Class Notes

CLASS OF 1922

APRIL 1932 Francis H. Horan
Class Notes
CLASS OF 1922
APRIL 1932 Francis H. Horan

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Aschenbach have announced the arrival on February 17 of Shirley Anne.

Anyone to whom Shaw Livermore owes a letter can write to him about it in care of the University of Buffalo, Buffalo, N. Y.

Herr Arvin Gunnison, for long a resident of St. Louis, has taken up residence in Boston (Massachusetts). His address: 15 Elkins St.

Bill Shirley, for the past two years librarian for the University of New Hampshire, has made another advance in his profession, this time to the post of first assistant in the Economics Division of the New York Public Library. He was in that division before he went to New Hampshire. The Shirley home address: 253 Washington Ave., Brooklyn.

The reproduction of the class composite picture, mailed to everyone as a part of the reunion propaganda, has been the subject of favorable comment from both wings of our party. Stanley Pingrey Miner, a former Brooklyn boy who made Phi Delta Theta, originated the idea.

Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Porter blew the Secretary to a dinner in Washington recently, when they were there for a few days in connection with a patent case on which the able Boston lawyer was working. Another visitor in the capital was King Fauver, there for the argument of a case before the Board of Tax Appeals. Dat 01' Haberdasher, Kilmarx, is hard at it contriving a fitting uniform for the festivities in June. We are told that the regalia selected satisfies all of the demands, practicality, free-wheeling, and more miles to the gallon.

From now on the arrangements for reunion will be as to the practical things, such as housing, number of costumes to be ordered, number of plates to be laid at the dinner, etc. These things, of course, mean nothing to anyone not on the committee, but we do earnestly beseech you to reply at once to any kind of postcard request that may be made of you, for information or of a higher contractual nature. The group in charge are tired old men, who have seen a lot of this world, and who don't fancy particularly acting as guidecompanions to wilful youngsters who won't co-operate.

The suggestion is repeated: If you have any choice, arrange your vacation to include reunion.

Secretary, 2700 Que St., N. W„ Washington, D. C.