Class Notes

CLASS OF 1899

FEBRUARY 1932 Warren C. Kendall
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1899
FEBRUARY 1932 Warren C. Kendall

Howland H. Sargeant of New Bedford, Mott Sargeant's boy, has been awarded one of the four Rhodes scholarships granted by the New England district committee. This means two years of study at Oxford University in England.

The Barneys of Dorchester, Mass., and the Barneys of Richmond, Va., are particularly sociable during the holiday season of early winter. First comes Christmas; then on New Year's Day comes the wedding anniversary of Wendell B. in Richmond; lastly, the same Wendell still has a birthday annually on January 6. Roger Barney, by the way, the younger brother, is already within half an inch of his elder's six feet two.

It may be the building boom is not all yet that we should like to have it. But Ernest Silver is kept busy supervising the construction of a new library and dormitory to round out his growing Normal School plant at Plymouth, N. H.

Herbert Miller attended the meeting of the American Sociological Society at Washington, D. C., December 27-31.

Louis Benezet delivered two addresses in Montpelier, Vt., at the recent annual convention of the Winooski Valley Teachers' Association.

An unusually long sitting of the Superior Court in Springfield, Mass., kept Charlie Donahue at his duties as judge in that city nearly four months this fall with only weekend visits home.

Bill Colbert is still in Washington, D. C., in one of the government departments.

Secretary, 41 West Kirke St., Chevy Chase, Md.