Class Notes

Class of 1925

March 1938 Ford H. Whelden
Class Notes
Class of 1925
March 1938 Ford H. Whelden

This issue of the MAGAZINE will reach more than 400 Quarters instead of the 150 who are regular subscribers. We welcome you into this often-wished-for 100% distribution. We failed this year to reach our 50% objective, and we hope that at least 50 non-subscribers will take advantage of the MAGAZINE'S offer for the last three months. You will be helping the class a great deal.

MORE WEDDINGS—PAST OR FUTURE

The engagements of JACK HARVEY of Lowell and Miss Frances Laton of Dover, and of WILL McLAUGHLIN of Helena, Mont., and Miss Mabel Mills of Seattle, were recently announced. No date has been set for the marriage of the former, while the Mills-McLaughlin wedding will be in June. Will is with the United States Soil Conservation Service in Warrenton, Oregon. BENNIE WERNTZ and Mrs. Lynd Norcross, both of Cleveland, recently took out a license to wed in New York City, but no further details are at hand. The St. Paul Junior Association of Com- merce Bulletin announces that TWIST ELMQUIST, who was secretary of the 1937 St. Paul Open Golf Tournament, has been appointed chairman of the 1938 Open. CHARLES BICKFORD, in the United States Forest Service, has moved from Louisiana to Lake City, Fla. FRED TAYLOR has left lowa and is in Quincy, 111. 808 PALMER, partner in a general insurance agency in Springfield, and fa- ther of two children, a boy and a girl, sends the following word from "far western" Massachusetts. "WEB COLLINS, in addi- tion to running his cotton waste business, is a partner in one of the leading florist shops. He has recently retired from the Board of Aldermen but continues to serve the public as vice president of the Springfield maternity hospital. Web has a fouryear-old son. JOSH JOHNSON is doing a fine job as assistant superintendent of the Woronoco plant of the Strathmore Paper Company. Josh was married recently. PHIL COYKENDALL has just moved to Springfield and is with the Adams and Ruxton Construction Company. JIM MARTIN, father of two fine boys, has a responsible position with the same firm. JIM ADAMS of New York was married on February 17 to Marjorie Bywater of Greenwich, Conn. They will live at 513 East Bgd St., New York City. CHUCK DODD has a new address—2o Country Lane, Northbrook, 111., and TY WERNER'S address is now 155 Tolman St., Cumberland Mills, Me."

BERMUDA—AND A BOOK BY A QUARTER'S WIFE

DEKE BLODGETT is planning another trip to Bermuda. Deke, CURT ABEL, and DUTCH JERMAN recently watched Ted Geisel successfully conduct the second annual manoeuvres of the Seuss Navy, sponsored by the Standard Oil Essomarine Division. BILL GRIFFIN is back from another trip to Hollywood. The New York City "Grand Central Boys" are still going strong with their Friday luncheons. Here is a sample of the news that Secretary Jerman pried out of one of the meetings:—BOß CANFIELD .... had a chair upholstered; RALPH UDALL .... lost a token of the New Haven Street Railway System which he had been carrying as a lucky charm for years. CLIFF HILL .... blew a 15 AMP fuse in his home. DOUG ARCHIBALD .... is searching for a paper plate really impervious to gravy. PERK FITCH .... our own Cal Coolidge, "I'm still paying therent." CURT ABEL .... says he is about to inaugurate a nominal fee for entertaining the college chums of the wives of classmates. Curt, of course, is one of our most eligible remaining bachelors. ROSS PEARL . ... "A good story will sellmore textbooks than a good author." And so, for another month, we leave the obviously contented and quiet Grand Central Boys!

"Sylvia Paul Jerman was bom in NewYork City, educated at Radcliffe, is 34, themother of three children. She has donepublicity work, newspaper writing, is atpresent press-agent for Hearst magazines." In addition she is the wife of our own Dutch and the author of "Attention Miss Wells," to be published by Harcourt, Brace & Company about March 10. The advance announcement caused the Secretary to put in an order for delivery upon publication. It concerns a confidential secretary, her district attorney boss, and a young reporter. Follow four new addresses: BRUD GOODMAN, the Homestead, Kew Gardens, L. 1., N. Y. BUCK JONES, 286 W. Bellevue Drive, Pasadena, Calif. PHIL MOLLOY, 1130 Farwell Ave., Chicago, 111. HOD WELLMAN, 210 West 7th, Jamestown, N. Y. Across the continent and back again for four Quarters!

