(A listing of deaths of which word has been receivedwithin the past month. Full notice mayappear in this issue or a later one.).
Cristy, Horace W. '00, Apr. 3 Dillingham, Paul S. '01, Mar. 22 MacKinnon, Harry W. '02, Apr. 26 Richards, John E. 'O5, Apr. 2 Brown, Allan '07, Apr. 15 Rutherford, Seymour S. 'OB, Apr. 13 Beal, Henry S. '10, Apr. 6 Griswold, Ernest H. 'll, May 3 Butler, John B. '16, Apr. 15 Gioiosa, Ernest A. '16, Apr. 2 Goss, Alfred E. '17, Apr. 7 Gregory, George '17, Apr. 4 Maclntyre, Arthur P. '17, Apr. 28 Campbell, Thomas P. '18, Apr. 8 Chipman, John H. '19, Apr. 18 McMahon, William G. '19, Apr. 25 Winslow, Basil L. '20, May 2 King, Clarence A. '21, Apr. 23 Leonard, Eugene W. '21, Apr. 28 Hoyt, Carter H. '22, Apr. 23 Yates, Edwin L. '25 Hoch, Horace G. '29, March Adams, Charles H. '30, Mar. 20 Sigler, C. Russell '30, Apr. 10 Sabary, Victor E., Jr. '36, Sept. 29, 1971 Olson, Robert E. '37, Apr. 21 Whiting, Samuel '41, Apr. 25 Kingsley, Buell C. '45, Mar. 30 McLaughlin, John T. '46, Apr. 16 Harkness, Thomas M. Jr., '45N, Dec. 11, 1971 Boyden, Frank L. '49 Hon., Apr. 25 Jaffe, William B. '64 Hon., Apr. 25
1899
BURT FRANKLIN JENNESS was born in Pittsfield, N. H., June 24, 1876 and died in EL Paso, Texas on October 13, 1971.
He was graduated from Dartmouth Medical School in 1899 with the M.D. degree, and was the last surviving member of his class. He interned at Massachusetts State Hospital, Tewksbury, Mass., then opened an office in Haverhill, Mass. He served in the U. S. Navy Medical Corps from 1902 to 1914 and was retired for physical disability. He was reactivated during World War I and was retired with the rank of Lieutenant Commander.
In 1917 he joined the faculty of the University of Texas at El Paso where he was an assistant professor in the Mining and Biology Departments until 1949. He was Director of the Health Service until his retirement in 1957 when he was made Director Emeritus. Dr. Jenness was a member of the A.M.A., Texas State and El Paso County Medical Societies, and the American Legion.
He was the author of five books of verse and numerous medical and historical articles published in newspapers and magazines. He wrote the lyrics to the songs "Men O' Mines" and "El Paso is Calling, Calling You."
His first wife, Amy Jane Baker, died in 1944. He is survived by his second wife, Roseva (Loring), whom he married in 1949, two nephews and three nieces.
Buriel was in Fort Bliss National Cemetery with military honors. Casket bearers were ten El Paso physicians who had been in his premed classes.
1900
The Class of 1900 has lost another of its stalwart and able members. HORACE WAKEFIELD CRISTY passed away April 3, 1972 at his home in Worcester, Mass.
Horace was a graduate of Monson (Mass.) Academy and entered Dartmouth in the fall of 1896. In college he was a member of K K K, the Mandolin Club, the varsity track team and ' Minstrel Show. After graduation he became associated with his father's newspaper, The Worcester Telegram. Since 1928 he had devoted himself exclusively to family affairs, especially, the management of its real estate in the center of Worcester and the supervision of other investments. He was a member of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, Worcester Art Museum, International Center, Republican Club of Mass., and the Worcester Science Museum.
