Class Notes

1922*

April 1941 ANDREW MARSHALL 2ND
Class Notes
1922*
April 1941 ANDREW MARSHALL 2ND

GREETINGS TWOTERS: Are you an FR?

The annual Tuck School Clearing House dinner—New York group—was held on March 5th at the Dartmouth Club. A large group was present among which were stalwart Twoters Lloyd Barnard of Central Hanover Bank 8c Trust Co. and Charley Earle of Burroughs Clearing House. Your Secretary also was there to enjoy a fine evening. An excellent speech by Dean Olie Olsen started the after dinner program with the major speech by A. H. Dean, Sullivan & Cromwell partner, on the subject of An Evaluation of the Work of the SEC.

We have previously spoken of Clark Bristol's move to Hartford (Conn.) and now news reaches us of a still further promotion for this ace insurance man. Clark has just been elected assistant secretary of the Century Indemnity Cos. Clark joined that organization in 1926 in the capacity of superintendent of the bond department. In June of last year he was transferred to the home office production staff with the title of Assistant Superintendent of Agencies. Our heartiest congratulations.

Haskell Cohn, partner in the firm of Mintz, Levin and Cohn, attorneys at law, announces the removal of his office to 50 Federal St., Boston.

My apologies to Ed Morse for referring to him in the March issue as Ed Ford. Ed has recently moved from the west to Avon, N. Y. and we hope to have word from him in the near future.

Are you an FR?

Edward (Cagey) Sharp reports from his stockbrokerage office in Chicago at 120 S. LaSalle St.

The following letter from Phil Nichols recording a new address at 83 Prospect St., East Hartford, Conn, is. a great example for other Twoters. Here it is:

"It has been quite a number of years since I left the Singer Oil Cos. Spent one year with a gang playing theatres in Ver- Mont and radio work, then several years bookkeeper for the Megowen Educator Biscuit Cos., of Lowell, then about a year ago landed a job which I had rather wanted for a long time with the State Motor Vehicle Dept., where I still am, my rating being that of inspector. I like this work the best of any job I have had, am out of doors practically all the time and enjoy it muchly.

"Am still happily married, my daughter Barbara being as tall as I am and finished second year high, my son Billy being nearly 13 and almost through grammar school. Only sports—tennis, ping-pong, and have a hobby of dx on the radio.

"Manage to see Hal Clark once in a while who works in Springfield and lives in Longmeadow. Also see Joe Loomis in Greenfield occasionally; he was officially class of '2l but finished with us.

"Haven't been up to Hanover for quite a number of years but certainly hope to be at the 20th reunion. Take in the Yale-Dartmouth game quite regularly, and manage to get in a week-end now and then with some close friends in Burlington.

"We own our own home here and would be very glad if any of the boys going through this way would stop in and say hello. Am away from home during the week as my work is mostly in the western part of the state but am home week-ends regularly. Guess that is about all the dope there is at this end, Andy. I enjoy the ALUMNI MAG a lot and always read the class news first."

That's the kind of dope your Secretary yearns for. Thanks a helluva lot Phil. Are you an FR?

Johnny Shea reports a new connection with Brown 8c Bigelow Cos., of St. Paul. He is covering the Detroit area with offices in the Fox Theater Building. John says he will be on deck for our 20th reunion with his entire family, including the latest addition Mary Ellen, two.

Chris Suttmeier recently sent his four bucks to Rex Malmquist (that's a good example to follow) and went on to say that he is still with the New York Life Insurance Cos. He is a member of a local draft board and has other interests in Richmond Hill, New York.

I was very glad recently to hear from Walter (Ike) Miller, outstanding banker of Peoria. Ike annually has the privilege of interviewing applicants for admission to the college and has just completed his assignment on this year's batch.

From Win Batchelder secretary of 'l9 comes word of Johnny Weare. John is connected with the Cambridge Rubber Company and evidently does considerable traveling as Win ran into him in Akron Johnny, I'd like to hear from you.

Are you an FR?

Here is an interesting paragraph taken from Olie Olsen's recent letter:

"Last week I was at a dinner party where Sally and Jim Hamilton were invited. We spent the rest of the evening together and <rot some of the latest stories from Chicago where Jim had spent the week. He is still exceedingly active as President of the American Hospital Association, or perhaps it is the American Hospital Administrator's Association—I don't know the exact name. There is no question about Jim's being the most outstanding person in the entire field in the country now. He was in Porto Rico earlier in the year on such activities and he is going to New Orleans in a month or so and the Lord only knows where he will be flying or traveling during the year. He certainly packs a tremendous amount of energy and enthusiasm just as he always has."

