Class Notes

CLASS OF 1899

March 1918 George G. Clark
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1899
March 1918 George G. Clark

K. Asakawa's leave of absence from Yale has been extended to September, 1919.

Dr. C. W. Bonney has just completed a six weeks' course of lectures to the Jefferson Hospital Unit.

Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Boston are receiving congratulations upon the birth of a daughter.

Samuel and Mrs. Burns spent January at Palm Beach. They were to have a "roundup" with the Abbotts in New York on their return.

Ronald Leavitti, the "class baby", aged seventeen, is a member of the 7th Balloon Co., A.S.S.C., American Expeditionary Forces in France.

Prof. G. H. Gerould became a captain in the Ordnance Reserve January 26 with immediate entrance into service in Washington. His present address is care of George N. Henning, 1728 20th St., N.W., Washington.

Ralph W. Hawkes is now giving all his time to the Holbrook Mills Company of which he is president. In the fall he moved his family from York to Millbury in order to be located near the mill. A daughter, Mary Adelaide, was born May 3, 1917.

Leon A. Martin's address is Y.M.C.A. Secretary, American Expeditionary Forces in France. He has been in France since November, and is organizing Y.M.C.A. units where needed.

Prof. H. A. Miller has been asked by the government to give them the benefit of his extended knowledge on emigration problems through devising plans for handling the interned alien enemies, and is spending the first two weeks of February at the government camp in Chillicothe, where are located 1200 interned alien enemies, to put into execution certain plans that he has worked out.

A. H. W. Norton has become a Texas rancher, and, like all the rest of the Southwest, is suffering for water.

Prof. James P. Richardson's new house in Hanover is now officially located upon Choate Road. The selection of this name for the new road just north of Webster Avenue is felicitous.

George A. Rounds was married in Kansas City during December, and is residing at 54 Brainard Street, Decroit.

Capt. F. R. Sanborn is attached to the large base hospital at Camp Upton, Yaphank, N. Y. One of his duties is to act as summary court for the hospital.

Harry Wason, Mrs. Wason, and son are making the Tampa Bay Hotel at Tampa, Fla., their winter headquarters.

A. D. Storrs was married February 8, 1918, at Hanover, to Miss Ethel Mary Haskell, daughter of William B. Haskell.

Secretary, George GL Clark, 60 State St., Boston