[A listing of deaths of which word has been receivedwithin the past month. Full notices may appear in thisissue or may appear in a later number.]
Bell, John D. '87, Nov. 12 Johnson, Stanley E. '87, Dec. Walker, James B. C. '99, Dec. 12 Cobb, Percival B. '04, Dec. 4 Leonard, Edward H. '07, Dec. 30 Stilphen, Cornelius M. '07, Jan. 8 Rollins, Carle E. '12, Jan. 3 Tirrell, Marshall T. '12, Dec. 9 Meader, Walton B. '15, Dec. 26 Felton, Lester M. '19, Dec. 25 Anderson, Arthur V. '21, Jan. 3 Pick, J. Richard '23, Dec. 8 Hamlin, Harlan R. '28, 1951 Barrington, John G. '31, Nov. 26 Moran, Thomas F. '37, Oct. 12 Lebovitz, Henry I. '43, Nov. 14 Marcley, Walter J. '02m, Nov. 8 Varney, George N. 013a, Dec. 11
1887
JOHN DANA BELL died November 12 in Boise, Idaho, at the the age of 90. The son of John Bell, 1852, and the grandson of Samuel Bell, 1793, he prepared for Dartmouth at Phillips Exeter Academy. In college he was a member of Psi Upsilon and graduated with Phi Beta Kappa honors.
Almost immediately he went West, first to Fort Collins, Colo., and then to Boise. Then under,the auspices of the New West Commission he taught at Midway, Utah, and later became postmaster at Teton, Utah. After a short time in California and Seattle he returned to Boise to become chief clerk in the Surveyor General's Office. From 1922 to his retirement in 1939 he headed the language department at the College of Idaho in Caldwell.
John Dana's wife Margaret died in 1952. He is survived by a son, John K. Bell, and four daughters, Mrs. Harry Folger, Mrs. Burnard C. York, Mrs. Ray McManimie, and Mrs. John Pemberton, with whom he lived at 2614 Davis St. in Boise.
1893
GUY WILBUR COX died at the New England Deaconess Hospital in Boston on December 9.
He was born in Manchester, N. H., January 19, 1871, the son of Charles E. and Evelyn (Randall) Cox. In college he was a member of Kappa Kappa Kappa and Phi Beta Kappa. After teaching school for one year he began the study of law and received his LL.B. from Boston University in 1896. In 1943 he received the honorary degree of LL.D. from Boston University and in the same year the degree of L.H.D. from Syracuse.
After law school he became associated with the law firm of Butler, Cox and Murchie in Boston and served as counsel for several insurance companies. In 1923 he joined John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. as vice president and general counsel. He became president in 1936 and chairman of the board in 1944, and retired in 1948.
One of the outstanding figures in Boston business circles, he was also active in educational and civic affairs. In 1902 he was elected a member of the Boston City Council, and was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives 1903-04, and state senator 1906-07. He also served as a member of the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention from 1917-19. He was widely traveled and widely read.
Mr. Cox was permanent president of the Class of 1893 and was serving the class as secretary and treasurer when he died. In 1923 he was president of the General Alumni Association. He served as a trustee and chairman of the board of Boston University for many years.
Mr. Cox was married on October 17, 1925, to Edith M. Paine who died in 1938. He is survived by two brothers, Louis S. Cox '96 and Channing H. Cox '01. Funeral services were held in the Daniel L. Marsh chapel at Boston University.
1895
ALLYN JONES CROSBY died at the Newport, R. I., Hospital on November 19. He was born in Brattleboro, Vt., February 7, 1874, the son of Edward C. and Emma (Wyman) Crosby.
From 1897 to 1921 he was superintendent and part owner of the Springfield, Vt., Electric Railway Co. He was then associated with the Legg wool brokerage firm in Boston until his retirement in 1932.
Well known in scholarly circles for his research on the USS Constellation, he was a member of the Newport Historical Society and the Naval Historical Foundation.
