Class Notes

Class of 1930

March 1938 Albert I. Dickerson
Class Notes
Class of 1930
March 1938 Albert I. Dickerson

Just about the time the duckboards begin to float on the campus this issue of the MAGAZINE will go to all active members of the class. Since this will give us a shot at several hundred '3O men who treat the ALUMNI MAGAZINE and our efforts as if they were disseminators of the plague, we are going to restrain our usual loquaciousness and give you in a series of pithy news flashes an idea of what you've been missing in the way of vital and pungent information during all these months.

Let's get at this systematically among the "L's" and give you BOBBY LARKIN, assistant secretary of the M. D. Larkin Company of Dayton, Ohio, a mill supply firm. A year ago, reported, "healthy, happy, andunmarried." .... DAVE and ERNIE LATHAM, physicians of Lowell, Mass., lately making the headlines "Twin Doctors Operate to Bring Forth Twins." .... Uncommunicative 808 LEE of the Employers' Group, Boston insurance organization. .... PETE LENT, old art major, in 1933 mechanical draftsman for Tubular Rivet and Stud Company, Wollaston, Mass Dr. BUNKIE LEWIN of Claremont, December bridegroom DAVE LEWIS, traveling auditor (1932) of the Rochester and Pittsburgh Coal Company in Indiana, Pa., father of four-year-old Bill If some of this news is out of date you know whose fault it is JESS LICHTER, treasurer, Harlem-Adler and Company, jewelry, New York—to show what these Tuck School boys can do Hanover will get DR. GEORGE LORD after three years of Mayo's, in the role of surgeon on the staff of the hospital and the Hitchcock Clinic, with bride of February, 1937—just announced by the hospital trustees with pride.... BILL LUCAS, purchasing agent in shoe in dustry, 1937 bridegroom, moves to Republic Shoe Company of Minster, Ohio. .... We think that DON MCBIRNEY is now vice-president of the National Bank of Commerce in Tulsa—two years a benedict PHIL MCBRIARTY, zoologist, pugilist and Thespian of Hanover days, a mystery, reported in 1934 with the Palais Royal Clothing Company, Washington, D. C 808 MCCLORY, the old "Swiss" lad, now following McClory tradition as barrister in Chicago, father of one- year-old Beatrice Captain TED MCDONALD of the tennis team, with Junior almost four, is traffic representative of United Airlines in Seattle BART MCDONOUGH'S procreative accomplishment reported last month CHARLIE MCDONOUGH a Brooklyn barrister The name of DR. DAN MCKENNA of Denver appears in the Alumni Fund roster below for the seventh generous time in seven years since graduation

Here's an item that deserves a new paragraph.

"Mr. and Mrs. J. FRANK MCLAUGHLIN(assistant U. S. Attorney, Honolulu) announce a recent change in managementwith the arrival of Paula Kathryn on January 9, 1938" (born with a lei around her neck).

Dr. JACK SMITH is safely back from the Orient in New Rochelle. Jack, a naval lieutenant, was stationed on the U. S. S. Sacramento at Shanghai at the outbreak of hostilities. He was one of those administering treatment to the survivors of the U. S. S. Panay. The Sacramento was, according to an interview with Jack by a staff writer of the New Rochelle Standard Star, mistaken for a Japanese man-of-war during the first days of hostilities, and Chinese planes made three air attacks on it, in which a dozen 1000-pound bombs were dropped. As quoted in the interview, Jack described the last attack as follows: "The Chinesebomber started across the river at a greatheight and I saw two little black pills leaveit. As the bombs descended, I realized thatthey were not going to miss the ship bymuch. One dropped at a safe distance, butthe other dropped about 60 jeet off thestarboard quarter. When it exploded, theship listed at about a 35-degree angle. Thewater in the river at that tide was 60 feetdeep, yet the ship was spattered with mudfrom the bottom of the river. It was a goodday before the ship was cleaned and lookedlike a first-class man-of-war again."

Here's a new wedding for you: "Mrs. Frances Hilbert Pfister announcesthe marriage of her daughter Agnes Laurato MR. JACK HADLEY HERRICK on Saturday,the fifteenth of January, Aurora, Indiana." At home after February the first: 3975 Abington Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio.