Are you an FR?T (For definition see end of column.) It's all yours Herb

Do You REMEMBER WHEN?

A. P. Boyd, now a partner in a flourishing insurance business in Chattanooga, Arvin Gunnison, now in business in Boston, and O. R. Rice, now a buyer for R. H. Stearns in the same town, made the golf team? and that Rice got the best score (82) in defeating fair Harvard?

On the fifth of May, 1919, Baldwin, Booth, Bradish, Busher, Carleton, Clark, Ferguson, Kilmarx, MacDermott, Moore, Mann, Nicholson, Putney, Stetson, Streng, Tayntor, Thornton, sold LIBERTY BONDS (nothing ironical meant) in the two-day drive to accomplish the Hanover allotment of one hundred and thirty-four thousand dollars?

The Junior Prom specialized in the one step, the fox-trot, and the waltz, and that the favorite pieces were the Beautiful Ohio,I'm Always Chasing Rainbows, and Me-ow?

Dr. Malcolm Keir was added to the faculty coming to Dartmouth from a government position in Washington and soon establishing himself as one of the best teachers modern Dartmouth has had?

C .P. Clark started his preparatory school on May 12 in one building which was to grow to formidable proportions with a Colonial (with cupola of course) main building and with a. most satisfactory and prosperous record behind and before it?

That as early as the spring of Freshman year already budding literary ambitions were sprouting in the heads of Ranney, Orr, Bingham, and others? Yea, it was so.

Fund Contributors for 1940 Contributors: 230 (92% of graduates). Total gifts: $2,600.10 (98% of objective). ROBERT P. BOOTH, Class Agent.

