(A listing of deaths of which word has been received within the past month. Full notices may appear in this issue or a later one.)
French, Professor Harry T. '13, August 18 Morse, Professor Stearns, September 4
McCarty, Peter F. '08, July 21 Knight, Morris '12, July 28 Avery, Maurice C. '13, July 22 Whitney, Cecil E. '15, August 13 Davidson, Lawrence L. '16, July 6 Marsden, Arthur G. '16, August 5 Sherburne, Maxwell G. '17, April 29 Sherman, Laurence G. '17, June 16 Mulcahy, Robert C. M. '20, May 1 Smith, Harold H. '21, July 9 Morrell, George A. '23, August 12 Hersey, Waldon B. '24, August 12 Kelly, Henry A. '24, July 23 Sheehy, Francis E. '24, June 23 Fleet, Henry L. '25, June 23 Harris, Daniel F. Jr. '25, July 20 Plummer, Richard W. '25, May 16 May, Robert L. '26, August 10 Carter, Richard P. '27, July 20 Choate, Rufus '27, July 12 Corliss, Philip G. '27, April 11 Proudman, Donald W. '27, August 12 Berry, Emmons M. '28, July 11 Goodwin, Clinton T. '28, May 6 Wollison, Herbert B. '29, July 26 Barnard, Richard '30, August 7 Troidle, Edgar E. '30, May 26 Laughton, A. W. '31, August 13 Torras, Alvaro G. '31, January MacPhail, Donald B. '32, August 26 Marks, Franklyn '32, July 12 Rich, Charles L. '33, August 6 Jarbeau, Robert F. '36, June 20 Morse, Roger A. '36, June 20 Southwick, Benjamin G. Jr. '36, July 30 Lamoureux, Arthur A. '43, July 26 Tracy, Jack E. '48, July 28 Lam, Chung-Nin '55, March Henderson, Greg G. '68, July 19
Faculty
DR. HARRY TAPLEY FRENCH '13 died August 18 at the Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital at the age of 87. He had suffered a stroke on August 9.
Born in Dover, N.H., he was raised in Haverhill, Mass., and first came to Hanover when he entered Dartmouth as a freshman. Following graduation, he entered Rush Medical College in Chicago. Suspending his studies there, he joined the faculty of Bristol (Conn.) High School where, in addition to teaching, he coached football and met Florence E. Austin, an in- structor in physics and chemistry, whom he married in July 1917. They had two sons who became physicians and a daughter who is now a pathologist at Mary Hitchcock Hospital.
In 1916 Harry returned to Hanover as an instructor in anatomy at the medical school, concurrently pursuing a program which led to his receiving a degree in physiology from Dartmouth in 1918. He completed his doctorate at Rush in 1921, and following internship at Mary Hitchcock Hospital, entered private practice in 1925. For many years he was a leading physician in Hanover and a consultant throughout the surrounding region. He was one of the founders of the Hitchcock Clinic, a group medical practice which now includes over 100 physicians, and, for over four decades, taught at Dartmouth Medical School.
In 1937 Harry became one of the first in the nation to receive professional certification from the American Board of Internal Medicine; for many years, he served on the board of governors of the American College of Physicians. He was a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, numerous medical societies and the Church of Christ at Dartmouth College.
In 1954 he retired from Hitchcock Clinic and Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital, and in 1958 he retired from his post as professor of neuroanatomy at Dartmouth Medical School. In recognition of his devotion to the town and its people, he was honored with an award from the Hanover Chamber of Commerce in 1964.
Survivors are his daughter, Mrs. E. C. Lathem of Hanover; his sons, Arthur '40 of Ann Arbor, Mich., and Rowland '41 of Eastport, Maine; and 11 grandchildren, among them Rowland '68 and Harry '74. His brother Rowland '19 is a former professor of chemistry at the University of Florida.
STEARNS MORSE, professor of English emeritus and former dean of freshmen, died September 4 in Mary Hitchcock Hospital following a brief illness. He was 83 years of age.
Born on a Bath, N. H., farm first cultivated in the 18th century by his great grandfather, Professor Morse completed his secondary education in Lawrence, Mass., before entering Harvard, whence he graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1915 and received a master's degree the following year.
Before service in the Army Signal Corps during World War I, he was on the staff of Little, Brown, publishers, and The New Republic. After the war, he was head of the English department in the Morristown (N J.) School before joining the Dartmouth faculty in 1923. He received an honorary master's degree from the College in 1936, when he was promoted to full professor.
As dean of freshman from 1946 to 1956, he welcomed more than one-fifth of the current alumni body to the College. He returned to full-time teaching for the last four years of his Dartmouth service before retiring in 1960.
A specialist in American fiction. Professor Morse also taught creative writing and wrote and edited several books and numerous articles. Included in his lengthybibliography were Books of the White Mountains and Lucy Crawford's History of the WhiteMountains. He was a contributing editor of TheCollege on the Hill, a history of Dartmouth. For many years he shared his love of his native North Country with poet Robert Frost '96, a close friend of long standing.
A man of deep convictions about his country and the ideals on which it was founded, Professor Morse was a popular speaker on political affairs. In 1936 he ran for the U. S. Senate as a candidate of the Farmer-Labor Party.
Mrs. Morse, the former Helen Field, whom he married in 1921, survives him at the family farm in Bath (Route 2, Woodsville, N. H. 03785), as do two sons, Richard '44 and Stearns Anthony '52, and a daughter, Sylvia McKean.
1908
HENRY STOWELL EMERY died May 25 in Derry, N.H., at the age of 90, only 15 days after the death of his son David. Em had borne up bravely after the amputation of both legs within five years, but as his widow Elsie wrote, "when David passed on, it made Henry's courage go, too."
Born in Salem, N.H., Em prepared for Dartmouth at Methuen (Mass.) High School. Soon after graduation he went in the shoe business; he was associated with several companies until 1951, when his leg trouble forced his retirement.
Em and Elsie were married in July 1918. They had two sons, David and Richard, who died in infancy. In addition to his widow, who resides at 12 Fairview Ave., Derry, Em is survived by two grandchildren. To them the Class extends great sympathy for their double burden of sorrow.
1910
MALCOLM STANTON died November 2, 1975 at Friendship Manor, New Ipswich, N.H. He would have been 88 years old on February 9.
Mac was with the Class in Hanover for only two years. At Dartmouth he became a brother of Chi Phi and participated in intercollegiate golf. He served in World War I and was for many years an insurance broker in the Boston area. He retired in 1953, the year of his marriage to Katharine Rush, Smith '07.
His niece wrote that "his prayers were answered, as he had no pain, sickness or warning" of the heart attack which caused his death.