A.J. was married on June 3, 1897, to Maude Standish Coudray, who died in 1941. He is survived by his daughter Alene M. Crosby, a member of the faculty of Rogers High School in Newport.
1899
JAMES BRACKETT CREIGHTON WALKER died of pneumonia at Northfield, N. H., on December 12.
Jim was born September 19, 1876, in Newmarket, N. H., son of George F. and Alice (Brackett) Walker. He prepared for Dartmouth in the local high school, and returned after three years at Hanover to make his headquarters the rest of his life in the Newmarket area.
Lumbering was Jim's chief occupation. Aside from some operations connected with the Sable Lumbering Co. in Nova Scotia, his early efforts were in association with his brother John Walker, Thayer School '93. With typical enterprise he covered most of New Hampshire. His judgment, initiative, and industry brought him conspicuous success in his work in the forests of the state. He served once as vice president of the N. H. Lumber Dealers Association. For many years, also, Jim conducted a general store in Lee, together with incidental service as local postmaster and insurance agent. The store he gave up in 1940. From that date he was connected with the N. H. Highway Department until his retirement in 1950.
No member of the family of '99 was more loyal to its traditions than Jim Walker, and beginning with the 15th Reunion in Hanover he and Mrs. Walker were regular attendants on such occasions. A major interest in life had always been football. For three years he was a stalwart guard on the Dartmouth varsity, and he continued in later days to attend college games whenever possible, especially the epic contests between Harvard and Dartmouth.
Jim was married to Lulu Plummer in 1901, who died in 1950. He is survived by his daughter Marion Dorothy, now Mrs. Ernest J. H. Decato of Tilton, N. H., and by one granddaughter, Judith Ann.
1901
RUSH FREDERICK NEWCOMB of 14 Clinton Ave., New Providence, N. J., treasurer for many years of the Bell Telephone Laboratories, died on November 25 at the Overlook Hospital, Summit, N. J., of a heart ailment.
Rush was born in Norwich, Vt., June 23, 1878, the son of Frederick O. and Mary (Morse) Newcomb. He was a graduate of Thetford Academy and received his B.S. degree from Dartmouth with the Class of 1901.
After graduation he went to work for the Western Electric Co. in Chicago. He was later transferred to the New York office of the Bell Telephone Laboratories, following the merger of the two companies, and by diligent and untiring application to his various assignments became treasurer in 1938 and continued in that capacity until his retirement in 1943.
A resident of New Providence for many years, he had served on the School Council, and was mayor of the city for two terms, from 1920 to 1930. He was also treasurer of the Presbyterian Church for ten years.
On August 8, 1906, he married Fannie Kendall, who died in August 1953.
Rush Newcomb was one of the solid, substantial men of the class, of a quiet unassuming personality. He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Kingsbury Badger of South Weymouth, Mass. (wife of Kingsbury Badger '29) and Mrs. Charles Houk of Hazel Crest, Ill.
1902
FRANK PAYSON FRENCH died on November 3 in Manchester, N. H. He made his home at 81 South River Road in Manchester.
He was born in Bedford, N. H., February 7, 1880. After receiving his M.C.S. from Tuck School in 1905, he became connected with the International Shoe Co. in Manchester, and for 28 years was purchasing agent for the firm. He was a member of South Main Street Congregational church and served as deacon for many years.
Frank never married. He is survived by a sister, Mrs. Clarence M. Crowell of Bedford, N. H., a niece and three nephews.
1904
PERCIVAL BARTLETT COBB died at his home, 19 Church Rd., Levittown, N. Y., on December 4.
He was born in Newton, Mass., June 12, 1883, the son of Darius and Laura (Lillie) Cobb. After graduating from Dartmouth with Phi Beta Kappa rank, he attended Union Theological Seminary and was ordained in 1914. From 1914-15 he was pastor of the Charlestown, N. H., Congregational church. He then gave up the ministry for teaching and taught modern languages at various colleges and preparatory schools. With his wife he executed many paintings, some of which won critical recognition. He was the author of a dozen books, several volumes of poetry, and numerous political pamphlets. A spiritual man in the finest sense, Perce once said that he "hoped to be a religious leader of always increasing power and influence."