1922

Anonymous Aborn, John R. Akey, Clifford J. Almon, Howard P. Anderson, Gaylord W. Anderson, Troyer S. Angell, Wilmer W. Ansin, Edward Ardiff, Elmer F. Armstrong, Robert R. Aschenbach, Walter J., Jr. Atwood, Raymond P. Auger, Ulysse Baldwin, Robert A. Ball, Leroy F. Barnard, W. Lloyd Barrows, Thomas N. Bartlett, Robert L. Bates, E. Graham Bates, Sherrill P. Bernheim, Leonard H. Beyer, Richard F. Bingham, Sylvester H. Blunt, John E., 3rd Booth, Robert P. Boyle, Paul E. Brisbin, Lansing G. Bristol, Clark B. Brooks, George E. Brower, John E. Brown, Dalton M. Brown, J. Regan Brucker, Ralph V. Bruckner, Harry Budnitz, Max B. Bullen, Wilbur W. Bunting, Roy Burgess, Robert, Jr. Burnham, Harold E. Busher, George D. Bus well, Frederick W. Byrne, Thomas J. Caldwell, Wellington L. Campbell, Laurence C. Canfield, Charles E. Carleton, John P. Carlisle, Herman L. Carpenter, Robert L. Carroll, James V. Carter, William E., Jr. Cassin, Matthew J. Cate, Robert B. Chadbourne, Harland A. Clark, Robert J. Clarke, Malcolm D. Clifford, Chester B. Clogston, Perley W. Cohen, Joseph S. Cohn, Haskell Cole, Albert E. Cole, Richard J. Colton, Harold J. Crampton, Alfred R. Cramton, Edward A. Crane, Norman T. Cummings, W.Warren, Jr. Cunningham, Bruce T. Curtis, Alonzo G. Dana, Grosvenor Daniell, Warren F. Davidson, Alfred E. Davis, W. Carl Dewey, Robert M. Dodd, John D. Dodds, William G. Dwight, Carroll Earle, Charles W. Eastman, Roger M. Fancher, John H. Farnham, Lawrence P. Fauver, King E. Fitts, Dana W. Porter, Cedric W. Pullen, E. Markey Rambach, Raymond L. Ranney, Winthrop R. Rassieur, Benjamin F. Reid, Ralph T. Rex, William M. Rice, Oscar R., Jr. Robie, Theodore R. Ross, Joseph K. Rothman, Philip E. Rowe, Edgar C. Sanders, Clarence W., Jr. Sands, Walter E. Saunders, Maurice, Jr. Shea, John J. Shepard, Horace L., Jr. Sherburne, Lester A. Sherman, Lucius 8., Jr. Shirley, William W. Shoup, Verner R. Siegfried N. Osborne Smith, Earle D. Smith, Spencer F. Spiegel, Modie J., Jr. Spiel, George F. Spiers, Paul H. Stanley, George A., Jr. Steen, Harford K. Stetson, Richard P. Stevens, Rufus L. Stewart, Arthur P. Strauss, Jack H. Streng, G. William Sullivan, Thomas P. Suttmeier, Christopher E. Sweet, Donald A. Talbot, Joseph E. Fraser, Harold E. Gallagher, William F. Garvey, Michael J., Jr. Giorgio, Nicholas A. Gluek, Louis A. Goldbeck, Cecil H. Grandfield, Ralph E. Gray, Frank W., Jr. Green, Harold W. Griswold, Harry M. Gunnison, Arvin Haas, William G. Hall, Gardner S. Hamilton, James A. Hanlon, F. Anthony Harmon, Russell S. Hart, Charles E. Hatch, Tracy W. Hauser, Bertram Hayes, Kent B. Healy, Clyde L. Heath, Andrew M. Henderson, Laurens L. Hight, Robert E. Hill, Roy W. Hinners, Ralph G. Hogle, Kenneth W. Holland, Henry 0., Jr. Hopkins, Charles S. Horan, Francis H. HotchkisSj Eugene Hoyt, Carter H. Hutchins, Frank A. Jackson, Stanley S. James, Alden Johnson, Edwin H. Johnson, John S. Johnson, William G. Kaplan, Edward E. Kattwinkel, Egon E. Kenyon, Stephen M. Kilmarx, Sumner D. Lane, Edgar C., Jr. Laycock, Edward A. Leland, Edmund F., Jr. Lenci, Thomas A., Jr. Leverone, Lawrence P., Jr. Litchfield, Richard C. Livermore, Richard M. Livermore, Shaw Lyon, Albert T. McKoan, John W. MacLaine, Edwin W. McMahon, Francis E. McNamara, Edward F. Malmquist, Eric C. Mann, William D. Marean, Ralph 8., Jr. Marshall, Andrew, 2nd Meade, Parker W. Mesquita, Mario de1 Millemann, Raymond J. Miller, Walter I. Miner, Stanley P. Moore, George T.2 ■. Morrell, William A. Morrissey, Leonard E. Moses, Harvey H. Naylor, Shepard A. Nicholson, Will F. Norton, Arthur B. Noyes, Frederick W. Nutten, Wesley L., Jr. Oliver, Herman S. Olsen, HerlufV. Orth, Leonard J.3 Perkins, Joseph S. Perkins, Moses N. Perry, William R. Pfeiffer, Edward F. Pinney, Thomas H. Pope, William H. Tapley, Charles S. Taylor, John L. Thomas, Louis A. Threshie, Philip H. Throop, Charles C. Tobin, Donald J. Totman, Ralph W. Tredennick, Stephen H. Turn bull, Robert P. Vogel, Frederick W. Vosßurgh, VanVleck FL Vose, Charles A. Wagner, Leslie Waite, Lawrence A. Wallace, R. Gilman Wason, Raymond Waterman, Sterry R. Watson, Clifton E. Wellman, Harold K. West, Herbert F. Willis, Richard T. Wilson, Benjamin W. Winkler, Charles J., Jr. Wood, John C. Wood, Richard G. Woods, Joseph B. Wright, Frank C. Zuckerman, J. Harvie A. IMemorial gift from hisclassmate, Mr. Kent B.Hayes.2Memorial gift from hisclassmate, Mr. Leroy F.Ball.3Memorial gift from hisclassmate, Mr. Modie J.Spiegely Jr.

Secretary, 736 Delaware Ave., Bethlehem, Penna

Don't be a Free Rider! 140 men have paid their $2 for the ALUMNI MAGAZINE (also the same amount for dues) BUT 143 men have not. It doesn't seem quite fair for 140 men to carry the load for the whole class, does it? Please mail your check to Rex Malmquist pronto. Don't be a Free Riderl