Obituary

Deaths

JULY 1972
Obituary
Deaths
JULY 1972

(A listing of deaths of which word has been received within the past month. Full notice mayappear in this issue or a later one.).

Goodhue, Everett W. '00, June 19 Wood, Harlan W. '06, June 7 Sherburne, Ralph H. '08, June 7 Fardy, Thomas A. '09, May 11 Dorr, Allen E. '10, May 12 Meredith, Russell D. '10, June 10 Shaw, Warren C. '10, April 23 Crocker, Walton G. '12, April 7 White, Richard J. Jr. '14, June 3 Strickland, Daniel L. 'l5, May 6 Brown, Mott D. '17, May 22 Nuese, Robert E. '17, May 19 Murphy, Cornelius F. '17, May 10 Pope, Lawrence F. '18, May 7 Childs, Harwood L. '19, June 7 Hainlen, E. Willis '19, June 10 McMillan, H. George '21, April 17 Brower, John E. '22, April 10 Francis, Kent W. '24, March 17 Kirouac, Elpheage V. '25, May 14 Winger, George J. '25, May 15 Applin, H. Herbert '26, May 28 Batchelder, Edgar M. '27, June 2 Goodnow, John R. '28, April 27 Payne, John C. Jr. '29, May 18 Sherberg, Ralph O. '29, May 7 Dickerson, Albert I. '30, May 18 Gorsline, William H. '31, June 9 Eisenberg, Edward L.D. '32, Dec. 11, 1971 Flaccus, W. Kimball '33, June 16 Hilton, Edward L. '34, March 4 Fowle, Richard J. '34, June 16 Larrabee, John A. '39, June 2 Bishop, Lloyd R. '42, May 6 Perley, Henry G. '43, April 29 Ronalds, Charles C. '45, April 13 Cary, Russell S. Jr. '54, May 14 Leaver, John M. Jr. '55, May 8 Marriott, Donald R. '56, June 15 Baernstein, Saul W. '60, May 11

1908

RALPH HOLMES SHERBURNE died on June 7, 1972 after a long illness. He was born October 25, 1884 in Epsom, N.H. The family moved to Penacook, and Ralph prepared for Dartmouth at Concord High School. In college he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, of which he was a charter member.

Upon graduation Ralph was appointed a clerk in the Penacook branch of the Concord postoffice. He had advanced to superintendent at his retirement in 1952. He then took over his parents' interest in the firm of Sherburne and Parker, general insurance agents, from which he retired in 1971. He was a charter member of the Penacook Valley Lions Club.

Ralph attended the Methodist Church and for several years served as trustee and recording steward. He was also a member of the National Association of Retired Civil and Federal Employees.

Ralph was first married to Lizzie E. Ordway of Penacook, who passed away October 8, 1918. In 1921 he married Mrs. Mary Danforth Brown, who died in 1951 after a long illness. In August 1952, he married Mrs. Rose L. Rivet who survives him, as do three stepdaughters, one stepson, five stepgrandchildren and one step great granddaughter.

Services were held in the First United Methodist Church of Penacook on June 10. Burial was in Woodlawn Cemetery.

Thus one more of '08's devoted and loyal members has passed. Our sympathies are extended to Mrs. Sherburne and the children.

1909

THOMAS ALBERT FARDY died May 7, 1972 at the Marion Manor, Taunton, Mass., a nursing home where he had spent the last years of his life, in a prolonged illness.

Tom was born in Randolph, Mass., on July 2, 1885. He prepared for Dartmouth at Thayer Academy, Braintree, Mass. He was the last member of 1909's delegation in New Hampshire Alpha Chapter of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. He was one of 1909's longtime contributors to the Alumni Fund.

Following graduation, Tom entered the employ of Library Inc. as a salesman in the Boston area. Through consolidations this firm became Remington Rand and then Sperry Rand. After 47 years service, he retired in 1956 and returned to the family homestead at 35 North St., Randolph, Mass., where he maintained his headquarters even while in the nursing home.

He was a director of Randolph Cooperative Bank for 42 years and chairman of the Finance Committee for many years. At the time of his death, he was an honorary director of the bank, an honorary member of the Knights of Columbus, and a member of St. Mary's Church, Randolph.

A funeral mass was celebrated May 10 in St. Mary's Church with burial in the family lot in St. Mary's Cemetery.

1910

ALLEN EVERETT DORR, 84, died after a long illness May 12, 1972 at Pittsfield, Mass.

Born in Richmond, Mass. February 24, 1888, Al prepared for college at Pittsfield High School, and after graduation he joined Armour and Co. in Chicago and later worked for the firm in Atlanta and Baltimore, as a chemist.

He entered the Army in World War I and was assigned to Washington, D.C., in the chemical warfare department, doing research on poison gases.