"Hod" traveled extensively, selecting the late winter and early spring months for trips to warmer regions such as Jamaica, Florida, Arizona, Hawaii and the Mediterranean. He was a firm believer in exercise, four hours a day being his normal quota in the forms of swimming, horseback riding, and walking. He was the peripetetic of the Class, a role made more satisfactory by the company of his three dogs. Even at class reunions and roundups Hod maintained his rigorous physical discipline. In 1907 he married Caro Ellsworth, who died in 1967.
Private funeral services were held under the supervision of the Sessions Funeral Home on Pleasant Street. His sole survivor is a sister, Miss Edna Cristy of Worcester.
1902
HARRY WALTER MACKINNON died in Clearwater, Fla., on April 26, 1972 at age 91.
Harry retired in 1935 after a career in the leather goods business in Springfield, Ohio. At one time he was president of the National Association of Small Leather Goods.
Mrs. MacKinnon died in January 1962. Survivors include his son Harry '34 and a grandchild.
1907
ALLAN BROWN died April 15 at the Austin Nursing Home, Warner, N. H., after a brief illness. He was born April 4, 1885 in Concord, Mass., and entered Dartmouth from Concord High School. He was on the varsity track team and a member of Sigma Chi.
Allan married Ethel G. Emery on June 30, 1913. A daughter Ethel was born on July 30, 1914, and Mrs. Brown died the following day. In June 1923 Allan married Margaret Wood of Arden, Del.
Allan's occupations since graduation have included: a retail grain and feed business, a connection with the Automotive Electric Co. of Boston, a period as a social worker in the Norfolk Prison Colony, and most recently operation of Lakeside Summer Camps and Locust Farm Camps in East Andover, N. H. Allan's winter home for the past 30 years was in Anna Marie, Fla.
Survivors include his daughter, Mrs. Ethel B. Lindley of East Andover, two grandchildren, a sister Carol, and two brothers: Roger W. 05' and H. Whittemore. Funeral services were held April 18 at the East Andover Congregational Church. Representing our Class, Robert Kenyon and Lura, with Harriet Ahern, attended the services.
The sympathy of the Class is extended to his family. Allan was a very loyal Dartmouth man throughout the years and a memorial fund is being established by his brother Roger Brown '05, to which . his friends may contribute.
1908
SEYMOUR SUFFEL RUTHERFORD died April 13, at Deven Convalescent Home, Deven, Pa. "S.S.", as we affectionately knew him, was bora November 17, 1885 at Waddington, N. Y., and prepared for college at Waddington High School. In college his fraternity was Delta Tau Delta. He took the first year at Tuck School.
Following graduation he spent four years in Idaho and Spokane, Wash., learning the lumber business. He then moved to Detroit and became partner in two wholesale lumber companies successively. In 1923 he moved to Philadelphia and organized S. S. Rutherford and Co., Lumber, which he conducted until 1953 when he retired to live in Waddington. During this period he made his home in Swarthmore, Pa.
S.s. was past president of Philadelphia Wholesale Lumber Dealers Association and a member of the Sawdust Club of Philadelphia. He had served as president of Swarthmore Borough Council and as trustee of Swarthmore Presbyterian Church. He is past president of the Dartmouth Alumni Clubs of Detroit and of Philadelphia.
S.S. was married in August 1916 to Edith Wallace Keatley of Beckley, Va., who passed away in February, 1971. They had four sons. Surviving are Seymour S. Jr. '39, William Wallace '40, Edwin K. '48, and nine grandchildren. A fourth son, Donald 8., was killed in an airplane training exercise. Services for S.S. were private, with interment in Waddington. The Class conveys sincere condolences to his sons and grandchildren. He will be sorely missed.
1910
HENRY STARR BEAL died April 6 in Hightstown, N. J. He entered with the Class of 1910, but after sophomore year transferred to the University of Berlin in Germany where he studied music and architecture.
Upon his return from Germany he joined the Jones and Lamson Machinery Co. in Springfield, Vt., where he became general manager. In 1933 he became president of the Sullivan Machinery Company in Chicago, Ill. In 1939 he moved to Worcester, Mass., as vice president of the Heald Machinery Co. and in 1941 he became vice president of the C. B. Cottrell Co. in Westerly, R. I.
