In the case that anyone is uninformed about the matter it should be said that Mr. Donald D. Tuttle, of this class, is publicity director of the New Hampshire State Planning and Development Commission. Since he has been in this office New Hampshire has become so completely planned that all its inhabitants now have to do is to look at the appropriate blueprint to find out just what their activities will be for years in the future, and it has developed to such an extent that, as everyone knows, it is no longer in the class of the backward states, Maine and Vermont, where it used to be, but has actually become an integral part of the Union. All this is due to Don, who has recently added to his other honors the position of president of the Concord alumni. Next to Harry Hutchins, Don is to the Secretary the greatest nuisance in the class, on account of his habit of asking abstruse questions in chemistry at the slightest opportunity, such as how to fire- proof Christmas trees; questions which the Secretary never can answer. Don is editor of that really fine publication, the NewHampshire Troubadour, which is a joy both to look at and to read. Every Dartmouth man should have it (advt.). He will thus be induced to come to the state whose subject it is; where he can while away his leisure by reading Chelsea Atwood's Leisure (advt.), while Homer Keyes' Antiques will serve him as a guide if his tastes lie in the direction of things old and sometimes beautiful (advt.).
Also in Concord is Doc Butterfield, and, with the Doc, his son Dr. Warren, of the class of 1927. Don says the son has a fine appearance, is well liked and is doing well. In this instance the Secretary is sure that, for once, the publicity director is telling the truth. At the November election Warren was chosen a member of the Hojise of Representativs of New Hampshire.
Through its children, the class is doing- its best to keep New Hampshire healthy. On the first of the year Dr. Marion Fair- field, Perry's daughter, established a practice in Nashua. Marion was graduated from Wellesley in 1928 and from the Cornell Medical School in 1932, where she won a prize in obstetrics. For a year she was interne in the Mary Hitchcock Hospital and for similar periods at St. Luke's Hospital, New York and at Johns Hopkins. For the past fifteen months she has been resident physician at the Margaret Hogue Maternity Hospital at Jersey City. With such a preparation and with her fine natural ability she is sure to be successful in her calling.
Henry Teague, after a successful summer at the Mt. Kineo House and with the Mt. Washington Railroad, looked forward to a pleasant winter of rest and recuperation. As a natural result of this feeling he received an offer too good to be declined to manage the Venetian Hotel at Miami, Fla. So he continues managing, with restIng and recuperating indefinitely postponed. Arthur Hayden has also been in Florida, where, it is to be hoped, his search for rest has been more successful.
Everett Goodhue is to be absent from his work in the Economics Department at Dartmouth College, on leave of absence or the second semester of the college year. his plans are not definite, but he has in mind a visit to the Pacific coast.
Secretary, 11 No. Park St., Hanover, N. H