At the end of the war, Al entered business with his father in Pittsfield. He retired in 1956.

He was a member of the First Congregational Church; Berkshire Commandery; Melha Temple, A.A.0.N.M.5.; American Chemical Society; Trowel Club, Washington; and the Dartmouth Club of Berkshire County, of which he was one of the founders.

In 1933, he married Margaret Sizer of Richmond who is his sole survivor.

WARREN CHOATE SHAW, Blackburn College (Carlinville, I11.) Professor Emeritus of History and Political Science, passed away April 23 at a nursing home in Aurora, Ohio, at the age of 84. He had moved to Ohio a few weeks earlier due to his health.

Interment was in Mayfield Memorial Cemetery in Carlinville, following a memorial service on May 26.

Warren was born November 16, 1887 in Lowell, Mass. In college, he was a member of the debating team in the first three years and president of the Debating Union in the senior year. He served as class secretary in junior and senior years and, in the senior year elections, was named permanent class President. He was a member of Kappa Kappa Kappa and Palaeopitus.

He joined the Blackburn faculty in 1939. He held the A.B. and A.M. degrees from Dartmouth College and the Ph.D. from the University of Illinois, and had taught at a high school and at Dartmouth, the University of Illinois, and Knox College. He was a veteran of World War I.

During his 17 years of full-time service on the Blackburn faculty, Prof. Shaw served as chairman of the History Department and college marshall. He retired from full-time teaching in 1956, but continued to teach several courses a year until forced by ill health to resign in 1967. On the occasion of Warren's official retirement in 1956, a bronze plaque with his likeness was placed in Hudson Hall at Blackburn in recognition of his contributions to the college and the community. In 1948, he was appointed special lecturer in history at the University of Munich, Germany. He was the author of several books, including "The Art of Debate" and "The History of American Oratory."

Prof. Shaw was married in 1913 to Helen Abbott Morey in Lowell, Mass. She died in 1930. In 1950, he married Nonna Dolodarenko in Carlinville. Survivors include his son, Roger M., and a grandson, Roger B.

1911

ERNEST HENRY GRISWOLD passed away on May 3, 1972—three weeks before his 83rd birthday. He was born in Nashua, N.H., and joined our class from Phillips Exeter and Nashua High School. In high school he was president of his class and active in athletics. He received a gold medal for greatest proficiency in English.

At Dartmouth Bendy became a member of phi Sigma Kappa. He was married in December 1910 to Dorothy Dexter, and they lived in the Norwich Inn until graduation. He first taught algebra, chemistry and physics at Franklin Academy in Malone, N.Y., and later at Weston, Mass. On January 1, 1915 he became the youngest CPA in the U.S., and in 1917 he started his own business, E.H. Griswold & Co. He was Professor of Accounting at Northeastern University Evening School for seven years, ending in 1923. That same year his wife Dorothy died in an automobile accident while on their way to Hanover for a Cornell football game, and he was left with four children ages 2 to 11.

In 1934 he married Eunice Howard who survives him, as do his son Henry '39 and two daughters. In 1962 Bendy's firm merged with Lybrand, Ross Bros, and Montgomery, and he became manager of their Portland Maine office. His home was in Saco at Seaside Ave.

Bendy served as treasurer for the Class for about 20 years and left the Class Treasury in a prosperous condition with about $3,300 in the Hanover Bank. He was a prominent and well-liked member of our class and will be greatly missed by all.

1912

WALTON GIBBS CROCKER died at New England Deaconess Hospital in Boston on April 7, 1972 of heart failure. He had been in failing health for several months.

He was born at Waltham, Mass., on May 6, 1888. He entered Phillips Exeter Academy in 1907 in preparation for college. Walton spent only one year at Dartmouth, where he was a member of Kappa Kappa Kappa.

He spent his active life in the wholesale and retail meat business, chiefly in the Boston market district, but also in control of two retail stores at Falmouth and Osterville on Cape Cod. The first five years after leaving college he was employed by Swift & Company. Then for 16 years he was with William A. Doe Company, followed by five years with Bethlehem Snyder Company. In 1935 he became one of the founders of Bolton-Smart Company in the Boston market, where he continued until 1966 retirement.

He was a member of the Algonquin Club of Boston, a Congregationalist, and enjoyed gardening at his winter place as well as at his summer home in Wareham, Mass.

On January 30, 1909 Walton married Sarah F. Parker of Wareham. They had a son Samuel '31, now deceased. Sarah died in December 1956 and on September 13, 1958 Walton married Gertrude M. Reagan of Boston, who survives him, together with a sister, three grandchildren and one great grandchild. Mrs. Crocker lives at 11 Wade St., Brighton, Mass.