1912
Morry Knight had been in failing health for a year so it seemed advisable for him and his wife to enter a nursing home in June of this year. Just before this move he sent a cheerful letter of greeting to those of the Class gathered in Hanover for the annual reunion. Six weeks later, on June 28, Morry died in Greenbriar Terrace Nursing Home in Nashua, N.H.
MORRIS EDWARD KNIGHT was born at Bennington, N.H., on August 8, 1890. From Milford (N.H.) High School he entered Dartmouth where he was an honor student and became a member of Sigma Nu. Following graduation, he spent one year at Tuck School from which he received a master's degree in business administration.
In May 1917 he attended the Military Stores School at Hanover, and in July, the Aviation School at Fair-field, Ohio. He was commissioned a first lieutenant, aviation section, Signal Corps. He served at the Supply Depot and Concentration Camp at Garden City, Long Island, until his discharge in 1919.
Morry was a dealer in investment securities in Boston and New York. In 1914 he joined E. H. Rollins and Sons, a bond house in Boston. Except for the period of service in World War I he remained with this company until 1931. During the most of the next 27 years he had his own company in New York City. He retired several years ago.
In 1918, he married Gertrude Harvey, who survives him together with a brother-in-law, John Harvey '25. There were no children.
Private funeral services were held in Lowell, Mass. Interment was in the family lot in Lowell Cemetery.
Morry was a popular and regular attendant at the Class reunions in Hanover, accompanied in later years by a friend of the family when he was unable to drive. He had the fond hope of being on hand for several more reunions.
1913
MAURICE CLYDE AVERY, 86, died July 22 after a short illness in Bethesda Memorial Hospital, Boynton Beach, Fla.
He was born in Sunapee, N.H., and graduated from Richards High School in Newport, N.H., after which he taught school for a short time. At Dartmouth, Cap immediately gained recognition for his debating ability; he was a member of the freshman debating team and president of the sophomore Debating Union. He was also a brother of Sigma Phi Epsilon, a charter member of the Dartmouth Outing Club (its treasurer during junior year), and active in sports, including football and cross-country skiing. He left Dartmouth after three years and took correspondence courses in building construction, teaching himself surveying while serving as postmaster and street and water commissioner of Derby, Vt., working as a fireman on the Boston and Maine R.R. and as a building contractor.
For nearly 30 years Cap was employed by the N.Y. State Electric and Gas Co., retiring in 1955 as head of the Land Department. He continued active as an engineering consultant for the Cooperative Grange League Federation Exchange. He served as city assessor for the City of Utica, N.Y., following a complete reappraisal of City real estate. Upon final retirement he and his family settled in Boynton Beach and lived there until his death.
Cap was a loyal Dartmouth man and classmate and regularly attended monthly luncheons of the Dartmouth Association of Palm Beach County. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge, the Elks, and the Sons of American Revolution.
In 1919, Cap married Emma Greenwood, who died about five years ago. He is survived by their two sons and daughter, a half-brother, and six grandchildren.
1914
WALTER HILTON JUNKINS was born in Portsmouth, N.H., August 3, 1892, and passed away in York Beach, Maine, in February 1975.
Junk came to us from Portsmouth High School. After graduation, he spent two years at M.I.T., where he was awarded a B.S. degree. On June 25, 1921, he married Ruth A. Yeaton, and their marriage was blessed by two children and two grand-children.
After completing his course at M.I.T., Junk began the work which was to occupy most of his life, as a chemist, health officer, and bacteriologist in such places as the Springfield Water Works, City of West-field, E.I. Du Pont de Nemours, the cities of Portsmouth, York and Coral Gables, Fla. Later he became the proprietor of gift shops in Miami and finally took up farming in Rye, N.H. He retired in 1958.
The sympathy of the members of the Class of 1914 is extended to those of his family who survive him.
1916
LAWRENCE LOEB DAVIDSON died July 6 at Mt. Zion Hospital, San Francisco, after a very short illness. Larry, as he was known to his classmates, was born December 23, 1894, in Sioux City, lowa. There he attended the local schools before entering Dartmouth. During his college years he was a member of the freshman debating team, manager of freshman track, and a member of the Junior Prom committee, Palaeopitus, and Dragon Senior Society.
After graduation he entered the Harvard School of Business Administration, where he finished one year before enlisting in the Navy. He was discharged a lieutenant J.G. and in 1920 entered his family's businesses, a department store and the Davidson Realty Company in Sioux City; he later became president of both institutions. He was a charter member of the Kiwanis Club, also a member of the American Legion, a life member of Landmark Lodge #103 A.F. & A.M., 32nd degree in the Scottish Rite Bodies, and Abu Bekr Shrine, all of Sioux City. He was active in many civic affairs.
In 1924 he married Mary Elizabeth Kirk, who survives him, as well as a son, a daughter, five grandchildren, and a brother Herman F. '26. In 1954 he moved to San Francisco, where his widow lives at 1170 Sacramento St.
1920
WESLEY GOULD CARR JR. came to Dartmouth from Pittsburgh, Pa., where he attended the George H. Thurston School. From the outset he was active on campus, popular and respected among his classmates. He was a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity, and went on to earn an M.C.S. degree from the Tuck School in 1921.
In the early years of his business life Wes was employed in the clothing manufacturing field, but he shifted allegiance to electrical appliances with Westinghouse Electric. This became his life-long affiliation until he retired.
In 1923 he married Esther McFarland who bore him three children: two boys and a girl. His wife passed on in March 1976. Her loss doubtless contributed to his death in May. He had been an ill man for several years prior to her passing.
In Mansfield, Ohio, which had been the Carr home for many years, Wes was active in the community. He attended the Congregational church, was an active Kiwanian, and belonged to the University and the Westbrook Country Club where he loved to play golf until his health failed him.
Wes Carr was a loyal Dartmouth alumnus and interested in the affairs of his 1920 classmates. We shall miss him very much. We extend our deepest sympathy to all the members of his family while expressing gratitude to Wesley III '50 for notifying us of the loss of both his mother and father.
Wes' father was a member of the Class of 1884 and his brother Houghton of 1917.
1921
HEWETT FALES MOORE, the farmer well known in the North Pomfret, Vt., area for his dairy herd, Angus cattle, sweet cider, apples, and honey, died August 24 following a vascular heart operation at the Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital in Hanover.
After receiving his C. E. degree at Thayer School, he followed an engineering career with Allen Hazen (1922-30), J. W. Finn & Son (1930-33), U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey (1933-34), and the U. S. Bureau of Public Roads (1934-42).
