Little did your scribe realize the occupational hazards in this job when, naively, he accepted it at our 25th. He does now. Don't ever omit a '33 wife (and we probably have, unwittingly, many times - our apologies) particularly when you list a group of '33ers and their wives, each specifically by name, as having been seen or reported at some Dartmouth function - and then end up by mentioning a lone husband when his wife also happens to be with him. Yes, we did this, not once, but several times in the last several years in reporting on the attendees at football games - and each time to the same girl.
Still shuddering, we hasten to add our printed apologies to those made personally to Ginny Mackey at the Penn game and to publicly acknowledge her long standing membership in the class. We would pick on the wife of the largest member of our class, Hal Mackey, who hardly misses a game. Actually, Ginny subjected us - yes, Hal, too - to a lot of good natured. kidding. Our explanation - aging eyes and the fact that '33ers all have such young-looking wives, one never can be sure.
Bob Fox, our reporting compatriot, did not escape unscathed from the jovial riding. He reported separately in more detail on the Penn "reunion" which was a real success thanks to ever-faithful Mel Katz. A "short wait for all seats" before dinner produced an atmosphere of volunteering. As a result, we had several offerings of individual's then-current, favorite stories. Some choice "eggs" were laid to add to the fun. Why not start planning for next year? Mel already has made tentative reservations for the Brown game in Hanover next fall.
Our next football game was Harvard where we sat next to John and Betty Scartlon and saw Norm Payne at the half. Actually we had seen the freshmen beat the Harvard yearlings 13-12 the day before. Reminiscent of "the twelfth man" as Princeton in our era, 1933 had its own that day — BudMadden - whose son Bill did a fine job of quarterbacking the team most of the game. We can't say that Bud actually trespassed on the field but he sure was in on every play. Had his wife Ann not been recovering from a recent leg operation, we're sure there would have been a "thirteenth woman" on the field. Bud, proudly — as he should have - showed us a picture of his daughter, Patricia, taken with Meade Alcorn '30, then chairman of the National Republican Committee and the Ohio state chairman, when she was the Cherry Blossom Princess of Ohio.
Still on football - George Bladworth '32 was kind enough to call our attention to John Donovan's son, also John, and his fine job of quarterbacking for the Concord High School, here in Massachusetts, where John is also principal. George spoke nostalgically of his days in AD with John Sr. We had occasion to see young John in action a week later and he proved to be all that George had claimed. We spend a few weekends each fall looking for prospects and we're sure the coaches would welcome your advising them of any really good ones you hear of or see. Just make sure they .can read and write - well.
But, beware of going to extremes as we did recently. All we did was recommend a boy who played end for three years, captained the crew, was outstanding on the books and on campus and ended up by being awarded the Barrett Cup. Now the Admissions Office won't listen to us unless we can guarantee equal calibre in advance. This is by way of leading up to the reporting of a new honorary member for 1933, Walter S. Palmer, Williams '32 along with his good wife, Jean, a Smith gal, whose son Scott, just mentioned, graduated in '59. Jean and Walt were at quite a few of our gatherings during Scott's four years. They were proposed by Jack Manchester and a strong second was added by Sam Black, who, ever mindful of his many years as Class Agent, advised Walt of his obligations to the Alumni Fund before the unanimous vote was even taken at the Penn gathering.
In September, Leland C. Sanborn, who had been principal of the Batavia, N. Y., High School since 1951, became superintendent of the New York State School for the Blind in the same city. Lee, who received his M.A. from Syracuse University, is credited with a list of civic and educational activities that would put most of us to shame. He and his wife Agnes don't have to worry about the admissions problem in Hanover since they have three daughters, Barbara Lee, Susan Beth and Betsy Ann.
Our class chairman, Hank Smith, was a member of a symposium held by the Wurlitzer PTA in his home town of North Tonawanda where he is president of the Chamber of Commerce and a trustee of the United Fund. Lest any of you who remember your Greek (in which symposium means a drinking party), get the wrong idea, the subject was "What Part of the Responsibility for Quality Education Belongs to - the Home - the School - the Church - the Community."
We have a report that Harry Robinovitz was a delegate to the Republican convention in Chicago and garnered an autograph from Nelson Rockefeller '30 for his three-and-a-half-month old son, David. Our mail bag is empty. Help from the male or distaff side will be most welcome. New addresses: H. Andrew Dudley, Apt. 11-A, New York 22, N. Y.; Robert G. Freeman, 596 Entrada Drive, Santa Monica Canyon, Calif.; Harding H. Macdona, 109 Moran Road, Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich.; Ned Munn, 2009 Atlantic Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.; J. Phillip O'Brien, 12 Nelson St., Framingham, Mass.; Donald H. Seixas, Apt. A, 238 W. 36th Ave., San Mateo, Calif.; Kenneth M. Spang, 14 Ludlow Drive, Chappaqua, N. Y.; and that fellow we were looking for last month, Robert A. Winger, P.O. Box 1225, Rotterdam, The Netherlands (Chrysler International S A).
