Obituary

Deaths

September 1975
Obituary
Deaths
September 1975

(A listing of deaths of which word has been received within the past months. Full notices may appear in this issue or a later one.

Studwell, Chester A. '02 July 10 Mitchell, Herbert H. '07 June 1, 1974 Farrington, George H. '12 June 22 Rogers, Scott A. '12 June 8 Shumway, Carl E. '13 July 5 Wright, Marc S. '13 August 5 Kinne, Willard A. '14 May 22 Lyons, Walter L. '14 June 7 Cobleigh, Gerald F. '15 July 17 Ellis, Richard H. '16 April 23 Kirkland, Edward C. '16 May 24 McCammon, Robert L. '16 September 22, 1974 Dibble, Tracy A. '17 June 20 Eaton, William C. '17 May 24 Randall, Leon N. '17 February 6 Baldwin, Murray A. '18 May 9 Sheldon, Neil O. '18 July 21 Woodman, Paul D. '18 May 8 Carto, William J. '19 March Johnson, Kenneth B. '19 July 7 Sheldon, Samuel '19 May 2 Singleton, Charles McE. '19 April 30 Smith, Wilton M. '19 May 1 Keep, C. Russell '20 December 13, 1974 Bower, J. Philip '21 July 12 Smith, Donald R. '21 May 17 Mann, William D. '22 June 13 Richardson, Everett G. '22 December 20, 1974 Winkler, Charles J. Jr. '22 June 22 Baldwin, Joseph E. '23 June 12 Downes, Randolph C. '23 July 14 Fairbanks, Edwin P. '23 May 30 Keenan, John H. '23 June 24 McLaughlin, George A. '23 May 21 Plant, George L. '23 May 20 Kraft, James B. '23 1967 Moore, John E. '23 June 5 Rivoire, Charles W. '23 June 5 Welch, William B. '23 April 29 Beers, A. Maynard Jr. '24 May 15 Cipollaro, Anthony C. '24 July 5 Pearson, Leonard '24 September 18, 1974 Spaulding, C. Jerry '24 July 31 Stephenson, Otis E. '24 June 28 Wolfe, Harry D. '24 March 28 Hennessey, Edward F. Jr. '25 September 29, 1974 Bell, Gordon '26 July 29 Buck, Howard T. '26 May 1 Carnell, Prentiss Jr. '26 June 9 Gibson, Harold H. Jr. '26 May 17 Hassett, Edward K. '26 January 9 Jost, Charles F. '26 April 23

Burnham, Donald C. '27 June 26 Hood, Richard F. '27 June 2 Lund, Arthur C. '27 July 6 Picken, James E. '27 April 2 Roe, John '27 May 5 Warner, Douglas C. '27 March 31 Worth, Elmer H. '27 June 23 Flynn, William F. '28 April 15 Willard, David K. '28 March 15 Bott, G. Morrill '29 April 25 Brabb, John H. '29 December 25, 1974 Hazelton, C. Russell '29 1968 Palmer, R. Stuart '29 December 25, 1974 Borella, Victor G. '30 July 9 Ekstrom, Henry W. '30 June 27 Johnes, C. Kenneth '30 April 28 Keller, William H. '30 April 29 McKibben, Walter J. M. '30 April 29 Chase, Richard B. '31 April 25 Power, Clifton W. '31 May 21 Uglow, George S. '31 May 15 Hofheins, Roger W. '32 June 26 Cleaves, Paul C. '33 May 9 Davidson, John A. '33 May 11 Doscher, Robert '33 June 7 Rienzo, Leonard R. '33 1974 Rollins, Daniel G. '33 July 20 Shollenberger, Lynford P. '33 June 5 Wilmot, Robert E. '34 May 9 Brown, Charles H. '35 July 25 Reynolds, Harris A. '35 May 27 Rogers, Paul K. Jr. '35 May 30 Shelmire, J. Malcolm Jr. '35 October 28, 1973 Townsend, Lloyd R. '35 June 21 Hill, John M. '36 May 15 Auld, Frederick H. Jr. '37 1973 Jacks, Allan '37 July 4 Smith, Edward W. '37 December 29, 1974 Stinson, Loring R. Jr. '37 May 4 Matteson, Robert F. '38 July 9 Langmuir, Kenneth M. '39 May 2 Mumford, Thomas F. '39 July 19 Sullivan, John H. '39 February 1974 Anderson, William T. '45 May 12 Blake, Paul G. '47 April Karnan, Robert S. '50 May 20 Nell, Herbert L. '53 December 22, 1974 Styles, J. Murray '61 June 30 Lena, Frank D. '62 May 10 Purdy, Harry L. '39hon October 21, 1974 Schroeder, Henry A. '67hon April 21 Blood, Robert O. '13m August 4

1902

Eight days before his 95th birthday, CHESTERARTHUR STUDWELL died in the Volunteer Firemen's Home in Hudson, N.Y. On June 5 he had fallen in his room, breaking his hip. He never regained the buoyant spirit which had kept him active since he retired.

Chet was born in Port Chester, N.Y., July 18, 1880, and, after graduation, returned to spend a busy life in his home town. He leaves a son Edwin F. '31, four granddaughters, and six great-grandchildren.

In college he was known as a dependable chap, was on the football squad for two years, a member of Phi Kappa Psi, and one of the group planning for a career in engineering. After graduation he went to work for the municipal engineer for both Rye and Port Chester. In 1912, after passing the N.Y. State examination, he was appointed village engineer of Port Chester, a posi- tion which he resigned in 1929, though as a partner of the engineering firm of J. A. Kirby, he continued to do public and private work for the town of Rye. He sold his business in 1965, but continued working until he retired in 1966.

Chet was well known in his native town, taking part in many activities. He was an active Mason, and an enthusiastic founder of various Masonic Bowling Leagues in New York State. He bowled regularly until he was 92. He was proud of his association with the local Volunteer Fire Department, of which his father had been the chief. When he finally retired, he went to live in the Firemen's Home.

Always a loyal member of his Class, he had a fine record of contributions to the Alumni Fund. He attended class reunions when possible, and seldom without his favorite camera. He served as class president from 1962 to 1972.

1905

Word has been received by the College from the sister of HARRY ALFRED LILL of his death in California on January 1. His last listed address there was 1651 Santa Barbara Avenue in Glendale.

Harry was born July 24, 1880 in Mount Hope, Kansas, from where he came to Dartmouth. He graduated a member of Phi Beta Kappa and began an 11-year career in journalism in his home state. In 1919 the Lills moved to California and Harry took up farming for 10 years. This was followed by eight years as a reporter for the Glendale News-Press after which until retirement in 1953, he maintained a vending business.

Harry married Bessie Jackson in 1907 and she predeceased him in 1964 shortly before the death of their only child Catherine.

In 1967 Harry married Mrs. Cecilia Homan who survives him at the above address. To her 1905 expresses its sympathy.

1913

MARC SNOWELL WRIGHT, class secretary for the past eight years and a most devoted alumnus, died suddenly at the Winchester (Mass.) Hospital on August 5.

Many alumni will recall with pride that for eight years from 1912 to 1920 Marc held the world pole vault record of 13 ft. 2¼ inches. He was selected while a junior to attend the 1912 Olympics in Stockholm where he won a Silver Medal in the pole vaulting event.

Born April 21, 1890 in Chicago, Marc graduated from Wendall Phillips High School where he was a member of the track and football teams. He was accepted at Dartmouth and worked during the summer for tuition money but transportation was a problem. He took a job as "cow poke" aboard a cattle train bound for New York, arriving in Hanover via Canada four weary days later. He was a member of Sphinx, Palaeopitus, and Delta Tau Delta and captain of the 1913 track team.

After graduation. Marc joined the Daniel Green Manufacturing Company in New York. In World War I he served as a Navy pilot in the Caribbean. Returning to civilian life, he started his own shoe manufacturing business in Reading. In 1919 he was married to Frances Knox Davis, a Boston University-Simmons graduate.

In 1942 he was commissioned in the Naval Air Force, served on the Eastern Seaboard, and retired in 1945 with the rank of commander.

After retirement in 1965 Marc served as an active volunteer at the Bedford Veterans' Hospital and, being an avid tennis player, spent many hours on the courts. He was a member of the American Legion, the Bear Hill Country Club, U.S. Navy Officers Club, New England Olympians, Melrose Tennis Associates, and was a track official.

A memorial service was held August 8 in the Church of the Good Shepherd of which he was a member, with Renza Shepard, Bernice Mason, Ruth Gay King, and Carl and Grace Forsaith representing the Class.

Two of Marc's brothers were also Dartmouth men: George '14 and Henry 'l7. Surviving him are his widow Frances, a daughter Mrs. Edwin (Ellen) Beschler of New York City, and one grandson Marc. To all of them we extend the sympathy of the Class. The family has announced that Memorial gifts may be made to the Dartmouth Alumni Fund or the United States Olympic Committee.

CARL ELLIOT SHUMWAY died at the Hanover Healthcare Center on July 5 at the age of 85.

Shum was born in Melrose, Mass., on June 30, 1890.

He married Frances Frost Bean in Wellesley June 18, 1929. Frances died in 1955. Surviving him are his son Peter of Etna, two daughters, Mrs. Nancy Adams of 10 Canton Rd., West Simsbury, Conn., and Mrs. Lorna Hamilton of Marblehead, Mass., and eight grandchildren. Shum maintained a lifelong interest in sports, particularly skiing and swimming in both of which he excelled. He was one of the three men who ascended Mt. Washington for the first time on skis in winter many years ago, and was an outstanding ski jumper in the White Mt. contests.

