Class Notes

CLASS OF 1925

MARCH 1932 F. N. Blodgett
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1925
MARCH 1932 F. N. Blodgett

Mr. and Mrs. Parker M. Merrow are happily announcing the birth of a daughter, Ann Darling, upon which delivery was formally accepted January 22, at the Wyman House in Cambridge, Mass. The Merrow menagerie already numbers one small son, Lyford Ambrose Merrow 2d, who will be three in May and who is exhibiting at this early age characteristics which, it is hoped, will some day make him famous on the Hanover plain.

And then there are the news reels—the pitchers! Featured this month in the more or less limelight are Dick Holden and Bill Sleigh whose almost-human features decorate the February University Club News—along with the rest of the University Club Glee Club. And brother Ryan . . . Steve got in solely on his badminton ability . . . his picture's in there, too. All this in one issue! And of course there's Eddie Blake breaking into print all over the country.

A check-up of recent issues reveals no word (or words) from the outposts of '25 civiliza For instance, in St. Paul, Minn., there is Hansum Twist Elmquist, a rising young lawyer in the firm of Clapp, Richardson, Elmquist, Briggs, and Macartney, 1408 Merchants National Bank Building. This month Ma and Pa Elmquist celebrate the second birthday of their blonde-haired, blueeyed daughter, Martha. Twist is already coaching the gal to be a good Smith and Dartmouth-prom girl. Twist himself keeps in training with golf in summer and hunting trips in the fall.

Pete Haffenreffer, down in Providence, R. I., has been bitten with the archery golf bug. A recent trip back home to Mrs. Pete's folks started the craze with Pete, and now he has an archery golf course on his summer place in Bristol. Incidentally, Mrs. Pete has the almost unparalleled distinction of being the wife of a '2ser and sister of another, Pete (of course) being the one and Bud Petrequin the other.

Bob Sharp and his wife have been living in Cambridge for the past year and a half or so while Bob burns the midnight oil (the old oil) on thesis work and expects to get his Ph.D. this June.

"Ride 'Em Cowboy" Buck Snyder, late, and still, of Saugerties, has added THIRTY pounds to his sylph-like silhouette. (Wonderful beer up Saugerties way!) Buck is still the head—the cor-pulent head, pardon us,- of the Hudson River Steamship Co., and is patiently waiting for spring with its thoughts for a young man's fancy—and its ability to break the ice up on the old Hudson (that is not a subtlety).

Pinky Anderson, we have it on good authority, is, at present writing, advertising manager of Stewart and Co., Baltimo', Maryland.

Well, Lyle McKown's gone and went and did it! on Saturday evening, January the thirtieth, in St. Mark's Episcopal church, Milwaukee, Wis. The party of the second part was Miss Katherine Atwater. Bob Borwell represented the class well by seeing that elderly ladies were all given the wrong seats in the wrong pews.

At Scarsdale, N. Y., Mr. and Mrs. Martin Huberth Jr. are announcing the arrival of a daughter on January 19—Miss Coralie Huberth, to you, suh!

Bob Wilson is now of the firm of Warren, Wilson, McLaughlin, and Bingham, the New Hampshire counsel for the Boston and Maine railroad, with office (Warren, Wilson, etc., not the B. & M.) in the Amoskeag National Bank Bldg., Manchester, N. H.

We thank you. . .

Secretary, 67 Milk St., Boston