Perce was married on June 23, 1914, to Lillian C. M. Steers who survives him with six sons and three daughters.
1905
WALTER SIDNEY DILLON died on November 24, in the New England Hospital in Melrose, Mass., following a long illness which had nearly completely incapacitated him for several years.
Born in Fitchburg, he prepared for Dartmouth at the Fitchburg High School and Exeter Academy. He was the son of Margaret (Cavanaugh) and David M. Dillon. His father was founder of the D. M. Dillon Steam Boiler Works, and into this firm Walter stepped after his four years at Dartmouth. He was secretary of this concern when he was stricken with illness.
He had been a member of the Fay Club, Oak Hill Country Club, Aurora Lodge of Masons, and Fitchburg Lodge of Elks.
In college "Mary," as he was always called, was an outstanding football player. Indeed, as a member of the team which christened the Harvard Stadium, he had the distinction of being the first man to score on Harvard in the new stadium.
Walter never married and there is no record of any close relatives surviving.
1907
EDWARD HENRY LEONARD passed away on December 30 at his home at 1454 Mystic River Parkway, West Medford, Mass., after a short illness.
"Deac," as he was known to his classmates, was born in Boston May 4, 1884, and prepared for college at Phillips Andover Academy.
After graduating from college, he taught school at Rutland, Mass.; at Newport, N. H., and at Somersworth, N. H., where he became Superintendent of Schools. About 1920 he joined the faculty of the Medford, Mass., High School as teacher of mathematics and became successively head of the Mathematics Department, sub master and head master of the High School, which position he held for several years until his retirement in June 1954- He was devoted to his chosen profession of teaching, was a hard and conscientious worker, both as teacher and administrator, and was one of the most highly regarded leaders in his profession.
He was married in 1916 to Ethel Stewart of Somersworth, N. H. She survives him, together with a son Edward Jr. '42, now a teacher in the Hanover, N. H., High School; a daughter Virginia, Wellesley 1942, who is employed in Boston and resides with her mother in West Medford; and one grandson.
The Class of '07 was represented at services in Medford on January 2 by Albert Stevens and Dick Lane.
1911
THE REV. WILLIAM TAYLOR was the victim of an automobile accident on November 30. He with his daughter were visiting former friends in Danbury, N. H., when the car ahead of them turned into an intersection on the left, and in the crash which followed Taylor was fatally injured.
William Taylor was the oldest member of our class, being born on August 22, 1876, in Whittlesey, Cambridge, England. Following attendance at Bangor Theological Seminary, he entered Dartmouth at the beginning of our junior year. He was married in Great Harwood, England, on September 1, 1897, to Elizabeth Hadcroft. He had been pastor of the Hope Congregational Church in East Providence, R. I., from 1919 to 1931, and then after a period of five years at the Evangelical Church in Harvard, Mass., he returned to his Hope Church pastorate from which position he had recently retired. He had previously held pastorates in Danbury, N. H., Bangor, Me., Monson, Me., Boxford, Mass., and Brookfield, Vt.
Services were held at the Brookfield Congregational Church in Brookfield, Vt„ and burial was in the Brookfield Cemetery there.
Surviving members of his family include a daughter, Miss Gladys Taylor of East Providence; two sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth Hoyle and Mrs. Emile Hodgson, both of Pawtucket, R. I.; and nieces and nephews.
1912
CARLE ELLSWORTH ROLLINS died the morning of January 3, from a heart attack suffered in the street outside the building where his offices were located.
Carle was born at Dover, N. H., October 30, 1890, the son of Mabel Clara Crosby and Frank Ellsworth Rollins. Preparing at Dover High School, he entered college and graduated with the Class of 1912. He married Dorothy Alice Ridley at Dover, on September 25, 1920.
