Letter from Sao-Ke Alfred Sze, Chinese Legation, Washington, to Dr. Alfred E. Stearns June 3, 1926
Dublin Core
Title
Letter from Sao-Ke Alfred Sze, Chinese Legation, Washington, to Dr. Alfred E. Stearns June 3, 1926
Subject
Letter from Sao-Ke Alfred Sze, Chinese Legation, Washington, to Dr. Alfred E. Stearns June 3, 1926
Transcription
June 3, 1926
Dr. Alfred E. Stearns, Principal
Phillips Academy
Andover, Massachusetts
Dear Dr. Stearns:
I have just received your letter of June 2nd, and I can well appreciate your anxiety in the matter. It is much more difficult to place a girl than a boy.
Since you know Miss Bickford, I think the arrangement is a good one. Of course the best thing to do is to get a member of the faculty at Elmira College to take Mary in for the summer and tutor her. But this I find impossible for the coming summer. I am also writing to Miss French to day. A copy of my letter to her is enclosed herewith.
We shall probably be in Ithaca after the 20th and remain there until about September 10th. There is some possibility of my meeting Mr. Robinson in Ithaca when I go up to Cornell for my Class Reunion next week. I am anxious to tell him that Mary’s affair is now happily arranged.
I am,
Yours sincerely,
June 3, 1926.
Miss Ernestine French
Executive Secretary
Elmira College
Elmira, New York
My dear Miss French:
Dr. Stearns writes me that he has now made arrangements with the Principal of Sea Pines School to take Mary in for the summer, so she will not come to Ithaca for the summer.
I thank you for the trouble you have gone to to make arrangements for her. Please also express my thanks to Miss
I am,
Yours sincerely,
Dr. Alfred E. Stearns, Principal
Phillips Academy
Andover, Massachusetts
Dear Dr. Stearns:
I have just received your letter of June 2nd, and I can well appreciate your anxiety in the matter. It is much more difficult to place a girl than a boy.
Since you know Miss Bickford, I think the arrangement is a good one. Of course the best thing to do is to get a member of the faculty at Elmira College to take Mary in for the summer and tutor her. But this I find impossible for the coming summer. I am also writing to Miss French to day. A copy of my letter to her is enclosed herewith.
We shall probably be in Ithaca after the 20th and remain there until about September 10th. There is some possibility of my meeting Mr. Robinson in Ithaca when I go up to Cornell for my Class Reunion next week. I am anxious to tell him that Mary’s affair is now happily arranged.
I am,
Yours sincerely,
June 3, 1926.
Miss Ernestine French
Executive Secretary
Elmira College
Elmira, New York
My dear Miss French:
Dr. Stearns writes me that he has now made arrangements with the Principal of Sea Pines School to take Mary in for the summer, so she will not come to Ithaca for the summer.
I thank you for the trouble you have gone to to make arrangements for her. Please also express my thanks to Miss
I am,
Yours sincerely,
Creator
Sao-Ke Alfred Sze
Publisher
Phillips Academy
Date
June 3, 1926
Rights
All Rights Reserved by Phillips Academy
Language
English
Type
Correspondence