Following the death of his mother in 1943, Hewitt returned to North Pomfret to manage the family farm, which dates back to 1760, and to marry Dorothy Sherburne of Pomfret January 8, 1944. They had two sons and a daughter.
Born in Pomfret January 22, 1900, Hewitt attended St. Johnsbury Academy. At College he lived off campus in the Musgrove Block and won the Thayer mathematical prize.
He is survived by his wife, his three children, a sister, and three grandchildren.
1922
WILLIAM RICHARD PERRY died April 18 in California where he had lived at 23930 Ocean Avenue, #161, Torrance.
Like a dozen or more of '22 classmates, Buck was a native of Omaha, born July 6, 1900. He prepared for college at Principia School, St. Louis. As a Dartmouth student he was an active and popular classmate. He was advertising manager for our 1922 Aegis, on the editorial board of the Bema, a member of Keyboard, and served on the cabinet of the Christian Association. He was also a member of Delta Omicron Gamma and Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
After graduation he started a wholesale business in eggs, poultry, and dairy products in Omaha. He moved to southern California in 1938 and established the Perry Egg Co., which under his ownership became a large successful business as wholesale distributors, processors and packers with facilities in Hawthorne and Gardena. Some years ago he also started a branch of his business in Texas.
Buck maintained interest in Dartmouth throughout his life and for many years served as a class agent on the Alumni Fund.
He is survived by his widow Laverne, and six children.
1923
We have just learned of the death from cerebral thrombosis on June 14 of GEORGE ANDREWS HART.
George was a native of Toledo, 0., and a graduate of Scott High School. He was with us during freshman and sophomore years. In 1924 he received his B.S. degree from Ohio State University. For many years there has been no record of his address and only recently have a few details of his life become available.
George's entire career was spent in the oil business, several years of it with Shell. He is survived by his widow Katy and a son.
THOMAS LOWELL NORTON, dean emeritus of the College of Business and Public Administration at New York University, died July 7 at the home of his daughter in Old Greenwich, Conn.
A graduate of Brockton, Mass., High School, Tom received his M.C.S. from Tuck School in 1924. He was a member of Sigma Nu and Phi Beta Kappa. An instructor at Dartmouth for one year, he held a similar position at Brown University for three years. In 1932 he earned his doctorate at. Columbia University. Bucknell University awarded him an honorary Doctor of Laws degree in 1963.
In 1955 Tom joined the faculty of New York University as dean of the School of Commerce. Previously he had been dean of the Bernard Baruch College of Business Administration, then a part of City College of New York. He retired in 1962.
During his career Tom served as a labor relations consultant to many government agencies. In 1939 he was named to the Federal Advisory Council of the Social Security Administration and later became special consultant to the Bureau of Labor Statistics in the U.S. Department of Labor. In 1944 he was named chairman of the War Labor Board and in 1948 served as chairman of the research advisory committee of the New York State Department of Labor.
Tom's wife, the former Verna Cutler died on June 14, 1975. He is survived by his daughter Joyce Norton French and a son Thomas Jr.
EDWARD NORTHROP WACKERHAGEN died at St. Luke's Hospital in his native Racine, Wis., on May 15, following a prolonged illness.
Wack came to Dartmouth from Lake Forest Academy. He was a member of Alpha Delta Phi. Dragon Senior Society, and Green Key.
Following graduation he joined Twin Disc Clutch, Inc. as a purchasing agent. He resigned as purchasing director of that company in the mid-40s to devote full time to Sheridan Product, of which he was co-founder. The Sheridan Company's high compression pneumatic rifle quickly gained a wide reputation for precision and quality. It was Wack's dissatisfaction with the performance of air rifles his son was using that led to Sheridan's founding. The new company called its first gun the Sheridan Super Grade, a model that was followed by a succession of several high grade lines.
Wack's survivors include his widow, the former Mary Virginia (Polly) Lewis, a daughter, and a son.
1924
SIMON HESS GEILICH died on August 29 in Brockton, Mass., where he had been a long-time resident. He had been president of the Geilich Tanning Company in Brockton before his retirement.
He was a charter member of the Brockton Symphony Orchestra, former chairman of the board of directors of the orchestra, and director of many of its fund-raising events. He played the viola and at Dartmouth was a member of the college orchestra.
He was an active member of Temple Israel in Brockton and served on its board of directors.
He is survived by a son Charles '51, a daughter Evelyn, and eight grandchildren, among them Michael '79.
WALDON BRADBURY HERSEY died on August 11 in Maine. He and his family had been spending the summer at their camp on Shin Pond, as they had done for many years, when he was stricken with a heart attack. He died at Eastern Maine Medical Center at Bangor following a confinement of about a week. He was a native of Patten, Maine.
Brad retired several years ago as treasurer of the Hersey Paper Lining Co. He took part in many civic activities while living in Winchester, Massachusetts, chiefly activities involving young people. Both he and his wife, Lois, were greatly interested in Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts. They made several trips to Europe as leaders of groups of scouts, travelling extensively on the continent. They were also interested in women's field hockey and lacrosse, as their daughter Alison became a member of the United States field hockey team.
After his retirement to New Boston, N.H., Brad devoted himself to the study and collection of Americana. He had one of the finest and most interesting collections in New England and was considered an authority on the subject. He was a member of the Early American Industries Association as well as several other antique and historical societies. He frequently gave talks on the subject of antiques.
He served as class treasurer for many years, including a term as president of the Class Treasurers Association. He was a trustee of the Winchester Savings Bank and the Lumbermen's Museum in Patten, and had been treasurer of the Winchester Badminton Association and a member of the Winchester Tennis Club. He was a faithful attendant at alumni and class functions.
He is survived by his widow Lois, a son Elliott '55, three daughters, Althea Shirley, Alison Risch, and Stephanie Kolman, and 12 grandchildren.
HENRY ARTHUR KELLY died on July 23, following a long illness. At the time of his death he was a resident of Southport, Conn.
He had retired as vice president of Henry A. Kelly & Sons, Inc., dealers in wholesale produce, wines, and liquors. In college he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon and Dragon. He had previously lived in Lawrence, Long Island, where he was a member of the Lawrence Beach club, Rockaway Hunting Club, Cedarhurst Yacht Club, and Theodore Club.
He is survived by his widow Margaret, two sons, Henry A. Jr. and Victor, a daughter, Patricia Depew and nine grandchildren.
FRANCIS EDWARD SHEEHY died on June 23 at his home in Dennisport, Mass. He had been in poor health for several years.
Recipient of a master's degree from Harvard in 1946, he had been a teacher at Waltham High School for 33 years before he became headmaster. He retired in 1959. During summer vacations and after his retirement, he served as manager and professional at the Bass River Golf Course on Cape Cod.
