THE PROGRAM of the School is progressing very satisfactorily despite the enlarged enrollment and the fact that there are three different groups of students instead of the usual two classes.
Dean Olsen addressed the annual ban- quet session of the Nashua and Concord regional groups of the American Institute of Banking on October 8. The title of his address was "The Banking Profession: A Challenge." He has also accepted the chair- manship of The Hanover Board of Fact Finding and Review appointed to deal with the various problems which have arisen in Hanover as a consequence of the addition of the Naval Training unit to the community.
Mr. F. Ray Adams, President, John T. Slack Corporation, lectured at the School October 8, on the topic: "The Problem of Company Organization."
More data from your Alumni reports: 1907—W. D. Howe is Technical Adviser to the Treasury Department, Republic of Guatemala; 1920—R. R. Larmon admin- isters Office of Price Administration affairs in New Hampshire; 1931—R. J. Miner is Assistant Dean of Men at C. C. N. Y.; D. C. MacKay practices law in Chicago; 1922 R. W. Yuill is on active duty as a Major in the Field Artillery; 1924—D. R. Moore has the rank of Captain in the Army Air Force; L. A. Putnam has been appointed Assistant to Vice President, Finance and Account- ing, Boston and Maine Railroad; 1925 C. F. H. Crathern Jr. is across the seas with Air Force Combat Intelligence; R. J. Fenderson controls payroll and costs for Todd-Bath Iron Shipbuilding Corporation at Bath, Maine; E. D. La Guardia is Man- ager of Clima-Ideal—lsthmian Weather Control Corporation in Panama City, also head of Mutuel Room, Panama Jockey Club, editorial writer for Mundo Grafico, Treasurer of Radio Mirimar, and Presi- dent of the Chamber of Commerce; S. B. Jurenev has moved from J. P. Morgan & Company to be Assistant Secretary and Assistant Treasurer of Continental Oil Company; C. C. Tallman is installing budgetary control systems in the Western Cartridge Company and its subsidiary, Winchester Repeating Arms Company; 1927—G. P. Chipman conducts courses in Hotel Administration at Michigan State University; J. W. Roberts, with the Statis- tical Department, National City Bank of New York, is engaged in economic research work, with emphasis on basic commodities; H. P. Trefethen is a Major in the Field Ar- tillery; 1928— E. A. Ross is Chief, Contracts Branch, Statistics Division of WPB; R. W. Tucker Jr. is in the Army Exchange Serv- ice; 1929—T. Carroll is Vice President, The Vulcan Copper 8c Supply Company; E. M. Jennings Jr. collects slow assets for the First National Bank of Boston; 1930— R. H. Waterman is First Lieutenant in the Air Corps; 1931—W. Blakey is Senior Account- ant with Haskins 8c Sells; R. R. Bottome is Executive Secretary, Coordination Com- mittee, Asociacion Norteamericano de Venezuela, with headquarters at Caracas; J. B. Chandler, Ensign, Naval Reserve, teaches at Harvard; A. B. Clow heads up advertising activities for Calco Chemical Company, and is Sales Manager of the Household Products Department; J. S. Lichter manages a Post Exchange for the U. S. Army; C. W. Michel is General Part- ner, J. S. Bache 8c Company and is a Direc- tor in some half-dozen companies; B. Morley now carries on as 2nd Lieutenant, Army Quartermaster Corps; H. Schneebeli is a Ist Lieutenant in the Ordnance De- partment; 1932—W. H. Marsh Jr. manages sales promotion for General Mills, working out of Atlanta; H. E. Seder, Sergeant, U. S. Army, is in the Finance Division; 1933 C. R. Brooks is Office Manager, Kingsboro Silk Mills, Inc., Daisy, Tennessee; F. D. Leyser is Principal, Admiral Billard Acad- emy, New London, Connecticut; R. W. Olmstead is Comptroller, Rensselaer Valve Company, Troy, N. Y.; B. M. Saia manages the Indian Bowl restaurant in Hanover; 1934—R. L. Dickson is Chief Accountant, Walter Kidde & Company, Belleville, New Jersey; C. I. Grob, Ensign O-V (S), keeps busy with administrative work at the Naval Ordnance Laboratory in Washington; J. H. Manley does statistical analysis work for Materiel Command, Army Air Forces, and has the rank of Ist Lieutenant; Captain A. H. Oesterheld is located at Camp Edwards, Massachusetts; Candidate G. C. Smith was at Camp Davis, North Carolina, when his report came in September; 1935 W. W. Blood Jr., Private, Ist Class, U. S. Army, is in the Classification Branch; E. S. Karstedt Jr. studies currently at the Naval Training School, Harvard; Corporal A. J. Seitner is a Field Artillery Officer Candi- date, now at Fort Sill; C. J. Shea, Ist Lieu- tenant, Sanitary Corps, Service of Supplies, is located at Washington; 1936—Corporal A. S. Brush is in the Finance Detachment at an Army Flying School; H. W. Hands manages Flowerfield Bulb Farm, Flower- field, L. I.; W. B. Holmes is a Special Agent with FBI; S. B. Karlen sells adver- tising space for Time, Inc.; A. W. Tacy is Supervisor of Priorities, Purchasing De- partment, Cadillac Motor Car Company; J. Wallace has the rank of 2nd Lieutenant, Field Artillery; W. A. Wilks Jr. is an En- sign, U. S. Naval Reserve. News of the more recent classes will appear in the next issue.
In Washington The Dartmouth Club of Washing- ton extends a welcome to all alumni who may have occasion to visit or take up residence in the Capital this win- ter. The Club offers a varied and active program, details of which will be found in this issue under Club News from Washington. For further infor- mation, contact the Washington secre- tary, Lawrence C. Reeves '33, 1240 Shoreham Bldg., Wash., D. C. Tel: Metropolitan 1030. And don't forget the weekly luncheon at the Annapolis Hotel, 12:30 every Tuesday.