He received a citation 40 years ago from the Boston papers as being largely responsible for the success of a Winter Carnival held in the Boston Garden which drew an audience of 40,000 during the three-day affair.

Shum lectured on dirigibles and aircraft and was one of a group who arranged a mammoth air spectacle held in Boston in the fall of 1934. He was a member of Phi Kappa Psi and the Dartmouth Outing Club, being president in 1912-13. Other affiliations were the American Legion, Naval Officers Assn., Early and Pioneer Naval Aviators Assn., Veterans of World War I Balloon Assn., Appalachian Mt. Club, and the Masons.

His military career was outstanding. He enlisted as a seaman in World War I and received his commission in 1918. He had an active part in starting the first Naval Reserve Air Station in Squantum, Mass., and the first Naval Reserve Aviation Squadron. Called to active duty in 1941, he flew missions in lighter-than-aircraft along the Eastern Seaboard and the Aleutians. Carl retired in February 1947 after serving more than 29 years in the U.S. Naval Reserve.

A memorial service was held at The Church of Christ in Hanover a fitting tribute to this man who had two goals in life - to reach the age of 85 as did his father before him and to live and die in his beloved Hanover. Three of his classmates attended the service - Bob Conant, Fred Page, and Dr. Harry French, and Mrs. Conant. The Class extends sympathy to his family.

1916

With the death on May 24 of EDWARD CHASE KIRKLAND, internationally known economic historian and one of Bowdoin College's most beloved teachers, the Class has lost one of its truly distinguished members. Death came on his 81st birthday in a Hanover convalescent home.

"Bowdoin men and women throughout the world mourn the loss of a distinguished scholar and historian," said Dr. Roger Howell Jr., Bowdoin's president. "A college is what its teachers make it and Professor Kirkland was one of Bowdoin's great teachers. As a prolific writer, he had few peers. The en- tire Bowdoin family will treasure his wit and wisdom."

Kirk was a native of Bellows Falls, Vt., and for many years was a summer resident of Thetford Center. As an undergraduate he was a Rufus Choate Scholar and in the First Honor Group. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He served for two years in World War I with the U.S. Army Ambulance Service with the French Army and was awarded the Croix de Guerre.

He earned his M.A. at Harvard in 1920 and his Ph.D. there in 1924. He also received an M.A. from Cambridge. From 1920-21 he was an instructor in Citizenship at the College. Kirk received an honorary D. Litt. from Dartmouth in 1948. He was also awarded honorary degrees by Princeton and Bowdoin.

His many books, applauded by critics as the works of a profound scholar, included A History of AmericanEconomic Life, Industry Comes of Age, and Men,Cities and Transportation, a monumental study of transportation in New England. He was the author of a widely-acclaimed biography of Charles Francis Adams Jr.

He was also an instructor at M.I.T. from 1922-24 and taught at Brown University from 1924 to 1930 when he went to Bowdoin where he held the Frank Munsey Professor of History chair until 1959 when he retired to devote full time to his writing.

For many years he was chairman of the Association of University Professors Committee on Academic Freedom. He had also been president of the Association, former president of the Economic History Association and of the Mississippi Valley Historical Society, later the Organization of American Historians. He was a member of the National Senate of Phi Beta Kappa and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He served as Commonwealth Lecturer at University College in London in 1952 and was Pitt Professor of American History at Cambridge 1956-57. He also held visiting professorships at Cornell and Wisconsin and was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1955. He continued to serve on academic committees after his formal retirement and numerous times returned to Bowdoin to lecture.

In 1924 Kirk married Ruth Babson, a Radcliffe graduate, who survives him at their Thetford home. Also surviving is their son Edward S. '46 of New York. Funeral services were held May 27 in the Thetford Congregational Church and interment was in Hillside Memorial Cemetery there. Professor Emeritus Arthur Wilson delivered the eulogy. Mrs. John Stearns represented the Class. The family requested in lieu of flowers memorial gifts be made to the Edward C. Kirkland Book Fund through Baker Library.

ROBERT LANDON MCCAMMON died suddenly of an embolism, complicating pneumonia, at the Rutland, Vt., hospital on September 22, 1974. The funeral services were held at the Aldous Funeral Home and cremation was carried out at the Gardner Earle Crematory in Troy, N.Y.

Unfortunately word of Bob's illness and death did not reach any of our class officers until June of this year when some details were received in a letter from the nurse who took care of Bob and is now caring for his widow Beverly at her home.

Bob was born in Rutland and came to Dartmouth from high school there. In college he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi, and left college in 1914. In 1918 he attended the U.S. Army Officers Training School at Camp Humphrey, Va., and in 1919 he married Lena Beverly who was a graduate of Washington State Normal School. They had one daughter Beverly who is married to Brigadier General Julian Ewell of MacLean, Va.

For 35 years Bob was with the U.S. Geological Survey, retiring in 1954 to his home in Rutland which had been his home base all of his life.

Bob is survived by his widow, his daughter, and twin grandchildren.

It has been brought to the attention of this writer, by several of his classmates, that the last line of the obituary in the June issue of this Magazine included a misstatement in regard to the athletic ability of JOHN HYDE MENSEL. The facts are that Jake became a first string member of the freshman basketball team and also of the track squad. He played in one basketball game against Cushing Academy in spite of a broken nose. As a varsity track athlete Jake competed in the four mile cross-country race and also ran the two mile in the New England Intercollegiates.

It is of interest that in some statistics compiled by our famous track coach, Harry Hillman, Jake had the slowest pulse of any of the cross-country runners, and made the greatest gain in lung capacity during the period of his varsity competition. He also skiied and was a mountain climber.

Jake will be remembered by his classmates as one who as a freshman was always on hand for class rushes and other competition against the sophomores, and he remained one of the most popular members of 1916 throughout our college course.

1917

Word has been received through classmates of the area of the passing of TRACY AUSTIN DIBBLE of Lynn, Mass., May 20. Trace was one of the first 17'ers that I met as we matriculated and had rooms in old Reed Hall. Like many undergraduates of that era, Trace worked his way through and is remembered particularly as an agent for Penn the Florist. His war record indicates he enlisted in Boston in December 1917 with a rank of private in the U.S. Quartermaster Corps. He served at Camp Johnston in Jacksonville, Fla., Fort Oglethorp in Georgia and with the General Hospital Quartermasters detachment. He received his discharge at Fort Oglethorp in January of 1919 with a rank of sergeant.

Following graduation, Tracy took up accounting and received his BCS Degree from Northeastern University in accounting. The results were awards as CPA in Massachusetts, 1920, New Hampshire in 1920 and Maine in 1921. His profession included membership in the Lynn Housing Authority. He was past commander of the American Legion's Essex County Voiture and Massachusetts Committeeman for the American Legion. He was also active in the Odd Feillows and was a past Noble Grand of the Bay State Lodge, of Odd Fellows and the Lynn Encampment of Odd Fellows: He was also a member of the Massachusetts Society of Certified Public Accountants, the North Shore Dartmouth College Association, and the Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendents.

He is survived by his widow Sara (Pelton), a son Tracy A. Dibble Jr., and a daughter-in-law, Mrs. Lorraine Dibble of Winthrop; a sister, Mrs. Evelyn Ballard of Desert Hot Springs,' Calif., and four grandchildren.

We have just learned of the passing of our classmate LAWRENCE LEVI DOTY, on September 17, 1974.

Ping as he was known to us, enlisted in the Navy May 3, 1917. After attending the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, he served for one year in this country, then was transferred overseas for a period of nine months. His duties consisted of participating in mine laying in the North Sea. Lawrence was discharged on September 16, 1919 with the rank of ensign.

Immediately after leaving the armed services, he worked as a buyer for Helburn Thompson Company of Salem, Mass. There followed a connection as salesman for wool merchant, Chester S. Brett, Inc. of Boston, Mass. Before retirement, Ping was treasurer of the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company, manufacturers of medicine, of Lynn Mass. He assumed the position of treasurer in April 1948 and served in this capacity for a Period of 20 years

Through his son Nathan we learn that, "Throughout his life, and particularly in the last 40 years, his main interest and activity was travel. He traveled with my mother extensively throughout the world - mostly in Asia, North Africa and Europe; also in South America, Indonesia, and the Pacific Islands. His interest in photography and in the collection of art objects coincided with his travels which often took him to some very remote areas which are not generally visited by the average tourist or traveler from the United States."

Our records indicate his marriage to Caroline Fogg in 1920. She survives him as well as do three children, Lawrence G. '46, Douglas M. and Nathan P. '55. Your secretary has been in touch with his widow Caroline and extends the sympathy of the Class to her.

LEON NICKERSON RANDALL passed away in Boston, Mass., on February 6, 1975. After graduation, "Joe," like many of his Class at Dartmouth, joined the Army on March 4, 1918. He continued to work in the Ordnance Department, was transferred to the South at Camp Hancock in Georgia and later was on duty at Sheffield, Ala., in the nitrate division. He received his honorable discharge at Sheffield on January 15, 1919. Following his services in the Army, Leon worked as an accountant for Scovill-Wellington in Boston for a short period, then joined in a similar capacity with Martin Perry Corporation. As a result of this accounting experience, it was only natural that he became interested in the Internal Revenue Service for the U.S. Government. He was in their employ for many years, in fact, until his recent retirement. Leon is survived by five sons who live in the Massachusetts' area, and 24 grandchildren. He was married February 19, 1921 to Viola B. DeCosta. The Class extends it's deepest sympathy to his widow and the family.