Frank was a member of the hockey team and golf team and captain of the golf team in his senior year. He was a member of Phi Sigma Kappa and Green Key.
He was a member of the Waltham Rotary Club, director of the Waltham Chamber of Commerce, the Schoolmasters Club, and the Mid-Cape Men's Club and a past president of the Dartmouth Club of Cape Cod. For many years he was a lector in St. Pius X Church in South Yarmouth, and was also a communicant of Holy Trinity Church in Dennisport.
He is survived by his widow Mary, a daughter Maire and a son David.
The class was represented at the services by Roly Barker and Dana Bent.
1925
HENRY LANDON FLEET died June 23 at the Eastern Long Island Hospital in Greenport, N.Y. His home was in Cutchogue, where he was born January 11, 1904. His high school was the Riverhead Union School.
In college Speedy was a member of Theta Delta Chi and played on the freshman and varsity basketball teams. He always maintained his interest in college and class activities and served as an alumni interviewer of applicants for Dartmouth for 20 years. He attended the Rutgers Graduate School of Banking in 1941 and the New York State Bankers School for Advanced Management in 1956.
Speedy followed a career in "the country banking business" and a parallel career of community service. He was president of the North Fork Bank and Trust Company from 1946 to 1963 and chairman of the board until his retirement in 1969. He was a member and former president of the Suffolk County Bankers' Association.
He was the recipient of the Theodore Roosevelt Award for his outstanding service in support of the Eastern Long Island Hospital, of which he was a board member for many years.
He was a member of the board of trustees of the Cutchogue Presbyterian Church and of the Cutchogue- New Suffolk Historical Society and a former governor of the North Fork Country Club.
Surviving are his wife, the former Dorothy Cantrell, two daughters, and three grandchildren. His brother Clarence was a member of the Class of 1921; Clement Malin '56 is his son-in-law.
1926
Our classmate ROBERT LEWIS MAY, creator of a modern-day symbol of Christmas — Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, who will live forever in the hearts of countless children — died August 10, two weeks after his 71st birthday at Evanston (Ill.) Hospital. Just two months before his death, Bob with his wife Claire attended the 50th reunion in Hanover in fulfillment of a long-held hope to be with his college friends for this nostalgic event. At Dartmouth he was an honor student all four years and graduated Phi Beta Kappa. He was a member of Alpha Sigma Phi.
Bob was an advertising editor with Montgomery Ward when, in 1939, he was asked to write a company promotional booklet for the Christmas season. He conceived the story of a little reindeer ridiculed by other reindeer for being so small and for having a bright red nose - but whose nose could shine through the fog and thus help Santa guide his sleigh to bring joy to children. Just last year Bob wrote an article for Guideposts. entitled "Rudolph and I Were Somewhat Alike," in which he said "Today children all over the world read and hear about the little deer who started out in life as a loser, just as I did. But they learn that when he gave himself for others his handicap became the very means through which he achieved happiness. My reward is knowing that every year, when Christmas rolls around. Rudolph still brings that message to millions, both young and old."
On May 2, 1958, Bob presented Dartmouth with the original manuscript of "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" and more than 20 other items to be kept in Baker Library (classmates Sid Hay ward and Dick Mandel had urged the idea). In announcing the gift, Herbert F. West '22, then director of The Friends of the Dartmouth Library, commented that the book was one of the most famous in American publishing history and had the astonishing circulation of more than eight million copies, and it was indeed fitting that the material had come to the Library.
Bob was owner of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer Enterprises from 1951 to 1958 and then returned to Montgomery Ward as catalogue editorial director, retiring in 1970. He was acitve in civic life in Evanston, having taken responsibilities in the community chest and in the scouting program for nearly ten years. He was a devoted Dartmouth man - class secretary, 1957-1962; a class agent; a member of the 50th reunion giving committee - and took an active interest in the Dartmouth Club of Chicago. His life-long interest in baseball was evidenced in Hanover when he kept all the official box scores for Dartmouth home games when Carl Allen was manager. His whimsical humor was a delight to his classmates when as secretary he wrote the class notes.
Bob is survived by his widow Claire who continues her home at 9515 Avers Avenue, Evanston, five daughters, a son, four grandchildren, a sister, and a brother.
1927
The Rev. RICHARD PHILLIP CARTER of Phoenix, Ariz., died July 20 in Scottsdale Memorial Hospital. He had expected to take an active part in our 50th reunion next June and already had picked the scripture for his memorial address.
Nick was born in Andover, Mass., and attended Phillips Andover Academy, where he played soccer and was a member of the mandolin club. In college he was president of the Dartmouth Christian Association, a member of Palaeopitus, the Round Table, and Gamma Delta Epsilon fraternity and senior director of the freshman class.
Following graduation he attended Chicago Theological Seminary at the University of Chicago for two years and the following year received his B.D. from Hartford Theological Seminary. He then taught at Dartmouth for two years.
Nick's first ministry was the Union Congregational Church in Greenfield, N.H., where he served three years. In 1936 he was called to the First Church of Christ in Suffield, Conn., where he served, with the exception of three World War II years as a Navy chaplain, until 1955, when he became president of the Boston Seamen's Friend Society. In 1959 he spent some time in Europe as special missioner for the Air Force, for which he later received a citation from the chief of staff.
Enjoying semi-retirement, Nick at first spent winters preaching in Florida and summers as interim minister in Connecticut. He and his wife were proud of the restoration of their home in Suffield. Later he added a home in Arizona and spent his winters there.
During his busy career Nick found time also to serve on the School Board at Suffield, as a trustee of Hartford Seminary Foundation, president and member of the board of directors of Deering Foundation, Suffield Academy, and president of the Chaplains Fellowship. He was a member of the American Association of University Professors and Rotary.
In 1931 Nick married Kathryn Naber, who died in 1946. In 1949 he married Elizabeth Fuller, who survives, along with two sons and a daughter of his first marriage and six grandchildren.
The Class will long remember the memorial service Nick conducted in front of Dick Hall's House at our 45th reunion, as well as the many other contributions he made to the Class and the College.
RUFUS CHOATE of Teaneck, N.J., namesake and great grand-nephew of Rufus Choate of the Class of 1819, who succeeded Daniel Webster as U.S. Senator from Massachusetts, died July 12 at Englewood Hospital, an institution he had served as a trustee for the past 18 years. Although long ill, he had remained active until his final hospitalization one week before. Born in Dorchester, Mass., Rufe grew up and attended school in Somerville. In college he was advertising manager of the Dartmouth Pictorial, a member of the debating club and Alpha Chi Rho fraternity.
