The death of Don Tuttle, recorded in another column, brings to us an overwhelming sense of bereavement. For nearly fifty years Don has been very much one of us—the soul of good fellowship, joviality, comradeship, close sympathy and helpfulness. He had made for himself in New Hampshire an enviable place in the public service. Seldom has the departure of anyone in the State been the occasion of such universal expressions of regret, esteem and personal affection. His class, which meant so much to him and to whom he meant so much, cannot be reconciled to his loss.
John Redington has accepted the position of Field Secretary of the New England Forestry Foundation. His work will take him over pretty much all New England, but he hopes to make his dwelling place somewhere in New Hampshire. This is much to his satisfaction as a lover of this part of the country, and certainly much to ours in bringing John and Lynda to a region where, in the future, most of us will be able to see them more often.
Dana Sears, who, in Calais, Maine, has been looking after the business interests of his sonin-law (in the service) during the war years, has now returned to his old home, 14 Charles St., Hyde Park, Mass.
The secretary has received belated news of the death of Eva Woodhull Foster, which took place at her home in Patchogue, Long Island, on July 29, 1945. She was married to Oliver W. Foster of our class in 1920, her husband dying in 1933. She is survived by a daughter, Olivia Woodhull, a student at Radcliffe.
Harry Marshall's letterhead bears the inscription, "Lecturer, South-East Asia, University of Miami." He has just welcomed home his son Daniel '34 who has been released from the Marines, in which service he attained the grade of major. The Island Press of New York announces the publication of a book by Harry, Flashes Along the Burma Road, described by E. Stanley Jones, who contributes the introduction, as "a very rich addition to that accumulating mass of Christian contributions which the East is now making to the West." He says further of Dr. Marshall, "He has brought to it a fine mind, a sympathetic spirit and a deep devotion."
A PORTION OF 1900 enjoys a moment of relaxation during its 45th Reunion held at North Sutton, N. H.
Secretary, Hanover, N. H. Treasurer,212 Mill St., Newtonville, Mass.