A graveside service was held April 11, at Center Cemetery in Wareham.

It is said of Walton Crocker that he was always cheerful, rarely complaining even when in pain, and always trying to make other people happy.

1916

ERNEST ANDREW GIOIOSA died in Margate, Fla., April 2 and was buried at Milton, Mass., near his old New England home.

For it was from Boston English High and a year at Boston College that earnest Ernie came to Dartmouth. He played on our freshman football team. In World War I he was an aviation cadet.

In the late '20s he found his life niche in New York. He was first an interpreter and translator for the U. S. Immigration Service, then a social worker for the Italian Welfare League among immigrants through the depression. Returning to the Federal service, he was with the Department of Justice as an inspector, investigator, and finally as a supervisor of border patrolmen and law enforcement officers, notably concerned at the beginning of World War II with the apprehension of enemy aliens. Upon retirement in 1956, the Gioiosas lived for several years in New Hope, Pa., until they moved permanently to 1455 N.W. 69th Ave., Margate, Fla.

Ernie was long a member of the Masons and the American Legion, and wherever he lived he was active in community affairs. He was married in New York in 1931 to Mollie Bree who survives him, and who has kindly helped us with this notice. She has our sympathy.

FRANK FARNHAM GREENLEAF, probably 1916's nearest equivalent to John Ledyard, died February 11 at his home in Sabattus, Maine, after a long illness. He was 79.

Frank came to Hanover via Kent's Hill Seminary on the initiative of his Dartmouth father and older brother but over what he felt was his own better judgment. He accordingly stayed only long enough to earn independence by working in the Commons Grille and for the builders of Hitchcock Hall, then demonstrated it by leaving on his own initiative and to our loss.

After four years in Boston and Buffalo, the independent rejoined the family construction firm at Auburn, Maine, leaving thereafter only to serve during World War I as a corporal with the 151 st Engineers. In 1939 he married Dorothee Nadeau and the couple settled in nearby Sabattus. Frank was a noted sportsman. He was co-founder of the local Boy Scout camping area, Camp Gusten. He was for over 30 years a member of the Sabattus American Legion Post; and for over 50 years of both Tranquil Lodge AF and AM, and the Lewiston Lodge of Elks.

In 1965 two of his classmates detoured from the Maine Turnpike and visited with Frank in the front parlor of his home, while a thunderstorm whipped Sabattus Lake below his barn and lawn. We found him, as expected, a happy, respected and still independent citizne. This note is written by one of those classmates—alike in tribute to Frank's strengths, out of sympathy for his relatives, and for the information of his Dartmouth friends.

R.F.E.

1917

MOTT DEVILLOE BROWN, President of the Class of 1917, died May 22, 1972 at Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis, Mass. He was born in Lansingburgh, N.Y.

Mott enlisted in the Ordnance Reserve Corps in Hanover in June 1917 upon graduation from Dartmouth and entered service with the Dartmouth contingent at the Watertown Arsenal. He went to France with the A.E.F. and became a Ist Lieutenant, serving as Armament Officer with the 141st Aero Squadron. He graduated from Tuck School in 1920. In 1923 he married Frances Eleanor Upton.

Mott made his home in Walpole, Mass., where he was for 25 years with the Kendall Company, first as head of the Statistical Department, then Officer Manager, and then New England Hospital Sales Administrator. He then moved to Columbus, Ohio where he spent 23 years with Huntington Laboratories, Inc., as Mid-Western Hospital Sales Manager, retiring in 1967.

For 40 years he had been a summer resident of Chatham, Mass., and in 1969 he became a year-round resident. Mott loved people and people returned his love. He was a member of the Dartmouth Club of Cape Cod and was recently notified by the Columbus Area Association of S.A.E. that he was being awarded a certificate of 50 years membership. He was a Past Master of Azure Lodge, A.F. & A.M., Walpole, and a member of St. Martin's Lodge, A.F. & A.M., Chatham, a Life Member of the Chatham Conservation Foundation, Inc., and a member of the Chatham Historical Society.

He is survived by his widow Frances, of 39 Silver Leaf Ave., Chatham, three daughters, a brother, a nephew, and seven grandchildren.

ARTHUR PIUS MACINTYRE, a man of perfervid devotion to his family, his church, his business, and his college, died April 28 following an illness of only six weeks.

"Spique" was born in Cambridge, Mass., July 14, 1894; prepared for college at Somerville (Mass.) High School; and attended Dartmouth for only the freshman year, at the end of which family needs required his withdrawal. Although he subsequently secured formal education in accountancy, his single year at Dartmouth included membership in the freshman hockey team and sufficed to imbue him with deep and enduring affection for the College, his classmates, and Delta Tau Delta fraternity.