Following graduation, he worked for N. W. Ayer & Co., one of this country's largest advertising firms, first in Philadelphia, where he met and married his wife Elizabeth, and later in New York. In 1931, he became a vice president in the New York agency of Donohue and Coe. Following a leave of absence during World War II to serve as Air Combat Intelligence Officer in the United States Navy, with active service in England and North Africa, he returned to the agency for a short period. He was president of the Scott-Choate Company, publishers of business magazines, from 1947 un- til 1960, when he sold his interest in the firm and returned to advertising as senior vice president and director of Gotham-Vladimir Co., Inc., of New York. Although he had retired several years ago from daily activity, he remained associated with Gotham-Vladimer's successor firm as a consultant.
An active civic leader, Rufe served his church, his community, and his profession. Among other activities he was a trustee and most recently an elder of the First Presbyterian Church of Englewood, chairman of the Teaneck Red Cross, chief of the Teaneck Auxiliary Police, and a trustee of the Englewood School for Boys, in addition to his many years of service as. an Englewood Hospital trustee. He was a recipient of the hospital's distinguished service award. He had served as secretary of the Business Publications Audit of Circulation, chairman of the board of the National Business Publications, and chief trustee of the Publishing and Advertising Insurance Trusts. He was also a director of the New England Fish Company, of which his father had been president.
He enjoyed boating, golfing, and competitive sports and was an excellent shot with rifles and handguns, having won many trophies in pistol tournaments all over the country.
Rufe was buried in the family plot in the Essex (Mass.) cemetery, where lies the body of his son Rufus Jr. '55.
Surviving are his widow Elizabeth, his son Thomas '62, his brother David '38, and four grandchildren.
JAMES DONALD O'HARA of Pompano Beach, Fla., died suddenly on May 6. He and his wife were visiting friends in Green Valley near Tucson, Arizona. While sitting on the porch chatting, he suffered a massive coronary.
Don came to Dartmouth after an outstanding record at Norwich (N.Y.) High School. In college he was a member of the Chi Phi fraternity and of the freshman basketball team.
After graduation, Don entered the textile business in New York City. He worked for Cannon Mills, Inc., for 30 years, becoming vice president in charge of the sale of gray goods. In 1957 he joined Woodward Baldwin, Inc., in a similar position, remaining with them until his retirement in 1966, at the age of 61. He then moved to Florida.
Don is survived by his widow Alice (Wilson), whom he married in 1930; a son J. D. O'Hara Jr. '53, professor of English at the University of Connecticut; and two daughters.
FARRINGTON BURFEIND KINNE, of Northbrook, Ill., died March 7. Born in Chicago, he spent only one year at Dartmouth, received his B.A. from Yale in 1928, studied at Northwestern University 1930-31, and received his law degree from Loyola University of Chicago in 1935.
After serving as attorney for the Pullman Co., Bud later became an associate with the firm of Winston, Strawn, Shaw, and Black in Chicago.
In 1935 he married Louise McKenzie, and they had two sons and two daughters.
FRANK ROBERT SENN died March 16 in Pompano Beach, Fla., where he had lived for the past 20 years. Born in Sandusky, Ohio, he attended Culver before coming to Dartmouth. During his three years in Hanover he was captain of the fencing team and a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. Transferring to Stanford for his senior year, he graduated Phi Beta Kappa.
Following college, Frank became associated with the Brightman Nut & Mfg. Co., eventually becoming manager. Later he was chairman of the board of Industrial Nut Corporation of Sandusky, living in San Francisco, California, prior to his retiring to Florida. He was a member of the Episcopal Church.
Frank is survived by his widow Olive, who resides at 3405 Spring St., Pompano Beach, and a daughter.
1928
IRVING HAVINGTON BEEBE JR. died April 22 in Miami, Florida, where he had lived since his retirement in 1967 from Pan American Airways.
Beebe transferred from Wheaton College in Illinois to Dartmouth at the start of our sophomore year.
He worked for the Miami Daily News as an advertising solicitor until 1942 when he resigned to do something more important for the war effort. The Navy and Air Corps turned him down because of poor eyesight so he drove across town to see Ham Hankins, operations manager of the Africa-Orient division of Pan American Airways. Ham had an opening for him doing vital war work. He was transferred in 1949 to San Juan, Puerto Rico, as a flight dispatcher and lived there until he retired.
He is survived by his widow Josefina, at 200 Biscayne Blvd. Way, Miami, and a daughter.
EMMONS MILLIKEN BERRY of 3 Monmouth Lane, Whiting, N.J., died suddenly at his home July 11 of a coronary heart attack.
A native of Hackensack, Emmons had been a 30-year resident of Ridgewood, N.J., before moving to Whiting three years ago.
Upon graduating from Dartmouth, which included a year at the Tuck School, he spent five years with Oxford University Press. He then joined the staff of the United States Trust Company, where he remained until his retirement in 1972. He was a specialist in trust accounting.
Since his retirement Emmons and his wife Katherine had traveled extensively in Europe and the North American continent. He had enjoyed excellent health, and his sudden death came as a shock to his neighbors and friends.
He was a member of the Community Reformed Church, serving on its consistory and as church treasurer. He played an active part in the life of Crestwood Village where his home was located.
One of his neighbors, writing in the local newspaper said, "He was a quiet, mild-mannered man, of smiling countenance, sparing of words but abundantly blessed with common sense."
A Phi Sigma Kappa at Dartmouth, Emmons main- tained an unwavering interest in the College and the Class during his lifetime. Only a handful of our class can match his 47 years of consecutive giving to the Alumni Fund. His plans already were made to attend the 50th.
He is survived by his widow, the former Katherine Knapp; a son and a daughter; two brothers; and one grandchild.
The Class extends sincere sympathy to his family.
WILLIAM G. MORTON '28
FREDERICK LINCOLN CHEEVER JR. died in Scituate, Mass., on May 28. He had been recuperating from a second heart attack.
Fred attended Thayer Academy before entering Dartmouth, where he became a member of Kappa Sigma.
Most of his career was with Pepperell Manufacturing, from 1930 until 1952 in Boston as advertising manager and from 1952 until 1960 in New York City as marketing manager. From 1970 until his recent retirement he was associated with radio station WPLM in Plymouth, Mass.
In 1934 Fred married Iris Gladwin who survives him in addition to three daughters, a son, and nine grandchildren.
CLINTON TAYLOR GOODWIN died May 6 in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., after suffering from cancer for two years. He retired from the practice of law in Mansfield, Ohio, in 1968 and moved to Ft. Lauderdale, where he went into the real estate business.
