FOR WHITNEY EASTMAN '10, elected Vice President of General Mills.
FOR JAMES M. WULPI '14, assigned to Bombay, India, as director of a new international unit of TWA.
FOR EUGENE PARKER CHASE '16, Professor of Government at Lafayette, elected a Senator of the Phi Beta Kappa Council.
FOR THE REV. FREDERICK W. ALDEN '19, named Minister of the New Hampshire Congregational-Christian Conference.
FOR PROF. GEORGE E. BROOKS '22, named Chairman of the Department of English, Springfield College.
FOR CLAUDE A. JAGGER '24, named Associate Director of the American Press Institute at Columbia University.
FOR PROF, GEORGE p. BORGLUM '26, named Chairman of the Department of French, Wayne University.
FOR PROF, EDWIN B. CODDINGTON '29, named Chairman of the Department of History, Lafayette College.
FOR CARL B. SPAETH '29, appointed Dean of the School of Law, Stanford University. FOR PAUL F. POEHLER JR. 'go, named Superintendent of Schools for the Town of Hanover, N. H.
FOR RICHARD E. LAUTERBACH '35, recipient of a Nieman Fellowship at Harvard, for the study of China and Russia.
FOR DAVID R. KENERSON '37, named Administrator of the West Jersey Hospital, Camden, N. J.
FOR HOWARD L. FOGG JR. '38, for the first showing, in New York, of his paintings of railroad scenes.
FOR PROF. HERBERT w. HILL of the History Department, elected Democratic State Chairman for New Hampshire.
Staff Changes
JOHN MOORE COMSTOCK '77, for many years Alumni Editor of the MAGAZINE, has now assumed the position of Alumni Editor Emeritus, in which role he will continue to be the elder statesman of the staff. Alert and quick-minded as ever, despite his 88 years, he still serves as Corresponding Secretary of the General Association of Alumni. His continued association with the MAGAZINE gives great happiness to the editors.
Our new Alumni Editor, we are happy to announce, is Miss Charlotte Ford, alumni recorder of the College, who with this issue assumes charge of the In Memoriam section.
In another staff change, James L. Farley '42, assistant editor, has assumed the additional duties of Acting Business Manager of the MAGAZINE. He succeeds Miss Christina Martin, who resigned September 1 to take a business position with the Hitchcock Clinic in Hanover.
Poetic Dean
To give variety to the Sachem Village houses for married veterans, it was decided to use white, red, yellow and gray for outside colors. The final results, while extremely gay, were several shades off the beam, and Dean Neidlinger, proponent of variety, felt called upon to absolve himself in The Dartmouth as follows:
Dear Editor: May I employ the power of your press
To save an artist's soul from deep distress? Please, sir, do tell the town I ain't The guy who chose the Sachem Village paint.
I made a model, yes, and planned a plan To give the Village houses some variety But, I assure you, I am not a man Bizarre in taste nor rebel from propriety.
From color charts I picked some subtle hues Warm gray, clean yellow, and barn red in good tradition.
I know not why instead of these they use Raw mixtures from some technicolored apparition.
It's not for me to lay the fault upon another, I only wish to clear myself from taint And have it known that I, believe me brother, Am not the guy who mixed the Sachem paint.