From the sylvan glades of Henniker, N.H., where Harry Rowe spends his daylight saving time, we received a fine letter with lots of news. He and Brynne Warsaw attended the annual cookout for athletic sponsors. They ate ribs and chicken at a table under the big tent with the Freemans and Art Allen. (Dobbie was in Utah visiting a daughter.) Harry and Brynne also took a three-week trip to Prince Edward Island by way of Bar Harbor and Yarmouth, returning through new Brunswick, Maine, and coastal Route 1. Harry also told us of the passing of Ben Burch, and while on this sad subject we also learned of the loss of Lester Meister, M.D., and Robert B. Davidson. Obituaries will appear in this magazine shortly.
Don Allen, still an active Rotarian in Seneca Falls, N.Y., was delighted to meet with Don A. Simpson, who was visiting a daughter in nearby Geneva, N.Y.
We conclude last month's distressing story of our classmate who, in 1932 as a medical student, accidentally stabbed himself with a needle that had been used on human tissue contaminated with a virulent organism. But to the surprise and joy of all, after three days in Dick's House, he returned to classes, his wound almost healed, and no complications occurred. Apparently the needle had not carried the pathogen, or Walter "Butch" Hector Modarelli, our class Joy, had a great immune system.
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