Class Notes

1900*

November 1942 LEON B. RICHARDSON, CLARENCE G. MCDAVITT
Class Notes
1900*
November 1942 LEON B. RICHARDSON, CLARENCE G. MCDAVITT

A most pleasant occasion in Hanover was the recent celebration of the one hundredth anniversary of the founding of Kappa Kappa Kappa. The Secretary was privileged to be present at the anniversary dinner and at his table to hold a pleasant reunion with three other 1900 men—Dr. Bigelow, Horace Cristy and Col. Teague. It will be seen that Worcester sent half her igoo delegation to Hanover for this festiv- ity. There must be something preservative about the climate of that region for neither Cap nor Hod shows any of the effects of the lamentable fact that time is passing on.

Clarence McDavitt certainly is seeing the world in these later days, mostly from above. He has recently returned from a hur- ried trip to Chile, as representative of the International Labor Organization. Three days of air travel down and five days back have put him very much in a frame of mind to remain on the ground for a period. Soon after his return he was summoned to Wash- ington for a continuation of the work which he has been doing in recent months for the Labor Relations Board.

As John Warden was a familiar figure to everyone in Hanover in his boyhood years, so he has again become one in these later times. After spending his summer here, he has returned to Florida for the winter. This year his address is 1725 21st Ave., South, St. Petersburg.

o Perry Fairfield has been seriously ill for some weeks at his home in Daytona Beach, Florida.

Nineteen hundred is still represented in the freshman class, John Dayton Condit, son of our late classmate, Dayton Lord Condit, being a member of that group. Leroy Sawyer's son, David G., is a sopho- more, and Don Tuttle's boy, Morton C., is a member of the class of 1943.

Secretary, Hanover, N. H Treasurer, < 212 Mill St., Newtonville, Mass.