Few, if any other, one-year non-graduates have served as head class agent as he did for one five-year term in the Forties or as a class executive committee member which he has just been.

Married September 17, 1931 to Ruby Harper, also of Somerville, he embued her with an abundance of Dartmouth spirit and they lived childlessly to share their 40th wedding anniversary last fall.

After his qualification as an accountant, he became affiliated with Lever Brothers Co. at their Cambridge home office and consecutively held the posts of comptroller, treasurer, and financial vice president. He was forced into premature retirement in 1949, along with other veteran officials, as a result of an executive upheaval.

While with Lever Brothers he amassed a broad acquaintance in the field of office management and corporate finance and held office in several trade associations, including a term as president of the National Association of Office Managers. Although never completely severing his Greater Boston ties, he was transferred to New York City by the Federal Renegotiation Board which he had joined following the debacle at Lever Brothers. He subsequently returned to Boston as an original executive of the New England division of the Small Business Administration. It was while with that bureau, in the later assignment as president of that Small Business Investment Corporation, that he came to civil service retirement in 1966 and the merited leisure of his Lexington (Mass.) home.

Suddenly and inexplicably stricken with fatal illness in mid-March, he died at the Mount Auburn Hospital (Cambridge), following three surgeries, on April 28. His Requiem Mass was celebrated at Sacred Heart Church in Lexington with burial at Mount Auburn Cemetery.

He is survived by his widow, three brothers, a sister, and a host of fondly remembering Dartmouth men, including every Seventeener.

R.S.

1918

LAWRENCE FRANCIS POPE, born September 22, 1894, died May 7 at the age of 77. Larry was the only member of the Class who could claim to be a 4th generation Washingtonian. He was born at 627 East Capitol Street, Washington, D.C., in a house built by his grandfather shortly after the Civil War, in which Larry and his wife lived for some years.

He graduated from Eastern High School in Washington in 1914 and entered Dartmouth that fall. He enlisted in the Navy at Portsmouth, N.H., in 1917 with a group of other Dartmouth men before the United States had formerly entered World War I. He was assigned for three months intensive training at the United States Naval Academy and then served on Coast Guard Torpedo Boat #17. Later he was assigned to USS Mercury, a transport ship on which he served for the duration. He received his Victory Medal on July 22, 1921. Larry was discharged in June 1919 but continued in the Naval Reserve until March 1921 completing his four years tour of duty.

For a few years he was employed in a school banking system in New York City. In 1925 he returned to Washington and entered the storage and moving business. When he retired in 1957 he was Vice President of the United States Storage Company of Washington.

Larry loved to sing., particularly quartet singing, and was for 19 years an active member of the Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barbershop Quartet Singing in America. He was also a member of the "Singing Capitol Chorus" of Washington, a noted chorus of men's voices and winner of several competitions. All Larry's many friends will miss his resonant bass voice, his spontaneous humor and wit and his friendly smile.

Larry is survived by his widow Mary of 5303 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. 20014.

1919

JOHN HALE CHIPMAN, a descendant of Nathan Hale, died on April 18 at his home, Main St., Norwell, Mass., after a brief illness. After graduation from college he embarked on a diversified career. He was a writer, musician, military man and a business man, to mention but a few.

In World War I he drove an ammunition truck in the French Army, an ambulance for the American Red Cross, and wound up as a combat officer in the French Foreign Legion. In World War II he enlisted in the Naval Reserve and served in the Intelligence Division, spending most of his time in the Near East. John translated into French all of President Roosevelt's speeches in connection with the African invasion.

In business he worked for Merrill, Lynch Co; General Foods, and Houghton Mifflin. Since 1945 he had had his own food brokerage concern.

He published Index of Top Hit Times 1900-1950 and was joint author with Col. Charles Furlong of Stone Age Men and Their Music. He also published a number of articles on archaeology.

A loyal member of the Class and the College, his musical abilities highlighted our undergraduate days and all our reunions. At our 45th reunion he and his daughter put on a never-to-be-forgotten musical show.

He is survived by his widow Mildred; a daughter, Mrs. Ruth C. Bailey of Norwell; two sisters, and four grandchildren.

1920

BASIL LINCOLN WINSLOW passed on May 2, 1972 at the Concord Community Hospital in Orinda, Cal., after a brief illness. "Abe" was born in Larone, Maine, on November 25, 1896. He entered Dartmouth in 1916, took a B.S. degree in 1920, and went on to Thayer School for his engineering degree in 1921. During World War I he served in the U.S. Naval Reserve, attending the Harvard Ensign School prior to his release from the service.

Shortly after his Thayer School graduation he joined the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co., which he served diligently until his retirement. His devoted service to his company was great, indeed, and was widely acknowledged by his suprvisors through the types of work entrusted to him, such as sales supervision and employee benefit plans. Literally thousands of P.T. & T. employees are indebted to him for counsel and guidance.