"SMALL BUSINESS MEN"

A picture and front-page article are at hand, dealing with the Massachusetts delegation of "small business men" called to the Washington Conference. HOMER TILTON, "prime mover in the plan forthe conference," promised to "dump intothe hopper some of the letters I have beengetting from small business men. Theyhave plenty to say about what's wrong a?idwhat to do about it." ANDY EDSON, back from Norway, is taking up courses in international trade and banking at the Harvard Business School. Next fall he will transfer his work to the Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Andy says that the United States, in his opinion, is well ahead of Norway in down-hill ski racing. ARTHUR SAWERS has left Wisconsin and is back in Chicago in the real estate department of the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company. WAKE WAKEFIELD also moves farther east—from Minnesota to Fort Wayne, Ind., where he is plant manager of the Minnesota Linseed Oil Paint Company.

TURNING BACK THE PAGES

From the Dartmouths of March, 1922 . . . . March 1. "Green Freshman Five Bests Crimson In Fast Game, 28-24." March lg—"Freshmen Five Defeats Undefeated Exeter And Ends Season With Clean Slate" (Ten Straight Games). March 21—" T. P. Carpenter was chosen President of the Freshman Class . ... F.N. Blodgett was elected Vice-President . ... T. K. Gedge was made Secretary . ... L. G. Leavitt, Treasurer and NeilWilliams, delegate to the College Club." March 29—"Freshmen Shed Caps—Sophs Emerge On Top. Pitched Battle Waged About North End of Campus At Chapel Time. Coup Well Planned .... Open rebellion against the college tradition of pea-green caps and no sweaters was the unique method adopted by the freshmen class yesterday in an effort to determine its own fighting qualities as well as those of 1924. Its curiosity was satisfied. The battle raged around Rollins Chapel, Webster Hall, and the Campus, starting with the first chapel bell and lasting half an hour. When the last individual scrap was over, the sophomores held the field with a complete mastery, while the freshmen had been sent, vanquished, to their dormitories, leaving behind them torn and tattered clothing as a mute reminder of their brief moment of glory!"

How small, as a college, is Dartmouth? Next month the Secretary will digress for a paragraph or two, with some statistics on the number of "college men" in a group of American colleges and universities. We think you will find it interesting—and surprising.

We are waiting for suggestions as to further "Brief Biographies."

On February 9 came the annual Dartmouth dinner in Boston at the Copley Plaza. Unofficially 1925 had the largest class representation, with 35 members. They were Andy Edson, Lou Kimball, George Chamberlain, Whitey, Homer Tilton, Paul Nute, Hal Stevens, Eddie Pease, Norm Strickland, Ralph Shineman, Russ Fox, Larry Bankart, Les King, George Stevens, Pete Haffenreffer, Pete Blodgett, Jock Brace, Bob Rhoades, Bunny Levison, Ralph Thompson, Lem Mosher, Bob Bishop, Charlie Haywood, Johnny Garrod, Paul Pearson, Chet Eaton, Ken Nugent, Frank Wallis, Lane Goss, Mark Emerson, Fergy Ferguson, Lang Spring, Bob Pierce, Bill Sleigh, and Ken Hill. With the wonderful addresses of President Hopkins and President Emeritus Angell of Yale, combined with tales of the Orient and Norway by Andy Edson and a report of the "small business man" by Homer Tilton, just back from the President's conference in Washington, the evening flew by all too fast. The reports of Andy and Homer were to the '2sers only around the table.

ALUMNI FUND RECORD FOR 1937

35X contributors (94% of graduates),total gifts of $2,908.00 (100% of objective ).

HORTON CONRAD, Class Agent

Assistants: Curtis A. Abel, Henry D. Archibald, Ford S. Barrett Jr., Walter R. Baumann, Clarence E. Blodgett, Nathan D. Bugbee, Lincoln K. Davis, Carl V. Elmquist, C. Lane Goss, Richard A. Gratz, William J. Griffin Jr., Rudolf F. Haffen.reffer 3d, Arthur C. C. Hill Jr., Kenneth B. Hill, Richard K. Holden, Charles R. Jameson, Berkeley F. Jones, Louis S. Kimball, Karl D. King Jr., Donald B. Lawson, Joseph F. Leavitt, Laurence G. Leavitt, Robert A. McKennan, Lyle S. McKown, Robert Meginnity, Parker M. Merrow, Sidney D. Milnor, Robert J. Palmer, Edwin G. Pease, Charles A. Peterson Jr., Edouard J. Petrequin, William Pugh, William B. Sleigh Jr., Stanton K. Smith, Robert A. Snyder, Channing S. Walker, Frank B. Wallis, Howard D. Wellman, Ford H. Whelden, Llewellyn P. White.