During his retirement years he lived near Windsor, Vt:, and served on the board of directors of the Saint Gaudens Memorial in nearby Cornish, N. H. During these years he attended many concerts, lectures and theater productions at Dartmouth, developed several close and lasting friendships among present and retired members of the faculty, and followed with interest and enthusiasm some of the more recent changes which have taken place at Dartmouth. During the 1960's he spent the winter months in Oaxaca, Mexico, which became a second and cherished home to him. In 1970, due to failing health, he moved to Meadow Lakes in Hightstown.
Survivors include his widow and three daughters.
HENRY CLINTON HUTCHINS died March 3 in Hamden, Conn., where he lived at 15 Broadfield Rd. Henry was born January 19, 1889 in Boston. He prepared for college at Volkmann School. After graduation he studied at Yale and received his M.A. degree in 1913. He then taught at Lafayette College. In 1924 he earned a Ph.D. at Columbia University. When he retired he was a Research Associate and an Honorary Curator, Defoe and Swift Collections, at Yale University Library. His interest in literature continued and in 1910's 50-year Reunion Book he reported that though semi-retired he continued his research work in 18th Century English literature.
Henry's interest in Dartmouth and the Class was always evident. He could be counted on to be at each Reunion.
He was married June 16, 1917 in Cleveland, Ohio, to Marian Rees. He served in the first World War as First Lieutenant and Captain F.A., U.S.A. In 1925 he was varsity tennis coach, University of Michigan.
He is survived by his widow, the former Alice Douglas Nash, whom he married in 1937, one son, and two daughters.
1911
GEORGE JOHN BYRNES passed away October 23, 1971 in the McGaw Infirmary of the Presbyterian Home in Evanston, Ill., where he had been a patient for over three years.
"Ky" joined our Class from South Boston High School and played on the freshman and sophomore baseball teams. His early years were spent in the sales end of the motion picture business in New York City. His interest in football was a lifetime avocation and he was connected with the Colgate football department as scout, having scouted Brown for at least 11 years. His good friend Grantland Rice relied considerably on his recommendations concerning West Coast players in making his All-American selections.
George was a Commissioner of the New York World's Fair in 1939 and then moved to California. During World War II he worked for the War Production Board. After the war he joined the U. S. Air Force as a civilian employee and was Chief of the Small Business Division, Los Angeles Air Procurement District, until he retired in 1964. In 1959 he received a Meritorious Civilian Service Award, the second highest honor that can be awarded a civilian employee of the United States Government.
We believe he is survived only by his stepdaughter, Mrs. Donald Keith, 1500 Sheridan Road, Wilmette, Ill. 60091.
1915
RAYMOND THOMAS McGUIRE of Worcester, Mass., died September 26, 1971. He was born April 19, 1892 and spent one year at Dartmouth. No other information is available.
1916
JOHN BEN BUTLER died suddenly at his home, 305 West 246 th St., Bronx, N. Y., on April 15. He was 77.
Born in Fort Dodge, he entered lowa State College but in 1913, following his brother Harry 'll, he transferred to Hanover as a sophomore and became an esteemed member of Alpha Delta Phi and Casque and Gauntlet. In association with Fred Leighton and James Rubel, both of 1917, he also established The Student's Store, which later became the Dartmouth Co-op.
By 1920 he had served in World War I as an ensign, secured an LL.B., from Harvard, married Dorothy Cumpson of Buffalo, and embarked on what was to be a 40-year practice of law in New York City. First, he gained varied experience in successive connections with the noted law firm of Evarts Choate, Sherman and Laon, with the State Judiciary, and in the U. S. Treasury. In 1925 he joined the firm of Gwinnand Pell and for 35 years much of his legal work had to do with the real estate operations of the J. C. Penney Company. On retirement in 1960 he was senior active member of the successor firm of Pell, Butler, Curtis and LeViness. Since 1923 he lived in the Riverdale area and since 1933 had a summer home in Marlboro, Vt.