Clint entered Dartmouth from the Glenville High School in Cleveland and became a member of Kappa Sigma. He received his law degree from Western Reserve University in 1931 and was a lawyer in Cleveland for 25 years before moving to Mansfield.
He served in the Army from 1941 to 1946 in the Judge Advocate General's Corps, with 25 months' service in Europe. He was discharged with the rank of major.
He is survived by his widow Isabel at 2716 N.W. 52nd St., Ft. Lauderdale.
CHESTER ALBERT HALTOM, chairman of the board of Haltom's Jewelers Inc. and a prominent citizen of Fort Worth, Texas, died June 4 in a Fort Worth hospital. His father founded the firm in 1892 in Bowie, Texas, where Chet was born. The Fort Worth store was opened in 1908 and others were opened later in Arlington and Ridglea.
Chet attended the Tome School and at Dartmouth became a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon and Dragon.
He began his career with the family business immediately after graduation, became vice president in 1943 and chairman in 1970. He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church and active in numerous civic affairs.
Chet took an active part in alumni affairs and conducted admission interviews in the Fort Worth area for a number of years. He and Winnie came back to Hanover for several reunions.
His principal avocations were the Fort Worth Boat Club and cattle raising.
In 1935 he married Winifred Schaer who survives him, as do their two daughters, a sister, and four grandchildren, all living in Fort Worth.
Former U.S. Representative JOHN ANDREW MCGUIRE died May 28 at Meriden-Wallingford (Conn.) Hospital. He was taken there after a heart attack in his office at the Wallingford Housing Authority, where he had been executive director since 1972. He had lived in Wallingford all his life.
He began his political career when he was elected town clerk in 1934, a post he held until 1950. He was state Democratic Party chairman in 1946-47. Elected to Congress in 1948, he served two consecutive terms until defeated in 1952. In 1953 he was elected warden of the Borough of Wallingford for a two-year term.
For over 30 years he ran a successful insurance, real estate, and travel agency.
He leaves his widow Dorothy, a son, a daughter, and seven grandchildren.
LEWIS CRARY MYERS died June 11 in an Elmira, N.Y., hospital of a heart condition which had forced him to retire a few months earlier.
Red prepared for college at the Peddie School. At Dartmouth he was right guard on the freshman football team and a member of Psi Upsilon.
He started and owned the Myers Oil Co., distributors of gasoline and fuel oil in the Elmira area. He was one of the founders of the Empire State Petroleum Association in 1946 and a member of the Psi Upsilon Club of Elmira.
In 1939 he married Frances Bennett of Elmira who died in 1973. He is survived by three sons.
ORMAN EDGAR RICHARDSON died August 16, 1975, in Augusta, Maine, according to information just received. A native of Skowhegan, Maine, Orman majored in French at Dartmouth and after graduation taught school for several years. Class and Alumni Records files contain no information on him since a letter in 1971 saying he was still a bachelor and had been retired for 10 years. He had previously worked for E. E. Taylor Corp. in Augusta.
1929
WALTER CARL BERGSTROM, chairman of the board of trustees of Medical Mutual, Inc., died in Chagrin Falls, Ohio, on April 20. He became a trustee in 1958 and also served on the executive committee, the planning committee, and the health delivery com- mittee.
After receiving the master's degree from Tuck School in 1930, Walt began his very successful business career with the Weldon Tool Company of Cleveland, where he advanced through many responsible positions to the post of executive vice president and later president. In addition, he served as president of the Metal Cutting Tool Institute from 1970 to 1972, and as a member of the Greater Cleveland Growth Association and the Council on World Affairs.
Walt is survived by his widow Myvanwy, a daughter, two sons, and four grandchildren, to whom the Class gives its warm sympathy.
JOHN ALDEN DAVIS, aged 69, died on June 4 after being stricken while on a fishing trip in western Maine.
Dave came to Dartmouth from Brockton High School, where he played football. In college he majored in psychology and was a member of Alpha Delta Phi. After graduation he joined the Colonial Brass Company of Middleboro, Mass., a firm that traces its origins back to the mid-1700s, and rose to the post of president and treasurer.
He was greatly interested in the Goddard Memorial Hospital of Stoughton, which serves the Brockton area. Twice he headed the building committee and rendered great service in enlarging facilities to meet the increasing demand. He also served as director of the Pilgrim Foundation.
John Davis was always intensely loyal to Dartmouth and to his friends and classmates, and was a regular at football games and local Dartmouth functions.
He is survived by his widow Virginia, a son, two daughters, a sister, and a brother, Lincoln K. Davis '25. The Class of 1929 expresses its deep sympathy on their loss.
JAMES WALTER SHUGART JR. died suddenly on September 14, 1975. Before retirement he had been the owner and president of Great West Lubricants and earlier executive vice president of Southwestern Petroleum Company in Fort Worth, Texas. During World War II he served as lieutenant in the Navy in supply activities.
In Fort Worth Jim-was active in civic and community affairs. He was a member of the board of directors of the Boys' Club and a life member of Rotary International. He also served for several years as a steward of the First Methodist Church.
Jim was always interested in music and was an accomplished violinist. For a number of years he had his own show on Station WBAP, Dallas-Fort Worth. He was a charter member of the Fort Worth Symphony. Jim will be missed by members of the Class of 1929, whose sympathy goes to his widow Alma, his daughter, and his son.
HERBERT BEERS WOLLISON died of cancer at his residence in Youngstown, Ohio, on July 27, following a long illness.
Herb came to Dartmouth from the Pittsfield High School, where he was a letterman in three sports and the president of his class. At Dartmouth he played football and water polo until he injured his hip. He was a member of Green Key and the Dragon Society and served as president of Alpha Delta Phi. His college major was in philosophy.
After college he went to the Harvard Business School and worked summers for the National City Bank and the Bankers' Trust Company in New York. He then earned a master's degree in business administration from New York University.
Herb spent his very successful business career with the Youngstown firm of Commercial Shearing and Stamping, Inc., retiring in 1971 as a director and vice-president of sales. During World War II he supervised many government contracts. For five years he represented his company in Luxembourg and later was in charge of developing markets in many areas.
He leaves his widow, the former Mary Elizabeth Glendinning, whom he married in 1936, two daughters, a son, and two grandchildren.
1930
RICHARD BARNARD died suddenly on August 7 in Melvin Village, N.H., where he was visiting relatives. Prior to his retirement in 1970 he had been with Employers Liability Assurance Corp. in Boston for most of his business career.
Dick's interest in Dartmouth and class activities was great. He was secretary of the Mystic Valley Dartmouth Club 1957-63 and held the same position in the Boston Alumni Association 1963-66. In 1964 he was named club secretary of the year.