And before going back to the pithy odds and ends we must announce the arrival of Peter Sterling BOTTOME on December 28, the second little male Bottome. Mrs. B. graciously timed the event so that Bob could complete negotiations on one of Rockefeller Center's bigger leases, for the Luce enterprises, Time, Life, Fortune, at cetera—such a substantial feature that one of the Rockefeller Center buildings, which they keep building to keep Bob busy, will be named for them KEL RICHARDS, Weston lumberman-photographer, finds the harsh climate of West Virginia too much for him and is hiding in deep Florida until after the new Fund Cam- paign is over BILL RICH, still a hot- shot reporter for the New York HeraldTribune, slipping in a little creative writ- ing on the side JACK RICH, a Bos- ton barrister and a 4-year benedict 808 RELYEA of the Travelers Insurance Company hasn't reported from Charlotte, N. C., since 1931 BILL REINHART, another Harvard LL. 8., practicing law on Fifth Avenue SHORTY REAVES is an- other mystery. What are you up to, Shorty? .... FRANK RATH, the handbag king, is secretary of William C. Rath Company. .... NELS RANNEY, floor coverer and re- cent papa, reported on last month PRES RANDLETT, from insurance salesman to Massachusetts state cop to inspector for the Alcoholic Tax Unit for the Internal Revenue Service in Boston. .... Dr. ADIE RAAB, Columbia M. D., is practicing medicine with his father in Brooklyn, while BILL PUTNAM is serving a wide area around Lyme in the same calling 808 PRATT, following family telephone tra- dition, is with the Southern New England Telephone in New Haven WALLA POORMAN, although he has snubbed us steadily for seven years, can't keep us from saying that after an M. I. T. record that would knock your eyes out, he is do- ing very nicely as chemical engineer and assistant to general manager of the Stand- ard Oil Company of Louisiana at Baton Rouge You ought to know, how- ever, about CHICK POOLER, the soap king of Lever Brothers, Cambridge—another of those Tuck boys WARREN PHINNEY, with daughter Judith going on three, a Boston banker (Real Estate Co-operative Bank) AL PHILLIPSON has accom- plished quite a bit with Northwestern Mu- tual Life in New York; two daughters ap- proaching six and three respectively, . . . . ART PETTENGILL is with CHARLIE AUSTIN'S Texaco Company in Woburn, Mass So far as we can tell CHUCK PERRY has been with the Dayton Company in Minnesota since graduation from Tuck School The ROBERT S. PERKINS Company, insurance, of Manchester, N. H., accounts for Boof, but not for 6-year-old Penelope or 2-year-old Charles. . . Wandering TOM PEIRCE should be with the Pennsylvania National Bank of Phila. delphia JERRY PEARRE is a newspaper man on the family paper, the Pontiac (111.) Daily Leader DICK PEABODY, one of our engineers, is with the Carrier Corporation, Washington, D. C.; has had broad engineering experience with doors, A. & P.'s and so forth PAT PATTERSON is doing something on the advertising side of the Providence Journal. .... As for the PARISHES, Warren is on the staff of the Lakeside Hospital in Cleveland. Ben, a fledgling daddy, is resident physician at Hazleton, Pa., State Hospital. .... Another Tuck lad in the marts of trade is BYMIE PALMER of the Chase National Bank While FRED PAGE, the Harvard M. B. A., is an investment analyst with Tri-Continental Corporation. .... RAY OLSEN is working on the bond bulletin of Poor's Publishing Company, Wellesley. ....

In the advertising racket we have BILL O'BRION of Kimball, Hubbard, and Powel, manager of the advertising media department; and the moss-gathering rollingstone, TOM DUNNINGTON, has, according to a recent newspaper note, just been put in charge of special promotional activities for the clients of Ruthrauff and Ryan. Among the R & R clients whose products Tom will promote are Chrysler's Dodge motor cars, and, more challenging to the imagination, a well-known variety of cornplasters. We suggest all of you take your corn and bunion problems to Tom, who ought to be a real help PAT O'BRIEN is a New York Life Insurance man That. old. track man and music major, 808 NOELTNER, is still arranging music and snubbing all our attempts to get in touch with him Another Tuck man, ED NIDITCH, is now a buyer for Wanamaker's DICK NEWMAN, chemist and foil expert, a salesman for Koppers Gas and Coke Company, Clifton, N. J Don't forget, any of this stuff that is wrong is on you, not us JOHNNY NEWCOMB, Filene's? benedict? . . . . FRANK NEFF, Cleveland squash player and entertainer, reported on the brink of marriage, while NEEF NEFF provides no information at all but is allegedly the father of a daughter of indeterminate date RUSTY MORRILL, you heel, you ought to be subscribing to these pages even if you are assistant buyer for Bamberger's As for you, Buzz MORLEY, if you only subscribed you would have found yourself covered in the December issue, wholesale and retail hardware and Saginaw gadgets notwithstanding