Always civic minded, John was for over 50 years a member of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York and the New York State Bar Association. He also served on his local Draft Appeals Board, the U. S. Association for the United Nations, and on the community boards of Riverdale and Marlboro.
Memorial services were held in Fort Dodge, lowa on April 21. John is survived by his widow; a sister Elizabeth; three sons: John Jr., Edward, and Daniel; a daughter, Mrs. Marshall H. Williams, and nine grandchildren. The sympathy of the Class goes out to them all.
1917
GEORGE GREGORY died in Sarasota, Fla., on April 4. He had been in ill health for several years and as recently as November 1971 had survived an operation for lung cancer from which he never fully recovered.
George was born in Pittsburgh, Pa., June 4, 1894. Following graduation from Lynn Classical High School, he entered Dartmouth, graduating with a B.S. degree in 1917. After serving in the U. S. Navy in World War I, where he attained the rank of lieutenant, he returned to Hanover and earned his M.C.S. degree from Tuck School.
His business career centered in the New York City area where he was in the employ of Graybar Electric Company as operating manager for a period of 37 years before retirement. His activities in Sarasota included membership in the Incarnation Catholic Church and the Ivy League and Dartmouth Clubs. His wife, the former Gertrude McCormack of New York City, passed away in April 1970. He leaves a sister, Mrs. H. C. Hill of San Diego, Calif., and a niece, Mrs. Sue Jensen of Madison, N. J.
1918
THOMAS PATTERSON CAMPBELL of Denver, Colo., died April 8 at St. Joseph Hospital. He had been in failing health for more than a year.
Tom was born in Denver in 1896, the grandson of Thomas Patterson, the last representative to Congress from the Colorado Territory, and later U. S. Senator; and the son of Richard C. Campbell '86, who established at Dartmouth the Richard Crawford Campbell Jr. Fellowship in memory of his son, a member of the Class of 1921.
Tom entered Dartmouth from Exeter Academy, and was a member of the college choir and Psi Upsilon fraternity. In World War I he drove an ambulance in France for the American Field Service, later enlisting in the aviation section of the U. S. Signal Corps, where he won a second lieutenant's wings. After the war he went to M.I.T. and was graduated in 1921. He then went to the Colorado School of Mines and earned a doctor's degree in science in 1924. After a period as metallurgist in British Columbia he returned to mines and taught there for 12 years.
Following this, he built a mill to handle silver ore at Creede, Colo. He was active in the Campbell Investment Company, founded by his father, and was president from 1930 to 1950. From 1942 to 1944 he was president of Wright Engineering Company and from 1950 to 1955, part owner and operator of the Albany Hotel.
Tom led an active civic life in Denver. From 1947 to 1955 he was Manager of the Department of Parks and Improvements. Two years later he was appointed to the Water Board and served as president from 1958 to 1961. He was director of the Metro-Denver Sewage Disposal District for two years and served as a trustee of the Art Museum and president of the Denver Child Research Council.
Denver over the years has been one of Dartmouth's strongest alumni centers, and Tom was a central figure in making it so. He was an incorporator of the original Colorado-Dartmouth Association in 1937 and was its president for nearly ten years. From 1943 to 1949 he was a member of the Dartmouth Alumni Council.
Tom was married in 1922 to the former Miriam Savage of Denver, who was a longtime patron of the Denver Symphony Society. She died in 1968. Survivors are two sons, Richard C. '40 and Donald C. '45, both of Denver, and three grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
1919
WILLIAM GROGAN MCMAHON died April 25 in New Rochelle, N. Y., where he had lived since his retirement in 1963. He had not been in good health for the past year.
After a tour of duty in World War I, Bill returned to college and received his degree. Entering business, he was in the sales end of several well-known concerns and for the past 20 years prior to retirement was Eastern Advertising Manager of Drug Topics and DrugTrade News.
