Class Notes

1922

APRIL 1966 LEONARD E. MORRISSEY, CARTER H. HOYT
Class Notes
1922
APRIL 1966 LEONARD E. MORRISSEY, CARTER H. HOYT

It's not yet too late to call and get your reservation at the Hanover Inn or the Motor Lodge for '22's Little Reunion, Friday and Saturday, April 15 and 16. Ask for Miss Carey at the Inn. If you plan to arrive in Hanover before 6 P.M. that Friday, you will enjoy attending the dinner of the Dartmouth Club of the Hanover Area. It will be in Hopkins Center and there will be no lack of Twoters to welcome you. If you are going to this dinner, however, don't delay sending a card now to '22's class secretary and saying how many "you" will be. Come back to Hanover solo if you must, but the Little Woman also would greatly enjoy this congenial get-together in mid-April. We'll all be seeing you.

Eric C. Malmquist, principal of Norwalk (Conn.) High School, has been elected to the Headmasters Association. This national association is limited to 100 members (75 independent school and 25 high school) and it is a high distinction to be chosen. One of '22's outstanding Phi Beta Kappas, Rex has more than 40 years' experience in secondary school instruction and administration. He has been principal at Norwalk for the past 27 years. All of which, in professional circles and in '22's grandfatherly eyes, makes him a genuine expert on what gives with today's adolescents. Congratulations, Rex and Helen.

Rev. Richard F. Beyer, our well-known minister in Vermont and New Hampshire, has been noted as the main speaker at some local World Community Day observances. A Brattleboro paper, for instance, says: "Rev. Beyer is a graduate of Mt. Hermon, Dartmouth, and Bangor and Union Theological Seminaries. He has served as pastor of Vermont congregations in Springfield, St. Almont bans, and Brattleboro (also Concord, N. H., and Bennington, Vt.). He has also served on the National United Church Council on Church and Ministry for six years and on the Committee for Religion and Health for the National Council of Churches." All classmates, Dick, take pride in the good work you continue to do.

Walter A. Gatzert has been named senior vice president of the American National Bank and Trust Co., Chicago. Walt's career for the past 35 years has been in banking and corporation finance. His son, Robert, was graduated from Dartmouth '5l and his daughter Caryl from Skidmore. Felicitations to him and his family.

Harold W. Frederick, '22's man in Spokane for the past two score years, was featured some time ago by the Spokane Chronicle which in part said:

Frederick heads the Frederick Co., a 26-year- old manufacturers' representative firm in the air conditioning, ventilating and heating field. He has recently undertaken expansion of the company which through the years has handled many manufacturers' products and for several years was sole distributor here (the Spokane area) for the Trane Co. Now, Frederick says the company is broadening its lines to include about 12 manufacturers giving the company a full spectrum of products in the field and it is also adding employees

Born and reared in Seattle, Frederick completed high school at Princeton (N. J.) Preparatory School and received his degree in mathematics from Dartmouth College. He worked in the insurance field and for the American Radiator Company before he started his own manu-facturers' representative firm in the late thirties. Frederick and his wife, Evelyn, live at 1015 East Nineteenth Ave., Spokane. They have a daughter, Beth (Mrs. Corbett U. Allen, Jr.) in New Jersey and two grandchildren. Frederick enjoys hunting, fishing, and an occasional game of golf. He is a member of Manito Golf and Country Club, the Spokane Club, the Elks and the Chamber of Commerce.

Classmates everywhere will be glad to hear of Hal and his family and wish them continued success.

Prof. Robert L. Bartlett was honored by the students at Westchester Community College, Valhalla, N. Y., when they dedicated their 1965 yearbook to him. Bob has taught mathematics and chemistry at Westchester for the past 19 years. Strangely enough, another classmate still vividly remembers a sophomore afternoon with Bob spent around Occom Pond catching salamanders for Bug something or another. Bob's score must have been 5-1.

Heard 'round keg, kitchen sink, and kaffee klatsch:

Fred Vogel has joined the department of Medical Radioisotopes (will Phil Gove please check that spelling?) at Medical Center, Portland, where our Phi Bete Chem major is working on the technical aspects of nuclear medicine. Any Twoter wishing to be nuclearized should get in touch with Fred.

Laurence Campbell continues to serve his Barre (Vt.) community in various civic enterprises. Currently, for example, he is president of the Barre Hospital Corporation.

Jim and Edith Hamilton, both well and happy, were recent visitors in Hanover. Clark Bristol has retired as vice president of the New Hampshire Fire Insurance Company and its subsidiary American Fidelity Company. For part of the year he continues to live in Manchester, N. H., where his address is now 1227 Union Street, but when the weather softens Clark hies to his summer home at Kittery Point, Me.

Spic and Milly Saunders and Ev and Esther Petot won't soon forget the fine month they spent together cruising the Mediterranean. The Saunders are now permanently settled in their home at Christiansted, St. Croix, Virgin Islands and the Petots are living, at least part of each year, at Maple Lane, Aurora, Ohio.

Recently stumbled against "People of Peacham" by J. C. Watts and E. A. Choate, but what really attracted these parochial eyes was "Edited by Richard G. Wood, with assistance from the Peacham Historical Society."

Dick Litchfield, a frequent fan at athletic events in Hanover, still delights in happy memories of his attendance at the Princeton game last November. His wife Mary has made progressive and partial recovery from er heart attack of October 1964, but complete convalescence, unfortunately, has not as yet ensued. Dick eagerly awaits spring, reopening his Old Village Barn on Route 16 in Chocorua, and resuming his flower and vegetable gardening. Dick has also assumed the duties of writing and producing a weekly newsletter for the Conway (N. H.) Rotary Club of which he is past secretary and past president.

Apropos our Class Memorial Books, Gordon Varney's wife Florence writes from Coral Gables, Fla., "Please extend my sincere thanks for the book placed in the library to commemorate Gordon. I appreciate it very much."

Occupants of new spaces or, at least, owners of new zip codes:

Wilbur J. Bunnell, 340 San Mateo Dr., Menlo Park, Calif. 94026; Robert E. Coventry, 203 North St., Meyersdale, Pa. 15552; George S. Hawley, Apt. 412, 5 Suburban Rd., Worcester, Mass. 01602; Edward D. Morse, 118 Main St., Avon, N. Y. 14414; John B. Wadsworth, 136 South Main St., Council Bluffs, lowa 51502; Richard G. Wood, Route 1, Towne Hill Rd., Montpelier, Vt. 05601.

So end the "coolest" class notes '22 has had in many a month. How come? Look back over these literary delicacies and try to find even one reference to Boston or our proper Bostonians. Not only "cool," but definitely "camp" also.

Secretary, 11 Brockway Rd. Hanover, N. H. 03755

Class Agent, Norway Hill Rd., Hancock, N. H. 03449