His business life was spent in the advertising business, - first with Crowell Publishing Co., and successively with the Scientific American and Good Housekeeping magazine.
He served for eighteen months as a pilot with the U. S. Air Force in France in World War I, with the rank of first lieutenant. Returning from the War, he was an account executive with the advertising agency of N. W. Ayer & Son for fourteen years and, since 1934 was secretary and account executive of J. M. Mathes Inc., the advertising agency headed by James M. Mathes '11, a fraternity brother of Carle in Beta Theta Pi.
Carle was Past Commander of the Manhasset Post of the American Legion and was a Mason.
Surviving him are his wife; his mother, Mrs. Frank E. Rollins, who made her home with him; and two sons, Carle E. Rollins Jr. and Dwight Hall Rollins.
MARSHALL TUCKER TIRRELL died in Weymouth, Mass., on December 9.
He was born in East Weymouth, June 9, 1890. He received his preparatory education at Weymouth High School, and entered Dartmouth, receiving his A.B. with the Class of 1912. While in college he was a member of Kappa Sigma Fraternity.
He was married to Ruth Hixon Carter at Winchendon, Mass., July 2, 1917; she died June 14, 1919. He married Beatrice Lydia Nash at East Weymouth, on October 14, 1922.
He was assistant to the treasurer and, subsequently, treasurer of the Town of Weymouth. He is survived by his widow and a daughter to whom condolences of the Class are extended.
1915
WALTON BERTRAM MEADER, 64, of 73 Fairview Rd., Lynnfield, Mass., prominent in Masonic circles and a Boston insurance broker, died on December 26 at Massachusetts General Hospital where he had been taken following a heat attack.
A native of Lynn, Walt attended Andover and Dartmouth and had figured prominently in our class activities in the Boston area for many years. He was a partner in the firm of Barker-Meader & Co., at 112 Water St., Boston.
Walt was a member of Golden Fleece Lodge of Masons, Mt. Carmel Lodge of Masons, Aleppo Temple, Mystic Order of Shrine, Olivet Commandery, Lafayette Lodge of Perfection of Boston and Giles Fonda Yates Council.
He was also active in Mt. Olivet Chapter, Massachusetts Consistory, Sutton Royal Arch Chapter, Boston Life Underwriters Association and the Lynn Rotary Club.
He leaves his wife, Mrs. Beatrice (Humphrey) Meader; two daughters, Miss Vivian Meader of Lynnfield and Mrs. Elizabeth Curtis of Concord, and two grandsons.
Services were held at the Richardson Funeral Home in Lynn. A number of classmates attended and flowers were sent from the class.
1918
DANIEL CHARLES GRAY died in Lorain, Ohio, on October 21 from an embolism following an operation.
Dan was born in McKeesport, Pa., May 1, 1895, the son of Wellsley and Caroline (Fell) Gray. In college he was a member of Delta Tau Delta.
From 1919 to 1921 he was in the sales department of Strong, Carlisle & Hammond in Cleveland and then for a year with National Tube Co. in Pittsburgh. In 1922 he became a partner in the Lorain Creamery Co. in Lorain, which connection continued until his death.
On July 25, 1928, Dan was married to Marjorie Dickinson, who survives him, with a daughter Jane and a son Dickinson, now a junior at Michigan State University. Their home is at 931 Arch wood Ave., Lorain.
Dan and Marjorie attended the class reunion in 1948 and the last one, both of which he enjoyed tremendously. A fine man, Dan will be missed by a host of friends.
1919
LAURENCE PATTON died in Covina, Calif., on July 28 at the age of 59, according to word received from his brother Francis of Rancho Santa Fe, Calif. Nothing is known as to the cause of his death or of his recent activities. Larry transfered to Hanover from the University of Chicago in 1916, and was a member of DKE. He left in 1917 to join the Navy. In World War II he was commissioned in the Army Air Force and served in the European Theatre as a captain from 1943 to 1945. He lived in New York City recently but was not active in College affairs.
