we had the usual Father-and-Son lunch, with an attendance of fifty-six. George Morris brought his daughter along, too. After George had put the guests through a catechism, we had moving pictures of the college.

At the other lunches, we have shown the versatility of our men by hearing from an officer of the army, a newspaper publisher, a chemist, an official traveler in Alaska, a librarian, and an economist. We had an average attendance of thirty men, some of whom did not "cut" a single lunch.

Secretary