This is the Alumni Fund issue. We've been requested to pare the usual nonsense to the bone. That will be easy.
The fall has been beautiful in Hanover. The leaves—uh-uh—Professor Gordon FemeHull Jr., on leave from the College last year to work for the Navy with European physicists in England, France, Italy and Occupied Germany, "and who, his father, Professor Emeritus Gordon Ferrie Hull Sr. reports, had a most interesting and productive year abroad, has returned to continue his work with the Office of Naval Research in Washington
1933 mail has been ver>' scarce tWs month but why slug the postman? He still comes once a day. Since last Tuesday's Republican landslide we've been waiting with all fingers and a lucky seventh toe crossed to hear how Judge "Dosch" Doscher made out in his bid for a New York State Supreme Court Justiceship. Hope he made it. After all, five small mouths to feed. You can't do that on surrogate -not as well as you'd like, anyhow. Besides, he's very distinguished looking, classic profile, streaks of grey at the temples. Besides, he'd make a fine Supreme Court Justice. And besides, he's our boy.
Clayton's stiff ankle has limbered up this week and the word is that he'll be ready for Columbia tomorrow—which reminds us. We were kinda stiff ourself last Sunday morning when we took on our big-shot (Financial Officer and Associated Treasurer—or something—of Aetna, Century, Indemnity and a few other outfits having to do with fire, marine, auto and industrial risks) college roommate, Bill Bates, pitching horseshoes at his West Hartford, Conn., suburban home. Now don't get us wrong. Like Clayton we were stiff, not like reunion. Like Clayton, we were stiff from all the shallow dives we'd made the previous afternoon in the Yale Bowl, and all that hard swimming upstream to keep from being washed down the sides of the bowl into the "playing field" below. Anyway, we won. We beat the Yales and I beat Bates, by a ringer. Noted on the way down that it still takes exactly two hours and a half to make Hamp, in spite of improved roads. Could be, tho, that Bedlam Manor's '39 Olds was not quite up to modern standards. Still, recall no trouble making it ip that time in a Model A back in '33.
We seem to have strayed again—Sam andJean Black, Don and Muggsie D'Arcy swam right along beside us in the Bowl, and Don. brave fellow, even discussed plans for a trip to Ithaca. Be a blizzard by then, no doubt. Don and Muggs are coming up for Columbia and we'll see them at the Manor tomorrowafter the game.
Speaking of straying—Henry Lewis (Hank)Lowerre was married November 1 to Dr. Bettina Boyd Garthwaite o£ New York. And Rev. Paul S. Collins, rector of Saint Barnabas Church, Troy, N. Y., helped tie the knot. Paul, writing to us about the wedding, also wrote of passing through Hanover at dawn one morning last August, and his description will interest you. "It was one of those summer mornings when there are very heavy rising mists in the valley and everything had an unearthly look as if one were detached from time and space. Dartmouth Hall looked wonderfully handsome. But that isn't newsjust something to write poetry about, I guess.
Speaking of hitching—a clip from the '-Hitching Post", Hollywood Variety,. October 17, kindly forwarded to us by "Cap Palmer 23. reads: "Robert Guggenheim Jr., manager of film operations for KNBH, will be married December 1 in Riverside to Jean O'Donnell of Kansas City."
A couple of '33s who were recently in Hanover on brief visits: Arch Lade and Bill Hoffman. Bill was on from Chicago with his wife and spent a few days at the Inn in early October.
Before we unhitch—We had our say a couple of months ago about our disappointing performance, as compared to that of our neighboring classes, in the last Alumni Fund campaign, and we have no intention of opening up that subject again now. Let every '33 read the reports in this issue of the MAGAZINE, and take note for the future.
We will be just as emphatic, however, in our praise and congratulations to Sam Black and to those who served on the Fund committee with him for a job well done. If we fell short of the goal we might have reached it was our fault as a Class and as individual contributors, and not in any way the fault of Sam and his committee who conducted a thorough, well-organized and efficient campaign. They fully deserve our thanks and deep appreciation.
Fund Contributors
394 Gifts (Participation Index 79). Total gifts: $7,292.32 (79% of objective).
Anonymous Anonymous Ackerman, J. Russell Alden, Douglas W. Alder, James L. Alexander, Ralph E. Allen, Alva Z. Allen, John T. Allen, Robert B. Allen, Theodore W. Almy, Theodore B. Andrews, J. Richard Atwood, William F. Await, Fred H. Babson, Gustavus, Jr. Ball, Myron H. Barbee, Ben R. Bates, Darwin S. Bates, William G. Beattie, Wesley H. Bee, Richard P. Beebe, Gilbert W. Bill, Andrew P. Black, John S., Jr. Blakesley, Elliot S. Bloomberg, Harvey S. Blumenthal, Bernhard S. Blumenthal, John A. Bradford, Wilber H. Braley, Warren J. Branch, Forrest P. Branson, John H., Jr. Brown, Weldon A. Brown, William C. Burbank, Roland W. Burns, Robert E. Burtis, Paul E. Burrill, Carleton P. Byers, Philip L. Campbell, James B. Campbell, Ralph O. Carr, Robert D. Celano, Joseph J. Chapman, Charles J. Chester, Lewis L. Clark, Charles T., Jr.