1918

It is regretfully reported that MURRAY ALPHEUS BALDWIN passed away on May 9 in Fargo, N.D., following many months of illness. Murray was born in Casselton, N.D., July 1, 1896 and moved to Fargo as a young boy. His four grandparents had migrated from N.H. and Vt. to Lake City, Minn, in 1860 (where, following a flag service in Fargo, Murray was buried). This pioneering spirit was inherited and reflected in Murray's many and extensive travels and exploration in several continents and his great love of the out-of- doors.

He transferred to Dartmouth in 1915 where he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi. He enlisted in the Navy in April, 1917 and served as a pilot in Naval Aviation, principally with dirigibles, and attained the rank of lieutenant commander. In World War II he reenlisted in Naval Aviation with the rank of commander and served until 1945, retiring as captain and commanding officer of the U.S. Fleet Air Base in England.

In Fargo he was associated with his father in investments, and was vice president of the American Life and Casualty Co., manager of the Dakota Clinic, district director of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, served on the N.D. State Historical Board, and on committees dealing with municipal water supply, flood control, and irrigation development. He served two terms as mayor of Fargo, resigning to run for the State Legislature in 1954, where he served until 1963 when he declined to run again. He was chairman of the important Appropriations Committee and acted as lieutenant governor. He was also president and treasurer of the North Dakota Water Users Association and head of the Fargo Aeronautic Club.

At the national level, aside from Naval service in World Wars I and II, he served in Washington, D.C., as a director of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce (along with 1918 classmate William B. Wright), and worked with the U.S. Shipping Board and U.S. State Department. He was a 33rd degree Mason and member of numerous clubs and associations. He owned and operated three large wheat, grain, and sugar beet ranches near Fargo assisted by his only living son Stephen, with whom he shared residence in Fargo and a winter home near Apache Jet., Arizona. He also had a summer home at Detroit Lakes, Minn.

Murray somehow found time to travel, explore, hunt, and fish throughout the United States, Central and South America, and Europe and his four-wheel drive wagons took him to Alaska, Baja, Calif., and the remote mining and historic areas of Arizona and the Southwest. Murray was an active conservationist, a student of geology, Indian cultures and for the past ten years had developed a hobby of collecting chunks of colorful rocks in remote areas in Arizona and cutting and polishing them into beautiful clocks, bookends, jewelry, etc. in his well-equipped shop at his winter home in Arizona.

Those who had the privilege of knowing him are greatly saddened by the loss of such a warm, congenial, wordly and highly esteemed friend. His loyalty to and affection for family, friends, college, state and nation merits the highest tribute anyone can bestow. He was truly a great American.

He is survived by a son Stephen, two daughters, Lee and Margaret, and their families, to whom the Class extends deepest sympathy.

1919

WILLIAM JEROME CARTO died suddenly in March at his home in West Harwich, Mass., where he had made his home since retiring in 1963 from the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Co. where he had spent his entire business career.

He is survived by his widow Mary Frances and two daughters and several grandchildren.

CHARLES McENTEE SINGLETON died on April 30 in Kansas City where he was born and lived all his life. He was 78. He is survived by his widow Meredith Warner Singleton.

Charlie entered the Army during World War I and did not return to College but went to Kansas City where he established the Altman - Singleton Insurance Agency from which he retired this year. He was a member of many civic organizations and an avid antique collector, particularly of fire marks. In 1971 he lent his collection to the Hallmark Gallery in New York for an exhibition.

SAMUEL SHELDON died at his home in Weybridge, Vt., after a long illness. Sam entered college from Pawling, N.Y., and after seeing service in France returned and received his degree. For 25 years he was associated with the New York State Department of Mental Hygiene at Wingdale, N.Y.

On retiring he returned to Weybridge and he and his wife Helen had been active in civic work. They both were directors of the Sheldon Museum in Middlebury, which was founded by a great-uncle.

He is survived by his wife and several cousins.

WILTON MERLE SMITH died on May 1 in Neptune, N.J., where he had made his home in recent years. He was at Dartmouth only a year, leaving to join the Navy in World War I and not returning.

During most of his business life Bill was with the U.S. Army Electronics Command, retiring in 1963. During recent years he has been very active in Masonic work.

He is survived by his widow Hannah, and two children Wilton Jr. of Neptune, N.J., and Mrs. William H. Wood of Plattsburgh, N.Y., and several grandchildren.

1921

ALLISON VAN VLIET DUNN, a civil and hydraulic engineer who for nearly four decades was connected with the National Park Service, Department of the Interior, and who as chief of the Water Resources Section devoted himself to the maintenance and administration of national parks and monuments, died of a stroke February 14 in Berkeley, Calif., where he made his home. He took up engineering with the intention of developing creatively his country, and all his working life he exerted major efforts trying to save our national heritage from destruction. For this work he was honored by the Secretary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall with the Department's highest honor, the Distinguished Service Award, and given a gold medal.

Al entered the National Park Service in 1928 as an engineering draftsman at the Rocky Mountain National Park and soon became park engineer. In 1936 he was appointed head of a newly established unit to oversee all National Park Service water resources. This unit which grew into the Branch of Water Resources, Division of Lands, in the Washington office was headed by him from its inception until he retired in 1963. In this position he initiated studies to determine the need for water and the sources of supply to meet future water requirements in all Park Service areas. He insisted upon compliance with Federal, State, and local legal requirements governing the right to obtain and retain the use of water in each service area, in many of which water is a critical commodity. He formulated a unique docket system which proved invaluable in protecting government interests and in dealing with water resources problems affecting the Park Service. Because of his constant vigilance and careful study, the Service was enabled to obtain new sources of water and to safeguard, sometimes through court action, existing sources.

Al was a man of many interests. After his retirement he photographed TV shows, roses, and fuchsias; instituted a buried system of sprays for watering his gardens; raised plums, pears, apples, and lemons; concerned himself with the pollution of the Connecticut River and the arterial maze Hanover might become; repaired in his library his many volumes of the classics proudly owned in his family since Colonial days; attended meetings of olive growers; fashioned chess sets; studied surfs along the California coast and the rookeries of egrets and great blue herons; and visited Death Valley where he had earlier done work.

Born in Galesburg, Ill., June 23, 1898, Al prepared for Dartmouth at the Western High School, Washington, and received his degree in Engineering from the Thayer School. At the time of his Citation he wrote a 1921 friend that he was convinced that the award should have been given not to him but to Dartmouth College and the Thayer School, for he "just happened to become a small valve in the Government machine, with functions for which his broad engineering education had provided excellent qualifications."

In 1930 he married Margherita ("Marghie") Hyde of Berkeley, who survives him, along with their only child, Jane Allison, Mrs. David W. Turner, and three grandsons, and a granddaughter.

J.H. '21

DONALD RICHARD SMITH died of complications of cancer and diabetes on May 17. He was 76 years of age.

He was born February 5, 1899 in Turners Falls Mass., and had lived there all his life. He attended Turners Falls High School where he was manager of baseball, basketball, and dramatics.

At Dartmouth Don lived in North Fayerweather Hall as a freshman with other classmates including Russ Goodnow, Connie Conrad, Carleton McMackin, Max Dechter, Ed Luedke, Art Nave, Art Oppen- heimer, Walt Prince, and Alex Youngerman. His roommate was Rog Wilde.

He joined the Beta Theta Pi fraternity along with Harry Chamberlaine, Marshall Exnicious, Ted Hartshorn, Dan Ruggles, and Joe Vance.

He was married September 30, 1921 to Prudence Greanelle. They had a daughter Jean who is the mother of two children.

Don worked for the Equitable Life Assurance Society and later for the Greenfile Tap and Die Company from which he retired in 1962.

His body was willed to Tufts College Medical School.

1922

EVERETT GORDON RICHARDSON, 74, retired engineer, suffered a fatal heart attack on December 20, 1974, at his home', 135 Orchard Road, Norris, Tenn. His first heart attack had occurred in June 1953.

Sunny, as his many friends knew him, was a native of Leominster, Mass. After graduation from its high school, he served in World War I Naval Aviation before coming to Dartmouth in the 1919 spring term of our freshman year. Endowed with an outgoing, genial disposition, he was an admired classmate and a member of Phi Gamma Delta.

He began his business career in 1923 with the Richardson Piano Case Co. in Leominster. About 20 years later he and his family moved to Salt Lake City. After a few years there, they went to Oak Ridge, Tenn., and since 1954 they had lived in Norris, where prior to his retirement in 1965 Sunny was an engineer with the Tennessee Eastman Corp.

He was active in the credit union of his company employees and he was a member of the Norris Fellowship Church. He was skillful at woodworking as a hobby and contributed several pieces including a lectern, pulpit, and communion table to his church.

Sunny and his wife, the former Dorothy Pace, happily celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary last September. She and their two sons Everett Jr. and Briggs, ten grandchildren, and Sunny's sister survive him. The Class joins them in sorrow.

1923

JOHN EDWARD MOORE died in his sleep on June 5 in Summit, N.J. He had been in failing health for some time but was able to be with us and enjoy our 50th.

A native of Waterbury, Conn., John came to Dartmouth from Crosby High School where he had been president of his senior class. As an undergraduate he was a member of Kappa Kappa Kappa and the Glee Club.

