George Ducro (Ashtabula, Ohio) says he will be at the Reunion if possible. George has two sons, George Ill, 7 years old, and Thomas, 4.
Norm Crane, leading physician of Plainfield, N. J., has been specializing for the last couple of years in pediatrics.
Steve Kenyon tardily adds to our vital statistics that in addition to Steve Jr., now 7, he has a son named Elliott H., aged 3. From Colorado Springs we learn that Dick Livermore has adopted a second child, Carol Ann, now 11 months old. Dick Jr. is a little over 2. Dick is still associated with Kaufman's department store.
The Herman Olivers got in a Hanover vacation in September, and are planning to be with us next June. Their family stands now at two, John A., 8, and Ann, 3.
Grand Poo-Bah Marshall has announced from his rural retreat a committee to help him with the Reunion. The prize winners are Olsen and Booth, as members at large; Atwood and Stetson, for Boston; Kilmarx, Miner, and your servant, for New York; and Hotchkiss and Miller for Chicago. When this group of exhorters begins to function, you will be belabored with pleas for your attendance at the June Fish-Fry. Sawbones Stetson kept a very elaborate file on the Tenth Reunion, and Andy is turning to this file for inspiration. One thing our leader promises us is that the wives who come will have a fine time. Gals who are interested in a grand week-end should put a little extra pressure on their husbands, so that we may have the attendance of both.
We lack addresses for the following: Lester R. Corbett, last in Ayer, Mass.; Hiram R. Crosby Jr., last listed as lieutenant at the C.C.C. camp at March Field, Calif.; Ivan Merrill Young, last at 292 Eighth Ave.; and Bernard M. Steele, last at Paris, France.
Through the kindess of Regan Brown, chain store tycoon, we have been furnished with a most elegant political flier used by Cliff Akey in his campaign for representative of Greenfield, Mass., in the state legislature. This item shows the candidate in a pen-and-ink drawing haloed with statesmanship. One of his principal arguments was that he has six children. Then there are sketches showing him as a newsboy, gridiron star, legionnaire, and insurance man. Clif also promises to restore a bridge "to the site where it belongs." This should be a mighty interesting maneuver.
Shaw Livermore is now assistant dean of the School of Business Administration of the University of Buffalo, in addition to being associate professor of economics. He will probably be awarded his Ph.D. at Columbia next year. His thesis is ready for print and will appear in Columbia Studies in Legal History. Shaw's wife (Evelyn Taylor), having given the necessary start to Shaw Jr., now 10, and Gloria, now 8, took her M.D. degree this year at Buffalo University, and she is now an interne at the Buffalo City Hospital. She is a Simmons girl, class of 1925.
Parker Huntington has become associated with the investment house of F. M. Swan & Co., 49 Federal St., Boston.
Ozzie Holland is living in Rochester after several years at Boston, and is a sales manager for his firm, Kellogg Compressor & Mfg. Corp.
Ed MacLaine is associated with F. C. Graham, Inc., Hyde Park, Mass., as a fu neral director.
Sherry Bates, who has been on a tour of duty as an officer of the CCC, has returned to Pitts field, Mass., which has been his headquarters for a good many years.
Secretary New U. S. Courthouse, Foley Square, New York