Johnny Johnson went to work in January for the United States Rubber Company, in the capacity of expert on warehousing and related arts. He will be in New York the most of the time, and is looking for a tidy suburb in which to encamp with his wife and their offspring. He severed his connection with the Greensburg, Pa., leather company, with which he has been associated for two years, just in time, because two weeks after the Biggest Delt had resigned, the factory burned flat. The new job, we hear, is a very good one, and we know we speak for the entire 1922 Aegis board when we wish its sports editor good luck.
Had Pinney has been a member of the famed University Glee Club of New York this winter, and takes the honor easily.
Mr. and Mrs. Kilmarx had a couple of weeks at Nassau in February to train Killy for a long session as a juror in New York county.
From George E. Brooks, associate professor of public speaking at the College of William and Mary, to Stan Miner:
"One of the things I perform religiously is to read every word of the 'Twoter.' In the last issue I noticed that my trip to the hospital in 1927 cost the class four dollars. Most everything was knocked out of my head at that particular time, and you can well understand why, somehow or other, it never occurred to me that a charge had been made for my visit.
"I have always been eternally grateful to 'Killy' and 'Skeet' for what they did for me at the time, and now I present my belated appreciation to the class of 1922. However, such payable things as expenses are more easily discharged, and I am only too glad to do it. I am also including $2 for my class tax, which, incidentally, is almost as late. The ALXJMNI MAGAZINE is already the most important book we receive.
"I can hardly wait for the Tenth to come round, and I hope that, at that time, some definite plan will be adopted by the class to insure our class quota of the Alumni Fund each year.
"Please remember me most kindly to any of the boys who may still remember me, and tell them there is a welcome on the door for any who wander down into Dixie."
John Glennie wrote to the Treasurer February 12 that he hoped to be in New York that month. No word was received thereafter from the ambulatory radiologist.
Dr. Clyde Jensen has sent a brief announcement that hereafter he is to be found at 1114 Boylston Aye., Seattle, Wash. He is connected with the Roosevelt Clinic there.
Lawrence Farnham has a new locus, 527 Manatuck Road, Brightwater, L. 1., N. Y. Police chiefs in towns throughout the Middle West are warned that Charlie Hart is on his annual pilgrimage selling the natives spectacles.
Russ Barton may be found daily on the premises of Frederick Peirce and Company, Pittsburgh bond house.
Secretary, 40 West 9th St., New York