Few men have contributed as much of their lives and energies to Dartmouth as did John. A class agent since graduation, he was elected vice president of the General Alumni Association in 1948. He served for three years as president of the New York Dartmouth Club and was president of the Class of 1923 from 1963 to 1968. In that latter year he was elected president of the Class Presidents Association.

In 1970 John retired as vice president in charge of market planning of Monroe International Division of Litton Industries. He had been with that company for 41 years.

John's wife, the former Helen McManus, died in 1950. His immediate survivors are two daughters Helene (Mrs. W. Robert Sinclair) and Valerie (Mrs. John F. Broozinski) and a son John Jr.

An able, quiet, and friendly man, John will be greatly missed in the councils of the Class of 1923. The sympathy of the Class is extended to his devoted family.

CHARLES WILLIAM RIVOIRE died of cancer on June 5 in Old Lyme, Conn., at the home of his daughter Susan. He had been in failing health for several months.

Charlie was born in Limoges, France, came to Dartmouth from the Hinckley School in Maine, and was a member of Chi Phi. In 1927 he received his L.L.B. from Harvard Law School.

After graduating from Harvard, Charlie went with the New York City firm of Mitchell, Taylor, Capron and Marsh. In 1933 he joined the W. T. Grant Co. from which he retired in 1964 as secretary and general counsel. At the time of his death he was administering trustee of the Grant Charitable Trust and an overseer of the Catholic Student Center at Dartmouth. He was also a director of the American Maize Products Corporation, the Great Island Holding Corporation and the E. Matilda Ziegler Foundation for the Blind. His clubs included the Country Club of Florida, The Ocean Club, and the Little Club of Delray Beach, the Wee Brown Country Club of Darien, Conn., and the New York Harvard Club.

In 1962 Charlie married Helen Martin Murphy who predeceased him. His children by a previous marriage are Susan (Mrs. William J. Hostnik) and Charles W. Jr. a member of the Class of 1962. His grandson, Susan's son, carries on the Dartmouth tradition in the class of 1976.

The Class of 1923 was represented at Charlie's funeral service by Jim Landauer, Leif Nostrand, Clarence and Priscilla Goss, and Ruel and Marge Smith.

Throughout his life following graduation from Dartmouth, Charlie maintained an active and generous interest in the College and the Class. We shall miss him greatly and extend our deepest sympathy to his family.

WILLIAM JACOB GRATZ died peacefully on April 10 after facing up courageously to cancer for several months.

Bill was a native of Wilmar, Minn., and a graduate of its high school. He served with the AEF in France from 1917 to 1919 and for three and a half years was a Naval Air Combat Intelligence officer during World War II. He left the Navy in 1947 as a lieutenant commander to resume his career in banking. A MagnaCum Laude graduate of the College, he received his M.C.S. from Tuck School in 1924. He was a member of Phi Sigma Kappa and Phi Beta Kappa.

Following graduation from Tuck School Bill joined the First National Bank of Saint Paul where he remained until his retirement as a vice president in 1962.

Bill served on the boards of many civic organizations during his very active business life. At the time of his death he was a trustee of the James J. Hill Reference Library and the Conwed Foundation. He was a member of the Minnesota Club.

Bill's only survivor is his devoted sister Marion Gratz who writes: "His courage and realistic Philosophy and thoughtfulness of others are an example for many, especially for me, for I am the only remaining member of our family".

GEORGE LAUDERDALE PLANT died on May 20 in Doctors Hospital, Washington, D.C., following a long period of ill health.

A graduate of Washington's Central High School, George received his M.C.S. from Tuck School in 1924. He was a member of Psi Upsilon.

For a short time following Tuck School, George was with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington. He then joined the National Retail Merchants Association in New York City where he remained until his retirement in 1968. Active as a representative of retail interests, he appeared frequently before House and Senate Committees. During his 38 years with N.R.M.A. he served at various times as vice president of three of its operating divisions - store operations, personnel, and employee relations, and was the author of a number of reports and studies dealing with retail store management and personnel matters.

George's wife Ursula died in 1965 and his only son George Jr. died in 1973. He is survived by five grandchildren and his devoted sister Mary Olive Jones whose husband Stanley Jones was a member of the Class of 1918.

To George's sister and his grandchildren the Class extends its deepest sympathy.

We have received a report of the death in January 1974 of WILLIAM ANDREW FINE JR. No details as to the cause of death or of the names of Bill's survivors are available.

Bill was with us during freshman year. Our Freshman Green Book gives his high school as Dewitt Clinton. The Class Scrap Book reported in 1962 that he entered Dartmouth as a wounded veteran of World War I. The second world conflict found him in Sicily, Italy, and France with an infantry division.

Bill's business career was spent in the stock brokerage business. In 1931 he organized a firm with Francis Dupont. Five years later he created his own firm and in the sixties was reported as being associated with Gude, Winmill Co. at One Wall St.

GEORGE ALEXANDER MCLAUGHLIN died on May 21 of congestive heart failure. He had been in failing health for a year and a half.

A graduate of Minneapolis' West Side High School, George remained at Dartmouth for two years and then transferred to the University of Minnesota where he received his B.A. degree.

At the time of George's death he was chairman of the board of McLaughlin, Gormley, King Co. of Minneapolis, a company which his father founded and which is now headed by his son-in-law. This company manufactures insecticide concentrates and specializes in the importation and compounding of Pyrethrum, a natural insecticide.

In 1962 George married Ted Gaver's widow, the former Dorothea Haman Gaver, and for many years they traveled together to all parts of the world in the in- terest of his business.

Dorothea writes, "You are quite right in saying far too many good men have left us just lately. The widowed group in Saint Paul is widening and we look at each other aghast. But one of life's treasures has been given us in the understanding and love of good friends."

George's survivors include his widow Dorothea, a daughter Nancy, and a son Dr. Donald Paul Gaver.

JOHN HERBERT KEENAN died on June 24 in a Portland, Me., nursing home.

John attended schools in Vermont and New Hampshire and received his M.C.S. from Dartmouth in 1925. He then spent a year at Columbia University. At the time of his retirement he had been professor of economics at the University of Maine in Portland for 15 years. Prior to that he was a professor at Portland Junior College. He was an army veteran of World War I.

Members of the family include John's wife Virginia Currier Keenan, two daughters, Mrs. Peter (Ann) Swazey and Mrs. Richard (Martha) Bourden, a son Stuart J. and five grandchildren. The Class of 1923 extends its deepest sympathy to them.

Word has only recently been received from his son, of the death in 1967 of JAMES BARRY KRAFT.

Jim was with us during freshman year. He then entered the United States Military Academy where he graduated in 1924 with a B.S. degree. At the time of his retirement from the Army in 1955 he held the rank of colonel and was commanding officer at Fort Slocum. Prior to his service at Fort Slocum he was military attache' in Hungary and commanded the Berchtesgarden Recreation Area after World War II.

Jim's only known survivor is his son Captain N. J. Kraft.

1924

ALBERT MAYNARD (Bevo) BEERS, JR. died suddenly on May 15 in Crystal River, Florida. He was born in Newton, Mass., and graduated from Newton High School.

After graduation, Bevo spent some time in Florida selling real estate. In 1928 he went to work for the United Fruit Company and spent 12 years in Honduras. He was then transfered to Colombia where he was an agricultural superintendent until 1961 when United Fruit sold their farms and ranches. After retirement from United Fruit, he continued to live in Santa Marta and to operate plantations and ranches in Colombia. In 1967 he retired to Crystal River, Fla.

Bevo had a most interesting and active career. Wherever he went he took part in activities and enjoyed life to the fullest. While he was in Central America, he was a good-will ambassador for United Fruit and for the United States. He inspired his friends to appreciate American sports, American customs, and American education. He had a hand in building an outstanding American school in Barranquilla and was never too busy to explain the business, social, and ethical aims of the United States. At the same time his wife Quecha taught kindergarten to native children.

Following his retirement to Crystal River, he was very active in the Crystal River Power Squadron and was interested in raising mallard ducks.

In spite of the distances involved, he regularly arranged to fit in trips to reunions and fall weekend parties, along with visits to members of his family.

The Crystal River Squadron pays him the tribute of saying that wherever Bevo lived, he made that community a better place.

In college he was a member of Lambda Chi Alpha.

He is survived by his widow Maria Lucrecia (better known to us as Quecha) whom he married in 1933 and three children; Richard Stanley, Carolyn Beers Paterna, and Albert M. Beers III.

Belated news of the death of EVERETT LEONARD PEARSON on September 18, 1974, in Newport, Vt., has been received. He was with the Class in Hanover from 1920 to 1923. Before coming to Dartmouth he attended Holderness School and Worcester Academy.

He had been a practicing attorney in Newport since 1947 and states attorney for Orleans County, Vt., since 1956. He had also been associated with the Veterans Administration in White River Junction.

Leonard was a member of the United Church of Newport, also a member of Columbian Lodge, AF and AM. of Brattleboro. He was unmarried.

OTIS ELMER STEPHENSON died on June 28 at the Newton-Wellesley Hospital after a long illness. He was a life-long resident of Newton and graduate of Newton High School. He also attended the Boston University School of Business Administration. He was an engineer with Western Electric Corporation from 1926 to 1955 and was associated with General Control Co. from 1955 to 1960.

He was member of the Boston Commandery and Aleppo Shrine and was active in the First Church in Newton.