He had four boys and four girls. Three of the boys graduated from Dartmouth, Will '42, Richard '46 and Gerald '51. Incidentally, this is the class record for number of children. Bill also has the class record for grandchildren with 21. Mrs. McMahon passed away in 1964.
Attending the funeral services were Dot and Nick Sandoe, Chet and Virginia DeMond, Spike and Dick Dudensing, Marie Drane, Lillian Colwell, Bro Greeley, Ken Huntington, and Eddie Fiske.
1921
EUGENE WEBSTER LEONARD died April 28 at his home in Wayzata, Minn., after a long illness.
Born June 17, 1899 in Mandan, N. D., he entered Dartmouth with three other class- mates from Shattuck Military Academy. He was a member of Psi Upsilon fraternity and Casque and Gauntlet.
Upon graduation he took up residence in Bismarck and started his career as a banker with employment by the First National Bank as assistant cashier. Later he was promoted to vice president. In 1937 he was married to Elizabeth Bleizeffer.
At retirement in 1961 he was president of the First Service Stock Corporation and was chairman of the Executive Committee of the First Bank Stock Corporation.
He is survived by his widow and his mother, Mrs. Irene L. Little.
Funeral services were private, attended by a small number of relatives and close friends, including De Walt Ankeny and his wife.
1922
CARTER HARRIMAN HOYT, a dedicated Dartmouth alumnus, died April 23, at Monadnock Community Hospital, Peterborough, N. H. He had been seriously ill since since early January and his recovery was eagerly hoped for by all classmates and his many Dartmouth friends.
A native of Lowell, Mass., Carter was born in 1899. He came to Dartmouth from Wilbraham Academy. In college he was a popular classmate and a member of Phi Kappa Psi. His devotion to Dartmouth continued throughout his life. For many years he has been 1922's Alumni Fund leader and he was likewise active on the Third Century Fund. He and his wife Allie were always present to make class and alumni gatherings successful.
After graduation, he began his career in the furniture business with Jordan Marsh Co. A few years later he became the furniture buyer for C. F. Hovey Co., Boston. During World War II he served in the U. S. Navy from which he was honorably discharged as a lieutenant-commander. For some 20 past years he has conducted his own business as a furniture manufacturers' representative.
In recent years Carter and Allie lived on Norway Hill, Hancock, N. H. Previously they had lived in West Newton, Mass. They were active in the First Congregational Church of Newton of which Carter was the moderator.
Carter and Allie were married 45 years ago in Lowell. As Alice E. Trull she was a Dartmouth daughter, her father being Herbert L. Trull 'OO. The Hoyt children are Carter Jr. '49, Barbara (Mrs. Arthur R. Baker) and Nancy (Mrs. Edward E. Langbeen Jr.). There are eight grandchildren.
Carter's former minister in Newton gave the eulogy at the service in the Hancock Congregational Church. Class representatives attending were Ray and Doris Atwood, Bill and Trudy Bullen, Haskell and Harriet Cohn, Carroll and Nan Dwight, Fran and Lucy Leland, Bill and Betty Mann, Andy and Charlotte Marshall, Ike and Harriott Miller, Len and Margaret Morrissey, Louise Olsen, Spenny and Marge Smith, and Dick Stetson. Charles E. Breed '51 represented the College.
The Class offers the family its deepest sympathy and its gratitude for the privilege of having had Carter as a classmate.
1924
DREW MILLER BYERS died at his retirement home in Leisure Village, Lakewood, N. J., on February 29. Born in Columbus, Ohio, on November 30, 1902, Drew entered Dartmouth with our Class but left before graduation.
He began work with the New York Telephone Company as an accountant and remained with them until his retirement in 1964. His wife Miriam, to whom he was married in 1924, died in 1964. Drew was active in Republican Party affairs and the Methodist Church. His community interests were also with such organizations as the YMCA and the Red Cross. His only surviving close relative is a daughter, Nancy (Mrs. Eugene R. Horyn), residing in Coshocton, Ohio.