1933 Fund Contributors
414 Gifts (Participation Index 84) Total Gifts: $9,354.00 (56% of Objective) Class Agent
Aaron, J. Arthur Ackerman, J. Russell Albaugh, Clarence H. Alden, Douglas W. Alder, James L. Alexander, Ralph E. Allen, Alva Z. Allen, Robert B. Allen, Theodore W. Andrews, J. Richard Atwood, William F. Await, Fred H. Babson, Gustavus, Jr. Ball, Myron H. Barbee, Ben R. Bates, Darwin S. Bates, "William G. Bayles, S. Heagan Beattie, Wesley H. Bee, Richard P. Beebe, Gilbert W. Beekman, Alston, Jr. Birmingham, Frederic A. Black* John S., Jr. Blakesley, Elliot S. Blanchard, Webster E. Bloomberg, Harvey S. Blower, Edmund R. Blumenthal, Bernhard S. Blumenthal, John A. Boisseau, Arthur R. Bradford, Wilbur H. Bradshaw, W. Richmond Braley, J. Warren Branch, Forrest P. Branson, John H., Jr. Brooke, John W. Brown, Weldon A. Brown, William C. Burbank, Roland W. Burns, Robert E. Burrill, Carleton P. Byers, Philip L. Campbell, James B. Campbell, Ralph O. Carr, Robert D. Carruth, Harry P., Jr. Celano, Joseph J. Chapman, Charies J. Chesnulevich, James W. Chester, Lewis L. Clare, Daniel F. Clark, Charles T., Jr. Clark, Frederick S. Clark, William S. Cleaves, Francis W. Cleaves, Paul C. Coffey, Keating Coleman, John E. Colla, Stanley A. Collins, Evan R. Coolidge, E. David, Jr. Cox, Robert M. Cox, Robert T. Crabtree, Norman V. Critchell, Robert S. Cunningham, Alexander S. Cunningham, B. Poland Curtis, C. Frederick D'Arcy, Donald F. Davidson, John A. Davis, Ernest S., Jr. Davis, George S. DeHaven, James C. Delmarsh, Archibald G. Dericks, Gerard H. Dewey, William T. Dickson, Robert L. Doherty, James J., Jr. Donner, Ward S. Donovan, John F. Doscher, Robert Douglas, Walter S. Dowling, William F., Jr. Downes, Richard E. Doyle, Willard L. Drowne, George P., Jr. Dudley, H. Andrew Durgin, Henry L. Durkee, Stuart H. Dutcher, Darrow A. Edwards, George D. Eldridge, Edward K. Ellis, Robert K. Erlandson, Norman W. Estes, Robert M. Evans, David LeR., Jr. Evans, Wilson D. Faegre, John B., Jr. Fairbank, Robert L. Farmer, Howard J. Farnham, Philip Farrand, George N. Fechheimer, May 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. Fobes, William H., Jr. Foley, Edward J., Jr. Forster, G. William Foster, Wood R. Fox, Maurice Fox, Robert S. Fuller, William A. Gamble, J. Ross Gardiner, Robb G. Gass, Samuel A. Gates, George E. Geddes, Gail G.1 Gemberling, Allan M. Gerstell, Richard Gillies, William B., Jr. Glendinning, Robert C. Goldberg, Morrell Goldthwait, Richar4 P. Goodell, Robert C. Gordon, Archie Gordon, Colver Grace, Pierre Greiner, Edgar C. Grob, Charles I. Grow, Robert J. Guggenheim, Robert, Jr. Hack, Burt H. Hackett, Harold R. Hagan, Robert S. Hale, Thomas T. Hall, Charles L. 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., II Heidler, George P. Henchey, Harold L. Henderson, Hugh Hershenson, Melvin C. Hicks, Hunter Hinds, Charles B., Jr. Hinkel, William H., Jr. Hird, H. Edward, Jr. Hitchcock, WilliamE., Jr. Hixson, Henry H., Jr. Hobbs, Winston E. Holmes, Edward M. Hopkins, Carl E. Hopkins, Harvey S. Hull, Arthur B., Jr. Humes, Edwin W. Huntress, Jack B. Hutchings, Edward B., Jr. Ingram, George R. Irvin, H., Jr. 