1920
ROSCOE OSBORNE ELLIOTT, one of the most admired and respected members the Class of 1920, passed away at the Massachusetts Memorial Hospital in Boston on December 8. The victim of a coronary thrombosis last May, Roc had since been in uncertain health and had been unable to carry on with his usual vigor as vice president of Comer Avondale Mills. Just a few weeks before his death he tendered his resignation as an officer and director of the company, but was persuaded to continue in an advisory capacity. He had been with Comer-Avondale since 1928.
Roc packed ceaseless and intensive activity for good things in the 57 years of his life. He was an institution as treasurer of the Class of 1920, having served in that capacity since 1922; and he worked for Dartmouth in a variety of other ways — as a member of the Alumni Council and as president of the Boston Alumni Association, to name but two of many. With all his loyalty to the College and his untiring efforts on behalf of his prosperous business, he found time also for important civic service. One-time resident of Arlington, Mass., Roc had been a selectman of the town, chairman of the trustees of the Robbins Library there, trustee of Symmes-Arlington Hospital, and president of the Arlington Boys Club.
Roscoe Elliott was born June 8, 1898, in Corning, Kansas, the son of Wealthea (Johnston) and Robert James Elliott. The family moved East in his early years and Roc came to Dartmouth from Somerville (Mass.) High School. At Hanover he played some varsity hockey, joined Phi Gamma Delta and Casque and Gauntlet, and commenced his long and popular career in class affairs.
At the time of his death Roc lived in South Duxbury, Mass., near the childhood home of his wife' Laura (Lewis), whom he married in 1923 and who has ever since been known affectionately to the Class as Dolly. She survives him,'as do their two children, Audrey (Mrs. John A. White of Cleveland), and Rich- ard O. Elliott '49.
Funeral services were held in Brockton, Mass., on December 10 and committal took place at the Mayflower Cemetery in Duxbury. Charlie Sargent, Eben Wallace, Mugs Morrill and George Macomber attended the services on behalf of the Class.
DONALD GILBERT HARRIS died at the Veterans Hospital at White River Junction, Vt., on November 16, after an illness of a few months. He was a veteran of World War I and a military funeral was held at Oak Hill Cemetery, Bellows Falls, Vt., on November 19, by the Pierce-Lawton Post of the American Legion. The flag which draped his casket was folded by Commander Johnson and presented to his mother, Mrs. F. G. Harris, of School St., Bellows Falls.
His services were attended by his daughter Ann Harris Stallard and her husband Sefton Stallard of Morristown, N. J., and by his numerous relatives and friends.
Don was born January 12, 1897, in Jersey City, N. J. He attended Dartmouth, where he was a member of DKE, for only one year, leaving to enlist in the Navy. He was a member of the Navy crew on the SS Leviathan and served on a number of voyages transporting troops to Europe.
After the war he was connected with the brokerage firm of Dominick & Dominick on Wall St., for a number of years; was married and owned a home in Madison, N. J. Being stricken with arthritis, he retired for a few years to live with his mother in Bellows Falls, Vt. After partially recovering his health, he took a position with the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad in New Jersey and Maryland, but returned to Vermont in his final illness.
Although Don only attended Dartmouth one year, he was one of its most loyal alumni supporters. He had the happy faculty of cheerful living and his many friends at Dartmouth miss him.
WADE W. SMITH
1923
JOSEPH RICHARD PICK died in Chicago on December 8. His home was at 618 Grace St., Chicago. Joe was born in Chicago, the son of the late Richard Pick and Jenny M. Pick, who survives him. His preparatory work was done at the Francis W. Parker School in Chicago which has sent many fine graduates to Dartmouth.