Clark, Frederick S. Clark, William S. Cleaves, Francis W. Cleaves, Paul C. Coffey, Keating Colla, Stanley A. Collins, Evan R. Connelly, Arthur F. Coulson, Robert E. Cox, Robert M. Critchell, Robert S. Cunningham, A. S. Cunningham, B. P". Curtis, C. Frederick D'Arcy, Donald F. Davidson, John A. Davis, Ernest S., Jr. Davis, George S. Dearborn, Benton N. DeHaven, James C. Dericks, Gerard H. Dewey, William T. Dickson, Robert L. Doherty, Donald E. Doherty, James J., Jr. Donner, Ward S. Donovan, John F. Dormon, William W. Doscher, Robert Douglas, Walter S. Dowling, William F., Jr. Downes, Richard E. Doyle, Willard L. Drowne, George P., Jr. Duby, James J. Dudley, H. Andrew Durgin, Henry L. Durkee, Stuart H. Dutcher, Darrow A. Easthope, John L. Eastman, Thomas W. Eckels, Lee W. Edwards, George D. Eldridge, Edward K. Ellis, Bowman S., Jr.1 Ellis, Robert K.
Erlandson, Norman W. Estes, Robert M. Evans, David L., Jr. Evans, Wilson D. Faegre, John 8., Jr. Fairbank, Robert L. Farmer, Howard J. Farnham, Philip Farrand, George N. Fernandez, Gilbert F. Ferris, Raymond W., Jr. Field, Douglas B. Field, Maxwell Fitzgerald, John W. Flaccus, Kimball Flagg, George E. Florin, Alvin A. Flynn, David V. Foley, Edward J., Jr. Forbes, William P. Forster, G. William Foster, Wood R. Fowler, Denman2 Fox, Maurice Fox, Robert S. Frank, Fredric M. Gardiner, Robb G. Gass, Samuel A. Gates, George E. Geddes, Gail G.3 Gemberling, Allan M. Gerstell, Richard Gillies, William 8., Jr. Goldberg, Morrell Goldthwait, Richard P. Goodell, Robert C. Gordon, Archie Gordon, Earle C., Jr. Grace, Pierre Graves, Richard W. Greiner, Edgar C. Grob, Charles I. Grow, Robert J. Guggenheim, Robert, Jr. Hack, Burt H. Hackett, Harold R. Hagen-Burger, C. S. Hale, Thomas T. Hall, Thomas J. Halligan, Edward B. Hamilton, George E. Hancock, John Hansis, Edward S. Hardy, Frank A. Hardy, Henry W. Harrington, Francis A. Harris, William B. Hart, Parker T. Haugan, Richard O. Hawgood, Henry A., 2nd Heidler, George P. Helmholz, Henry F., Jr. Hershenson, Melvin C. Hicks, Hunter Hinds, Charles 8., Jr. Hinkel, William H., Jr. Hird, H. Edward, Jr. Hitchcock, W. E., Jr. Hixson, Henry H., Jr. Hobbs, Winston E Hoffman, William J. Holmes, Edward M. Hopkins, Harvey S., Jr. Howe, Howard C. Hull, Gordon F., Jr. Humes, Edwin W. Huntley, Leslie M. Huntress, Jack B. Ingram, George R. Ingram, Gordon R. Jackson, Edwin H. Jackson, Frederick L. Jackson, Richard Jacques, Kenneth B. James, Robert L., Jr. Janjigian, Edward R. Jaques, Alan A. Jaquith, Wilbur M. Jennings, Alfred J. Johnson, Cutting Johnson, E. Clifford, Jr. Jonas, Irving L. Jones, William R. Juergens, Albert G. Kafka, Roger J. Kaplan, Eugene Kaplinger, Douglas S. Katz, Melville J. Kaufman, Pettus Kay, Robert E. Kent, Jack A Kerwin, Martin M.
