Quiet Al Frey, now retired and living in Dresden, Me., was never one to boast about his accomplishments, but let it be said here and now that they have been superb. Serving initially as assistant dean of Amos Tuck School and professor of marketing and advertising, he came into his own as dean of the school of business at the University of Pittsburgh, whose faculty thought so highly of this modest scholar-administrator that they voluntarily established the Albert W. Frey lecture fund when A 1 retired from his deanship. Annually the fund brings to the university a noted scholar to lecture in the area in which Al's scholarly contributions are nationally and internationally known. Your classmates in 1920 salute you and congratulate you, Al, for the honors the University of Pittsburgh has conferred upon you.
Another 1920 man of distinction is Charles F. H. Crathern, who is starting his third career. The first, after Dartmouth, was in the military, with service in the U.S., French, and Greek armies. In each he served with distinction. The French awarded him the Croix de Guerre, the Greek army St. George's Cross, and the U.S. Air Force the air medal. Following military service he returned to his hometown of Mason, N.H., and began another distinguished, though more modest career as town clerk and treasurer, thus following in the footsteps of his greatgreat-great-grandfather, Captain Thomas Tarbell. Mason, founded in 1768, has always had a Tarbell or a Crathern minding its affairs. But, Charlie, who's going to tend shop while you enter your fourth career the leisurely life?
Condo #4, Norwich Meadows Norwich, Vt. 05055