God be Praised for Dappled Things Dept. The reference, gents, is by courtesy of Gerard Manly Hopkins and doesn't mean much in the present context, unless maybe it can be pulled around to involve the Fifteenth Reunion, which I am too lazy to do. I mean pull it around, not the Fifteenth Reunion. Here's the story on the Fifteenth Reunion. It is going to take place next June, and you are planning to be there. So are all the twenty-six classmates from the New York area who gathered at the Dartmouth Club October the first and put the bee on me. On the ball, they said. There is a Fifteenth Reunion coming up, and that means some advance preparation. So, they said, you better write Ellie Noyes and Dick Olmsted and ask them to gang up on the Inn or the DOC House and get us a spot reserved for the BIG DINNER of the Fifteenth Reunion. So I wrote to the Hanoverians, and that is all hunkydory. Then, they said, we have to have a field reserved and the cowflops removed from same so's we can have ourselves a BIG PICNIC, with a few kegs of MECHANICSVILLE SPECIAL DARK to dampen the THIRTY-TWO WHISTLE. So I got on the ball on that, and President Dickey said he had already fenced off a piece of land and put up a BIG SIGN, saying NO COWS ALLOWED UNTIL JUNE 24 NEXT. Then, they said, we don't trust you, Baker, because you don't answer mail, but we suggest that you get ON THE BALL and appoint a FIFTEENTH RE- UNION CHAIRMAN. I am working on that. So there's the story on the FIFTEENTH REUNION to date, and more next month.
Double Double Toil and Trouble Dept. At eleven o'clock on the morning of Wednesday, August 7, the Al Keyworths expanded their menage by one son, which throws the original two-boys, two-girls balance a little out of whack, but is, the Keyworths figure, fine and dandy. Pappy Keyworth has been too busy assisting with formula-mixing to advise me of the son's name yet, but they figure to send him to Camp Keewaydin, Salisbury, Vt., and then to Dartmouth. Bob Ryan's offspring, a play called Rocky which he wrote while at Dartmouth, earned him §5OO in royalties this summer when it was played on the cream cheese circuit. That's making your offspring work for you. Your estimable Class Agent, Howard W. Pierpont, is now serving as divisional group manager of the New England Department of the Equitable Life Insurance Co., with Boston HQ at 82 Devonshire St.
A Rose Must Remain in the Sun and theRain Dept. Dr. Sey Rogers and Dorothy Stewart were married at the Temple Emanuel in Greensboro, N. C., September 3, with Mike Cardozo as one of the ushers. After a wedding trip to Canada they took up residence at the Dorset in New York. To whom most hearty congratulations. On September 28, Dick Clarke and June Garnsey were married at the Trinity Episcopal Church, Redlands, Calif. To whom most hearty congratulations. Hank Barber, the Jay Whitehairs, and the Ed Truexes were all August visitors at the Hanover Inn. They missed having a small reunion with the Newell Goldbergs and Gus Zimmerman who were July visitors at the same hostelry.
O Where Have You Been My Long LongLove This Seven Long Years and More Dept. This desk is in receipt of very welcome information on a lot of men not heard from in many a long year. Hank Kingdon works for Bessire and Company, Indianapolis. Cmdr. Fred Leyser is at the Admiral Billard Academy, New London, Conn. Bob Mitchell is editor and publisher of the Rutland (Vt.) Herald, a darn fine newspaper which I read all summer. Dave Stern is a partner in Scaffner and Stern, 120 S. LaSalle St., Chicago. Bert Unobsky is partner in a cotton firm, Block and Unobsky, in Memphis. W. H. Kendall is Asst. Division Engineer with the Pennsy Railroad, living at 214 Pine Ave., Altoona, Pa. Jim Dillon got out of the Army last January and resumed vice presidency of the Wilmington (Del.) Sash and Door Co. Jack Couzens is again engaged in the practice of law with Bleakley, Piatt, and Walker at 120 Brdwy, N. Y. C. Buzz Burrows sells Nestles Chocolates in and around Chicago. Bud Hubbard is a jewelry salesman with Cowell and Hubbard, Cleveland, and this Christmas will finish his first year in-a new house at 1305 Euclid Ave. Tom Hope is Retail Traffic Mgr. for Montgomery Ward at 619 W. Chicago Ave., Chicago. Harry Hall is with USES as senior interviewer and veterans employment representative at Bellows Falls, Vt. John Cabot lives at 3725 Osage St., Denver, and George Dyhe at 32 Lafayette Drive, Port Chester, N. Y„ and Clarence Farr in Francestown, N. H. Cal Ireys works for General Metalware in Minneapolis. Dan Sundeen can be reached at Box 92, Manchester, N. H., and Arnold Warmolts works for Starrett Brothers and Eken, 14 East 136 th St., N. Y. C. Jack Barry is IBM Mgr. in Scranton. Al Childs is resident engineer on construction of a new GE plant in either Pittsfield, Mass., where he lives at 80 Edward Ave., or in Tiffin, Ohio. Hal Chinlund is a Baltimore accountant, and Gene Catron a New York investment banker, and Martin Leich manager of Radio Station WBOW in Terre Haute. Emmet Naylor works for Proctor-Carnig, Inc. in Springfield, Mass. Frank VVestheimer is assistant profes- sor of chemistry at the University of Chicago, and Jack Zimmerman is on the financial staff of General Motors, and Al Zinggeler is a salesman for Chas. F. Hubbs and Co., N. Y. C., and Isadore Garber lives at 201 Linden Blvd., Brooklyn, and Ted Monell is with International Nickel at 67 Wall St., N. Y. C. Howard Wile left M. I. T. this summer to take a post as Administrator of Research at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. Bob McGuire is in charge of the McGuire Funeral Home in Washington, D. C. Mike Cardozo succeeded Benno Schmidt last June as general counsel of foreign liquidation, and Joe Fanelli is running his own law firm in Washington.
Prepare your liverth and stomachth andspleenthFor abundance of likker at the Great Fifteenth.
Secretary, 178 Prospect Ave., Princeton, N. J.
Treasurer, Room 1801, 80 Maiden Lane New York 7, N. Y.