"Abe" married Mildred Ruth Crane and to them was born Alan '49. Both Mildred and Alan survive him. To them go the sympathy of the Dartmouth family and especially the members of the Class of 1920.

The Dartmouth Alumni Association of Northern California received his faithful attention for 35 years, from 1926 to 1961. His dedication to that position led to his special recognition upon retirement in 1961 at a meeting in San Francisco when Alumni Council President Guy Wallich '21, presented "Abe" with a framed water color of Dartmouth Hall in the presence of President John Sloan Dickey and a host of Dartmouth alumni. Known throughout the Bay Area and Northern California as "Mr. Dartmouth," "Abe" was the outstanding interpreter of the College's aims and aspirations.

Upon retirement, and with Mildred, he devoted much time constructively and successfully to conservation projects. He loved the California mountains and natural preserve areas, spending his summers in the high Sierras. As Treasurer of the John Muir Association he helped in the preservation of a nine-acre tract, including Muir's home, and in a similar capacity for the Walnut Creek Recreational Center he participated in preserving a five-acre plot in the midst of that fast growing suburban area. Just prior to his terminal illness he and Mildred had spent four days in the Yosemite National Park commemorating it's 100th anniversary.

At a memorial service in Berkeley, Calif., College Trustee David P. Smith '35 closed a tribute to "Abe" with the passage from Edwin Markham's "Lincoln, the Man of the Hour," that begins "Here was a man to match the mountains and the sea ..."

Kind, good-natured, patient, gentle, selflessly dedicated, loyal, devoted—such was Basil Lincoln Winslow.

1921

Word has been received from a nephew, Richard Maxson, of the death of his uncle, CLARENCE ALBERT KING in Carmel, Calif. He was 73 years of age. Born July 18, 1898 in Butte, Mont., he entered Dartmouth from Butte High School. His roommate freshman year was Bob Loeb '21.

He was a member of the SATC at the college, spent two months at Plattsburg Barracks, was commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant in the infantry, assigned to Camp Grant, I11., and discharged from the service Dec. 6, 1918.

Information about his life from this point is somewhat sketchy. He moved to Butte and was employed by the Three Forks Portland Co. He was a building supply salesman in Bremerton, Wash., in 1942. At one point he was an apartment house owner in Walnut Creek, Cal. His last address was Carmel, Calif., and he died after a long illness at the Carmel Valley Manor, after retiring in 1969.

No details are available on his funeral, place of burial, or the surviving relatives. As an alumnus he was inactive, having asked in 1942 that he be removed from the college's mailing list.

H.F.B.

1922

JOHN EATON BROWER, 72, one of '22's Canadian classmates, died April 10 in Toronto.

John was born in Phoenixville, Pa., but when he was seven his parents moved to Canada and John entered Dartmouth from Upper Canada College, Toronto. After graduation he returned to Toronto where he soon engaged upon a lifelong career as an accountant.

He worked first in the installment sales department of Robert Stimson Co., Ltd. Then, he joined the accounting firm of Clarkson, Gordon and Dilworth. In February 1933 he was admitted into the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Ontario, of which he was a member for 39 years. Later he went as an auditor with Lybrand, Ross Bros, and Montgomery, then with Thompson-Jones and Co. He completed his career, however, by managing his own business as a Chartered Public Accountant.

His writing contributed to the advancement of his profession. In his early experience he won an essay prize for an article published in the Chartered Accountants Magazine. He was later the author of "Some Problems of University Accounting" and "The Accountant and Industrial and Public Relations."

John loved Dartmouth and the New Hampshire mountains. For several years he was treasurer of the Dartmouth College Club of Ontario.

He never married and his sole survivor is his sister, Mrs. Edward Pratt of Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. John was no stranger at reunions and the Class will especially miss him at its Fiftieth.

1925

ELPHEAGE VICTOR KIROUAC died on May 14. Al was born in Greenfield, Mass., on July 4, 1904 and came to Dartmouth from Greenfield High School. Following graduation in 1925 he attended Tuck School, receiving his degree there in 1926.

For the first few years after college he was with the National Shawmut Bank in Boston but spent most of his business career with the Burroughs Corporation in the field of sales and service of accounting equipment and systems.

He became manager of the Bridgeport, Conn., branch in 1960 and made his home in Westport, Conn.

Al is survived by his widow Winifred, who lives in Westport at 5 Abbotts Lane, two sons, and five grandchildren.

EDWIN LANGHORNE YATES died on April 4 at a hospital in Spruce Pine, N.C., after a heart attack.