He is survived by his widow Ruth and two sons, John B. '60 and Robert B. '63.

HARRY DEANE WOLFE died unexpectedly on March 28 as the result of a heart attack, while vacationing in Scottsdale, Ariz. He had been suffering from physical disabilties for some time following an accident.

Harry came to Dartmouth after one year at M.I.T. After graduation he was associated with Montgomery Ward and S. Kann Sons Company. In 1936 he received a M.A. degree (Commerce) from the University of Wisconsin and a Ph.D. degree in 1938. From 1928 to 1942 he was a professor at Kent State (Ohio) and in 1942-3 served as an economist with the War Production Board in Washington. In 1943 he became the director of marketing research for Colgate-Palmolive Co., a position he held until 1957 when he joined the faculty of the University of Wisconsin, School of Commerce as a professor. He became professor emeritus in 1972.

He was the author of many publications regarding marketing and advertising as well as a member of many related organizations. He was also active in community affairs and was listed in Who's Who. In a resolution by the faculty of the University his interests were referred to as "at once philosophical, methodological, theoretical, and practical."

He was a member and trustee of Christ Presbyterian Church and the Maple Bluff Country Club.

He is survived by his widow Dorothy, two grandchildren, and four sisters.

1925

EDWARD FRANCIS HENNESSEY JR. died September 29, 1974 after a short illness. He was born June 22, 1903 in Middleboro, Mass., and came to Dartmouth from Middleboro High School.

Following graduation Ed was in the oil business at first but about 1940 joined the Stevens Walden Co. of Worcester, manufacturer of wrenches and other tools and accessories. He became vice president and sales manager, retiring recently from this position.

In 1930 Ed was married to Margaret Shea in Springfield, Mass. She died in 1967. He is survived by a daughter Mrs. Alex P. Madarasz of Malvern, Pa. and two sons Edward F. III '56 of Hartford, Conn, and Dennis J. of Whitinsville, Mass., and 12 grandchildren.

Ed was a member of the Dartmouth Club of Worcester and was a loyal and interested alumnus of the College.

1926

HAROLD HAMILTON GIBSON JR., Hal to his friends, died on May 17. We were roommates at the Alpha Delta Phi House in our senior year. Hal was thin, high-spirited, an elegant dresser, who played the piano and the mandolin with verve, a cigarette hanging from his lips in the manner of the twenties. He had a great sense of humor, was aristocratic (a word used then but not now) in his attitudes, a strong lover of Dartmouth.

He was the son of Harold Hamilton Gibson '97, whom I remember in Evanston, Ill. He was the founder of the Chicago Dartmouth Club, and many times president. Hal's brother is David A. Gibson '4O. He was a nephew of Harry A. Gibson '97, second cousin of Jasper M. Gibson '00 and Lester H. Gibson '04, grandnephew of John T. Gibson 1864, third cousin to Morton C. Jaquith '29 and Wilbur Jaquith '33.

Hal was born on October 3, 1905 in St. Louis, lived in Evanston, Ill. After College, where he was also a member of Sphinx and Alpha Delta Phi, he married Caroline B. West in 1936. They had one daughter, Ann Bartram, who went to Pembroke, and died in April, 1960.

Hal attended the Harvard Graduate School of Architecture 1927-1928. He worked in architectural design in Chicago 1928-1934, in architectural publishing 1935-1938, in architectural publishing 1935- 1938, and as a draftsman for Oliver Barker '26 in Duxbury, Mass., 1938-1941. He worked for Owens-Illinois Glass Co., in Philadelphia 1941-1960 as an architectural representative.

In 1964 the Gibsons returned to Hanover, living at 9 Mitchell Lane. While in Hanover Hal with taste and verve put together for our 40th Reunion the best movie of our Class yet produced. It was a thrilling experience to see half a dozen model Ts or As crossing the green filled with exuberant youths. Here were the steaming horses drawn up at Lewiston to take hundreds of girls in fur coats under bearskin rugs across the covered bridge to the campus. And there was Tiny Marsans, a huge man, making a speech on the green to the delight of the crowd. Hal with the help of Blair Watson captured the essence of the College in the Northland and produced a document embodying the health and vigor of the Dartmouth spirit, as loved by many here and around the world.

Collie is a devoted Episcopalian but Hal remained aloof from formal religion, a free thinker. There was no funeral. Burial will be in Philadelphia in St. James Kingsessing church yard.

On July 1, 1971 the Gibsons removed to Salem, Mass., where they were custodians of the Peirce- Nichols House, where Collie remains.

Hal was a lover of poetry and of the cultural life of the College. He was a deeply thoughtful man devoted to the best literature of the country, a keen reader and interpreter of American life as reflected in literature. He always gave off sprightliness and ebullience. His death is a special loss to our Class, which sends its heart-known condolences to Collie in her loss. I cherish the memory of his gayety when we were young and had the deepest affection for him throughout his life.

RICHARD EBERHART '26

CHARLES FREDERICK JOST of 252 Weed Street, New Canaan, Conn., died April 23 at Norwalk Hospital after a long illness. He was born in New York City February 19, 1904 and prepared for Dartmouth at Stuyvesant High School.

Charlie was one of the eight 1926 men to enter Thayer School and graduated with a Civil Engineer degree in 1927. Having a son at Dartmouth, Charles Jr. '58, Charlie and his wife Lil took an active interest in class alumni activities and attended many functions.

During World War II he served as a captain in the Ninth U.S. and the First Airborne Army in Northern France, Rhineland and the Battle of the Bulge retiring as a major in 1946.

Following graduation Charlie joined Hazen & Whipple, Consulting Engineers, commencing his professional life in the field of water supply and sanitary engineering which he pursued actively for 45 years. In 1929 he went with the consulting engineering firm of Nicholas S. Hill Jr. which later became Buck, Seifert and Jost of which he was a partner.

As a consultant, he served innumerable municipalities, authorities, state and federal agencies private water utilities, banking institutions both in the U.S. and abroad in connection with all phases of water and sewerage development and operation. He was responsible for many large undertakings, one of which was the Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Authority which handles water and sewer service for the entire island and for which Charlie was consultant for 26 years.

He was a member of the American Water Works Assoc., the Water Pollution Control Federation, the Consulting Engineers Council and the Dartmouth Club of Western Connecticut.

He is survived by his widow, the former Lillian Arzinger,; a son Charles F. Jost Jr. '58; a daughter Jean Mandelbaum; a sister, a brother, and six grandchildren, to whom 1926 extends its sincere sympathy.

1927

ROSWELL SHEPHERD NICHOLS, JR., 70, of Partridge Point, Davis Wharf, Va., died April 19 of cancer. An attorney, he began his practice in Westfield, N.J., and formerly resided in Westfield and Plainfield.

Nick attended prep school at Blair Academy and then came to Dartmouth, where he was a member of Delta Tau Delta. He went on to get his law degree at Rutgers and joined his father in the practice of law in Westfield.

In 1930 he married Ruth Foulks and had the misfortune of losing her in childbirth in 1932. He became very active in civic affairs, serving on the board of managers and as counsel for the Children's Specialized Hospital in Mountainside, the Westfield Rotary Club, an officer of Echo Lake Country Club, Secretary of the United Campaign and a director of Peoples Bank and Trust Co. and its successor, the National State Bank.

During World War II, Nick served four years in the U.S. Navy, rising to the rank of commander.

In 1951 he married Lydia Collins and he is survived by her and her two sons, Baird and Collins Snyder, both Annapolis graduates, and a sister, Charlotte Nichols Montgomery.

Nichols was the senior partner in the law firm of Nichols, Thomson and Peek of Westfield. At the time of his death he was chairman of the Accomack County Board of Zoning Appeals and on the advisory board of the National State Bank at Elizabeth.

JOHN ROE died very quietly and peacefully May 5, at Nassau Hospital, Mineola, N.Y., after a brief illness. He had suffered a stroke. He had had no thought of retiring and was actively engaged in accounting.

Jack was a trustee in the Presbyterian Church of Garden City and was an enthusiastic choir member. He enjoyed his membership in the Long Island University Club and worked in various civic endeavors. He was made a life member of United Cerebral Palsy because of his assistance over the years in their cause.

He was an understanding father and very good pal, as well as husband. He is survived by his widow, the former Isabel Geoghegan, whom he married in 1934 and three daughters, Mrs. Susan Walker, Mrs. Virginia Granville, and Mrs. Alice Leiblein, also six grandchildren and a brother, Edward G. Roe '23.

Jack graduated from Pleasantville, N.Y., High School, Class of '23, where he was class president. He was a member of Phi Delta Theta.

He was a brother of Fred Roe '31 who died in World War II.

DR. DOUGLAS CALVIN WARNER, 70, the owner and founder of the Warner Clinical Lab and a Santa Barbara, Calif., resident since 1946, died March 31 in his home after a lengthy illness.

Born at White Plains, N.Y., September 28, 1904, his education took him through White Plains High, Phillips Andover Academy, Dartmouth College and the University of Colorado. After earning a master's degree at Claremont College and a Ph.D. from the University of Southern California, he entered specialized laboratory work. He became an assistant instructor in human anatomy at Pomona College, and by 1942 he was licensed as a clinical laboratory technologist.

His studies in microbiology in agricultural research for Union Oil Co. were substantial as was his lab work at both Cottage Hospital and Santa Barbara General Hospital. As owner-director of the Warner Clinical Lab he continued studies in animal sciences and related fields. He was a member of the Society of American Bacteriologists, American Society of Bioanalysts, AAAS, Tissue Culture Association and Sigma Xi.