Another musician and aviator, holder of a transport license, and so forth is GEORGE SARLES, associated in 1935 with the Rawlins Motor Company, Mount Kisco, V Y TED SAUNDERS still with Lincoln Stores? .... DR. GENE SCADRON, Bellevue baby juggler, is silent So is the mysterious swimmer and zoologist, GEORGH SCHELLER, rumored a physician, proved a bridegroom of last June. .... FRED SCHMIDT still cutting us cold? .... LENNY SCHMITZ, lawyer with the Northern Trust Company of Chicago. . . . . AL SCHUMAKER, Eccy flash, now a Nyack, N. Y., paper research flash FRED SCRIBNER, hope of the Young Republican Movement of Maine, aren't you ashamed, you non-subscriber? .... For DR. TED SEIDMAN see our December effort. .... EARL SELDON, veteran of Dartmouth, Michigan, Babson, and Harvard, is now an attorney and assistant to the president of the American Equipment Company, Detroit Can DR. DON SHASKAN still be at Bellevue after three years? .... As for GORDON SHATTUCK, try the superintendent's office, Strathmore Paper Company, West Springfield, Mass CHIC SHERBURNE seems to be with CLIFF MICHEL'S Edward B. Smith Company and BURT SHERWOOD with United Electric Light and Power Company, living in Teaneck, N. J., with 4-year bride Russ SlGLEß—still with the Central Hanover Bank? .... We'll handle CHUCK SIMMONS of Apgar Daniels Company, Chicago, (bonds) out of court, if possible, after years of criminal neglect Another neglecter par excellence is BILL SINZ, instructor at the University of Puerto Rico AL SMITH, M. C. S., LL. 8., golfer, radio operator, bridegroom, and, we suspect, sailor, has an office at 60 Broadway for transaction of all sorts of nefarious business EGGIE SMITH, we are surprised and crestfallen to find you escaping the cultural uplift of these columns, wherein your baby and bond trades are meticulously described. . ... Et tu, WILLIAM CHARLES SMITH and your Emily Not omitting you either, Lt. SOUTH of the Navy Aviation, Squantum, Mass Or you, ED SPRANKLE, of the Central United National Bank, Cleveland SHELLY STARK free lance writer and radio scribe, is another matter—one letter every five years is his quota. After all writing is his business. ... SOME of you people ought to know what SAM STAYMAN is doing at 1265 Broad- way We have to fall back on 1932 news for the STEERS boys, GEORGE with the advertising department of the National Lead Company, and BUCK a space buyer for Pedlar and Ryan, advertisers. . . . . HEINIE STEIN, an executive of the Law- rence M. Stein Company, Chicago, has a daughter Mary, who will soon be two, and otherwise has reported little HEI- NIE STEWART, the musical doctor, is at the Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit PROFESSOR WIN STONE, whose Dartmouth ancestry goes back to the 18th century like PETE LILLARD'S, beginning with a great-great-great grandfather, is, nevertheless, an apostate subscriber CHARLIE STREET'S heart is in the right place but his pen is weak. Chisholm-Ryder Company is his outfit LEE STURMAN, lawyer of Rochester, hasn't given us much to report about himself STAN SWANSON, New York investment broker, with Lancaster, Havens & O'Brien And BILL SWARTCHILD, how about breaking down the information embargo?

ALUMNI FUND RECORD FOR 1937

535 contributors (75% of graduates),total gifts of $2,600.35 (1J9% °f objective).

G. WARREN FRENCH, Class Agent

Assistants: Samuel A. Adams, Robert I. Booth, Victor G. Borella, Robert R. Bottome, Llewellyn L. Callaway Jr., Edwin B. Carnell, Josiah B. Chandler, Paul H. Duback, Henry S. Embree, John French Carl W, Haffenreffer, Francis H. Horn, William R. Jessup, Alex J. McFarland, Burrows Morley, Philip R. Peck, Paul H. Poehler, Charles E. Rauch 2d, Charles V. Raymond, Nelson A. Rockefeller, Herman T. Schneebeli, Fred C. Scribner Jr., William E. Steers, John M. Tiedtke, J. Frank Tragle, John T. Wooster.

