Class Notes

1915

December 1980 MRS. CHARLES W. COMISKEY
Class Notes
1915
December 1980 MRS. CHARLES W. COMISKEY

For those classmates who could not attend the reunion in June, the faces in the September issue photograph are, from left to right, Marv Frederick, Mrs. Sawyer's granddaughter, Marion Frederick, Jeanette Reynolds, Mrs. Ralph Sawyer, Elvie O'Hara, June and Chink Chamberlain, John Pendleton and granddaughter Joanne Allgood, Ruth Crance, Ad Winship, Isabell Comiskey, Al Bull, Cloughy, Dale Barker, Paul Rothery and wife Joanne, Betsy Kiebala, Mrs. Reynold's daughter.

Thanks to Chink Chamberlain here is some news from classmates. Al Bull writes that the hotel where he has stayed for 14 winters has been sold, so new plans will have to be made. Hope he can come up with a solution, because his stay in Florida with Dale Barker means a great deal to them and the other '15ers who get together for lunch and dinner.

Tracy Taylor advises he is confined to a wheelchair as a result of a fall and broken hip, but he feels fine and sends greetings to all. Duzeand Helen Lounsberry are back in Weston. Duze mentioned that grandsons Bob '75 and Willy Hirama '76 cycle to their jobs in Washington, D.C., every day through Arlington cemetery, without damage to headstones. Their father has been in the Sinai Field Mission trying to keep peace between the Arabs and Israelis tough work.

Arthur Sterling reports he is in good health. Took a guided tour of parts of Portugal and Spain this spring, and in spite of a bad mishap with the bus, it was an enjoyable trip. Ralph andEsther Brown had a busy summer. Their family were with them almost the entire time, coming from St. Louis, Tucson, California, Virginia, and southern Maine. Owing to limited eyesight and mobility, they may spend the winter in Maine, with visits to Arizona and Virginia. George Ingalls celebrated his 88th birthday September 30. Great going. His apartment affords him an excellent view of the Rockies, and as he cannot do too much walking out of doors he catches up on his reading. Peggy Hill, widow of Stu Hill, has moved to Boulder. George and Stu were very close friends, so Peggy's being so near makes for pleasant company. MarvFrederick is feeling okay now after a pacemaker was installed for his heart. Chink Chamberlain advises that Judge Edmund Dewing is in Newfield House Convalescent Nursing Home in Plymouth, Mass.

Received the sad news of the death of HelenRose on October 16. Anyone interested in remembering her could send a check to the 1915 Memorial Fund. Dale Barker is back home from the Cape, and he too is looking for a solution to a winter vacation in Florida.

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