Article

Tuck School

November 1952 A. W. Frey T'21
Article
Tuck School
November 1952 A. W. Frey T'21

On September 24 Tuck started its 53rd year, with an enrollment at the same high level as that of the past several years. Specifically, 89 first-year Tuck men, 68 second-year Tuck men, 13 first-year Tuck- Thayers and 5 second-year Tuck-Thayers give a total enrollment of 175- Four nien in the first-year class and three in the second- year class are graduates of colleges other than Dartmouth. One Norwegian is enrolled as a special student.

On the chance that faculty comings and goings may have confused you as to who is actually on hand this semester, here's the list: Burleigh, Sargent, Olsen, Foster, Gris- wold, Walters, Duncombe, Hill, Gruen, Morrissey, Sears, Hummel and Frey. Mr. Stone is not teaching during the first semester. Mr. Sargent will be on leave of absence for the second semester. Mr. Woodworth reports being well settled at Ann Arbor.

The first-year course in Finance A has been revised and is now called Business Economics. Mr. Olsen is conducting this course.

Mr. Griswold reports a most pleasant experience as guest o£ the president of the Chicago, Indianapolis and Louisville Rail- road, involving an inspection trip of the line from Chicago to Louisville in the host's private car.

A little late now, but for the record the following Tuck men lectured at the School in the late spring months: Clark C. Sorensen T'37, Director of Personnel, Harris-Sey- bold Company; Charles F. McGoughran '20, Secretary and Director of Personnel, Sinclair Oil Corporation; William M. Tetrick T'39, Treasurer and General Manager, R. S. Robie, Inc., Cambridge, Mass.; Alfred L. Burke T 25, Duff & Phelps, Chicago; and Enders Voorhees '14, Chairman of the Finance Committee, U.S. Steel Corporation. John Hathaway T'48, Young & Rubicam, spoke to a Marketing Management class in September.

In the news Dick Bowlen T'31 has been made controller of Bryant Chucking Grinder Company; Bob Pease T'47 is now teaching sales, marketing and foreign trade on the Rutgers University faculty; Clark Sorensen T'37 has been appointed assistant to the president of Harris-Seybold Company, where he has been director of personnel since 1944 and, on the side, a member of the executive committee of the National Metal Trades Association; Art Bright T'40, former faculty member, is director of research of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston after having served for some time as director of research of the Committee of New England; Joe Russakoff '27, president of Vanguard Advertising, is teaching a course in advertising media in the School of Business Administration at Manhattan College; Daniel B. Ruggles T'22 has moved from national advertising manager to national advertising director of The Boston Herald-Traveler; Sumner Kilmarx T'23 is currently head of the Dartmouth Athletic Council; George Farrand '33, assistant treasurer of Young & Rubicam, has been reelected chairman of the Advertising Agency Financial Management Group in New York; Nathan Lenfestey T'14 is an executive vice president of the National City Bank of New York as of September; Dick Darby T'42 is vice president of Peterson & Kempner, New York advertising agency; Alex Hoffman T'51 has been made assistant account man at Compton Advertising.

Dwight Allison T'52 reports that the thirty-one 1952 graduates who trained at Lackland Air Force Base last summer are now scattered around the country in various positions of considerable responsibility. At Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio are Ted Eberle and John Clayton, management analysis officers; Jack Hastings, on a project involving the more efficient use of materials, Fred Brown, in budgeting; and Mike Conway and Allison himself, in the military personnel division. Most of the other men are assistants to the Chiefs of Requirements and Distribution of Supplies at their stations among them, Dick McFarland at Ogden, Al Karcher at Mobile, JohnNahigian at Memphis, Pete Bogardus at San Bernardino, Charlie Fryer and Charlie Richardson at Sacramento, Bill Bobbs and PeteBixby at Kelly Field, and Al Judson and Harry Nelson at Rome, New York. Dwight states that the Tuck training has been of much more than a little help.