ROYCE IRVING SLOANE died February 10, 1972, the day before his 70th birthday. Royce, known to many friends as Ich, was born in New Haven, Conn., and throughout his life lived in or near that city. In 1926 Royce joined the Retail Credit Company in New Haven, which operates a business reporting service. He remained with that compapy uninterruptedly for over forty years, retiring in 1967. He was a charter member of the Exchange Club and took an active part in the affairs of the West Haven Congregational Church. He was also a member of the Dartmouth Club of New Haven.
Royce Sloane's major role in the history of the Class of 1924 was his authorship of the words of the Class song published first in 1922 and reprinted in the June 1939 issue of the Alumni Magazine.
In 1959 Royce married Elizabeth Kennedy, who died in 1970. A son, born in 1926 of his first marriage to Dorothy Sofield, died in 1928.
HARRY SANDS WEAVER JR., M.D. professor emititus and former chairman of the Department of Ophthalmology, Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital, Philadelphia, died March 24.
Dr. Weaver maintained an active practice in ophthalmology in Philadelphia for 32 years and served on the staffs of Hahnemann, Wills Eye, and Magee Memorial Hospitals until his death. He had residences at 1930 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, and Medford, N. J.
Born in 1903 in Philadelphia, where his father was also a physician, "Buck" Weaver attended Dartmouth and Syracuse Universities and graduated from Hahnemann Medical College in 1929. He subsequently did graduate study at the University of Pennsylvania.
He joined the faculty of Hahnemann in 1930 and headed the Department of Ophthalmology for 23 years until 1969. He was a past president of the Hahnemann Alumni Association, and was a member and past chairman of the Alumni Board of Trustees. He received the College's Alumni Award in 1969.
Dr. Weaver was an active member of a number of local and national medical societies. He was past chairman of the eye section of the Philadelphia County Medical Society, and at the time of his death was serving as first vice president of the Pennsylvania Academy of Ophthalmology and Otolaryngology. He was a life member of the Ophthalmic Club of Philadelphia. He was a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons and the American College of Physicians.
Dr. Weaver also was a retired Captain in the U. S. Naval Reserve. He had joined the Naval Reserve in 1934 and served on active duty as a Chief Flight Surgeon for N.A.T.S. throughout World War II.
Buck was a Mason and member of the Sons of the Revolution. He was also a member of the Union League, the Medford Lakes Country Club, the Dartmouth Club of Philadelphia, and the Philadelphia Central City Lions Club.
He is survived by his widow, the former Elizabeth Garrett; two sons: Harry S. 3rd '57 and Frederick C., and three grandchildren.
1929
WILLIAM HARLAN TAYLOR was born in River Falls, Wise., on April 22, 1908 and died in Houston, Texas on March 28.
His family moved to Norman, Okla., when his father became the first head of the Department of Geology of, the University of Oklahoma. The family moved to Oklahoma City in 1916. Harlan attended schools there, graduating from Central High School. At Dartmouth he lived in Topliff, was a member of D.K.E., Dragon and The Arts, and majored in Geology. He went on to Stanford after graduation where he received an M.S. in Micro-Paleontology. He worked for the Petty Geophysical Co. until 1946, when he formed his own company, Taylor Exploration Co., Inc. in Houston, in the Rio Grande Valley.
His company has been engaged in seismic contracting, geophysical surveys and interpretations. He was president of the Houston Geophysical Society, a charter member of the Society of Independent Earth Scientists, and a member of the American Society of Geophysicists, and American Association of Petroleum Geologists. He was a Methodist and member of the First Methodist Church.
Harlan was a popular and highly respected member of 1929 who will be missed by his many friends and classmates. He is survived by his widow, Nancy (Wade), two daughters and a son.
We are indebted to Nancy for sending us the family background and activities and interests. She writes, "Aside from his family, Harlan had three loves—Dartmouth, golf, and his grapefruit and orange groves."
What a wonderful life he lived!