Dr. Warner and his wife Marjorie spent part of each year in Honolulu where they maintained a home since 1959. He belonged to the Santa Barbara Yacht Club as a staff commodore; LaCumbre Country Club; Oahu Country Club and Phi Kappa Sigma. He was an avid golfer, having shot four holes in one and two double eagles.

In addition to Mrs. Warner, he leaves four daughters.

1929

GEORGE MORRILL BOTT was born October 18, 1905 in Arlington, Mass., and died in Sanford, Me., on April 25 after an extended illness. Molly began an active athletic career at Phillips Exeter Academy and continued it during his years at Dartmouth. He will long be remembered by his classmates as a superb athlete who captained the Dartmouth hockey team our senior year and attained Ail-American ranking as a goalie. He was a member of Sphinx and Phi Gamma Delta.

His working life was spent as a superintendent of woolen mills in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Maine. His final post was at the Brooks Woolen Company in Sanford, where he retired about a year ago because of ill health.

Tragedy struck his family soon after his marriage in 1931 to Ruth Gray, since she died the next year. Their son George Morrill Bott Jr., a graduate of the University of Maine, died in 1956 at the age of 24. In 1937 Molly married Anne Clough who survives him. His two stepdaughters, Mrs. Hope Brown of Belfast, Maine, and Mrs. Nancy Gerry of Fairfield, Maine, rave nine children and three grandchildren. The Class of 1929 expresses its deep sympathy to the survivors.

Word has just been received that WILLIAM BOOTH BUNN died on July 31, 1974, but no details are available.

Bill came to Dartmouth from Trinity School. He married Dorothy Adelaide Meyn in 1929 and had one daughter, Dorothy Ellenor Smith. He was active in advertising throughout his career, starting with Cunningham and Walsh of Madison Avenue and its predecessor. He was first engaged in market research and merchandising and later became an account executive. He the moved to the St. Regis Paper Company, where he was manager of Marketing Complications until his retirement.

Bill was a vestryman in the Episcopal Church and spent his summers at the old family homestead on Lake Champlain. The Class extends its deep sympathy to his family.

RUSSELL SHERMAN HOLBROOK, age 67, died on November 26, 1974 as a result of a fire in his home in Cairo, Ill., where he was living alone in retirment. He prepared for Dartmouth at Webster Groves High School, Mo. At Hanover he was a member of Alpha Chi Rho and took an active part in Outing Club hikes. He left Dartmouth after two years to join the promotion department of the Ralston-Purina Company in St. Louis and then moved to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, where he became director of research.

During World War II Russ joined the Navy, emerging as an aviation radio technician. He returned to his newspaper job but soon found electronics work more exciting and joined the McDonnell Aircraft Corporation in radar and other airborne electronics assignments. Later in life he moved to Cairo, Ill., to become assistant manager of an appliance store.

Russ was married twice but little is known of his immediate family. He is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Dorothy H. Piersol of Maplewood, Mo., and Mrs. Betty Hillibrandt of St. Louis.

1930

VICTOR GASPAR BORELLA, one of the country's leading labor consultants, a longtime aide to Nelson Rockefeller in business and government affairs, and an active worker in Dartmouth alumni organizations, died July 9 at the Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital in Hanover. In failing health for the past year, he succumbed to a heart attack.

The greater part of Vic's career was spent with Rockefeller Center in New York City. Beginning there in 1939 as director of personnel and industrial relations, he held that post for nine years, except for wartime leave from 1942 to 1945. He became manager of operations in 1948 and vice president in charge of operations two years later. From 1958 until his retirement in 1966 he held the position of executive vice president and was in charge of all phases of running the huge Center. Before becoming a Rockefeller Center executive he was personnel director for the Terminal Transportation System in New York City from 1930 to 1935 and public relations counsel for General Motors Corporation in New York from 1935 to 1939.

During the three-year leave from the Center, Vic went to Washington to be assistant cordinator in the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs, headed by Nelson Rockefeller, and then executive director of that office. His uncommon skill in labor- management relations was later called upon by Rockefeller when he was campaigning for Governor of New York and when he was in office. Vic was director of the labor section of the Republican Party for the governor's campaigns of 1958, 1962, 1966, and 1970. In 1961 Governor Rockefeller named him chairman of a committee to review the operations of the Workmen's Compensation Law in the State of New York, after which he served as special adviser to the governor on labor affairs. Early this year, when Rockefeller was chosen to be Vice President of the United States, Vic was called out of retirement to be his special adviser on labor matters.

Among the other important labor positions Vic filled, he was vice chairman of the Labor-Management Council of New York City, a director and chairman of the executive committee of the American Arbitration Association, and vice president of the Institute of Collective Bargaining and Group Relations. For his remarkable contributions to the betterment of labor relations in New York he received the Union Label Award of Merit. In 1968 he was honored by the Italian government and made Commander in the Order of Merit. He was a member of the Presidential Mission to Latin America in 1969, and in 1971 received the Open Door Award of the Manpower Education Institute. With all these honors and after spending five years as private consultant in New York, Vic and his wife Eleanor retired to their farm in Enfield, N.H., not far from Hanover.

Dartmouth was one of the great loves of Vic's life and he served it in many capacities, most notably as charter member and then chairman of the board of overseers of the Hanover Inn. He was president of the Class of 1930 from 1955 to 1960; member of the Dartmouth Alumni Council, 1959-62, and its vice president in 1961-62; vice president of the General Alumni Association, 1959-60; and member of the board of governors of the Dartmouth Club of New York, 1964- 65. He received the Dartmouth Alumni Award and the Class of 1930 Award, both in 1968.

Vic was born in Plymouth, N.H., on October 13, 1906. From Newport (Vt.) High School he entered Dartmouth with the Class of 1928. He left in sophomore year to work and attended Norwich University for one year, 1926-27. In the fall of 1927 he returned to Dartmouth and joined the Class of 1930. He was associate editor of Jack-o-Lantern and a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon and Sphinx.

Vic's first marriage, in July 1934, was to Cecelia O'Connor of Houghton, Mich., who died in 1956. In May 1957 he was married to Eleanor Dwinell Newton, sister of Lane Dwinell '28, who was Vic's freshman roommate and who served as Governor of New Hampshire from 1955 to 58. Vic is survived by his widow Eleanor; a stepson, John Borella Newman '63 of Crystal Bay, Minn.; a brother, Charles Borella of Center Harbor, N. H.; and a nephew, Richard Borella '41 of Freeport, N. Y.

A memorial service was held in Rollins Chapel on July 12. Vice President Rockefeller headed the large number of friends, classmates, college officials, and New York labor leaders who attended. Tributes were delivered by Lane Dwinell and by Vic's stepson and nephew. In addition to Nelson Rockefeller, the Class of 1930 was represented by Meade and Marcia Alcorn, Herb and Marge Chase, John and Ellie French, Alex and Caroline McFarlar.d, Milt and Blanche McInnes, Boof Perkins, Charlie and Mildred Rauch, Fred Scribner, and Charlie and Lari Widmayer.

C.E.W. '30

CHARLES KENNETH JOHNES died April 28 in Hollywood, Fla., where he had moved following his retirement from his oil business in Newark, N. J.

Ken was the owner of Mohawk Refining Corp. He had been active in his industry trade associations serving as president of the Association of Petroleum Rerefiners in 1961-62. He was also active in the work of his church and had been a commissioner of the Boy Scouts. He was president of the Maplewood Country Club, 1962-64.

Sympathy of the Class is extended to his widow Elizabeth, son Donald, and daughter Judith.

WALTER J. MORETON MCKIBBEN died on April 29 at his home in Worthington, Ohio. Jay attended Ohio State after leaving Dartmouth and had been with the Post Office Departmennt for 37 years prior to his retirement in 1966. He was a superintendent in the Columbus, Ohio, post office at that time. He suffered a coronary which restricted his activities but was able to pursue his hobbies of gardening and fishing. He and his wife Elizabeth, who shared his enthusiasm for fishing, had spent winters in Florida for several years.

To his widow, son Richard and daughter Jane, the Class extends its sympathy.

HENRY WILLIAM EKSTROM died on June 27 at New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, following a short illness. Hank had been with the Division of Contract Administration, U.S. Defense Dept. in Boston prior to his retirement two years ago when he moved to Cape Cod. He served as a major in the Army Air Force during World War II and as an active reserve officer had also been called back for service in the Korean conflict.

Several years following his graduation from Tuck School he had established his own business in public accounting in Concord, N.H. Hank was a fine golfer, captain of the golf team in 1930 and New Hampshire Amateur Champion in 1929, 1932, and 1933. His championships ran in threes as he was also a three-time senior club champion at Oakley Country Club, Water- town, Mass., in more recent years. He was a member of the Cape Cod Dartmouth Club and the Cranberry Valley Golf Club of Harwich. The Class extends its sympathy to his widow Helen and sister Ethel. Representing 1930 at services held in Concord were Ben Demers, Boof Perkins, Bill Stearns, and Marge and Herb Chase.

1931

FRANK BARNES MCKNIGHT died in Boca Raton, Fla. on April 18. He had been afflicted with cancer.

Frank was president of the Beverly Lumber Company of Kansas City, Mo., but had made his home in Boca Raton for the past 17 years. He was a member of the Community Presbyterian Church of Deerfield Beach, Florida. His fraternity was Phi Gamma Delta.