CONTRIBUTORS

1930 J Ackley, Alexander M. ( Adams, Charles H. ( Adams, Samuel A. ( Ahern, Clinton J., Jr. ( Alcorn, Hugh M., Jr. ( Alexander, Jack K. < Allen, Sam H. J Allyn, Horace W. ] Austin, Charles S. ] Bailey, Lester W. 1 Barnard, Richard ■] Benoist, Edmond G. Benson, Clarence B. Bernhardt, Raymond S. 1 Birmingham* John F., Jr. 1 Birnie, Walter H. Bishop, Henry R. Blais, Wilfred A. Blake, Eben N. Blake, Nelson M. Blakey, Wallace Blanchard, Robert O. Blanchard, William F. Booma, Harold E. Booma, Roland C. Booth, Robert I. Borella, Victor G. Bottome, Robert R. Bowes, Frederick Bowlen, Richard W. Bragner, William E. Brazil, Edward A. Breckinridge, William R. Brown, Willard M. Browning, Arthur M. Bruce, Robert M. Brunner, Fred M. Bry, Adolf W. Buhler, E. Carll Butler, Gordon S. Butt'erfield, Richard D. Callaway, L. L., Jr. Carnell, E. Bradley Carroll, Edward R. Casler, Harry_ S. Chandler, Josiah B. Chase, Clarence R. Chase, H. Erwin Cheney, John G. Chilcote, Lee A. Childs, Theodore F. Chittim, Robert H. Crandell, Burton E. Chrissinger, Horace B. Christe, William B. Clark, James Clarke, Paul F. Cole, E. Shaw Collins, Morton B. Condon, Harrison F., Jr. Covell, George D. Crane W. Warner Crawford, John 0., Jr. Crosier, George D. Davis, Stanton W. Day, Dudley M. Dearstyne, William E. Denney, Clark Dickerson, Albert I. Dobson, Jack W. Doherty, Francis V. Donovan, Thomas D. , Doran, William T., Jr. Downey, Edmund B. Dresser, Walter E. Duback, Paul H. Dunlap, James C. Dunning, Harrison F. Durgin, Winslow S. Ela, Roger E. Eldredge, Howard R. Embree, Henry S. Emrich, Milton S. Farmer, E'. Capen Faust, Dudley W. Fenton, William N. Ferguson, Dudley C. Finch, Benjamin, Jr. Fisher, Charles L., Jr. Fisher, George C. . Fitzpatrick, B. T. Fitzpatrick, John R. Flanders, H. Nelson, Jr. Fleischman, Milton W. Fletcher, William M. Foster, F. Spencer Fox, Evarts C. Franson, George E. Fredrickson, George W. French, G. Warren French, John Frost, Edwin R. Funkhouser, Richard L. Galbraith, William N. Gibbons, Hughes 0., 2nd Gilbert, Ellis W. Golan, Joseph C. Goodman, Jerome Grant, Edwin H. Gray, Russell C. Griffin, Arthur L. Gulden, Frank, Jr. Haffenreffer, Carl W. Hamm, Edward F., Jr. Hancort, Joseph S. Harris, William O. Hartmann, Ralph B. Haskell, A. Porter, Jr. Hatch, Winslow R. Hayes, Merrill B. Hazen, Edward H. Heimbach, Howard A. Herrera, Julio G. Herrick, Jack H. Hight, Donald Hobbs, Ranald P. Hoffman, Paul B. Holden, Frederick B.1 Holme, John C. Holmes, Edward C. Hood, Richard B. Horn, Francis H. Howard, Jerome W. Howe, William F. Hoxie, C. Gordon Humiston, Charles E., Jr. Humphrey, Otis M. Irwin, James B. Jackson, H. Kirk Jaspersen, Fred F. Jeremiah, Edward J. Jessup, William R. Johnson, Hugh A. Johnson, Robert P. Just, Milton H. Keating, John P. . Keene, Robert E. Keller, William H. Kindermann, Frank J. King, Melvin C. Kisevalter, George G. Klepp, Henry P. Kohn, Robert S. Kronengold, Alfred Kull, Kenneth K. Larkin, Robert H. Latham, David A. Latham, Ernest H. Lawrence, Henry M. Lawson, William, Jr. Leahy, Francis J. Leslie, Alan N. Lewin, B. "Rend Lewis, David N. Lichter, Jesse S. Lillard, Walter H., Jr. Lilley, Oliver L. Loeser, Daniel W. Lohnes, Harold G. Long, George W. Lord, George