Were all the stars of our story for this issue to be included on one team it would be a stellar attraction indeed. The only problem - or at least the major one - would be who would call the signals and who would take out the opposition and support the ball carrier. With so many leaders it might be a mite difficult to decide which way to go all at the same time.
Al Butler, formerly with the J. Walter Thompson Co., has moved over to Benton and Bowles as senior vice president and director. In his new post he will share responsibilities on General Foods and other accounts.
In an unusual move Roy Coppedge, by his own choice, becomes general counsel of National Distillers and Chemical Corp. after four years as president of the same. Roy, who joined the company in 1953, formerly was of the law firm serving as its outside general counsel and wanted to "return to the practice of law."
Of particular note is the knowledge that Raphael Hillyer is a member of Juilliard Quartet, proud possession of the outstanding School of Music of the same name.
Anniversaries are becoming the order of the day for our classmates. Latest to receive an accolade in this regard is KenLangler who in February celebrated twentyfive years with the Phoenix of Hartford Insurance Co. In recent years he has been a member of the home office staff of the company.
Congratulations also are forthcoming to Ed Whitmore who has just moved up to vice president for corporate planning of Indian Head Mills, Inc. and to Dr. Bill McLaughlin who has taken over as the head of the newly created Office of Graduate Medicine at San Francisco's Presbyterian Medical Center. From 1952 until 1960 Bill was professor of Urology at the Medical School in Hanover.
In Bay Shore, N. Y., John Morrison was unanimously elected vice president of the school board; Harry Coronis was on the Nashua, N. H., No. 1 curling team which won the Merrimack Bowl; Len Florsheim, president of Robertson Photo-Mechanix, Inc. broke into print with a paper on "How Useful is Electrostatic Printing." His paper before the Fifth Visual Communications Congress appeared in the Reproduction Engineer.
It was good to have a note from Ed Hyde who wrote: "Russ Capelle and I see each other regularly, he as professor of History and I as head of medical service of Norwich University. Ran across a boy at Norwich with a familiar name - James Fortune. Turned out to be son of Jim Fortune. See Wendell Harding, dean of Vermont College in Montpelier, occasionally."
New addresses: Roy A. Adams, 259 N. Ridge. Town of Rye, Port Chester, N. Y.; Arthur K. Atkinson Jr., 1734 N. Clark St., Chicago 14, Ill.; Brig. Gen. John G. Bouker, USMC, Quarters M-6, Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego, Calif.; Dr. Henry R. Bradford, 2905 Cleveland Ave., N.W., Washington 8, D. C.; Richard Or. Brierley, 7360 Sanderson PL, Cincinnati 43, Ohio; Paul S. Cleaveland, 28 Dunbarton Dr., Nashua, N. H.; Elmer H. Cook Jr., 2415 S. 15th St., Las Vegas, Nev.; William L. Essex, RW 2145898. 234 Cicero Ave., San Antonio, Texas; Joseph w. Handrahan, vice president, Martin & Hettrour Contracting Co., 808 Farmers Bank Bldg., Pittsburgh 1, ■)! Pa. (133 Eade St., Glenshaw, Pa.); v M' Tayne, Real Estate, 1140 Hiway 101, r?Sf \far Calif. (140 12th St., Del Mar); Frederic 1 34 Lester Ave., Shillington, Pa.; Ralph I■ u itl'es 28749 Edgedale Rd„ Pepper Pike 24, E-,PU I Jackson Smith, 15 Sylvan Lane, Old 9vrirh Conn.; James B. Whipple, Educator, ?ret Director for Center of the Study of Lib. Jf,: for Adults, CSLEA, 4819 S. Greenwood, Chicago 15, HI- (5429 S. Blackstone Ave., Chi- cago 15)-
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