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, Clifford Johnson, Cutting Jonas, Irving L. Jones, William R. Juergens, Albert G. Kafka, Roger J. Kaplan, Eugene Katz, Melville J. Kaufman, Pettus Kay, Robert E. Kent, Jack A. Kerwin, Martin M. Keyes, Ralph S. Keys, Richard H. Kiger, Charles J. Kimball, Whitefield F. King, Henry B., Jr. King, William H. Kirkham, Dunham Knapp, Edwin C. Knickerbocker, Paine Krans, DeHart Krolik, Day, Jr. Krosnick, Gerald Labbe, John T. Ladd, Gordon H. Lade, Archibaldi Jr. Lang, William H. Lapham, Edwin S. Leonard, Nathaniel W. Levensaler, Atwood Lewis, William B., Jr. Ley, Robert T. Lincoln, Donald O. Lord, Edward S. *Lovejoy, Samuel C. Lowerre, Henry L. Lyon, Richard K. MacCarty, William C., Jr. McCombs, William M. McCoy, Byron O. Macdona, Harding H. McDonald, Gordon A. McDonald, Robert E. McFarland, James P. McKane, Vernon W. McKee, Henry H., Jr. Mackey, Harold F. Madden, Wilson H. Manchester, John C. Mankowski, Peter P. Manley, John H. Mann, Thomas D. March, Charles H., Jr. *Marden, Ford Marden, John S. Marden, Philip A. Maskilieson, Thomas Masten, John E. Meek, John F. Merkt, Oswald E. D. Merrill, John A. Merrill, Vincent N. Merson, James S. Metcalf, Tristram W., Jr. Meyer, Frederick A. Meyer, Richard F. Michaelson, Jesse J. Milans, Calvin H. Milius, Gay E., Jr. Miller, Henry A. Miller, Manuel Mitchell, Robert H. Moatz, Herbert C., Jr. Mohr, G. Jacques Monagan, John S. Monahan, Theodore V. Moody, Roger B. Muller, William G. Mundt, George J. Murray, Donald A. Naramore, H. Burling Neaman, Milton R. 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.2 Osborne, Brett Osborne, Harry V., Jr. O'Toole, Francis J. Page, William R., Jr. Palmer, Gerald C. Parker, John L. Patch, Edgar L. Paull, John H., Jr. Paulson, David B. Peck, Raymond E. Petrie, James A., Jr. Phinney, E. Donald Pierpont, Henry B. Pierson, Judson T. Porter, William E., Jr. Prince, F. Ervin Pringle, John P. Quinn, William R. Raoul, William G. Reeves, Lawrence C. Resnick, Eber Reynolds, Morgan B. Rhodes, Kent Rice, Richard G. Rich, Charles L. Richards, William E. Rideout, George M. Riggs, Lorrin A. Ripley, F. Fuller Rittenberg, Sumner L. Robinovitz, Harry J. Robinson, Fred J. Rocker, Richard A. Rockwell, John H. Rollins, Daniel G. Root, Nathan N. Rowe, Winston J. Rugen, Carl E. Russell, David W. Ryan, Richard E. Salisbury, Arnold H., II Sanborn, Leland C. Sands, Robert G. Saywell, Robert M. Scanlon, John M. Scheibe, Karl M. Schlesinger, William L. Schneider, John J. Schuemann, Howard R. Schulte, John S. Schwartz, Eugene J. Seabolt, Robert H. Searing, Joseph P., Jr. Seixas, Donald H. Selivanoff, Alexandre A. Shafer, Charles C. Shafer, John I., Jr. Shaughnessy, William K. Shaw, Horace B., 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 P. III Smith, Roger V. Snead, Thornton W., Jr. Snead, Walter L. Spang, Kenneth M. Speare, Alden Sprague, Chandler M., II Sprague, Mansfield D. Stanley, Justin A. Starr, William J., Jr. Stege, Charles E. Stevens, Roland E., Jr. Stoneman, Sidney Strock, Alvin E. Sturm, Frank W. Sumner, Robert W. Swan, Alfred J. Swander, Robert F. Swinehard, D. Robert Sylvester, Roger E. 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. Tozier, William Trickey, John, Jr. Trost, John F. True, Charles H., Jr. Turner, Ernest R. Turner, Robert S. Uebel, Martin A. Valensi, Randolph E. VanDeusen, Hobart M. Veres, Robert L. Voorhees, DeForest B. Wachs, Miller A. Wakefield, Lyman E., Jr. Walker, James C. Warden, David E. Watson, Robert H. Watson, Walter Webster, Charles S. Weeks, Herbert S., Jr. Weeman, Kenneth B. Weidenhamer, Jay E. Wentworth, Elliot E. Werrenrath, George H. Weston, Paul Wheeler, Stirling R. Wheelock, Howe G., Jr. Whitbeck, Philip F. White, F. Lupton White, Robert W. Whitman, Stanton H. Winn, William R. Wood, DonaldMacP., Jr. Wood, Harvard W. Woodard, Russell G. Woodcock, Robert L., Jr. Woodman, John F. Woods, James F. Worthen, Merrill Worthington, N. Page Wright, Jackson W. Young, Vincent T. Zebrowski, Stanley
MEMORIAL GIFTS FROM: 1 Wood R. Foster '33.
2 Mrs. O'Leary.
*Memorial Gift throughCapital Campaign.
Secretary, 80 Mooreland Rd. Melrose 76, Mass.
Treasurer, Young and Rubicam, Inc. 2 Park Ave., New York 16, N. Y.