Time out while we straighten the Harlan Miller family. In the November crop of notes we did a first-class job of mixing up the members. Dorothy is Mrs. Miller, and Joan daughter number one, born last March. Father was speaker by proclamation at the Rochester Dartmouth Club right after the Yale game. He was sole eyewitness and the gang clamored for the lowdown.
The Yale game, it appears, is good for many a story, say nothing of pictures, such as the one above. Yuh—it's Bill Hatch. What an advertising illustration for the Kreml, Fitch, or Herpicide people to use as the "shining" example. Fred Shaneman took this shot and sent it on from Tacoma when he got back home from the only game his Eastern trip would allow. Bill, it seems, may have been demanding his hat. He sat the rest of the game without any. Action is afoot in Fred's Pennsylvania Salt Company to form a Dartmouth Club. Slim Bauman '25, a recent recruit, holds out continually for a local brewery as meeting place, until Fred is about worn downand with another addition. Jack Robison '25, ready to give in at the next session. Jim Reid typed out a columnist's paradise on his questionnaire. He's editor of the textbook department of Harcourt Brace, publishing about 30 college and high school books a year, from Algebra to Zoology. Jim has four Dartmouth professors on his authors' list. His own wife, Helen Grace Carlisle, has written six novels. These literary parents, James III aged 21/2, Peter 14, and Christopher 9 now occupy the new Reid home on Brookdale Road, North Stamford, Conn., near Pat Meleney and Claude Jagger, the A.P. financial editor.
Thanks to Jim, who sees much of Jim Wheaton and his fancy tests for picking smart telephone operators for the Jersey Bell Telephone, Hal Cowley comes to light as publisher of the Journal of HigherEducation at Ohio State, married, and father of a daughter. Norm Maclean also is married to a red-haired young lady from Montana, and, adds Jim, rates top flight as teacher of English at the University of Chicago. To Dr. Bill Gardner, Jim hands the palm for a flourishing Park Ave. practice, with recommendations for his general ability to treat anything from house maid's knee.
Les Sycamore, ski, squash, and tennis enthusiast of Hanover, N. H., with three sons, occupies an important niche in the medical set-up of the College. He is radiologist to Mary Hitchcock Hospital, in charge of X-ray interpretation, X-ray and radium treatment, and physical therapy. Under the title of "Docent of Roentgenology, " Les does some teaching in the medical school. On the outside he is secretary-treasurer of the Grafton County Medical Society, member of the New England Roentgen-Ray Society, and diplomat of the American Board of Radiology. It appears that he takes a bus man's holiday when he goes to New York to see Tony Cipollaro, the dermatologist, and Bill Gardner, the Park Avenue practtioner.
The New York Dartmouth Outing Club became active again after the Christmas holidays, and in their Bulletin list the four stalwart members of the class who are still sufficiently limber to tackle the ski trails, Bill Gardner, A1 Hadlock, who remains treasurer, Charlie Holbrook, and Tim White. Perry Moody, who lives over in East Orange, is still in the real estate business at Room 1830, 1 Wall St. George Emrich Jr., one Chicago's investment bankers, has his office at 120 S. LaSalle St. If any of you care to glance at authors' signatures in the New Yorker, you will run across A. J. Liebling, currently the writer of Profiles—Philadelphia Jack O'Brien. Lieb has that tongue-in-the-cheek style which makes interesting reading. Harvey Lester Haws, long the squire of Ardmore, is now a resident of Haverford, Pa., living at 10 Llanlew Rd. Bert Hallin, who has been with Montgomery Ward at Jackson, Mich.; Lorraine, Ohio; Kalamazoo, Mich.; Mattoon, I11., is now up in Muskegon, Mich., at 303 Western Ave. Larry Fishbein delves into real estate at Bgg Sawson St., New York City. Charlie Hammond, security salesman in Columbus, Ohio, now lives at 1505 Franklin Park So.
Jerry Glauber, auditor for Wormser Hat Stores, after a long sojourn in Pittsburgh and Toledo is back in New York at 740 Broadway. Weston Blake, formerly manager of the Boston office for Hubbard Bros., is now associated with F. L. Dabney, stocks and bonds, at 10 Post Office Square, Boston. Bill Smith has been made a partner of a New York Stock Exchange firm at 40 Wall St., but he completely neglected to say whom. Another one of the investment clan who has shifted scenery is Norm Everett, who is now at 35 Congress St., Boston, and living at 43 Duhinda Rd., Waban, Mass. Roger Stephenson, long assistant manager of credits and collections for Consolidated Gas in New York City, represents Angus Equipment Company at 276 Franklin Ave., Hartford, Conn.
The officers of the Dartmouth alumni associations and clubs this year include Leon Rothschild, president of the Southern California Alumni Association, Jim Rutherford, president of the Dayton, Ohio, Association, Buts Crouter and Mony Monahan, president and secretary of the Philadelphia Association, Frank Montross, secretary-treasurer of the Westchester Association, Ken Davis, secretary of the Manchester, N. H., Club, Jeff Adams, president of the Dartmouth Club of Wellesley, Mass., and Ed Spargo, secretary of the Bridgeport, Conn., Club.
Secretary, 12 Haviland St., Worcester, Mass..