Well, things are brightening up—a couple of the faithful have come to the aid of the party in its moment of despair—letters from Fred Cole and George Slawson.
Fred says that Bill Kimball has gone back
to the ranks of the seekers after knowledge, studying civil engineering at M. I. T. Stuie Marshall holds down a desk at Lever Bros, in Cambridge, is married, and has a youngster in kindergarten. Lew Terry got himself married last June, with Fred as chief ringhander, to Eloise Thompson at New Haven. Ed Wheatley and Virgil McNeil were at the reception. As for our friend Fred, it seems that he is called supervisor of field research in the advertising department of Lever Bros. (Lux, etc.), the duties covering much territory from door-bell ringing to determining the preferences of smells for soap. Fred says it's all right, but that it's hard on a fellow who has hay fever and whose smeller works only four months a year.
George informs us that Ellie Jones has transferred his affections from the classified ad section of the Chicago Tribune to some newspaper in Florida. Jud Whitehead sells coppers and nickels (minerals, and according to Jud, nothing to do with cash) in New York city. Doc Dowlin is studying medicine in New York, and on September 24 was married to Miss Calista Lane Bristol at Forest Hills. They are now established at 141 East 44th St., New York city. Ted Geisel '25, the famous painter-naturalist, has been working on a painting for the Dartmouth Club of New York, evidently a nood figger from the description,—anyway, it seems that there were a couple of essential parts that he couldn't handle and our own Jack Rose was called in to distribute the necessary paint.
Through sundry devious channels the word has finally reached this quarter that on one recent and memorable day the football team of Coach A 1 Fusonie met and defeated that of Coach Bob MacPhail some forty points to not much. A1 is instructing and coaching at Taft School, and Bob is coaching football again at Pomfret.
Dusty Philbrick has been in the hotel business for fair—Windsor Hotel, New York; Farragut House, Rye Beach, N. H.; Mayflower Hotel, Boston, and now Hotel Fensgate, Boston. Back in June '27, Dusty married Arleen Johnson—and now the family includes a boy and girl, Harry C. III and Marion Millar.
Johnnie Scott has been in the real estate business since 1927, first with Joseph P. Day, New York city, as a salesman, and now with F. A. Rellstab, Inc., New Rochelle, in the same capacity.
Carl Lundgren is one of the few dozen perspiring bank clerks at the Chase National.
A 1 Walker sells lumber for Mackenzie and Winslow at Fall River.
Merrill Shurtleff is with William Filene's Sons, Boston.
Bill McRoberts went from Dartmouth to North Dakota State, graduating there in June last year. Mac played on the football, hockey, and track teams at North Dakota, andhascoachedswimming at Lansing Central High School, Lansing, Mich. Bill was head chemist at the Lansing Paint Company when the depression hit that section and closed up the company last winter. Since that time he has been working as a chemist for the lowa Highway Commission.
A 1 Lathrop was in the actuarial department of the Metropolitan Life until last March, when he became an operations dispatcher for Curtiss-Robertson Airplane Manufacturing Company at Anglum, Mo. If I'm not mistaken, Bob Winchester is with the same company.
Dave Menard, another of our chemists, has been research assistant for E. L. Patch Company of Stoneham, Mass., but expected to do graduate work in chemistry this fall.
Kemp Munson is statistical clerk for the DuPont Company at Wilmington, Del.
Art Vandenberg has been a secretary in the Senate, a bond salesman for the Guardian Detroit Company, and now is in the advertising business in Detroit.
Jack McLaughlin, another of the advertising fraternity, was with Aitkin-Kynett at Philadelphia until last December, when he joined the advertising department of the Campbell Soup Company at Camden, N. J.
Johnny O'Sullivan is still with the sales department of the Crucible Steel Company at Syracuse, and became engaged to Helen Troy Smith last April.
Stew Wright is an assistant buyer for R. H. Macy.
Bob Heald has been a salesman for Montgomery Ward at Denver, and since September, 1929, has been selling for Liggett and Myers in the same city.
Red Moore is a statistical clerk for the United Fruit at Boston.
George Holbrook is burning up the roads around Hanover as a salesman for the Holbrook Grocery Company, Keene, N. H.
Lanky Langdell is coaching football at Beverly (Mass.) High School this fall, and is doing a MacPhail by attending Harvard Law at the same time.
Tavey Taylor is traveling and studying in France and Germany. He entered Grenoble University a year ago to study languages, and expected to study at Heidelberg before returning.
Gene Andres is field secretary for Phi Gamma Delta, and says that as he makes the rounds he becomes more and more bullish on the Big Green.
Chuck Davis is assistant cashier in the First National-Old Colony Corporation, New York city. Chuck married Ethel Laßlotier a year ago last September.
Secretary, ! The Waypoyset Mfg. Cos., Pawtucket, R. I.