Class Notes

Class of 1933

November 1934 John S. Monagan
Class Notes
Class of 1933
November 1934 John S. Monagan

Lest the above address astonish our faithful followers, we hereby give prompt notice that we have moved our secretariat to the rive gauche of the Charles, where, at the law school of the there-situated 'varsity, we are now passionately engaged in the pursuit of furtive torts and wary contracts.

Our digs are situated just close enough to the Yard to hear, now and then, the shrill cries of the Porcellians as they gather gleefully about their chafing dish after lights. Occasionally a broad "A" floats away from Dunster House and slips forlornly in through our opened windows, rather surprised and slightly shocked at the strange, rather plebian atmosphere.

Happily, though, our spirits are continually buoyed up by the ever-present, frank, open, freshly washed Dartmouth face.

George Blaesi and frau live in the same apartment house. About the storied paths of the Yard we have seen Dan Rollins, Don Lincoln, Sid Stoneman, Vin Merrill, Gordon Ingram, Bill Starr, Bob Allen, and Bob Estes.

Allen, Merrill, and Ingram are at the School of Architecture. All the others are at the Law School. Starr and Estes are rooming together for the sixth year, according to demon statistics gatherers.

Frank Ripley dropped in to see us the other evening. He is working in a textile factory in Watertown, but plans to return to the family mill in Troy, N. H., in the near future, and will doubtless be there when this offering reaches you. Bill Dewey, at present recovering from injuries sustained' in an automobile accident, is to take Rip's place in Watertown.

REUNION IN BOSTON

We were pleased, last night, to receive a visit from Don Doherty and George Rideout, both steaming with excitement over plans for a Dartmouth 1933 get-together which we are enthusiastically aiding and abetting. The meeting is to be held at the University Club in Boston on October 20 with beer and appropriate accompanying features .... songs, perhaps, and witty stories. There are nearly a hundred '33 men in Boston and environs, and all who can be reached will be commanded to attend.

Bob Woodcock sent "the wealth of material which I received in connection withour replies to Alumni Fund requests," viz.: Bill Atwood is still with the New Eng. Tel. & Tel. in Bangor, Me Dar Bates is in Cleveland, Standard Oil, with wife AND CHILD, an addition which we hadn't heard about Bill Brown, after a year at Ohio State Graduate School, was working as a longshoreman in San Francisco during the strike Bob Goodell plans to study in Germany this year

John Marden is clerking at the Prudential Insurance Co. office in Newark Bob Ellis is with Montgomery Ward in N. Y.

.... Bob McDonald is employed by Bamberger in Newark Jack Masten, still at Yale Law Grob Filene's training squad Payne Macy's training squad Pierson Hahne & Co., department store in Newark.

CUPID V. 1993

Mrs. Ernest Augustus Arend requests thehonor of your presence at the marriage ofher daughter Miss Delphine Dorothy Silvato Mr. David William Russell on Wednesday the third of October, First PresbyterianChurch, Ridgewood, New Jersey.

Norm Erlandson writes from 521 Westminster St., Elizabeth, N. J "I amstill laboring down here on the Jersey flatslearning the mattress and bedding business from the inside out and upside down.After these several months of labor underthe employ of the Simmons Co., I havelearned the ideal way to spend a night inbed sleeping, of course, on a BeautyrestMattress. run into several '33s downaround the big city and, surprisinglyenough, they were all working in fact hadpositions. Macy's seems to be supporting9/10 of the class. God bless Macy & Co."

Jack Smart sends a postcard from the Abbaye du Mont Saint-Michel written in what must be Oxford French, the gist of which is that the life of an ardent student at Brasenose is all that it's cracked up to be.

John Davidson gives proud notice that he is now connected with the Welden National Bank in St. Albans; that his brother is going to enter Dartmouth; that Hagan has written him about chaperoning fifty girls on a store picnic.

Mr. and Mrs. Montgomery Rea Shakerannounce the marriage of their daughterMargaret Elizabeth to Mr. Lawrence CarterReeves on Friday the seventh of September,Chevy Chase, Md.

Bill Forbes sends us an epistle from Marion, Ind., on the stationery of the Foster-Forbes Glass Co. He is selling bottles in Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, and Wisconsin. Gus Babson, he says, is in Terre Haute, with the Louden Packing Cos.; Ralph Campbell is selling furniture in Chicago. He plans matrimony in the near future Don D' Arcy has a baby.

Time flies. . . . . The Rindge Tech H. S. drum corps are practicing across the street for their parade at the big game tomorrow A juicy looking tort has just whizzed by my ear and I can't resist the chance to squash life out of it with my bare hands.

Secretary, 1697 Cambridge St., Cambridge, Mass.