Steve Lehman is at present practicing a little of that Tuck School knowledge he imbibed from Bill Gray last year, and is holding down a job in the employment department of the McKinney Steel Company, in Cleveland.
C. L. Phillips, an ensign on a sub-chaser, is at present on duty in the Adriatic. He writes that there is no prospect of returning before September.
Cliff Meredith is busy playing detective in Washington for the National Information Service, Inc.
Latest reports from New England say that J. B. Donohue, Blandin, and Weston are at Harvard Law School, and Isbell is at the Harvard Business School.
Harv Hood is shoving around milk cans in one of his father's canneries at St. Albans, Vt. It takes a better imagination than the secretary owns to imagine H. Perley as a day laborer, but suppose we'll have to take his word for it.
Bill Bemis is attending law school in Cleveland, and also instructing the freshmen of Western Reserve University the art of declaiming a la W. H. B. on Dartmouth Night.
Sergeant John M. Cunningham was still in France the last anyone heard from him. John likes the army—NOT.
Chuck Hilliker was gassed and returned to this country in February. On doctor's orders he has gone to Colorado to try to rid himself of a cough caused by the gas.
"Duke" Mather has been to France several times, as he is an ensign in the transport service.
Red Wilson is selling automobile tires in New York, working for the Knight Tire and Rubber Company, of Canton, O.
The secretary would be glad to receive information as to the present address of the following men: L. K. McElwain, P. A. Hull, R. Fish, D. G. Robinson, B. Stone, H. B. Van Zelm, L. H. Bame, B. Blanchard, 3rd, B. Bluesky, A. L. Bou, E. Butts, Jr., T. Cook, W. K. Chen, R. R. Wiley, and G. A. Hull. Recent letters sent out to the above mentioned men have been returned as incorrectly addressed.
Stan Jones is messenger boy for an advertising firm in New York. Jones will be a millionaire before long if he saves all his salary.
Fred Cassebeer, formerly of the War Trade Board, is now mixing headache powders and soft drinks in his father's drug emporium in New York.
Fat Sheldon is the mayor, postmaster, and errand boy of Rupert, Vt. Rumor hath it that Fat is about to become a benedict. How about it, Neil?
Jim Pearce, one time Class Sport, now toils in father's wall-paper mill. Jim says he is due for a promotion soon, and claims he is an expert at plastering paper on ceilings.
Gene Markey is back in Hanover for the spring term. We don't know just what Gene is taking, but we suspect that theatrical inducements were the chief reason for his returning and braving the dangers of Math (is that right, Gene?) once more.
Swoboda Shea is in his glory now. He is athletic directing,—where we don't know, but that doesn't make any difference.
Herm Whitmore is back after wintering at a popular German resort. "Ain't it a grand and glorious feeling, Herm?"
Paul E. Moyer has finished his work as special examiner of the U. S. War Work Board, and is now living with his wife's parents, Rev. and Mrs. G. H. Sisson, in Manchester, N. H. He is supplying the pulpit of the neighboring Congregational church in Goffstown. N. H., and will do graduate work at Harvard next year.
Let's all 'get together and make this reunion a hummer. June 21-25. Indications are that 1918 will have a bigger per. centage at this reunion than she may ever hope to have at another. Are you going to be there? It is a big reunion year all around, and you will want to be in on it. Remember, June 21-25.
Secretary, Harold B. Doty, 1706 Kilbourne Place, N. W., Washington, D. C.