He is survived by his wife Lois L., two daughters Mrs. Frances Leiding, Crystal Lake, Ill. and Mrs. Mary Ann Clark, Boca Raton; a stepson C. D. Southard, Philadelphia, and a stepdaughter Mrs. Sally McCaffrey, Kansas City.

CHARLES STETSON MENDELL died June 18 in Winter Park, Fla.

Born in Taunton, Mass., he moved to Winter Park in 1936. He was formerly chairman of the Rollins College English Department, served as chairman of the Rollins College faculty, was acting dean of Rollins College and received the Rollins Decoration of Honor in 1948. Prior to 1936 he taught in Tabor Academy for three years. He was a member of Phi Kappa Sigma and the New Bedford (Mass.) Port Society.

Survivors include his widow Phyllis; sons Seth of Avon, Conn., and Nathaniel of Pocasset, Mass.; sister Mrs. Louis Gottschalk of Florence, Ala., and five grandchildren.

CLIFTON WARFIELD POWER died on an air flight home from Paris, France on May 21, 1975. He was born in Pueblo, Colo., on November 18, 1907.

At college he joined Phi Gamma Delta and Sphinx. After graduating from Dartmouth he began a career in the aviation industry, starting with Eastern Airlines.

During World War II Clif served in the Navy, attaining the rank of lieutenant commander; following the war he served in the Naval Reserve.

In 1941 he and Lydia Frazier were married. After the war they settled in southern California, Clif continuing his work in aviation with Convair-General Dynamics. Throughout his 25 years with the company he managed defense contracting activities and was involved in numerous experimental programs, including the Atlas Missile system. After retirement he continued to maintain an interest in aviation and he held a private pilot's license.

He served as president of his local Dartmouth Club and once wrote "Being an alumnus has been a great source of pride to me for all these years."

Clif is survived by his widow Lydia, his son John, and two grandchildren.

GEORGE STANLEY UGLOW died on May 15 in Chicago, succumbing to a heart attack.

After earning his J. D. at Northwestern Law Schook, his career had been in the field of claim adjustment, including being superintendent of claims for the Great American Group of Insurance Companies. During World War II he served in the Navy.

George had been a member of Delta Upsilon Fraternity, the Illinois and the American Bar Associations, Ridge Country Club, and the Church of the Mediator.

He is survived by his widow Helen (DeVries) whom he married in 1938, daughter Barbara Ann Lovelette, and two grandchildren.

1933

ROBERT DOSCHER, a justice of New York State Supreme Court from 1950 to 1964, was killed in an automobile accident during foggy weather on the New Jersey Turnpike June 7. He was 62.

Dosch attended Mercersberg (Pa.) Academy, was admitted to Dartmouth in 1928, and graduated with our Class. He was a member of Theta Delta Chi, Casque and Gauntlet, Paeleopitus, Green Key, and Le Cercle Française. He was on the freshman and junior varisty baseball teams, the freshman swimming team and won his varsity letter in swimming.

He attended Cornell Law School and was graduated from St. John's University Law School in 1937. He was elected to the New York State Assembly and in 1942 at the end of a second term he was commissioned a combat intelligence officer in the Army Air Forces. Serving with the 7th Bomber Command in the Pacific he survived a crash landing but received injuries in a jeep accident which necessitated his hospitalization for more than a year.

In 1946 Dosch was elected a Rockland County judge and surrogate and resigned in 1950 when he was elected to the State Supreme Court.

His son Dr. Crile Doscher '56 writes, "... my dad was no doubt the stimulus that I too attended Dartmouth and has been the same stimulus to my three sons, his grandchildren, who also hopefully will graduate this outstanding educational institution ... I have lost a great friend and Dartmouth has lost a very loyal alumnus." He had served the College faithfully in the interviewing of prospective students.

Surviving are his former wife Alta (King) whom he married in 1945 and who survives him at 143 Parrot Road, West Nyack, N.Y., and five children, Crile, Bruce, Pamela, Jill, and Robert Jr. To them all we express our sincere sympathy.

LYNFORD POWERS SHOLLENBERGER died in his sleep June 5 at his Evanston, Ill., home. He had been ill for some five years but had recently had a pacemaker implanted which was a great help to him.

His friend and classmate Jack Robinson recalls, "Lyn and I were the closest of friends from 10 years of age. It began at a camp in Wisconsin where Lyn was the leader in all activities, particularly sports (all of them).

"We started in high school together but he transferred to Lake Forest Academy where he and the late Tom Eastman were stars of a great Prep School championship football team.

"He was Captain of our '33 Freshman Team but had to drop out due to the Depression. Lyn loved life and people!!"

Lyn was also a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon and Casque and Gauntlet Society. Until his retirement he was in the steel warehousing business with Hunter Hicks.

He is survived by his wife Margaret (Migg) at 918 Michigan Ave. in Evanston; a son John of Washington, D.C.; a daughter Deborah Stewart of Atlanta; and a brother Robert of Evanston. To all of them goes the sympathy of the Class.

1935

HARRIS ALLEN REYNOLDS, 60, of Newtonville, Mass., died May 27 in the New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, after a long illness.

Born in Cambridge, and a former resident of Belmont and Wellesley, Harry graduated from Belmont High School before entering Dartmouth. He was a member of Alpha Sigma Phi and of Phi Beta Also, he was active in the Forensic Union and Freshman and Varsity swimming. A 1938 graduate of Harvard Law School, he devoted his entire life to the legal profession and, at the time of his death, was associated with the Boston law firm of Hale, Sanderson, Byrnes and Morton.

Very active in civic and political pursuits, he served as president of both Boston and Newton Junior Chambers of Commerce, the Belmont Civic Forum, and as secretary of the Massachusetts Civic League. Harry was an assistant attorney general in the 1950s and special counsel for the Massachusetts Crime Commission. In 1962 he was Republican candidate for Massachusetts Secretary of State.

Harry leaves his widow Barbara (Roby), and two sons, Harris Allen, who graduated from Dartmouth June 8 this year, and Richard Tucker, a student at Hobart College. Three surviving brothers are Howard, a Harvard graduate, Clinton '41, and Preston '42.

The Class extends its deepest sympathy to the family.

News has been received, somewhat belatedly, of the death of FREDERICK CUSHING on March 8 at Mobile, Ala., after a brief illness.

Cush spent much of his business life as a general contractor, but most recently was a life insurance underwriter with Mutual of New York. He had started in the paper and container business, but during World War II worked with Gulf Shipbuilding Corp., and construction thereafter became his life work.

In what was a rare occurrence in those days, Cush was married at the beginning of our junior year at Hanover to Janet Boone, a coed from Bowling Green. They had one son, Frederick Jr., who attended Tulane and the University of Alabama Dental School and is now a practicing dentist at Mobile.

Cush entered Dartmouth from Pawling School, majored in Economics and Political Science, and was a member of Beta Theta Pi.

The College has received news of the death of JOHN MALCOLM SHELMIRE two years ago in California. Jack had not kept in touch with the College or the Class, and few details are known.

Following graduation, he began as a salesman with B.V.D. Corporation. During World War II, he was a lieutenant with the U.S. Navy. Since then, little is known. Apparently, he never married.

Jack had entered Dartmouth from Moorestown Friends Academy. He played freshman and varsity soccer, and was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.

PAUL KNAPP ROGERS JR., president of Skinner Precision Industries and one of Connecticut's leading industrialists, died May 30 at his home in New Britain, Conn., after a lengthy illness. He was 62 years old.

A native of New Britain, Paul had spent most of his business life there, following brief stints in the machine tool business in Springfield, Vt., and South Bend, Ind. He joined Skinner in 1937, rose through the ranks and became president in 1954. In addition, he served on the board of a dozen other companies, including Skinner's European subsidiary, Hartford Special Machinery Co., Rowland Products Co., Wasley Products, Inc. and two banks.

Paul was a widely recognized leader in the fluid power industry and for 23 years served as a director and treasurer of Fluid Controls Institute, Inc., as well as a director of the National Fluid Power Association. He was a former director of the Connecticut Business and Industry Association, and most recently had served on the board of the Manufacturers Association Hartford County.

He had widespread civic interests, serving on the of the New Britain General Hospital, Family service Association of New Britain, and the New Britain Chamber of Commerce.

Paul's hobbies were tennis, skiing and yachting, sports whoch he shared avidly with his family. He served as commodore of Off Soundings Yacht Club from 1952 to 1954, and was a director and past president of the Shuttle Meadow Yacht Club.

Paul entered Dartmouth from Culver Military Academy. At Hanover, he majored in engineering, was a member of Phi Kappa Psi and served on the business board of the Jack-o-Lantern.

He is survived by his widow Catherine (McHenry) whom he married in 1938; a son Paul K. Rogers III of New Britain; daughter Andrea (Mrs. R. Avery) Hall Arlington, Vt., three sisters, and four grandchildren. The Class extends its sympathy to Kay and her children.

1936

Word was received during the summer of the death of JOHN MURRAY HILL on May 15. John lived in Montorsvill, Pa., and practiced law in Williamsport where he was born.

He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania School of Law after Dartmouth and was an agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation before he began the private practice of law. He was a past president of the Lycoming Law Association, a member of the Penn-sylvania and American Bar Associations, and a member of the Ross Club in Williamsport.

