For six years Tom Ham has developed and conducted a training course for college students in the employ of Jones & Laughlin Steel Company of Pittsburg. This course was for employees who gave promise of becoming executives. The war has taken most of his students but he is still with the Steel Company in another capacity.
A letter from George Lake informs your secretary that he has been retired from the faculty of Pomona College in Claremont, California, and is now in charge of the Museum of Anthropology which is connected with one of the graduate departments of that institution. George likes his work and gets a great kick out of his splendid Victory garden.
Word has been received of the death of Mrs. Jack Frost in Putnam, Conn., on March 7, 1944.
Warren Kendall 1899 has sent your secretary a letter of appreciation of Mrs. Frost's efforts with meager resources to bring up Jack's four children. All these children are college graduates and all are making good in engineering and educational fields. Mr. Kendall's letter will be printed in our class report.
Secretary and Treasurer, 21 Forest Rd., Cape Elizabeth, Me.