A member of the executive committee since 1970, Dick never missed a reunion and had always been a willing worker when asked to take an assignment. He was probably the only classmate who had his class banner from the freshman year. He brought it to Hanover for the 40th, and it has been used in the tent for the past two reunions.
Dick had military service in the U.S. Army, entering as a private in 1942 and leaving with the rank of captain in 1946.
Representing the class at services held in Winchester were Rollie and Dot Booma, Les and Edith Godwin, Pete Lillard, and Fred Scribner.
1931
ARMINE WALKER LAUGHTON, 67, died on August 13 at his home in Bellevue, Wash. He succumbed to a heart attack.
Jim came to Dartmouth from Phillips Exeter Academy where he had been on the football team and crew. At Dartmouth he joined Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity, was a member of Green Key, played freshman and varsity football, belonged to Cabin and Trail, and was director of cabins and trails on the D.O.C. Council.
He spent the '30s teaching, writing, and coaching. Jim was in the U.S. Navy from 1943 to 1946 on convoy duty. From 1946 to 1950 he was headmaster of Norfolk Academy, receiving a master's degree in education from Boston University in 1948. He served as class secretary from 1946 to 1950. At the time of the Korean War, Jim returned to active duty and remained in the Pacific area until 1958. He was Executive Officer aboard the USS Gen. J. C. Breckinridge. Following that tour of duty he served as educational advisor, 14th Naval District, from 1958-1966 and as technical education administrator, Quality Eval. Lab. in Oahu, from 1966 to 1969, when he retired as a commander.
He is survived by his widow Mary, whom he married in 1932, his daughter, and his son.
1932
EUGENE HOMER CATRON of Brookvilie, N.Y., died June 30. Gene originally came to Dartmouth from Cherry Hills, Colo.; during his college years he was very active in sports, especially tennis.
After graduation he continued his education with a certificate from the Harvard Business School in 1935 and with an L.L.B. degree from the Yale School of Law in 1937.
During World War II Gene was a commander in the U.S. Navy and at one time served as principal attorney for the War Production Board in Washington, D.C. He was awarded the Commendation Ribbon and the Navy Bronze Star for his service to his country.
Before the war, Gene was an attorney with Hines, Rearick, Door and Hammond and with the investment banking firm of Dillion, Read. Later he became vice president of F. Eberstadt & Co.; his final position was general partner with Shields & Co., Investment Bankers of New York. He served as a member of the Hoover Commission and also a Director of International Breweries, Inc. of Detroit.
Gene is survived by his widow Mary, two daughters, and a son. The Class extends its sympathy to his wife and family.
EUGENE STAATS FREEMAN passed away on July 21 in Minneapolis, Minn. Gene came to Dartmouth from Omaha and majored in psychology. After graduation he returned to that city to work for the Nebraska Power Company. Later he was district representative for the Frigidaire Company of Omaha. At last word he was semi-retired from Heating Supply Co. in Minneapolis. Gene married Elizabeth Hayward in December 1935. The Class extends its sympathy to her.
FRANKLYN MARKS, composer and arranger for Walt Disney Studios before his retirement early this year, died July 12 at his home in Sherman Oaks, Cal.
A senior fellow and a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Frank was clearly headed for a career in music from his undergraduate days when he played with the band and the Barbary Coast. Following graduation, he was a pianist with various dance bands and an arranger for radio, Broadway shows, and recording studios. After service in the Army, he was a free-lance arranger, teacher, and composer before joining the Disney organization in 1955. Stan Kenton performed and recorded his compositions Trajectories and Evening inPakistan; twice he toured Europe with Yma Sumac as her music director.
Known as top orchestrator at Disney Studios, Frank orchestrated the music for the films Sword in theStone, Parent Trap, 101 Dalmatians, and Jungle Book. He composed a couple of original tunes for the film Bon Voyage, which he orchestrated, and the score for the film Legend of the Boy and the Eagle. Among television features presented on The Wonderful World of Disney for which Frank composed musical scores are the movie Charlie the Lonesome Cougar (nominated for an Emmy Award), Rusty the Ding-a-LingLynx, Outlaw Cats of Colossal Cave, Sancho theHoming Steer, and The Nine Lives of Elfego Baca. He worked on the original Mickey Mouse Club composing songs.
Surviving him are his widow Willie Bruce and their two daughters.
WILLIAM HENRY CLEMENT PLETZ JR. died in New York City on April 1. Bill was a lifelong resident of New York, where he was born in 1910. He came to Dartmouth from George Washington High School and majored in economics and became a member of Kappa Kappa Kappa.
Following graduation he joined the real estate firm of Byrne, Bowman, and Forshay Inc., serving that company successively as district manager, maintenance manager, and vice president. In 1957 he joined Brett, Wyckoff, Potter, Hamilton Inc. and two years later became assistant vice president in charge of maintenance.
Bill married Elinor Sparnicht in New York in 1937. He is survived by his widow and a sister. The Class extends its deep sympathy to his family.
JOSEPH AUGUSTUS SAWYER died March 13 at the Presbyterian Community Hospital in Klamath Falls, Oregon, after an illness of one week.
Joe was born in Cleveland in September 1909. He attended the University School and Deerfield Academy. At Dartmouth, where he majored in sociology, he was a member of the freshman and varsity track teams, active with The Players, and a member of the Glee Club. He served as treasurer of Green Key, and as vice-president of the Interfraternity Council. He was a member of Beta Theta Pi and Sphinx.
Joe worked in sales for the Underwood, Elliott, Fisher Company, and later was a branch manager for the Underwood Corporation. He married Helen Holt Clark of West Hartford, Conn., in 1934. In 1960 the Sawyers moved to Oregon, and the following year Joe became manager of the Klamath Falls Municipal Air- port, a post from which he retired in 1973. He was active in a number of state and community projects, serving terms as president of the Oregon Airport Management Association, chairman of the Klamath Falls Commercial Land Use Program, and president of the Klamath Area Safety Council.
Joe is survived by his widow, two sons, a daughter, nine grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.
1933
CHARLES LOTHROP RICH, 66, of 67 Beech Street, Norwood, Mass., died August 6 at the Norwood Hospital after an extended illness.
He was a lifelong resident of Norwood and prepared for Dartmouth at Norwood High School and Phillips Exeter Academy. In college he played varisty baseball and was a member of the Sigma Chi Fraternity.
After more than 20 years with the Norwood Press and the Boston Offset Co., in 1955 he acquired and had since operated the Beckler Press Co. of Boston.
He served as a Norwood selectman for the past 27 years, having won his last election in January 1976, and was a past chairman of the selectmen. He also served as a member of the board of directors of the Norwood Cooperative Bank.
