TENNERS OF THE SECOND GENERATION .... Elizabeth Lyon married to Henry Sears Bagg at Holyoke, Oct. 12 Kev Fay who is an all-round improvement over his immediate Progenitor, was elected President of his class (second year) at McGill Medical Roger Noone is associated with his dad's law firm in Chattanooga. .. .. Natalie Comey is a freshman at Dennison Cheever's son is headed for Dartmouth Young Charlie Kent is playing end during his second year at Vermont Academy Deborah Bankart, as ski instructor for the coming winter at the Hanover Inn, will be on hand to greet and give good instruction to Tenner's children who will be in the Inn's Annual Holiday Party It is a great sight to watch these youngsters barge in and around the ordinarily tranquil old hostelry Laura Lord has entered Smith Harold Robinson Jr., who finished his second year Dartmouth Medical, is now at Harvard to complete his course Dartmouth Freshman Herb Wolff Jr., who captained his high school tennis team, shows promise of excelling Father Herbert at his own game.
.... Walter Winchester, Harold's senior son at Hanover, has been selected as one of the ushers to serve during the winter concerts and players productions Sid Bull Jr. is a fine runner, winning the Dartmouth-Harvard cross country meet as his latest victory.
THANKS TO BERTHA SCARLETT who is most helpful in spotting Tenners for Prof. Andy and your Sec'y, we were able to identify the following men at the Columbia Game: Ed Shattuck, Gay Gleason, Jack Thomes, Norton Cushman, Howard Fogg, Slip Powers, Herb W01ff.... The Gay Gleasons had just returned from an insurance convention at White Sulphur Springs which Pineo Jackson also attended.
"SHING" SHERWIN is manager of the Colonial Garage at 23 Central St., Wellesley, living at 50 Linden St Frank Fleming has moved to 8 Jasper St., Beverly
Freshman shown on cover of October ALUMNI MAGAZINE is Art Scharf of Tacoma, Washington, one of Chan Baxter's neighbors and young friends Howard Fogg lives at 7 Oak Knoll Road, Summit, N. J These address changes enable Tenners to locate each other.... Bob Woodcock is in the life insurance business at 141 W. Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, with residence at 1416 Central St., Evanston Maurice Blake was at Harvard game dinner, and lives at 11 Mason St., Brookline Ralph Abercrombie, who has headed up Tilton alumni so actively during recent years, has moved to 318 Broadway, Methuen.
JIM EVERETT, a full-fledged N. H. citizen and owner of a humble Irish cottage with thatched roof and about 20 rooms with private bath at Nashua, has been grumbling to himself (no one else would listen) because he had to pay 10 bucks for his Phi Bete son's initiation fee, then had to whack out some more for the key, a highly prized decoration which he himself missed by a comfortable margin in spite of his voluminous outpourings .... once again a 1910 son takes after his mother.
FAMILY PARTY Football games can come and football games go .... but the Harvard contest is the only one on the Dartmouth schedules year after year that can qualify as a Dartmouth Family Reunion .... you meet there each fall the old and the young, the strong and the infirm, all types and sizes of classmates, new friends, and those of long standing Boston still seems sufficiently small and quaint to retain an indefinable something so lacking in other large cities the Hanoverian squads play in.
That University Club is a "Dartmouth Howl" from Friday afternoon to Sunday morning .... you meet gathering Indians from all over the lot and if you are young enough to have your Class Dinner in the "Bull Pen," where classes from 1910 down through the 20's meet, eat, and chew the fat in common, you cover a lot of oral acreage.
It was a grand gathering, thanks to E. Jenness at Cie Win Nay, Junior, the Class Baby, now an attractive young man, was with us.... so was his O. M
Plugger Norton came up from Naugatuck as usual Botanical Researchist, Ted Hill, paddled over from Cambridge Rusty Williams was there from Needham. .... Insurancers Ray Gorton and C. Fay took an evening off to perpetuate an aging attendance record Joe Kinney "thumbed" his way up from Brooklyn. .... Sid Bull sat in receiving congratulations on young Sid's winning the H-D cross country that afternoon Doc Foster left Portland to double up on Alumni Council and The Get-Together Maurice Blake and Cliff Lyon, Harmony Morse's undergraduate choristers of note, ate and visited Big, genial Ed Keith came up from Puerto Rico to pass around a box of fat and delicious native cigars. .... Barristers Gleason, Powers and Inky Taylor came in to study amiable, witty sense and nonsense B. Armstrong and J. Hobbs held frequent huddles with Thirteeners, Sherm Ward, Don Cunningham, Bill Towler at the next table Bucky Allen, able Headmaster at Rivers School, was a most welcome attendant as was Geo. Sinclair who is ever helpful to a laboring sec'y Charlie Bardwell drove down from N. H Efficient, friendly Treasurer Burton was all over the room Ed Shattuck aided by E. Pierce drummed up the gang to attend colored movies of the Reunion which Wilk had rushed on from California .... stuck for an operator, Cliff Lyon did a job that would move Sam Goldwyn to tears.
Wilk deserves a vote of thanks for those movies.... the shots of Reunion, Commencement, Hanover scenery in color were something to truly enthuse over .... it was a mighty fine thought for Wilk to carry through.
Space does not permit a further elaboration of our weekend and party .... but you absentees can picture for yourselves, the Festive Board of 1910 surrounded by noisy, friendly 1913, 1911 and 1912 men, many of whom you had not seen for years, then others you see annually at the same place.
The value of football games to Dartm0outh does not lie entirely on the gridiron.
HAROLD ROBINSON is spending this year in America, living at 136 Hancock St., Auburndale Harold Jr. is in Harvard Medical; Jim is a Dartmouth junior
Harold has been lecturing throughout the east on China, citing from personal experience and observation what the war has done and stating that the Chinese can stand more hardship than any other nation on earth. War, famine, floods and bandits have all failed to break the spirit of China's sturdy but suffering folks. On the way east from California, Harold visited with Leo Sherman at Grinnell College.
THE SEASON This is being written after the Sewanee game and before the Princeton fray We may not win another contest this season, and we may take one or two .... but regardless of what happens, we do not think that this fall has been a catastrophic one in Dartmouth football .... and we know that a month after we receive this issue of the ALUMNI MAGAZINE, most of us will have forgotten scores and disappointments for what looms large on the individual horizon today dwarfs into relative insignificance tomorrow ....
due somewhat to boundaries of the mind, and the appalling complexity and speed of current happenings.
DARTMOUTH has a really fine athletic department at Hanover Bill McCarter is very able in the performance of his duties Earl Blaik, Harry Ellinger, Andy Gustafson and staff form a great coaching staff, both for the squad and the undergraduates .... there is no better college baseball coach in the land than big Jeff Tesreau Harry Hillman fighting Hanover weather and not too good material, continues to pull individual champs out of the bag from time to time Ossie Cowles, whom Red Louden discovered out in Minnesota, is a basketball coach of exceedingly high capacity Eddie Jeremiah is just as good in hockey .... there is no better personality and coach in Hanover than the burring Scotchman, Tommie Dent.... we could go through the entire athletic department and say equally true things about Chick Evans, Pat Kaney, Elly Noyes and many another .... but space doesn't permit so what light and brief purgatory you may have gone through at some quickly forgotten football game is many times compensated for in the general health of Dartmouth's athletics.
Secretary, Canaan, N. H.
Treasurer, 1 Weybosset St., Providence, R. I.