CLEVELAND CROP ....
Because they're all right here at hand we tend to overlook the news eminating from Clevelanders; now, however, that about half of the local contingent have new arrivals to report, we dip our colours to the home horizon and report a banner crop. Some of the outlying precincts are still to be heard from, but these will give you some idea of what 1935 in-Cleveland has been doing:
Jack Steffens fathered John Laundon Steffens, as of July 7, 1941.
Bill Hawgood follows suit with Wm. Shepard Hawgood, 11, on July 20th.
Dan Swander varied the pattern a bit on August 12th with Susan Cole, but Jack AuWerter hews back to the earlier norm with tasselled Henry Harlow AuWerter arriving on Halloween. More power to them all, and welcome.
MARRIED MEDICO. .. .MR. ROBERT KARKUNOFFANNOUNCES THE MARRIAGE OF HIS DAUGHTERGLADYSTOLIEUTENANT MILFORD NEWTON CHILDS, M.C.ON SATURDAY THE THIRTIETH OF AUGUSTNINETEEN HUNDRED FORTY-ONEATTHE POST CHAPELMEDICAL FIELD SERVICE SCHOOLCARLISLE BARRACKS, PENNSYLVANIAAt HomeCamp Lee, Virginia
Thus the doctor takes a wife and becomes medical instructor in the Camp Lee replacement center. Bud was in town taking his national board exams sometime late this summer, during recesses from which we stormed a local lab, appropriately labeled El Dumpo, where Senor Childs did a mock strip dance which left no doubt at all in our mind as to his eventual success in the army.
WINGMAN WEDS ....
On October 4th, Dorothy Clark Morrell, a graduate of Packer Collegiate Institute, a resident of Brightwaters, Bay Shore, N. Y., and (we heard) a very charming bride, was just that for Ensign Carl Otto Fischer, Naval Aviator, Patrol Squadron 73, Quonset Point, Rhode Island, where the two will live. They were in Hanover for the Colgate game but we missed them.
AND WAREHOUSE MAN
Bob Rounsavall and Gretchen Collins, from Louisville, were married November first. The bride is a graduate of Louisville Collegiate School and Gunston Hall, Washington, D. C., and attended Katie Gibbs School in New York. Bill Hawgood, on hand for the wedding, reports Bill Embry '34 stood up for Bob. When not thus occupied, the bridegroom runs the Dixie Warehouse, on Main Street, Louisville, Kentucky.
BENEDICTS TO BE
Bill Mathers, engaged to Myra Tutt Martin, late of Sarah Lawrence, of New York and Oyster Bay, L. I. Bill is with the legal firm of Milbank, Tweed & Hope in New York City.
Bill Fitzhugh, betrothed with Florence Hardy, Vassar '37, a resident of Fitchburg, Mass., is still on the Columbia University faculty.
MILITARY MEN
To the forty one members of the class listed in service in the July issue, add the following:
John Blanchard, 25th Ordnance Co., Camp Hulen, Texas.
Lt. Wayne Geib, Lovell General Hospital, Fort Devens, Mass.
Lt. John Jewett, Station Hospital, Pine Camp, Great Bend, N. Y.
Lt. Natha?i Lippman, c/o Postmaster, A.P.O. 801-C, New York, N. Y., where he is a first lieutenant in the Medical Corps.
Dr. Melvin Rossen, Station Hospital, Fort Devens, Mass., doing dentistry there while living at 22 Wisconsin Ave., Somerville, Mass.
Tom Swift, now in the Marine Corps, has an address that reads like a code message, or the afterguard of the signature of a Knight of the Bath who is at the same time a Fellow in the Royal GeographicalSociety and similar such; here it is: 3—HQ —B, FMF, MCB, San Diego, California.
Hugh Wolff, 124 th Observation Squadron, 314 Sedgwick, Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas.
Lt. Harold Orenstein, c/o Commander, Asiatic Fleet, Cavite, P. 1., and if "P. I." means what we think it does it means Phil- ippine Islands.
Paul Siskind, Cos. D, 35th Infantry Train- ing Battalion, Camp Croft, S. C.
