Herein are no reports of spirited reunions at Yale Bowl's Portal Two, for we heard the game over our radio. In fact, although we took in the Harvard week-end and enjoyed the battle in the first person, we saw mighty few '34 fellows in the offing. Under the stands between the halves was a mass of unfamiliar and vaguely familiar faces belonging to older and younger chaps. 1934 turned up only in the persons of Class Father and Mother, Ed and Mary Moore. These two seemed to be making a lengthy Eastern pilgrimage, for they waited over for the Yale tourney and then hastily beat a western retreat back to the Moore Co. and E. R. IV. We expect that the Class Baby welcomed Ed back with, "Well, it looks like we busted the jinx for good, eh Pop?"
A long distance halloo to Ike Powers and a long distance handshake with Chuck Rolfe were all that remained to remind us that we graduated from Dartmouth in June, 1934.
But meanwhile, even with the football season around us, people have been married, setting up gigantic milestones in our class progress. Take it away, Father Time. In Columbus, Ohio, Merry June Heaton to Rowland Steele Wilson on the fifth of November.
In Newark, N. J., Audrey Jeanne Lloyd to Robert John Miller on the tenth of October.
In Wisconsin Dells, Wis., Beverly Snider to William Van Orden French on the seventeenth of October.
In Williamsville, N. Y., Mary A. Albrecht to Richard L. Emerson on the fourth of September. After a wedding trip to Hot Springs, Va., they are living in Boston, where Dick is working for Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co.
At Durham, N. H., Muriel Andrews to Herbert W. Jackson on the twentieth of August. After a motor trip through the Midwest, the couple moved to Ithaca, where Herb is completing his graduate work for a zoology Ph.D.
And now to get on to less stately subjects I have a few letters from some of the boys who have not failed to remember us in our hour of need .... Henry Rosen, now established on the regular pay roll of Gloucester High as a teacher of French, is heading for France next summer and casting about for a comrade other than his movie camera. Anyone also having such a project in mind is asked to write to Hank either directly or through this column.
Jack Fogarty wonders what kind of tweak Father Time gave to his lower quarters to make him write after ALL these years. It turned out that Jack merely wanted to brag and tell us the sequel to a remark made in a last year's column to the effect that he was a-courtin'. To make another long story short, Sara Elizabeth (Jill) Edwards and John Griswold Fogarty were married on the fifth of September, 1935. Jack goes on to say: "The dignity ofthe marriage state has been further enhanced by the dignity of parenthood. Wefind ourselves the proud father and motherof a bouncing baby boy. Robert DavidFogarty '58 was born on the ninth of October, 1936. They say he resembles me, thelucky devil, but the only similarity I cansee is in the size of his feet. I bet he'll be astall as his uncle Swede. In addition to myB.A. degree I have now acquired my D.D.(Doctor of Diapers) degree, and my servicesin that capacity are now urgently required.
A few scribbles from Bill Emerson place him and Bill Judd still in Cambridge Judd finishing law at Harvard; Emerson "cleaning up" his work at M. I. T Ned Mudge investigating personal loans for the Shawmut Bank Dick Loughry, now the father of a small girl, is in Boston serving a dental interneship .... Merrill Heald and Ward Harvey finishing up at Harvard Law this year. .... Charlie Levesque, chemistry M.A. from Dartmouth, worked during the summer for General Electric in Schenectady, is now at Illinois working on a Ph.D Ed Thomas is at Tufts, and has a part-time job in the morgue.
John Anderson claims that he was so surprised to see a plea for contributions literary rather than pecuniary that he was immediately aroused from what he calls his ordinary lethargy. John is still with General Electric, in the Specialty Appliance Sales Department, Production Division, at Nela Park, Cleveland, handling customer relations. Among other things, Andy rejoices in Cleveland in the gain of Jimmy Hamilton, one time Tuck prof and Mary Hitchcock administrator.
Bill Stowe is teaching at Bar Harbor High School in Maine George Sayre studying medicine at McGill Neal Richmond teaching at Manlius. .... Henry Necarsulmer in the banking profession, with Kuhn, Loeb, 8c Co., New York Bob Layzell with the New Hampshire Fire Insurance Co. in Manchester, doing accounting work Dick Compton in the advertising department of the Chicago Daily News.
During the last fortnight, Bill Scherman
moved downtown a few subway stations, is now relocated with his first love, the advertising firm of Schwab and Beatty. Those of us who follow the doings of Charlie Atlas, Pelman's man with the grasshopper mind, and Mr. Addison Sims of Seattle, will rejoice in knowing that many of the new ideas expounded by these gentlemen of the ad columns will first have been spun out under the typewriter ribbon of our own Rabbitt Scherman.
Many of you radio listeners have undoubtedly got wise to the fact that Jerry Danzig is regularly on the air on Sunday evenings in a program called "Let's Visit." Jerry and a comrade take turns ringing door-bells of the apartments of good solid middle-class New York citizens, and, after gaining entrance, ask them every personal question possible outside of "how much their rent amounts to." Jerry's voice sounds pretty natural, and he certainly does get into some deep discussions with some of these gentlemen on hobbies such as collecting match boxes, etc. Listen in some time and see for yourself.
MORE SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS
Tom Cass is associated with the investment banking house of Suplee, Yeatman, & Co., Philadelphia Walt Bryant, aggie grad, now at the U. S. Morgan Horse Farm, Middlebury, Vt Noel Maxam in real estate firm of Andrew L. Malott, Detroit Hubie Johnson, a textbook representative for J. B. Lippincott About time for a letter from Willie Gilmore, explaining the Hammond, Ind., address
Al Bennett in the printing business in Boston Bill Barrett a tire salesman for U. S. Rubber, also in Boston
Dana Redington, now down east as a teacher at St. Johnsbury Academy, where the Musical Clubs used to take one of its long trips when your scribe managed them. . . . Emile Kluge lists his occupation as Chatham Mills, Inc.—address Pittsboro, N. C.
Ed Kaiser a member of the geology department at Washington U., St. Louis. . . . . Ken Silcock in the engineering division of Detroit's Chrysler Corporation. .. . . Jack Wolf doing placer mining in or near Pueblo, Colo Frank Wardwell up at M. I. T. doing gradstude work. .. . . Stan Silverman, how about writing a letter on how you are and what you're doing in Harrison, N. Y.? ....
Bob Mann, an ad writer at McCann-Erickson, one of New York's biggest agencies Bill Hackley now assistant manager of the Chicago Club Bill Ely a budding prof at Emerson School, Exeter, N. H Ed Corson on the payroll of the American Smelting & Refining Co., on lower Broadway Cal Calmon boning away in the Sterling Chem lab at Yale Don Bunting a student flyer at Oakland, California's, Boeing School of Aeronautics Armand Benoit an assistant production manager of Underwood Elliot Fisher, Hartford
Stu Barber, a "correspondence supervisor" for the WPA in Washington Bobs Balgley and Offenbach with William Filene's Sons in Boston
Secretary. 126 Beaufort PL, New Rochelle, N. Y.