Class Notes

Class of 1922

June 1934 Francis H. Horan
Class Notes
Class of 1922
June 1934 Francis H. Horan

Armstrong, Aschenbach, and Robie attended the annual dinner of the Dartmouth Club of Northern New Jersey on April 7 at the Essex County Country Club in West Orange.

The Boston Transcript reported the death on March 25 at Jacksonville, Fla., of Hope Carpenter, wife of Tom Carpenter. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W. St. Amant of Auburndale, Mass. Her sister, Miss Ruth St. Amant, and her brother, George St. Amant Jr., of the class of 1926, survive. She was a graduate of Smith in the class of 1923. The Carpenters were married in November, 1925, and at that time moved to Crescent City, Fla., where Tom has been an orange grower for several years. The Carpenters had three children, who survive their mother. Burial was at Crescent City.

George Shattuck, one of the leading educators of Darien, Conn., has moved to Glenbrook, Conn.-16 Park Lane.

Sliding George Brooks (the reference is to his dive into third base and somebody's spikes in 1925) is living in Kingston, R. I.

Shep Naylor has another address in Lancaster, Pa., where he has been engaged in creative linoleum manufacture,—1112 Watson Ave.

Kenneth Lindsay has been for some time a buyer for G. Fox & Cos. in Hartford, Conn., and he lives at 20 Ware Ave., W. Hartford.

Ray Atwood sent a long letter which arrived one day too late for the last issue. It appears that Len Morrissey, shepherd of the Boston flock, has had a nice promotion in the metropolitan district of the New England Telephone Company. This seems only fitting for a fellow who has three sons, which is very nearly a record for that vicinity. Gray Bates and Ray have been playing vigorous squash in the Newton Club on teams X and Y. Dr. Kattwinkel, who is practicing in Newton, is still learning the game.

Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Johnson welcomed a daughter, Mary, on March 13. Mai Clarke was No. 3 man on the B. A. A. team of Class A of the Massachusetts State Squash League this winter. Such vigor is evidence that teaching in the Country Day School has not depleted Mai's vigor. Of the great number of pedagogues in the class, he is the only one of whom we know that is anything but a slippered scholar.

Bob Booth has been doing his usual good job for the Alumni Fund, assisted by Kilmarx, Ike Miller, Morrissey, and Nicholson.

Secretary, United States Attorney's Office Old Post Office Building, New York