Early, as an undergraduate, Joe displayed his musical talent. Several of the songs which haunt our memory of the musical productions for the carnivals and proms of 1919 to 1923 were of his composition. Music was also to be heard from his dormitory rooms because his love of music and genial spirit attracted all other kindred spirits on the Campus. He was an excellent student and graduated near the top of the class.
After graduation, Joe entered the textile and upholstering firm of Pick & Heller Co., Chicago, which his father had established. Until his retirement in 1952, he had served the company as sales manager and executive. In addition to making a name for himself in the textile and fabric field, Joe had important real estate interests in Chicago and for a number of years had headed, as president and general manager, the corporation owning the sixteen-story Westminster Office Building.
His marriage in 1936 to Ida Krehm of Toronto brought richer happiness to Joe and a still deeper interest in the musical arts. His bride was even then a pianist of renown and today has become a virtuoso of international acclaim. After his retirement from business, Joe took great delight in accompanying her on concert tours. In this manner, they had spent several summers abroad and early last fall had returned from a truly triumphant tour of Central America. Nor did Joe neglect his own musical talent through the years. Under the auspices of the Swedish Society of Composers and Authors of which he was a member, there was published a lovely waltz which he had composed while in Europe and which has since been recorded by Decca in their record collection Candlelight Memories and is about to be re-recorded as a separate composition. In 1951-52, he had produced a stirring patriotic anthem, both the words and music being his own, and which he had entitled Fighters for Freedom.
Joe had served his class for many years as Assistant Class Agent and also as a member of the Executive Committee. Earlier this year, he had acted as special editor of an issue of the Skiddoo.
In addition to his mother and widow, two sisters survive. But he will always survive in the hearts of his classmates as a humanitarian and for his infectious good will and great loyalties.
In his testament, a substantial grant is made to the Trustees of the College to establish a student loan to be known and administered as the "Richard Pick Fund" in honor of his father.
1928
NORMAN CECIL NASH died November 16 at Water Isle, Virgin Islands, of a heart attack. He had retired from business July 1 and moved to the Virgin Islands.
Born in East Orange, N. J., on October 30, 1906, Norm graduated from Culver Military Academy. He left Dartmouth in his sophomore year to get married. His son Donald was the first child of a '28er. Norm was a member of Alpha Delta Phi.
Norm joined the Kudner Agency in New York in 1936 as a copywriter and was vice president and co-copy chief at the time of his retirement. He pioneered many of the techniques of television commercials.
Norm served in the Navy from 1942 to 1945 and for fifteen months was air combat intelligence officer on the aircraft carrier, USS Card on submarine patrol in the Atlantic. He was a lieutenant commander in the Naval Reserve.
He was a long-time resident of Easton, Conn., and a former rear commodore of the Cedar Point Yacht Club.
His first wife, Almira Smith, died, and on December 22, 1950, he married Mrs. Dorothy Liberton Jenkins, who survives him. He also leaves his two sons, Donald and Robert of New York City.
1929
JOHN PARKER died on November 27 while visiting friends in Bath, Maine, where he had lived since 1937.
John was born in Hudson, N. H., and graduated from the Concord, N. H., high school as class president and salutatorian. During his years there, he participated in, and was president of, both the Debating Society and the Dramatic Club, played football and baseball and was captain of the latter team his senior year.
While in college, John participated in various sports, which he loved, but his outstanding play in baseball is, perhaps, best remembered by most of us. He was a member of Delta Omicron Lambda, Kappa Phi Kappa and Phi Beta Kappa, was president of Phi Sigma Kappa his senior year, and a member of Spinx and Green Key. He majored in history.
After leaving college, John received a Master's degree at Harvard and did further graduate work, following which he returned to Hanover and taught in the public schools for six years before becoming superintendent of Schools in Bath in 1937.
At the outbreak of World War II, he left the school post to go with the Hyde Windlass Company in Bath as its war production manager. After the war, he remained with the company as its materials agent, and was associated with the company at the time of his death.
