We regret to note press dispatches of May 16 which advise that Lawrence A. Jump, driver of an American ambulance attached to the French army, was missing after his vehicle had been shelled by German artillery in the Sarreguemines sector. Larry went to Geneva after graduation to join the staff of the International Labor office and joined the ambulance unit at the outbreak of the war. A letter received just before the above information announced that he had been on the Saar front since February.
In connection with the above it is recalled that Richard Neville Hall, the first Dartmouth man to lose his life in the World War, was killed under similar circumstances while driving an ambulance on Christmas morning, 1915.
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