Betty Newick and Frank Peyser played their revered fathers to a standoff on 36 holes of golf at the reunion.
The May 20 issue of Nation's Business, publication of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, carries an article by Harold D. Lane, Washington editor of the Railway Age, on "Regulations and the Railroads."
Newdick's address is care of Slayton Daroyd, Inc., 85 Devonshire St., Boston, and house, 15 Mt. Vernon Terrace, Newtonville, Mass.
Whittier's address is 58 Fernwood Road, Larchmont, N. Y.
Dr. Joe Merrill of Raynham Center, Mass., a recognized authority on bees, was scheduled to talk on "Package Bees and Their Uses" at a meeting sponsored by the Eastern Massachusetts Society of Beekeepers at Sharon, Mass., on June 21.
H. D. King, deputy commissioner of lighthouses, gave an illustrated lecture on "Lighthouses and Lightships, Old and New" at Hanover on May 21, under the auspices of Gamma Alpha, the scientific fraternity, and the Dartmouth Scientific Association.
Henry Norton will be chairman of a round table conference on "Arbitration and Intervention in the Caribbean Sea" at the session of the Institute of Politics in Williamstown in August. At the time of our reunion he was lecturing in the Middle West. Last spring Mrs. Norton addressed the Women's Civic League of Tarrytown, N. Y., on the subject, "Women Explorers and What They Have Done." Their home address is Irvington on the Hudson, N. Y.
Two pictures were taken at the reunion of Besse and Chase in shorts. When they see the result, they will discontinue the practice.
At our class meeting we adopted, with some amendments, the model class constitution recommended by the Secretaries Association at its last meeting, and in accordance with its provisions, elected an executive committee of five, consisting of Emery, W. E. Chamberlain, Harding, Hills, and McClary. The committee met later and made McClary secretary-treasurer, and Hills class agent for Alumni Fund. We also voted an annual class tax of $2 per man for class expenses, with the suggestion that the men who can be asked to pay as much as $5 each year. Solicitation for contributions to the Alumni Fund will be made separately by C. C., our new class agent.
The new officers feel their responsibility and hope and expect the active co-operation of every man in the class.
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Bill Clough, Jr., will be in Europe this summer as a part of the Tabor Academy student exchange plan.
John Dunlap's sons, George, Clark, and Richard, and Don Gates' son, Don, Jr., came to the reunion. Don's daughter, Phi Beta Kappa, Middlebury 1929, is to teach in the Enosburg Falls, Vt., High School this next year. Mrs. Gates attended her 25th at Middlebury this year.
W. H. Lillard, Jr., and William Putnam were members of the graduating class. Next year we have the following sons in Dartmouth: Joe Clough '31, Proctor '31, Gage '32, Harwood '32, Hobart '32, Peyser '32, Worthen '33, Bill Clough '34, and McClary '34.
Secretary, 45 East Main St., Malone, N. Y.