Eddie was born in Durham, N.C., January 5, 1903 and graduated from Central High School (now Cardoza High School) in Washington, D.C.

At Dartmouth he was a member of Zeta Psi fraternity and was on the board of the Daily Dartmouth during all four years.

He started to work for General Motors in Washington in 1927 and just before World War II moved to the Detroit area, where he became Director of College Relations for General Motors.

Following retirement in 1963 Eddie moved to Little Switzerland, N.C., in the mountains near Asheville. He spent much of his time there working with local development groups in the effort to attract new industry to that part of the state and to train and help people to work in these industries.

One of his principal hobbies was archaeology and he spent several winters in Oaxaca, Mexico, where Monte Alban is located.

His widow Dorothy survives him and lives in Little Switzerland.

1926

HENRY HARTMAN of 30944 Broad Beach Rd., Malibu, Calif., passed away on September 10, 1971.

Having started his career in a real estate mortage house in Chicago, Henry "felt the walls closing in" and responded to a call from a friend in Europe where they refitted a schooner and sailed about the ports of Europe for five years.

He eventually landed in Hollywood where he worked as an assistant director and director in the business of motion picture production. This job also took him to the far corners of the world.

He is survived by his widow Virginia to whom the Class sends its sympathy.

1927

LAWRENCE VAN VALKENBURGH MOSS died February 7 in Lockport, N.Y. He was in the insurance business for many years, most recently as president of the Moss Agency in Lockport.

Mrs. Moss predeceased him. He is survived by his son, Lawrence C. Moss.

1928

JUDGE JOHN RICHARD GOODNOW, Associate Justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court for five years, died April 27 at the Elliott Community Hospital in Keene, N.H.

Jack was born in Jaffrey, attended Keene schools and Phillips Exeter. At Dartmouth he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon and Dragon. He graduated from Harvard Law School in 1931.

He was city solicitor in Keene, county attorney from 1937 to 1942, Associate Justice of the N. H. Superior Court from 1943 to 1947, and Chief Justice of that court from 1947 to 1952.

In 1952 he was appointed Associate Justice of the N.H. Supreme Court and served until his resignation in 1957. He had practiced law in Keene since that time, as founder and senior partner of Goodnow, Arwe, and Ayer.

Jack had been president of the Cheshire County Bar Association, Keene Rotary Club, Cheshire County YMCA and Elliott Community Hospital. As chairman of the hospital building fund drive in 1970 he led campaign workers to a total of $2.5 million, $1 million higher than the goal. He received the Community Service Award from the Greater Keene Chamber of Commerce in 1971. He lived at 45 Roxbury St. in that city.

He was honored by Keene State College in 1969 with at Doctor of Laws degree.

He is survived by his widow, Margaret (Symes) Goodnow; his mother, Mrs. Christine Goodnow of Keene; a son John '58 of Keene; two daughters, Mrs. Persis G. Hamilton of Old Deerfield, Mass., and Mrs. Joan G. Bardis of Heidelberg, Germany; and six grandchildren.

1937

ROBERT EDWIN OLSON died following a heart attack April 21 at his home 2231 Westwood Place, Falls Church, Va. He was an attorney with the Securities and Exchange Commission in Washington for many years.

He came to Dartmouth from Chatham (N.J.) High School. He was a member of Alpha Sigma Phi, a Senior Fellow, and was active in The Players, Cercle Francais, and American Student Union. His major was Sociology. Bob was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in his junior year and graduated summa cum laude.

He served in various legal positions with the SEC since 1942, with the exception of a period of service in the Army Signal Corps during World War II and several years in the early 1950's with the Office of Price Stabilization. He held a master's degree from Harvard and received his law degree at Columbia.

He is survived by his widow Patricia and a sister.

1938

JOSEPH PAUL FOGARTY died on August 14, 1971 in Newburgh, N.Y., of cancer, after a long illness.

Mr. Fogarty was a member of Delta Tau Delta, and received an LLB degree from New York Law School after completing his studies at Dartmouth.

He was a member of the firm of Dominick and Fogarty in Newburgh and a director of St. Lukes Hospital and the YMCA in that city.

He was also active in the Red Cross and Community Chest and served as president of the school board.

Survivors include his widow Jeanne and four sons: Peter, Timothy, Kevin, and Joseph Jr.

1943

JAMES CRUICKSHANK JR. '43 passed away at Glover Memorial Hospital, Needham, Mass., on February 2 following a short illness.

Jim graduated from Pawtucket (R.I.) High School before coming to Dartmouth. He was a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity.

Jim attended the USNR Midshipmen School at Notre Dame, marrying Hope A. Stanley in Pawtucket the day after his naval commissioning ceremonies. Jim served in the Navy during both World War II and the Korean conflict, leaving the service as a Commander.

