Jack Allen writes "I shall be there withgray hairs, golf-sticks, neuritis, and all,eager and ready for the fray and frolic.Possibly for such a momentous occasion weshould revive 'Red' Spillane and 'Yes, wehave no bananas.' "
Clif Clarke's answer is that Agatha and
possibly Clifton Jr. will be with him in June.
"Husky" Wilbur from St. Paul, who is with the Minneapolis-St. Paul Sanitary District, says, "Count on me with the wife andmaybe two or three of the kids."
"Phenney" Badger, president of Investment Counsel, Inc., of Detroit, writes: "Twenty-five years ago I felt that my 25thwould be the last roundup. I had to skip1933 for well-known reasons, but nothingshort of zero-zero will stop me from zooming over the old campus next June. Onconsideration I feel now that I may holdtogether for another five years. Perhapsafter renewing associations next June another twenty-five will loom as a possibility."
Edmund Freeman spent his usual vacation in his home town of South Royalton, Vt., on the White River, a town without a debt. Last year I invested in some land and built a small summer home near the river and a brook. The classmate I met was "Bede" Washburn.
Line Wilson wants a fall reunion. June is one of the busiest times for the San Francisco office of the French Line, so he regrets that football games only next year will be his lot.
One whose identity is withheld by request has located John Joseph Scarry for us. The owner and manager of the Unicorn Book Shop, 1908 Centre St., West Roxbury, Mass., is "that old-time Spanishcavalier, Don Juan Jose Escarrio, lately ofChineesechevoorstraatje, Java, Sumatra,Malayasiz, South Seas, etc., etc., 'The Harpthat once through Sanborn Hall' (1909-1913), coat of many colors, goatee andshaven crown, etc., ad infinitum." Jack's book shop is most novel and successful, from all accounts.
On the return to Phoenix, Arizona, from New England, Leeds, Lillian, and the three young Gulicks spent a night in Denver in October, and the Cunninghams, Mores, and Gulicks had a great reunion. The youngest Gulick help Bob More make out his slip to advise he would be on in June, but the hieroglyphics are a little hard to read!
"Bis" Talbot is back in New York City and at 504 West 112th St.
Earl Barber, now at 632 Abbottsford Road, Kenilworth, Ill., and Phyllis will be in Hanover for the reunion.
Nineteen hundred and thirteen takes first place this year with 10 sons in the class of 1941:—Richard F. Blanchard, Esmond R. Crowley Jr., Rowland B. French, Winthrop L. Manley, C. Landon Martin 2d, Lincoln Morton, Franklin A. Munsey, Donald C. Samuel, Richard G. Spillane, Stephen W. Winship.
Offices in alumni associations and club held by Thirteen men are as follows: N. C. Lenfestey, vice president of the General Association of Alumni; John S. Macdonald, president of the Thayer School of Engineers; C. A. Clarke, secretary Dartmouth Club of Haverhill, Mass.; T. S. Jewett, secretary Belknap County Dartmouth Club; M. E. Gately Jr., secretary Dartmouth Club of Buenos Aires; Dr. R. M. Schulte, secretary Inland Empire Dartmouth Alumni Association, Spokane, Wash.
The Boston group held a class dinner at the University Club on October 82, the night before the Harvard game. Linscott, Merrill, Pishon, Towler, Bill Davis, Dow Kimball, Munsey, George Knight, Shumway, Enright, Ike Tuck, Pop Haley, Cushman, and Wilkins attended. During the dinner Bill Towler wired Bill Appleyard in Burlington, Vt.: "Have two extra ticketsHarvard game, wire me class dinner University Club or Ritz tonight if you aresmart enough to come." Soon a bellboy brought the answer, which had arrived $3.00 collect: "Your country friends will bevery glad indeed to accept your gracious invitation for game and hotel accommodations of course. Will arrive Ritz about eightthirty. Please arrange luxurious suite towhich we are accustomed. Bridal preferred.Please extend my best wishes and felicitations to the greatest class that ever graduated from Dartmouth College. Will see youin the morning. Vermonters are noted foraction. I am canceling several duck hunting engagements to say nothing of prominent Canadian National officials. Nowaren't you sorry you wired me. If you aresmart enough, to use your own language,you are not. Love and kisses. Bill and Eve." They arrived; in fact the Secretary joined the threesome for breakfast at the Ritz previous to the game.
The class luncheons on Wednesdays are now held at Patten's, 41 Court St., Boston. It is more convenient than the Parker House, and 12:30 noon will find some of the boys at a table upstairs. Interest in the reunion should continue the football crowd attendance throughout the fall, winter, and spring.
'l3 UP . The class dinner is all set for Saturday night, place to be announced in the next issue, but the best place in Hanover has already been reserved. Previous to the class dinner the most recent Dartmouth and class movies will be shown, an exclusive showing.
Saturday night, after the dinner, there will be a class gathering and dance at one of the fraternity houses. Such a party will be exclusively for 1913, and we will not have to be hosts for the alumni and undergraduates as we have other years of our reunions.
Too much football this past month to bother about the reunion, so the list of recent replies is small. These names are added, however, to 55 already printed:
"Cap" Avery, Mose Erving, "Husky" Wilbur.
Secretary, 40 Broad St., Boston
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