Keyes, Ralph S. Keys, Richard H. Kiger, Charles J. King, Henry 8., Jr. King, William H. Kirkham, Dunham Knapp, Edwin C. Knickerbocker, Paine Krans, DeHart Krolik, Day, Jr. Krosnick, Gerald Labbe, John T. Lade, Archibald, Jr. Lang, William H. Lapham, Edwin S. Legrow, William L. Leonard, Nathaniel W. Levensaler, Atwood Lewis, William 8., Jr. Ley, Robert T. Likoff, William Lincoln, Donald O. Lord, Edward S. Lowerre, Henry L. Lyon, Richard K. MacCarty, W. C., Jr. Macdona, Harding H. Macgregor, Robert W. Mackey, Harold F. Madden, Wilson H. Maher, Robert F. Manchester, John C. Mankowski, Peter Manley, John H. Marden, Ford Marden, John S. Marden, Philip A. Maskilieson, Thomas Masten, John E. McCombs, William M. McCoy, Byron O. McDonald, Gordon A. McDonald, Robert E. McFarland, James P. McKane, Vernon W. McKee, Henry H., Jr. Meek, John F. Mehler, Albert J., Jr. Merkt, Oswald E. D. Merrill, John A. Merrill, Vincent N. Merson, James S. Metcalfe, Tristram W., Jr. Metzger, George R., Jr.4 Milans, Calvin H. Miller, Henry A. Mitchell, Robert H. Moatz, Herbert C., Jr. Mohr, G. Jacques Monagan, John S. Monahan, Theodore V. Moody, Roger B. Muller, William G. Murray, Donald A. Mundt, George J. Naramore, H. Burling Nichols, Howard C. Niebling, Robert E. Noonan, James A. Noonan, Thomas B. Norton, Robert M. Oesterheld, Arthur H., Jr. Okie, William T. O'Leary, Laurence J., Jr. Osborne, Harry V., Jr. Page, William R., Jr. Palmer, Gerald C. Parker, John L. Patch, Edgar L. Paull, John H., Jr. Paulson, David B. Payne, Harold G., Jr.5 Payne, Norman H. Petrie, James A., Jr. Phinney, E. Donald Pierpont, Henry B. Pierson, Judson T. Pimper, James L. Porter, F. Howard, Jr. Porter, William E., Jr. Prince, F. Ervin Quinn, Stanley E. Quinn, William R. Reed, John F. Reeves, Lawrence C. Resnick, Eber Rhodes, Kent Richards, William E., Jr. Rideout, George M. Ripley, F. Fuller Rittenberg, Sumner L. Robinovitz, Harry J.
Robinson, Fred J. Rocker, Richard A. Rockwell, John H. Roettig, Louis C. Rollins, Daniel G. Root, Nathan N. Rowe, Winston J. Rugen, Carl E. Russell, David W. Salisbury, Arnold H., 2nd Sanborn, Leland C. Sands, Robert G. Sayre, Ford K.6 Saywell, Robert M. Scanlon, John M. Scheibe, Karl M. Schlesinger, William L. Schneider, John J. Schuemann, Howard R. Schulte, John S. Schwartz, Eugene J. Searing, Joseph P., Jr. Seixas, Donald H. Selivanoff, Alexandre A. Shafer, Charles C. Shafer, John 1., Jr. Shaughnessy, William K. ' Shaw, Horace 8., Jr. Shaw, Leland H., Jr. Shea, Herbert D. Sherman, William A. Sherwood, Malcolm E.
Shineman, Everett A. Smart, John K. Smith, George C. Smith, Harold W. Smith, Henry C. Smith, Henry PI, 3rd Smith, Roger V. Snead, Thornton W., Jr. Snead, Walter L. I Spang, Kenneth M. Speare, Alden Sprague, Mansfield D. Stanley, Justin A. Staudt, Edward P. Stege, Charles E. Stevens, Roland E., Jr. Stewart, David C., Jr. Stoneman, S. Sidney Strock, Alvin E. Sturm, Frank W. Swan, Alfred J. Swander, Robert F. Swinehart, D. Robert Taft, Jackson H. Tallberg, Clarence A. Tart, George S. Teahan, William W. Terry, Albert B. Theriault, George F. Thompson, John S. Thompson, Way Thomson, Chester L.
Thorstenberg, Roswell B. Thurber, A. Edward, Jr. Trickey, John, Jr. Trost, John F. True, Charles H., Jr. Turner, Ernest R. Turner, Robert Sewell Turner, Robert Stuart Uebel, Martin Valensi, Randolph E. Van Deusen, Hobart M. Veres, Robert L. Wachs, Miller A. Wakefield, Lyman E., Jr. Walker, James C., Jr. Ward, John C., 2nd Warden, David E. Watson, Robert H. Webster, Charles S. Weeks, Herbert S., Jr. Weeman, Kenneth B. Weidenhamer, Jay E. Weitz, Henry Werrenrath, George H. ' Weston, Paul R., Jr. Wheelock, Howe G., Jr. Whitbeck, Philip F.
. White, Charles A., Jr. White, F. Lupton White, Robert W. Whitman, Stanton H. Winn, William R. Wood, Donald MacP., Jr. Wood, Harvard W. Woodard, Russell G. Woodcock, Robert L. Woodman, John F. Woods, James F. Worthen, Merrill Worthington, N. Page Wright, Jackson W. Young, Vincent T. Zebrowski, Stanley MEMORIAL GIFTS FROM:1 Robert E. Niebling '33and Walter S. Douglas'33.2 Classmate.3 Wood R. Foster '33.* Brother, John K. Metzger'34.5 John S. Black, Jr. '33.6 N. Page Worthington '33.
YOU HAVE TO LOOK TWICE to make out that this is a cardboard cut-out and not really Forrest Branch '33, who served as the Hanover model for this advertising photograph. Pictured with him is Bucky, Sid Hayward's Blue Belton Setter.
CLASS AGENT JOHN S. BLACK JR. '33
Secretary, 20 Valley Rd„ Hanover, N. H.
Treasurer,: 2812 Grant Bldg., Pittsburgh 19, Pa.
Class Agent.