AND IN MUFTI
Harry Dawson has given up assisting the City Auditor down in Montgomery, Alabama, to become an Associate Economist with the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Dept. of Labor, Washington. Washington also claims:
Milburn McCarty, IV, as head of the Press Section, Defense Savings Staff, Treasury Department, living at the University Club there, and
Alex Schnee, a License Officer in the State Department, living at 1312 27th St., N. W.
CLASS AGENTS .... also in mufti!
Maybe this sort of thing has been going on right along. Maybe there is nothing very startling about it to you. Maybe there isn't. But we were set right back on the usual to learn that a brace of the boys are in the F.8.1. Of course with Sellmer off with the R.A.F., with Orenstein offshore with the Asiatic Fleet, with Eddie Mitchell shuttling back and forth between the Gold Coast, 8.W.A., and South America; Henriquez in Panama; Jim Irvin in Caracas, Venezuela; Don Radasch down at Cristobal in the Canal Zone; and Bartlett, Atherton, and Clarke, out in Honolulu, we shouldn't be startled at anything. Put four or five hundred men together, and what do you get.. .. a mob; but seriously, among that number there are naturally some whose lives will vary from the more stereotyped pattern the rest of us pursue. Of these are the two in the F.8.1., Gordy Hamlin and Elmer Adkins. Hamlin is with the Charlotte, N. C., office; Adkins serving as Special Agent in San Juan, Porto Rico, which should be particularly interesting work.
INTERMEZZO IN HANOVER
Dartmouth won the one we saw. It was a very pleasant day all around: richly colored foliage through which to drive over Vermont hills from down near the Massachusetts border, Balch Hill echoing the same hues as viewed from the grandstand; lots of people, nice people, fellows you hadn't seen since reunion or before, lots of laughter and much talk. Hanover doesn't change, you know that, .... the hills and the halls, the Inn Corner, the library tower, Dartmouth Row, Main Street, they're all just the same. Eating in Thayer as opposed to Commons or the basement grill seems not unnatural. We had lunch there Saturday, Bob Naramore,.... Bob Ferry, too .... us, and an oft-quoted young couple from down in Newtonville, an ex-Class Poet, whose name we omit as per promise, and some others. All very nice, as was the game; though we personally thought the tackling and blocking was very poor, but nobody seemed to agree with us. Colgate had more of a band than we'd expected, and some novel cheers. Late that night, after a session with some steamed clams in a farmhouse up past Lyme, we headed south .... back into Vermont, almost running into two does on the Molly Stark Highway west of Brattleboro around three in the morning.
Seen from seat 9, row Q, section 5, were some of the following: Gus Davis, over from Rutland, looking even more debonair than as a sophomore; Tom and GinnyLane, up from New York; Hank Hawkins all the way from Claremont, and Don and Ibba Hagerman. We stopped off in Deerfield, Mass., the next afternoon to see them, and had a very nice chat with Ibba, while Don was off on a nearby hill readying a skiing trail for the coming season. 1934 was represented in Hanover that day by Bill Scherman, Ray Hulsart, Ike Powers, and Dave Hedges.
Larry Sommer and Roy Shattuck have left Hanover: Larry is restauranting on Commonwealth Avenue in Boston, living at 20 Prescott St., in Cambridge; Roy is an Asst. Professor in Economics at CarnegieTech, not far from 4614 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, where he resides.
Speaking of teaching, Walt Pruden is teaching at Saltus Grammar School in Bermuda, Gene Burnkrant likewise in Newtonville, Mass., as is Schuy Cornthwaite in Durham, N. H., and Harry Price at Riverhead High School, Box 275, Riverhead, Long Island.
CHATTER ....
John Morrison is Resident in Obstetrics at Mass. Memorial Hospital in Boston ....Dick Sylvia is with The BridgeportPost in ibid., C0nn.,.... Bill Bonner is with the Torrington Co., in ditto, Conn., .... Johnny Glavis is a research chemist with Rohm & Hass, Philadelphia .... BobCollins has moved to Upper Ridge Way, Indian Hills, Elm Grove, Wisconsin. ... Ernie Hedler has moved to Cleveland, but when he called we were 0ut.... as we are now.
Secretary, 1843 Cadwell Ave. Cleveland Heights, Ohio Treasurer, 5036 Juanita Ave., South Minneapolis, Minn.
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