Many of John's classmates will be interested and pleased to know that he played baseball, until five years ago, for a team sponsored by the Bath Iron Works - along with two of his sons.
He was a member of the Bath Personnel Service Commission since its inception in 1943 and was a corporator of the Bath Savings Institution, a trustee of the Patten Free Library Association, a director of the YMCA and past president of Rotary and Colonial Clubs. He was also a member of the Red Cross Executive Committee, a trustee of Memorial Hospital from 1945 to 1953 and a former director and secretary of the Golf Club.
He leaves his wife, Virginia Musk Parker; a daughter, Virginia of Boston, and three sons, Everett H. '52 and John Jr. '54, both in the Army, and Gerry H., at home.
Funeral services were held from the Winter Street Congregational Church in Bath and burial was in the family lot in Hanover. In this connection, it seems fitting to us that we conclude with the following quotation from a letter recently received from Bob Monahan:
"John Parker came home today to rest where he longed to be when the end came. The sun was bright but the wind across the valley was chill as his Hanover friends gathered in the Old Dartmouth Cemetery for committal services.
"John Dickey, standing beside the flower-blanketed burial plot flanked with fresh snow, talked with us briefly about John Parker as 'my classmate.' He concluded, 'John Parker was his own best monument.' Thereupon, simple but most appropriate services were conducted by the Reverend Harland Lewis, who you may recall directed our Memorial Service at the 25th."
1937
THOMAS FRANCIS MORAN died suddenly at Memorial Hospital, Nashua, N. H., on October 12. Death was due to postoperative complications of an operation for intestinal cancer.
Tom was born in Nashua on January 17, 1916, the son of Maude C. and the late Thomas F. Moran, an attorney. He was educated in Nashua schools, received his degree from Dartmouth in 1937, and got his law degree from Boston University School of Law in At Dartmouth, Tom was a member of Phi Sigma Kappa and majored in sociology.
During World War II, he served as a special agent with the Counter Intelligence Corps. Tom was a member of the law firm of Hamblett, Moran and Hamblett of Nashua and was highly esteemed as an attorney and as a good neighbor of his fellow townspeople. He was a communicant of St. Patrick's Church and was a member of the New Hampshire and Nashua Bar Associations; he was also one of the Twenty Associates.
Tom is survived by his wife Lois and three children, Herb, Peter and Gael; his mother; three sisters; and a brother Kenneth of the Class of 1929; also several nieces and nephews, including Ken Moran Jr. '52 and John Moran '54.
Burial services were held at the family plot in Hudson, N. H., on October 12.
1943
HENRY IRVING LEBOVITZ died suddenly on November 14, in the Prince George County (Md.) Hospital.
He was born in Baltimore, March 5, 1922, the son of Nathan and Augusta (Aaronson) Lebovitz. He prepared for college at the Park School in Baltimore.
After serving in the Navy as an ensign during the war, Henry became a partner in the Peabody Construction Co. in Washington and made his home in Chevy Chase, Md.
Henry is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Lebovitz of 813 Lake Drive, Baltimore, who recently established at Tuck School the Charles I. Lebovitz Memorial Award in memory of their other Dartmouth son, who graduated in 1952 and who died on January 2, 1955, while serving as an ensign in the Navy.
AN ICE STATUE of Dr. Jonas Salk was contributed by Dartmouth Outing Club members versed in snow sculpture, at the beginning of the March of Dimes campaign last month, in ceremonies at Mount Mansfield, Vt. C. Abbott Meader '57 of Brooklyn, N. Y., designed the statue of the discoverer of the Salk vaccine. Members of the Ski Team demonstrated their skill on the slopes as their part in the ice show that was presented on the nationwide TV program on January 4.
Don H. Collins '56 of Eatonsville, Md., was in charge of Dartmouth participation.
GUY WILBUR COX '93
ROSCOE OSBORNE ELLIOTT '20