Uppermost in our thoughts as these notes are penned is the game at the Yale Bowl on October 31. A large number came up from New York, and many went down from Boston and vicinity. The class seats were widely spread around portals one and two, but the class section proper was well filled. Chum Hayes, as usual, had charge of portal one for the Yale Athletic Association.
The sympathy of the class goes to Cliff and Agatha Clarke in Haverhill, Mass., who lost their daughter Virginia Lee, seven years old, on September 26, from infantile paralysis. Louis Foster has at last been located in Brooklyn, N. Y. He is associated with the Employers' Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd., at 120 William St., New York city.
Arthur L. Scott has been transferred to Pennsylvania for the C. L. Stevens Company of Boston, and is living at Holicong.
In June of this year a portrait of Jack Alden, headmaster of Columbia Grammar School in New York, was hung in the library of the school, along with those of his distinguished predecessors. The portrait was painted by the noted artist, Elie Cristoloveanu. Jack now is especially busy with the work of the Emergency Unemployment Relief Committee, as he heads the Private School Section.
Ralph Badger appeared in the Detroit Press and Time, October 5, his first burst into the political arena, "which was somewhat unintentional." He urged the return of prosperity be hastened by drafting Calvin Coolidge for the presidency of the United States, but Cal did not agree with him. Ralph was talking before the Purchasing Agents Association of Detroit. He is executive vice-president of the Union Guaranty Trust Company of Detroit.
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