Class Notes

1922

November 1944 ANDREW MARSHALL 2ND, ERIC C. MALMQUIST
Class Notes
1922
November 1944 ANDREW MARSHALL 2ND, ERIC C. MALMQUIST

From the West Coast comes a word from Wes Nutten, a lawyer by profession, partner since '24 in Flint and Mackay; Wes commutes daily to Los Angeles from Beverly Hills. Mrs. Wes and the boys, thirteen and fifteen, gambol in the California sun at 708 North Crescent Drive. A sport cruiser known as "Fin-Finder" carries the Nutten house flag and from it Wes has enjoyed looking for swordfish over many years and. has caught flocks of 'em. His most coveted award is a button from the Newport Tuna Club for catching a marlin swordfish with a feather jig on light tackle. It took four hours and two minutes!

After a seventeen-year connection with Gosnold Mills, New York City, Bob Burgess has severed his ties. His old company has been taken over and Bob is to line up something new. We hope to have his new connection and details in a coming issue.

From the latest Congressional Directory:— Joseph E. Talbot, Republican, of Naugatuck, Conn., was born in Naugatuck, Conn., March 18, 1901; educated in the public schools; graduated from Dartmouth College in 1922 and from the Yale School of Law in 1925; admitted to the Connecticut bar in 1925; prosecuting attorney, 1928-33; judge, 1935-37; treasurer of the State of Connecticut, 1939-41; workmen's compensation commissioner, Fifth District, Connecticut, 1941-January 20, 1942; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress in a special election on January 20, 1942; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; married and has four children; member of House Committee on the Judiciary; is a member of the American, New Haven, and Waterbury Bar Associations; member of Rotary, 8.P.0.E., and K. of C.

According to latest reports Bill Pierce is with the WPB in Chicago on work connected with the manufacture of radar.

A perfectly swell picture of the six offspring (yeh, count 'em—six!) of the Warren Daniells' is in my files but can't be used in these columns because of a policy of the MAGAZINE editors concerning publishing photos of wives and children of Dartmouth men. We'll save it for later use, however, unless tough old editor Charlie Widmayer will relent! This Millinoeket gang should be publicized from coast to coast!

Mose Perkins is connected with the Ayer Mill of Lawrence, Mass,, and University Cap and Gown Co. of Boston, both jobs occupying his full time.

Ray Milleman is now a major; also Ike Miller, Joe Woods and Johnny Carleton have received promotion to that rank.

Twenty-Two's Annual Frolic in Boston occurred at the University Club on October 13, the night before the Notre Dame game. The details will be served up next month. If this party was like some of those in past years, it was a corker!

Just in case you'd like to know—the late September mails brought your correspondent many replies to his letter request for news. Yet from the overall picture the number of returns was disappointing. Of just short of 400 letters and dope sheets mailed, to date (October 8) only 76 replies have reached me—and they have slowed down to only two or three a day. Those of you who haven't re- sponded yet, would do me a great favor by replying. Your current addresses are needed and of course the latest gossip is always wel- come 1

Modie Spiegel is a working "boss." Proof is furnished on Page 80 of the September 18th issue of Time. The lad looks as though lugging boxes and such agreed with him.

Dick Stetson has been upped to lieutenant colonel and Bill Johnson to lieutenant.

Lt. Col. Fred Levis won first place in the return- of-the-dope-sheet derby; Bob Booth in the place position and Ed Rowe was number 3. Fred is home on temporary duty for a couple of months. He is married—has four children, one gal married, and Fred Jr. in the Marines. Proir to '42 he was V. P. of Lionel A. Edie and Co. of New York City.

Norm Crane has just received promotion to lieutenant colonel. He still remains as deputy port surgeon at a large eastern port.

Schirmer, Atherton and Co., Boston, continues to claim the allegiance of George Stanley, a daily commuter from Andover. "There's a slug of hard cider in the cellar for any Twoter coming my way," says George. Has Leland sampled it yet?

Amos Lyford is connected with National Cash Register Co., in Manchester (N. H.)—married, has no youngsters.

From Rochester, N. Y., home office of Frank Hutchins' advertising agency bearing his name, comes the news that the firm has expanded through branch offices opened in New York and Philadelphia

More news next month! So long for now.

THE NEW PRESIDENT of the Globe American Corp. is Alden P. (Ike) Chester '21.

MOTION PICTURE EXPERT, Major Orton H. Hicks '21, Army Signal Corps, is now Chief of the Overseas Motion Picture Service.

Secretary, 1837 Arlington St., Bethlehem, Pa. Treasurer, 16 Sunset Hill Ave., Norwalk, Conn.