An advertising salesman, Jim had been district manager and regional vice president for Cleworth Publishing Company from 1953 to 1965; more recently he was New England District Manager for Cahners Publishing Company of Boston. For the last 18 years Jim and his family have made their home in Needham.

Jim was a loyal alumnus of the college and an enthusiastic rooter for Dartmouth's athletic teams. His son James S. was a graduate of the Class of 1968.

Jim is survived by his widow Hope, his son, and a daughter Laurie Anne, all of Needham; and by his mother, Ellen B. Cruickshank of Pawtucket.

The Class of '43 and the College have lost a very special alumnus, Hank Eagle—lndian, Dartmouth graduate, and intensely proud of both. His attitude towards both came through "loud and clear" in his recent letter as an "official" Indian published in the May 1972 issue of the Alumni Magazine.

Throughout his life, Hank loved the outdoors, the woods, lakes, and fields of Northern New England and especially life itself in that particular way that no nonwoodsman can understand. In fact, he and his wife Mary had only within the year returned to Maine to live.

While the following material was forwarded by his wife for use in this obituary notice, it is only fitting that the Class also know Hank had left instructions that the Indian Artifacts he owned be given to the Dartmouth Museum in honor of the Class of '43:

HENRY GABRIEL (EAGLE) PERLEY, died suddenly April 29 at Augusta (Maine-General Hospital after brain surgery. Hank was physically attacked by a stranger in Rockland, Maine, on April 26 and died without regaining consciousness following the operation.

Hank was born in Greenville, Maine, on April 7, 1921, the son of Henry Red Eagle Perley and the late Wanna R. Eagle Perley. He grew up amid the woods and waters of his beloved Maine and the contrasting "clangbang" of Coney Island, N.Y., where his parents were performers in his early years. He was a registered Maine Guide from the age of 16, and prepared for Dartmouth at Abraham Lincoln High School in Brooklyn, N.Y.

While at Dartmouth he was vice president of Phi Sigma Epsilon, captain of the fencing team, a member of Junto, an English honors man, and a graduate cum laude. Hank was the 8th native American Indian graduate of Dartmouth in the period 1865-1965.

Hank spent the WWII years as a radio operator and instructor in the U.S. Army Air Force, returning in the spring of 1946 to complete his work at Dartmouth.

After leaving Dartmouth he attended graduate school at Boston University, receiving his A.M. in '49, then to the University of Maine receiving his M.Ed, in Administration in 1950. He later started doctoral studies at the University of Cincinnati. Before joining the business world, he was Instructor of English at Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts and chairman of the Department of English at Fairfield (Maine) High School.

His business career was with General Electric in Evandale, Ohio, as a ghost writer and later writing presentations, with Lear Inc. in Grand Rapids, Mich., as advertising manager, and finally with Pratt and Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford, Conn., as senior engineering writer. Hank returned to Maine in the summer of 1971 to begin renovation of a 125-year-old house in Cushing on the banks of the St. George River.

During his business career he managed to research the Revolutionary War years and write an as yet unpublished historical novel of some 1000 pages, based on the life of Benjamin Burton, entitled Winter Soldier.

He is survived by his widow, Mary I. Perley of Cushing, Maine, two daughters, a step-son, and his father, Henry Red Eagle Perley of Greenville. His funeral service was held in Greenville on May 2.

Henry loved and was proud of Dartmouth. He was looking forward to the 30th reunion in June and the check for reservations for him and his wife was in his pocket ready to mail when he was taken to the hospital.

1946

CHARLES ARTHUR DESHAVZO of 131 Spoonwood Road, Wilton, Conn., died on March 2 at Greenwich Hospital. He was 48 years old. Although he had suffered from lung cancer since last October, he continued his work with the J. P. Stevens and Company until a week before his death. His entire career was devoted to the textile industry.

A native of East Orange, N.J., Art was educated in the public schools and entered Dartmouth in July of 1942. He subsequently enlisted in the Naval V-12 Program of the United States Marine Corps. He served in China from 1945 to 1946 and returned to Dartmouth for his final semester. Recalled during the Korean War in February of 1951 as a Ist Lieutenant, Art served with the sth Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division.

He is survived by his widow, the former Carmen Louise Boom; a son Peter '69; a daughter Jane; and a granddaughter, born seven days after his death.

1954

It is with deep sorrow that we report the untimely death of RUSSELL SINGER CARY JR. at Boulder, Col. on May 14.

"Skip" was born . May 3, 1932 in Melrose, Mass., and prepared for Dartmouth at Vermont Academy. At Dartmouth he majored in geology and was a member of Alpha Theta fraternity, but was most well known for his prowess on the ski team, of which he was captain.

