It's an active season at the World's Only Dartmouth Club With Its Own Permanent Location. Football films of the Holy Cross, Princeton, Brown, and Harvard games have pulled enthusiastic audiences and made for the missing of more than a few suburban trains. Narrated by Skeff McAllister '59 for the second year, the Club's own version of Wednesday Night at the Movies seems on the way to becoming a New York fixture. Film costs are underwritten by the New York Club, and will be happily shared with any other clubs who don't mind movies still newer than TV fare. Just ask.
Our tenants from the Brown Club have had one year of a Dartmouth roof over their heads and reports are that they like it a lot better than the Columbia roof that sheltered them since the old Princeton Club was demolished. What's more, we like them too, the more so because of a healthy Brunonia contribution to the bar exchequer. To date no one has defiled the captive Brown Bear that is part of the back bar decoration, the World's Largest Humorous Ivy League Football Mural With Undressed Indian Girls. Men's Bar, of course.
Dartmouth Night was celebrated around the Princeton Game film in the main dining room and an accordianist in the Men's Bar, although technical difficulties prevented the scheduled direct wire transmission from Dartmouth Hall's steps.
Officers elected for fiscal year 1967 are: President - George Farrand '33; vice president - Gene Schwartz '33; treasurer - Paul Jameson '29, and secretary - JimSchaefer '48.
If you're in town, drop in any weekday from 11 A.M. until 10 P.M. Good food at lunch and drinks anytime. Chitbooks for out-of-towners. Membership blanks for locals. Genial Manager Jim McKeon '39h will be glad to see you, as will we all. Only 37 seconds by tunnel from Grand Central.
Secretary, Commodore Hotel, 109 East 42nd St. New York, N.Y. 10017