When the clarion call went out from Washington last year for robust young men to staff the new Agency for International Development, among the successful applicants was our own Scott Rutherford. He said adieu to the Chase Manhattan Bank in New York, where he'd been in the international and credit departments, and arrived on the New Frontier last June. Promoted this spring, Scott is one of the two A.I.D. officials who parcel out capital loans to Pakistan. Working with an engineer and a lawyer, he's given the green light to money for such projects as an electric power station for the city of Karachi and a power distribution system in East Pakistan. Other possibilities are loans for port and airport improvements and to Pakistani development banks which make development loans up to $250,000 for projects too small for A.I.D. Scott says he hopes to travel to Pakistan within the next few months, to check on the administration of approved projects and investigate future lending possibilities.
Cal Bristol, pointing toward a 1964 finish for his Ph.D. program, this summer is heading a mining exploration program in County Galway, Ireland. He's studying in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and is planning to pilot his own plane for a visit to the U.S. Al Petrone will take a surgery residency at Wayne County General Hospital in Wayne, Mich. Newell (Mickey) Stultz this spring finished his Ph.D. course work in Boston University's African Studies Program. He'll teach American government at B.U. this summer, and in September he, Betsy and one-year-old Elliot depart for Pretoria, South Africa, for a year of dissertation research on a Ford Foundation foreign area training fellowship.
Next month Dick Braum begins a one-year appointment as resident orthopedic surgeon at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, and from there he'll move on to a year at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York as a senior fellow in orthopedic surgery and surgery of the hand. Dick and Sue had their first child, Jennifer Leigh, December 28. Dr. Jay Brooks reports he's "still single and happy" and is beginning a part-time Master of Education program at the University of Massachusetts.
Bob Gudbranson graduated from Western Reserve University Law School last June and was admitted to the Ohio bar in October. He's now with Nicola and Marsh, a Cleveland firm. John and Sue Vaughan have moved to Raleigh, N. C., and John has been promoted to food service director of Wake County Memorial Hospital. The Vaughans have a second daughter, Mary Coffin, known to family and friends as Marcy.
Bob Ankerson took the hand of Carol Ann Smith, Skidmore '58, in New York City March 17. She's from Garden City, Long Island, and is an assistant to the director of personnel of Compton Advertising, Inc. Bob is with Time, Inc.
Pete Gulick writes to urge '55s to add a little extra to their alumni fund contributions this year, in memory of Paul Tiemer, who died in February of cancer. Pete inquired about the possibility of a class memorial to the College, but was told that the alumni fund would be the best way to give to Dartmouth in Paul's honor.
Dave and Chaile Steinberg had their second son, Jeffrey Scott, April 12; Dave is a Philadelphia lawyer in the firm of Steinberg, Steinbrook, Lavine and Gorelizk, specializing in Federal income taxes, estate planning, and work connected with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Woody and Nancy Goss also had a second boy, Charles Lane II, named after his grandfather, C. Lane Goss '25.
Ben and Sue Sutton had their third, second daughter, Karen Lee, July 30 of last year, which was the Suttons' sixth anniversary; Ben is vice president of Sutton Insurance Agency, Inc., in Cleveland, and also is first vice president of the Aurora Kiwanis Club and is acting in the Aurora Community Theatre's most recent smash hit. Boband Nancy Hadley had their third girl, Ruth, November 22; Bob received in September from the American Institute for Property and Liability Underwriters the designation of Chartered Property and Casualty Under-writer (C.P.C.U.). Jim and Maryellen Tremblay welcomed their first, Christopher James, November 15; Jim is an accountant with General Electric in Schenectady, and the Tremblays moved into a new home there last month.
Web Wilde is with Fram International, Ltd., in Nassau, the Bahamas. It might be difficult to get to the Princeton game from there, but Web, of coarse, will make it. Bill Anagnoson is a teacher-coach at Livonia Central School, Livonia, N. Y. BobGregg is in the overseas operations section of General Motors in New York City. PatMcCarthy is project director of the Boston Redevelopment Authority. Mel Tatsapaugh is an architectural draftsman in San Francisco. Jerry Daniell is a teaching fellow at Harvard.
Dick Kidde is in Chicago as an assistant buyer for Montgomery Ward & Co. JackSickler is in New Haven as a salesman for International Business Machines. Ted Voorfaees is an Army captain at Fort Benning, Ga. Herb Chandler is an Air Force contract specialist, a civil service job, located at IBM's Space Guidance Center in Owego, N. Y. George Chesel is laboratory supervisor at Louis A. Weiss Memorial Hospital in Chicago. Mike Fletcher is a captain at Rockport Air Force Base in Texas. Ralph Sautter is a commercial credit analyst at State Street Bank and Trust Co. in Boston.
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