SAMUEL E. ARONOWITZ '11, recipient of the annual Distinguished Citizen's Award from Fort Orange Post, American Legion, of Albany, N. Y.
ROSWELL MAGILL '16, elected President of the University Club, New York City.
FRANCIS T. CHRISTY '18, elected President of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences.
EDGAR A. FARNUM '26, elected President of the Boston Sales Executives Club.
HAROLD p. TREFETHEN '26, elected Vice President and Comptroller of the National Shawmut Bank of Boston.
LEONARD w. DOOB '29, Professor of Psychology at Yale, recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship to study "the beliefs and attitudes of German-speaking minority groups."
HERMAN T. SCHNEEBELI '30, Republican, elected U. S. Congressman from the 17th Pennsylvania district, in a special election.
CHARLES E. ODEGAARD '32, President of the University of Washington, elected President of the International Council for Philosophy and Humanistic Studies.
j. CLARENCE DAVIES JR. '34, named by Mayor Wagner to be Temporary Chairman of the New York City Housing and Redevelopment Board.
ORVIL E. DRYFOOS '34, elected a Trustee of the Rockefeller Foundation.
HENRY M. HASEROT JR. '40, elected President and Chief Executive Officer of the Haserot Company, Cleveland.
MONTE G. BASBAS '44, elected President of the City Clerks Association of Massachusetts.
c. WILLIAM DRAKE '45, elected a Trustee of Newark Academy.
DANIEL T. CARROLL '47, elected a Partner in the management consulting firm of Booz, Allen and Hamilton.
DONALD B. HYATT '50, producer-director-writer of the NBC television show Meet Mr. Lincoln, recently given a Freedoms Foundation Award, on top of the Robert E. Sherwood Television Award, an Emmy Award, a Sylvania Award, and the Thomas Alva Edison Award.
THOMAS E. O'CONNELL '50, named Directing Head of the first Massachusetts State Junior College at Pittsfield, pilot unit of a proposed system of nine such community colleges.
HOWARD R. WEBBER '56, named Editor of the University of North Carolina Press.
PROF. HERBERT w. HILL '41h, elected President of the New Hampshire Historical Society.
PROF. ROBERT E. RIEGEL '35h, recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship to study the history of American feminism.