CONTRIBUTORS

1925 Abel, Curtis A. Adams, Thomas A., Jr. Aldrich, Richard H. Allen, Ford W. Allen, Joseph Ames, David M. Anderson, Paul A. Antrim, Joel P. Archibald, Henry D. Babcock, Charles W. Bacon, Harwood C. Bankart, Charles L. Barker, William G. Barnett, Sherman R. Barnfather, Roland C. Barrett, Ford S., Jr. Batchelder, Sydney H. Bates, Harold N. Baumann, Walter R. Beacham, Harold R. Beatty, Ross W. Becker, Walter W. Bickford, C. Allen Bishop, Robert H. Bjorkman, Henry B. Blake, Edgar B. Rlodgett, Clarence E. Blodiett, Frederick N. Holies, Chester A. Booth, Edwm R. Korwell, Robert C. gowden, Benjamin H. Brace, Lloyd D. Rricki Francis A., Jr. Rricknell, Clifton A. Briggs> Walter B. Brown, E.Francis Brown, J- C*l£e<?ri* Brundage, Paul B. Bryant, William J. Bugbee, Nathan D. Bullard, George N Bunting, William B. Burgess, Lee Burner, David M. Burns, Edward E. Callis, Eugene M. Calvert, William C. Campbell, Whitney Canfield, Norton Canfield, Robert E. Carey, Ralph F- Carpenter, .Robert is.. Carpenter, Thomas P. Carswell, Elmer J. Carter, Albert H. Carter, William R. Cassels-Smith, George R. Chamberlain, G. N., Jr. Chamberlain, Stanley G. Channin, Nathaniel S. Chilcott, Theodore E. Childs, Walter S. Chipman, Norris B. Chism, William W. Clark, Norman Clark, Wilfred Clarke, Harry A. Clifton, Charles E., Jr. Clough, Henry P. Collins, Webster E. Colton, Richard C. Conrad, Horton Copeland, Stanley E. Coykendall, K. Philip Crawford, Henry B. Curry, James R. Davis, John H., Jr. Davis, Lincoln K. Dewing, Arthur D. Disque, Brice P., Jr. Dodd, Charles W. Duffin, J. Daniel Dunlevy, Edwin Dwinell, Ralph B. Eaton, Chester W. Edgerly, Stuart Edwards, Foster H. Elder, Harold M. Elder, Jay C. Elmquist, Carl V. Emerson, Mark F. Emerson, Milton K. Ferguson, C. W., Jr. Fitch, Charles P. Fitzgerald, Clifford L. Fleet, Henry L., Jr. Flint, Charles H. Flynn, John C. Foss, Bradbury P. Foster, Andrew B. Foster, H. Schuyler, Jr. Fox, Russell E. Frenkel, Lester A. Friedmann, Karl R. Gardner, Wilson E. Garrod, John E. Gaskill, Ralph H. Gedge, Thomas K. Geisel, Theodor S. Gilbert, Blair B. Goas, Lewis O. Goss, C. Lane Gould, Gerald F. Graydon, Charles W. Green, George D. Greenebaum, Gerald Griffin, William J., Jr. Guernsey, Raymond V. Haffenreffer, R. F., 3rd Haman, Albert L., Jr. Hardy, Robert C. Hart, Milton N. Harvey, John Haywood. Charles F. Hefler, Alden R. Hennessey, Edw. F., Jr. Herlihy, Paul F. Hershey, Frank S. Hewitt, Edward C. Hexter, Paul L. Heydt, Richard G. Higgins, Thomas J., Jr. gi , Arthur C. C. Hill, Kenneth B. golden, Richard K. Hommeyer, Paul G. g°we, Gardner W. owe» James R., 3rd Huberth, Martin F., Jr. Hunt, Donald C. Jacob, John D. Jacobson, Berger E. Jameson, Charles R. Jamison, Lee B. Janssen, August R. Jarnow, Alfred A. Jenkins, William W. Jerman, Paul Johnson, H. Hersey Johnson, Henry R., Jr. Johnson, Roger D. Jones, Berkeley F. Jones, Henson L. Jones, Roderick B. Joslyn, George R. Kaufmann, Fred W., Jr. Kelsey, Preston H. Kennedy, Frank T. Kilby, Donald S. Kimball, Louis S. King, Karl D., Jr. Kingman, Bradford M. Kirouac, Elpheage V. Kurtz, Cornelius Laing, Alexander K. Lanphear, Roy H. Large, J. Judson Larrabee, Leonard P. Larson, Leonard W. Learnard, Everett F. Leavitt, Joseph F. Leavitt, Laurence G. Leffingwell, Henry D. Levison, Bernard L. Lipsohn, Karl P. Litchfield, Stanton