He served in the Army from 1955 to 1962 and on June 1, 1960 married Nancy Proctor in Yosemite National Park.

An accountant by profession, he was a member of the AAPG and the Colorado Society of Certified Public Accountants, and was Assistant Treasurer of Consolidated Oil and Gas of Denver. He pursued his interest in geology throughout his years since Dartmouth and was a member of the Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists.

He is survived, in addition to his widow, by a son Scott; two daughters, Heide and Kirsten; by a brother Robert '60, and by his parents Mr. and Mrs. Russell Singer Cary of Melrose, Mass.

To his near and dear ones the Class extends its deepest sympathy.

1955

COMMANDER JOHN LEAVER was killed in a helicopter crash May 8 in the Gulf of Tonkin. He was performing his duties as Operations Officer of Destroyer Flotilla 11.

John was an NROTC midshipman at Dartmouth and had served on active duty since graduation. His Navy career was distinguished and varied. Just previous to his last assignment he was skipper of the USS Ramsey (DEG-2). This ship is a key unit in the Navy's Vietnam defense effort. Only the very finest officers are entrusted with such important assignments. It is fitting that his shipmates held a Memorial Service for him abroad the Ramsey on May 16.

John prepared for Dartmouth at Bewster Academy. He was a brother of Phi Sigma Kappa. His home was New Hampshire and he exemplified the best traits of the Granite State.

To his widow Claire and their sons, Robert and Edward, the Class extends its sympathy and humble thanks for his great patriotism and service to us all. They have requested that any remembrances be sent to the Navy Relief Society Educational Scholarship Fund.

MORGAN JOSEPH MCGUIRE died July 5, 1971 after a sudden illness. He was stricken with a cerebral hemorrhage and died within six hours.

Morgan was born in New Haven, Conn., on April 9, 1933 and prepared for Dartmouth at Hopkins Grammar School in New Haven.

At Dartmouth he was a member of Green Key and Germania. After his tour of duty with the Army, he returned to Hanover and graduated from Tuck in 1960.

He was a cost accountant with the International Salt Co. in Scranton, Pa., and lived at 91 Wakefield, Hamden, Conn.

His survivors include his widow Claudine, two daughters, his mother, and one sister.

1958

CYRUS HENRY LOUTREL 3RD, an executive with Chubb & Son, Inc., New York insurance brokers, died of cancer on April 3.

Cy prepared for Dartmouth at Deerfield Academy and his friend Al Greener wrote that Cy left after his freshman year and then returned. after a two-year stint in the U.S. Army. He graduated with the Class of 1960. A member of Delta Tau Delta and Dragon, he was extremely popular on the campus and was elected social chairman at Delt.

He was an avid sailor and tennis buff, belonging to Beacon Hill Country Club in Summit and the Mason's Island Yacht Club of Mystic, Conn., where he had grown up. His grandfather, Cyrus H. Loutrel, was a New Jersey State Senator.

Cy leaves his widow Judy and two sons, Chad, 7, and Paul, 4. The sincere and deep sympathy of the Class is extended to the family who live at 15 Mount Vernon Ave., Summit, N.J.

1960

SAUL WOOLFORD BAERNSTEIN died of cancer on May 11 at George Washington Hospital in Washington, D.C. At the time of his death, Saul was with the law firm of Wilner, Scheiner, and Greeley of that city.

Saul was born in Houston, Texas, and prepared for Dartmouth at San Jacinto High School. While majoring in philosophy, he found time to participate in the Forensic Union, WDCR, and UGC and Jewish Life Council. Saul was a member of the debating team that won the national championship in 1959.

He received his law degree from the University of Texas, where he was editor of the Texas Law Review. He served as a law clerk for the Texas Supreme Court and taught at Southern Methodist University school of Law. Saul founded the first community legal services clinic in Dallas.

From there, Saul became a special research fellow in law and behavioral sciences at Yale, where he received a master's degree in law in 1968. Saul went to Washington that year and became associated with the Urban Institute and American University Law School's Institute for Justice and Social Behavior.

The Class extends its deepest sympathy to his widow Madeleine, of 2475 Virginia Ave. NW; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Baernstein of Houston; and his two sisters, also of Houston.

1965

JOHN LOVELL PICKELLS JR. drowned while fishing on January 25.

John prepared for college at Groton and was an English major. He was a member of Chi Phi and active in IDC.

After graduation he taught at Milford, N.H., in the ninth grade. He then moved to Harwich, Mass., where he taught at the High School until June 1971, at which time he became a fisherman.

Survivors include his widow Karen and four children. A fund has been established at the Hyannis Co-operative Bank, Main St., Orleans, Mass., to help the family.

Mott Devilloe Brown '17

Henry Gabriel Perley '43

John Leaver '55