He served in the U.S. Navy in World War II, in charge of a fleet of minesweepers, for which he received the Bronze Star.
He is survived by his wife Dorothy (Holman) and two stepsons.
SVEN BERNARD (GOLDSMITH) TUNANDER died suddenly April 19 at his home, 127 South Seward Avenue, Auburn, N.Y.
Born in New York City, Sven was a graduate of the Barnard School for Boys. At Dartmouth he became a member of the Theta Chi Fraternity.
He was employed by the W. T. Grant Co. for 33 years, as manager of the downtown Auburn store for 17 years before retiring in 1973.
Sven was an elder and member of the board of the Westminster Presbyterian Church in Auburn, and had been active in the Chamber of Commerce, American Red Cross and Kiwanis. He was a member of the Owasco Yacht Club, Auburn Torch Club, Y.M.C.A. and Score and a World War II Navy veteran.
Surviving are his widow Nancy, two daughters, a grandson, and his mother.
1936
ROBERT FULLER JARBEAU of Garden City, N.Y., died June 20, his 62nd birthday, of a heart attack while he was sailing off Atlantic City.
Bob was born in Elizabeth, N.J., entering Dartmouth from Lawrence Academy. He was a member of Kappa Sigma, an economics major, and a participant in intramural sports before he left Hanover in 1935. Two years later he received his degree in business administration from Northwestern.
He served in the Navy during World War II, and resigned from the Navy Reserve in 1947 with the rank of Lieutenant Commander.
During his business career Bob was active in sales and represented Waldesian Hosiery for a number of years. From 1957 on he was a principal in the firm of Newton and Jarbeau, a manufacturer's representative, with offices at the Empire State Building. His responsibilities included styling, sales, and production guidance.
His avocation was sailing, and he served as a director of the Suffolk County Navy League. Bob never lost his interest in Dartmouth and was a member of the Dartmouth Club of Long Island.
Surviving Bob are his widow LaVina of 87 Suffolk Lane, Garden City, a son, and a grandson.
1949
The Class of 1949 is sorry to learn of the death of GEORGE LAW DAY. George died February 20 in Altamonte Springs, Fla., after a long illness. He leaves his mother, Mrs. Eli Day, who lives in Altamonte Springs, Fla., and a brother, Robert Day, in Los Angeles. George came to Dartmouth from the Hill School. He majored in sociology and was a member of the Kappa Kappa Kappa fraternity and Sphinx. He was also a letterman in lacrosse.
CHARLES ERSKINE INGRAM died on February 13 of a heart attack. Erk lived in Tacoma, where he had been associated with the Weyerhaeuser Company for 23 years, most recently as manager of container-board marketing. We all remember Erk as a pitcher on the baseball team and as member of Sigma Chi and Dragon. Prior to coming to Dartmouth, he attended Taft School.
Erk is survived by his widow Page, whom he married only last year, three daughters, and his father, Charles H. Ingram '15. Page is currently living at 7324 North Street, S.W., Tacoma, Wash. 98498.
1955
Word has been received from the mother of CHUNGNLN LAM that he succumbed to cancer last March in Vancouver, B.C.
Chung Lam spent his freshman year at Dartmouth and graduated from Peking Medical College in 1957.
After resident posts in the Royal Infirmary and Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Glasgow, he became medical registrar in the Royal Alexandra Infirmary, Paisley, and subsequently lecturer in child health at Glasgow University.
In 1967 he went to Canada and joined the staff at Vancouver General Hospital and became associate professor at the University of British Columbia.
He is survived by his widow who is also a doctor, three young children, and his mother.
1968
GREG GRAHAM HENDERSON died at his home in Barrington, R.I., on July 19. Born in Battle Creek, Mich., Greg came to Dartmouth from Indianapolis and T. C. Howe High School, where he was a National Merit finalist and a member of the National Honor Society.
While at Dartmouth, he was an active member of the D.C.Y.C. and majored in math. After graduation, Greg and the former Adelaide Goulding were married, and moved to Maryland, where Greg earned a master's degree of health science in bio-statistics from Johns Hopkins University. The Hendersons moved four years later to Rhode Island, where Greg earned another master's degree, in mathematics, from Brown.
It is tragic indeed that a talented young man who spent so many years in pursuit of higher education never had the opportunity to put all his efforts to work. Most of us will remember Greg as a very quiet, modest, and gentle classmate at Dartmouth. He. will be missed, and our thoughts are with Greg's wife and parents, his only immediate survivors.
Stearns Morse
Robert Lewis May '26
STATEMENT of ownership, management and circulation (Act of August 12, 1970; Section 3685. Title 39. United States Code). 1. Date of filing: October 1, 1976. 2. Title of publication: Dartmouth Alumni Magazine. 3. Frequency of issue: Monthly, Sept. to June inclusive. 4. Location of known office of publication: 201 Crosby Hall, Hanover, N.H. 03755. 5. Location of the headquarters or general business offices of the publishers: 201 Crosby Hall, Hanover, N.H. 03755. 6. Names and addresses of publisher, editor, and managing editor: Publisher, Dartmouth Class Secretaries Association, Crosby Hall, Hanover, N.H. 03755; Editor, Dennis A. Dinan, 201 Crosby Hall, Hanover, N.H. 03755; Managing Editor, none. 7. Owner (If owned by a corporation, its name and address must be stated and also immediately thereunder the names and addresses of stockholders owning or holding 1 percent or more of total amount of stock. If not owned by a corporation, the names and address of the individual owners must be given. If owned by a partnership or other unincorporated firm, its name and address, as well as that of each individual must be given.): Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H. 03755. 8. Known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders owning or holding 1 percent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages or other securities: none. 10. The purpose, function, and- nonprofit status of this organization and the exempt status for Federal income tax pur- poses have not changed during preceding 12 months. 11. Extent and nature of circulation. Single Average no. issue copies each nearest issue during to preceding 12 filing months date A. Total no. copies printed (net press run) 36,300 38,800 B. Paid circulation 1. Sales through dealers and carriers, street venders and counter sales 192 140 2. Mail subscriptions 35,701 38,188 C. Total paid circulation 35,893 38,328 D. Free distribution by mail, carrier or other means Samples, complimentary, and other free copies 172 214 E. Total distribution (sum of C and D) 36,065 38,542 F. Copies Not Distributed 1. Office use, left-over, unaccounted, spoiled after printing 235 258 2. Returns from news agents G. Total (sum of E & F—should equal net press run shown in A) 36,300 38,800 I certify that the statements made by me above are correct and complete. DENNIS A DINAN, Editor