A. Low, G. Evarts, Jr. Lower, Philip A. Lucas, William O. Mcßirney, James D. McClellan, George H. McClory, Robert McCulloch, Walter A. McDonough, Bart J. McDonough, Charles J. McFarland, Alex J. McGrath, Alfred F. McGrath, Norman E. Mclnnes, Milton G. McKenna, Daniel S. McLaughlin, J. Frank Magenau, Eugene F. Marks, David N. Marsh, John S., Jr. Marsters, Alton K. Mavis, Carroll E. Meyer, Kirt A., Jr. Michel, Clifford W. Miller, John C. Milne, William, Jr. Mitchell, Francis D. Mitchell, James W. Moore, H. Kelsea, Jr. Moore, Jackson B. Morley, Burrows Morrill, Russell G. Neff, Frank H., Jr. Ne wcQ'mb', John R. Newell, Henry C. Newman, Harold D. Niditch, Edgar B. O'Brien, Arthur P., Jr. O'Brion, William L. Odbert, Henry S. Olsen, Arthur M. Olsen, Raymond N. Osgood, Stanton M. Page, Frederick W. Palmer, Byron F. Palmer, Elton M. Parish, Benjamin D. Parker, Richard A. Parkhurst, George V. Patterson, Milton L. Peabody, Richard Peacock, Charles D., 3rd Pearre, Jerome Peck, Philip R. Perry, Charles H. Phillipson, Albert Placak, Joseph C., Jr. Poehler, Paul F., Jr. Pooler, Charles A. Poorman, Glenn W. Porter, George W. Pratt, Robert H. Putnam, William F. Raab, Adolph P. Rath, Frank H. Raube, S. Avery Rauch, Charles E., 2nd Raymond, Charles V. Reaves, Paul H. Reinhart, William J., Jr. Rich, John F. Rich, Williston C., Jr. Richards, Louis L. Richmond, Lawrence S. Rockefeller, Nelson A. Rosenberry, W. S., Jr. Royce, Richard L. Rubin, David Rugg, Addison F. Rumpf, A. Newell Ryder, Francis C. Safford, D. Wade Salisbury, Henry W. Sandberg, Oscar G. Sander, Hermann N. Sanders, John H. Sarles, George A. Savage, Ernest L., Jr. Scadron, Eugene N. Scheller, George A. Schmitz, Leonard S. Schneebeli, Herman T. Schuster, Edward R. Scribner, Fred C., Jr. Seidl, Stuart F. Seidman, Theodore R. Shaskan, Donald A. Sherburne, Harold H. Sherwood, Burton T. Shultz, Milton G. Shurts, Arthur Van D. Sigler, C. Russell Simmons, Charles E. Simpson, George E. Smith, Alden W. Smith, Everett G. Smith, H. Morton, Jr. Smith, Wilbur C. Smith, William C., Jr. Sprankle, Edmund J. Stayman, Samuel M. Steers, George A. Steers, William E. Stein, Henry L. Stewart, Harry L., Jr. Stigall, John 8., Jr. Stone, George R. Stone, George W. Street, Charles G., Jr. Sturman, Leon H. Swartchild, William G. Tadross, Victor A. Tangeman, Fred A. Telling, John E., Jr. Thompson, Paul V. Tiedtke, John M. Tilt, Richard G. Toland, John M. Tragle, J. Franklin Trostel, Albert 0., Jr. Troy, Philip J. Tyler, James H. Uhlemann, Frederick K. VanDerbeck, W. Scott Van Leer, A. Wayne Varley, Edgar J. Violante, George C. Vogt, Arno R. Vogt, Clifford J. Walker, Robert' A. Warner, H. Stewart Warren, Edward C. Wasmer, Walter J. E. Waters, Edwin S. Weaver, Sylvester L., Jr. Weil, Linton D. Weinstein, Edwin A. Weinstein, Howard Weston, Horace C. Whipple, John S. White, Merit P. Whitelam, Douglas E. Whittlesey, Robert T. Widmayer, Charles E. Wilkinson, Wesley A. Williams, Clifford G., Jr. Willis, J. Brooke Wilson, William L. Winter, J. Robert Wolfe, Theodore R. Wood, Henry N. Wooster, John T. Young, Collier H. , Zagat, Eugene H. Zeigler. Richard B. Zey, C. Gordon 1 Memorial gift from hisclassmate, Mr. Addison F.Rugg.

Secretary, Administration Bldg., Hanover, N. H.