G. Luten, Granville H. Lyman, Donald A. Lyman, Elliott B. Lyon, George R. Lyons, Barrett MacCready, Robert A. McCleery, James W. McDonough, Kenneth P. McGaughan, Terrence F. McHenry, Harold A. McKennan, Robert A. McKown, Lyle S. McLaughlin, Willard T. MacMillan, Charles W. McNamee, Edward M. McNulty, William J. Mahool, John 8., Jr. Manning, Bernard J. Martin, James O. Martin, Norman W. Marvel, Gordon S. Mason, Warwood £, Matchett, Earl N. Matteson, Hobert V. Megathlin, George E. Megee, Howard W. Meginnity, Robert Merrow, Parker M. Mickelson, Howard Milnor, Sidney D. Misch, Robert J. Molloy, Philip T. Montgomery, Kenneth F. Montgomery, Kenneth M, Moore, Don W. Morrison, C. E., Jr. Murphy, Joseph J. Myers, Robert G. Newman, George W. Newton, Marshall Norris, John L. Nugent, Kenneth S. Nute, Paul B. Nye, Richard S. Ober, Edwin H. O'Connell, Philip C. Oktavec, Henry J. Osgood, Franklin T. Packard, John S. Palmer, Robert J. Pardee, William D. Parker, Kenneth R. Pearl, Ross E. Pearson, Paul F. Pease, Edwin B. Penney, Cyril F. Perkins, Harold A. Per-Lee, Jack H. Peterson, Charles A. Petrequin, Edouard J. Phillips, Bernerd D. Pierce, Richard K. Pierce, Robert W. Poorvu, Sumner L. Prescott, Winston N. Price, Lincoln Pugh, William Reading, Robert A. Reber, Paul V. Reed, Paul J. Reeder, John F. Reeves, Mart W. Reynolds, Robert C. Rice, Herbert L. Rice, Winthrop H. Richards, Elmer E. Richardson, Laurence E. Rider, Harold E. Roberts, Porter Robinson, Charles A. Robinson, Sanford Roessler, Edward W. Rogers, Irving E. Rogers, James G. Russell, Hiram S. Sailer, Henry C. Sawers, Arthur R., Jr. Sawyer, Robert C. Sawyer, Walter F., Jr. Schroedel, Howard A. Scott, George L. Sharp, Robert L. Shea, Francis M. Shepard, William M. Shineman, Ralph E. Simms, William H. Simonds, Kenneth C. Simonds, Robert T. Skiles, Mark O. Slater, Drennan J. Slawson, Daniel S. Sleigh, William B. Smith, Arthur R., Jr. Smith, Bradford, Jr. Smith, Carl W. Smith, Dudley T. Smith, Francis B. Smith, Frederick W. Smith, James V. Smith, Norman F. Smith, Reynolds W. Smith, Stanton K. Snyder, Robert A. Sparks,, Allen L. Sprague, George E. Spring, Arthur L. Spring, John D. Stebbins, C. Rowland Stephenson, Roger F. Stevens, George T. Stevens, Harold E. Strickland, Norman W. Sullivan, J. Kenneth Sweet, Harold C. Sweetser, Robert C. Talbot, Herbert S. Tanzer, Radford C. Taylor, B. Clinton Thayer, Hamilton W. Thompson, Ralph Thompson, Ralph D. Thompson, William A. Thurn, Allen R. Tilton, Homer S. Tinker, Harry A. Tobey, Newton H. Tompkins, G. Patchin Torbert, Edward N. Torrens, Robert W. Tucker, Ralph H. Upton, Duncan G. Van Orman, Francis E. VomLehn, Walter R. Walker, Channing S. Wallis, Frank B. Walter, Paul B. Walton, Joseph R., Jr. Waring, Ellis A. Warner, J. Eliot Warren, Robert O. Y. Washburn, Warner M. Watson, John I. Webster, Fred Weinig, Robert F. Welch, Laurence A. Wellman, Howard D. Werner, Tyrrell H. Werntz, Orrin B. Westfall, Oliver A., Jr. Weston, Frederick L. Whelden, Ford H. Whitbeck, John M. White, Harold E. White, Llewellyn P. Whitman, John T. Whitney, Roland A. Whittemore, S; Dolloff Wilder, Francis S. Wiley, Robert E. Williams, Neil Wilson, Alva S. Wilson, Charles M. Wyckoff, Rodgers L. Zahm, George G. Men CarryingInsurance with, theCollege as Beneficiary Jones, Roderick B.

Secretary, 344 Buhl Bldg., Detroit, Mich.