1937
LESTER SAWYER HOYLE died in Phoenix, Ariz., on March 21. We are indebted to Bill Terry '13, secretary of the Dartmouth Club of Phoenix of which Les was a member, for this sad news.
Les left Dartmouth to attend several schools, including the University of Virginia, Harvard, University of Pittsburgh, Emerson, B.U., and Northeastern Law School. He had practiced law in Phoenix since 1954. An avid traveler he had visited many countries. At one point he was lost on the Sahara Desert and contracted tropical fever in Egypt. Another time he was lost in a snowstorm in the Swiss Alps. It was reported that he was involved in buying wild animals in Africa and selling them to zoos in this country.
Survivors include his widow Ann, his mother, a sister and a nephew.
1945
THOMAS MOORE HARKNESS JR. died December 11, 1971. Tom was born in Wilmington, Del., on March 23, 1921. He prepared for Dartmouth at P. S. DuPont School and was in Hanover from July 1943 to February 1944, after which he saw active Navy service in the Pacific theater.
He had been employed by the Bell Telephone Co. of Pennsylvania since 1946 and was a supervising foreman responsible for vehicle and building maintenance in the Philadelphia area.
To his widow Betty, and sons Harry and Tom, the Class extends its sincere sympathy.
BUELL CHAPIN KINGSLEY, M.D., died in Seattle, Wash., on March 30. Buell was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., April 20, 1923, the son of Margaret (Chapin) and Charles Kingsley 'l4, and prepared for Dartmouth at Hackley School. After college Buell attended Dartmouth Medical School, received his M.D. degree from U. of Oregon, and his psychiatric training at Yale Institute of Living and the Philadelphia Child Guidance Clinic.
He was director of the Whatcom Community Mental Health Service Clinic for 13 years, serving as both administrator and staff psychiatrist. His efforts on behalf of his speciality in the Bellingham, Wash., area were recognized by a local editorial praising his long service and mourning his untimely death.
Buell married Margrethe Johnson, also a physician, in 1952 and there are two surviving children, Garth and Lynn.
To Maggie and the children the Class extends its sincere sympathy and would like to add its praise to that already given Buell by an appreciative community.
1946
The entire Class is saddened by the news that JOHN THOMAS MCLAUGHLIN died on April 16 after collapsing in his home at 20 Veda Rd., Weymouth, Mass.
After service in the Navy, John returned to Dartmouth in the fall of 1945, completed his Dartmouth education in one semester, and returned to graduate at Commencement in 1946.
Starting in 1949 John served for eight years as Executive Secretary of Development Corporation of America, which he left in 1957 to go into the general business of real estate under his own name. He became the senior real estate appraiser for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and was also an instructor in real estate at Suffolk University. John is survived by his wife, four sons, Steven G., Daniel F., John, and Paul, and three daughters, Janet, Lisa and Julie.
John was one of the most loyal, active, and popular members of the Class and will be missed by all of us. His reply to the request for information in preparing the 25th Reunion Year Book closed with the following words "Somewhere along the line, in conspiracy with my wife, produced 7 offspring. Managed to get back to 3 or 4 Reunions and a few homecoming games. Will always consider my time at Hanover as some of the best years, the green years."
The Class extends its heartfelt sympathy to all of the family. Bill DeStefano represented the Class at the funeral.
1956
GEORGE ALLEN RICH died May 8, 1971, after having been in ill health for a year.
George came to Dartmouth from West Orange, N. J. After a stint in the Army, he moved to Utah where he worked for Thiokol Chemical Corporation. He later moved to California where he was employed by National Cash Register Company and TRW Systems Group, for which he was manager of Systems and Procedures at the time of his death.
In 1969 he received his MBA from the University of Southern California.
George is survived by his widow Janice and a daughter Sandra of 26612 Morena Dr., Mission Viejo, Ca. and his mother and father who reside in Lauderdale, Fla., to whom the Class extends its deepest sympathies.
Thomas Patterson Campbell '18
Carter Harriman Hoyt '22