Ralph Totman is the only one so far to indicate that he cannot attend the Fif- teenth Reunion in June, 1937: "Sorry I shall not be able to make it, butI'm taking a leave of absence next Januaryto take a trip to Spain and NorthernAfrica."
He expects to spend this coming summer in East Alstead, N. H. (near Bellows Falls). Ralph is living at 2 Lyndeboro Place, Boston.
Little, Brown & Cos. will publish in September Herb West's "Modern Book Collecting for the Impecunious Amateur."
Harry Bruckner has been promoted to the post of division superintendent of traffic with the N. J. Tel. & Tel. Cos. We point with pride
Stan Miner will soon move into a house which he is building in Ridgewood, N. J., whence he has commuted to New York these last several years.
Ray Atwood tells me that Haskell Cohn and he were the only members of the class to turn up at the Boston alumni dinner.
Len Morrissey's car was stolen recently after he had parked it in Boston. A few days later an Everett cop found it in good shape. The news seemed so important to the Everett gendarme that he phoned Len at 3:00 A.M.
During the recent flood in New England Elmer Ardiff handled the emergency for the telephone company in the territory around Haverhill, Mass.
Len Morrissey points out that the Alumni Fund campaign is on and he is anxious for us to hold the considerably better pace that we hit last year.
Buck Perry, who has been out of touch with our Bureau of Identification for several years, has finally informed us that he is in business in Los Angeles in the Produce Building and is living at 636 Ivy St., Glendale, Calif.
Bill Wilkinson is a supervisor with the PWA with an office at 11 Bond St., Brooklyn, and he is living at 237 West 24th St., New York City.
We are told that Morrill Sprague is living in Still River, Mass., and that Perley Knapp is living in Camillus, N. Y., R. D. 1. The Bill Shirleys announce the birth of Wayne Douglas Shirley, April 28.
Aaron M. Basch, whose last known address was 265 Osborne Terrace, Newark, N. J., cannot be located by the Alumni Records Office. I should like to hear from anybody who can help us to locate him.
Harvey Moses sends news of the spring floods in Springfield: "We fled the city after working ninestraight days, including two Sundays, totry and clear up the flood's ravages. Watercame into our S. D. Dept. about four feetso we all turned to and helped the tenantsdry out the contents of their boxes. OneSunday I ironed bonds from 9 A.M. to 7 P.M."
Mose also sent a large clipping from the Springfield Republican whereon was spread the pictures of several rising Republican politicians, including Sterry Waterman, recently appointed assistant clerk in the Vermont Senate. The attached article says of this Twoter who used to intone Swinburne in a bull bass that he is "going places in Vermont politics." [Waterman has just been elected one of the Vermont delegation to the Republican National Convention.—Alumni Ed.]
Secretary, U. S. Courthouse, Foley Sq., New York