Class Notes

1928

NOVEMBER 1998 George A. Bell
Class Notes
1928
NOVEMBER 1998 George A. Bell

yell and proved that he could put on both legs of his trousers at the same time. My remarks a couple of months ago regarding the hazardous moment of the day when it is necessary to balance on one leg while inserting the other in the leg of one's trousers brought some response. A note from a gentleman from another class told a rather ribald story of some character who leapt in the air with a hell of a

I checked up on Bob Reed, who came to the reunion from California by train and planned to return the same way, including a stopover to fish somewhere. He went by train to St. Paul, expecting to go by boat on the .Mississippi to St. Louis, but the water was too high for the boat to get under the bridges, so he was flown to St. Louis. After a few days there he flew on home. The trip must have been more arduous than planned, but he said he felt fine. He is planning another trip next year to attend the "75th reunion at Culver. Sometimes, it seems to me, my neighbors, when they see me, look a little incredulous as though, if I'm still around, time must indeed be standing still. Bob would be a more persuasive example than I.

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