John is survived by his widow, the former Eleanor Smith, and a sister, Mrs. Mary Loughery, of Hendersonville, N.C. The Class extends its sympathy to them in their loss.

1937

FREDERICK HOWARD AULD JR. died about two years ago. His wife Phyllis answered one of Frank Robin's letters to classmates who had previously given to the fund but not recently. We quote: "Sorry I have not written before but I just couldn't explain. I lost Fred two years ago to cancer. He put up a wonderful battle but this was one he didn't win. Please forgive my postponement of this sad news."

Fred did not graduate with us but went on to Ohio State where he received his engineering degree in 1940. Following service with the Coast Guard 1942-1945 he spent his business life with The Vernon Company, Newton, lowa, in specialty advertising and later as their representative.

At Dartmouth he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi and at Ohio State he earned varsity letters in football and baseball.

Beside his widow he leaves two children, Michael and Sally, as well as a nephew David '48.

ALLAN JACKS died in Italy July 4 of cancer. He was chief of the Rome bureau of the Associated Press and a veteran correspondent well known and respected in his chosen trade. He had been ill for months but continued working virtually until his death.

Al came to Dartmouth from Choate School. He majored in French, was a member of Cercle Français, Beta Theta Pi, and played in the band. He was very popular classmate with a great sense of humor and one well remembered even though he had been abroad for years.

After graduation he became editor of the Observer-Dispatch in Utica until 1941 when he was drafted. He rose to lieutenant colonel in the Signal Corps serving in Europe. Then he joined the AP, writing from Albany, Syracuse, New York, Paris, Belgrade and other points in the Middle East. He went to Rome in 1952, Istanbul as chief in 1956, then back to Rome as chief the next year.

Although born in Illinois he grew up in Maine. Despite all his years abroad he maintained the charm and manners of a New England gentleman, and some of his downeast twang.

In 1946 he married Michele LeBlond who attended the University of Paris. Surviving beside his widow are two sons, Christian and Phillip, and his mother.

Even though few of us had seen him through recent years he was a loyal supporter of the College and the fact he is no longer our Rome classmate leaves a void in our hearts and minds. Our sincere sympathy goes out to Michele and the family.

LORING REA STINSON JR. died May 4 after a long illness in Rutland, Vt.

Born in Burlington, Stin came to Dartmouth from Hackley School. He was a member of DKE, Sphinx, the track team, and majored in English.

After graduation he worked a few years for the Porter Screen Company in Winooski, then enlisted in the Air Force. He was stationed in England during World War II as a major in charge of utilities and maintenance for several replacement depots. While there he met Margot Heathcock who came over in 1946 to marry him.

In 1948 they moved to Rutland. He joined Babbitt Motors, a Ford dealership established in 1925 which he bought and operated in 1955 as Stinson Ford Sales. He was active in Rutland affairs. Chamber of Commerce, a board member and president of Rutland Hospital during its $9 million expansion program completed in 1973, a Rotarian, and president of the Lake Dunmore sailing club where they had a summer home.

We so well recall Stin during undergraduate days as a quiet spoken guy with a marvelous sense of humor and very popular. He carried this asset all his life and it was mentioned in a tribute to him printed in the Rutland newspaper.

In addition to Margot he is survived by two daughters, Charlotte, of Saranac Lake, New York; Dilys, of West Dean, England; and a brother, John '42, of Proctor, Vt.

The family requested that any contributions in his name be sent to the American Cancer Society.

1939

THOMAS FRENZEL MUMFORD died July 19 in Griffin, Indiana, following a ten month bout with cancer.

Tom prepared for Dartmouth at Park School in Indianapolis, his home town. While at Dartmouth he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi and was quite active in the Outing Club, particularly Cabin and Trail and Bait and Bullet. In his junior year, Tom transferred to Purdue University and graduated from there with a B.S. in Animal Husbandry.

War interceded and Tom participated as an officer in the Navy. During this period he ranged from being a blimp commander on the East Coast to a navigator in the Pacific. At war's end, he had achieved the rank of lieutenant commander.

Following the war he and his wife Letitia moved to southern Indiana to manage the family farm. It was there that he lived and worked for the remainder of his life. Together with his wife he raised a family of six children and singlehandedly he managed the 5,800 acre farm.

During these years, Tom contributed much of his time and resources to the livlihood and well-being of the community. A principal achievement in which he was instrumental was the creation of a 40,000-acre levee district in the Wabash River Valley. In conjunction with this he was a charter member of the Wabash Valley Association which promoted the commerce of the Valley. For years he was a vestry man and senior warden at the Episcopal church near his home.

In bis later life Tom added to the educational soundness of southern Indiana. For nine years he was a trustee of Hanover College and at the time of his passing chaired the Committee of Academic and Institutional Affairs. He was also a trustee at Evansville Day School.

Tom is survived by his widow Letitia, five sons, one of whom is Class of '77 at Dartmouth, and one daughter. Southern Indiana will miss him.

CHRISTOPHER MUMFORD '77

JOHN HENRY SULLIVAN died on February 21, 1973 at the Presbyterian Hospital in Knoxville, Tenn. Death was attributed to a ruptured aorta, and occurred as he was concluding an address to the Knoxville Business and Professional Club. Formerly from Knoxville, Sully was director of engineering and research with Richman Brothers Co. based in Cleveland and resided in Bay Village, Ohio. He had returned to Knoxville for a week's stay to assist Knox Manufacturing Corporation with a plant expansion. Knox being a subsidiary of Richman Brothers.

Previous to working with Richman, Sullivan had been with Palm Beach Company, and previous to this had listed his employ in our "25 Year" Book as a staff engineer with M. Wile & Co.

Sully had entered Dartmouth from the Boston Latin School, having spent his younger years in Dorchester, Mass. He was a member of the freshman track team, a Phi Sigma Kappa, and a member of the Liberal Club, and Germania. He majored in Economics.

He leaves his widow Sara, a son Jackson W. Sullivan (24); and twins, William and Sally, aged 20.

1945

WILLIAM THAYER ANDERSON, M.D., 52, PASSED away May 12 in Anaheim, Calif., after a long battle with cancer of the stomach.

Bill was born in Pennsylvania and grew up in the Buffalo, N.Y. area. After serving in the European Theatre with a Military Intelligence Unit and the 17th Airborne Division during World War 11, he returned to Dartmouth as a pre-med student with his new bride Alice, where they took up residence in Middle Fayerweather with other married couples, and she worked in the College Bursar's Office and then as a medical secretary at Hitchcock Clinic.

After graduation in 1947, Bill entered the Medical School at Dartmouth where he was president of his Class. Their first child Hilary (Mrs. William Hald of Costa Mesa, Calif.) was born in January of his second year. In 1949 they moved to Philadelphia where Bill completed his last two years at the School of Medicine of the University of Pennsylvania.

Returning to Buffalo, N.Y., where both Bill and his wife had grown up, he completed his internship and residency in Obstetrics and Gynecology at Sisters Hospital. During that time their son Bill Jr. and daughters Joan (Mrs. Darrell Knight of Fullerton, Calif.) and Deborah were born. Their move to Anaheim coincided with the opening of Disneyland, and in 1962 their youngest son Eric was born.

Bill was Honorary Chief of Staff at Martin Luther Hospital, former Chief of Obstetrics and Gynecology Service there, and a member of the Orange County Obstetrics and Gynecology Society. In 1970 he was president-elect of the Orange County Medical Association when illness necessitated his resignation.

A letter from his widow Alice arrived in Hanover just after our Class had completed its 30th Reunion. In it she wrote, "We shall miss terribly this great man, my husband. He was an inspiration to all in his dedication to medicine and his five year struggle with cancer. God has given us many happy memories, and mine include years of joy at Dartmouth." His classmates can think of no finer tribute and extend their loving sympathies.

1947

PAUL GIRARD BLAKE of Pittsford, N.Y., died suddenly of a heart attack in April. At the time of his death, he was a partner in the firm of Rupley, Bahler and Blake, consulting engineers, with offices in Buffalo and Rochester, N.Y.

After graduation from Dartmouth, Paul was employed by the Massachusetts Transit Authority, at the same time taking some courses at Tufts University. He served with the Marine Corps from 1950 to 1952 and received an M.S. in civil engineering from Georgia Institute of Technology in 1957. For several years he worked for the Portland Cement Association as a consulting engineer. A member of the New York and Massachusetts chapters of the Society of Sigma Xi, Paul was active in the University Club of Rochester. He had been a member of the Buffalo Curling Club. He leaves his widow Kathleen and three stepchildren to whom the Class extends its condolences.

1961

JAMES MURRAY STYLES died unexpectedly on June 30 of a heart attack. He was living in Weyauwega, Quebec, Canada.

Jim was born February 13, 1939 in Montreal, Canada. In September, 1954 he came to the United States and attended the New Hampton School for Boys in New Hampshire. He then went on to Dartmouth, majoring in history and joining Sigma Chi.

After college, Jim became a member of the municipal bond trading staff at the Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Company in Chicago. In 1966 he joined the investment banking firm of Allan Blair & Company, where he was vice president and treasurer. He then went on to Walston & Co. where, in 1968, he became vice president in charge of the firm's National Municipal Bond Trading Department.

Jim returned to his native Canada in 1974. He purchased and operated his own business Weyauwega.

Murray Alpheus Baldwin '18

Charles William Rivoire '23

John Edward Moore '23

Harold Hamilton Gibson Jr. '26

Victor Gaspar Borella '30