This is a listing of deaths of which word has been received since the previous issue. Full notices, which are usually written by the class secretaries, may appear in this issue or in a later one.
Winthrop D. Barker '15 • Sept. 6 Briard N. Greeley '19 • Sept. 16 Lawrence E. Lovejoy '20 • Sept. 19 Werner Janssen '21 • Sept. 19 Allan B. Kernan '21 • Aug. 25 Charles W. Earle '22 • Sept. 23 Harold E. Fraser '22 • Sept. 23 Paul J. Soley '23 • Oct. 6 Nicholas A. Andretta '23 • Oct. 4 George Cassels-Smith '25 • Sept. 21 George C. Brockway '26 • Sept. 22 Bennett T. Kent '26 • Oct. 16 Ward A. Peterson '26 • Oct. 4 Morton H. Cavis '27 • Sept. 22 Horace B. Chrissinger '30 • Oct. 1 John R. Donaldson '32 • July 7 Daniel N. Gage '32 • Aug. 27 Harold B. Naramore '33 • Oct. 1 William P. Goergen '34 • Aug. 20 Karl F. Maas '34 • Sept. 11 Joseph M. Schuldenfrei '34 • July 7 James A. Dickinson '35 • Sept. 22 Cyrus L. Fulton '35 • Sept. 4 Elmer D. Rogers '35 • Sept. 22 Gerald L. Hasbrouck '36 • Aug. 23 John J. Kenny '36 • Sept. 13 Oliver Butterworth '37 • Sept. 17 Converse G. Fenn '38 • Aug. 20 David Ward Sr. '39 • Aug. 12 George L. Kimball '40 • Mar. 15 Daniel R. Rectanus '40 • Sept. 21 John T. St.Mary '40 • June 5 James McLellan Jr. '4l • Sept. 16 John S. Krol '43 • Sept. 21 Malcolm D. Corner '44 • Oct. 20 William A. Duffy '44 • Sept. 22 Howard L. Mac Curdy '45 • April 15 George A. Merrill '45 • Sept. 19 Andrew L. Galdi '46 • Aug. 16 Arthur Harrison '46 • July Christian C. Bugge '49 • Oct. 1 Louis V. Farrar '49 • Aug. 30 Brayton L. Meyer Jr. '49 • Aug. 17 Norris G. Townsend '49 • Aug. 26 Charles W. Carpenter '50 • Sept. 19 Robert H. Smith '50 • Sept. 30 Daniel T. Rownd Jr. '51 • July 12 John W. Mansfield '55 • Oct. 6 Harry W. Bailey '56 • May 16 Werner P. Kuhn '64 • Sept. 23 Andrea M. Battiste '79 • Sept. 25 Michael K. Kealey '80 • Aug. 24
1919
Hildreth Mason Allison
died in July in Peterborough, N.H., where he had resided in recent years. He left the College at the outset of World War I for army service. After the war he returned and graduated with the class. He was elected Class Poet.
Hildreth was a selectman in the town of Dublin, N.H., and also town moderator. From 1946 to 1966 he was with the Veterans Administration in Washington, D.C., and later with the American Trust and Security Bank. Throughout his life Hildreth was a prolific writer of both verse and prose. He had many published articles. He is survived by a brother, Elliott, and a niece.
Briard N. Greeley
died in September in New Rochelle, N.Y., where he lived most of his life. Bri was in good health at the time of the 70th Reunion, but had physical problems since. He was vice president of the class. His family goes back a long way in Dartmouth lineasre.
1921
Werner Janssen
died September 19 after a short illness. He was born in New York City, where his father operated one of the City's most popular restaurants, Janssen Wants to See You. He was with us less than three years, but that was long enough for him to compose the music for the musical comedy "Oh, Doctor!"
After completing his education at the New England Conservatory of Music, he studied conducting in Europe with Weingartner and Scherchen, as well as composition with Respighi. Returning to New York, he played piano in various cabarets and contributed numbers for the Ziegfeld Follies and other revues. Throughout his entire life he made conducting appearances in Europe, and in 1934 was invited to lead the New York Philharmonic.
From 1937 to 1939 Werne rwas director of the Baltimore Symphony, but thereafter he shifted his base to Los Angeles where he met and married actress Helen Twelvetrees. He was a visiting conductor in Utah, Oregon, and San Diego, as well as in many European cities. Despite his fall schedule, he often lent his wisdom and advice to Dartmouth's music department.
O.H.H.
1922
Webster Garst
longtime resident of Bradenton, Fla., died November 1, 1989, from a heart attack. He and his twin, Claflin, entered Dartmouth from Worcester (Mass.) Academy After sophomore year they transferred to Columbia where they graduatedin 1922.
For many years Webster was a Florida citrus and cattle rancher. He belonged to the American Legion, the Lions Club, the Manatee County Historical Society, and other organizations. He was a veteran of World Wars I and II.
Throughout life Webster kept an interest in Dartmouth. He is survived by his wife Johanna, three sons, eight grandchildren, and his brother.
1924
Norman Fitzroy Maclean
died at his home in Chicago on August 1 after a long illness. Editor of the Jack-O-Lantern as an undergraduate, he later stayed on for two years at the College as an instructor in the English department. He then worked as a forest ranger in Western Montana where he had grown up, and to which he returned summers for the rest of his life. He had worked earlier in logging camps and with fire crews.
Starting in 1930 he taught English literature at the University of Chicago where he remained on the faculty for 43 years. He received his Ph.D. from Chicago in 1941. On three separate occasions he won the University's prize for excellence in undergraduate education, and he served for three years as dean of students. Upon retiring in 1973, he became a writer of fiction. His famous book, A River Runs Through It, was published in 1976.
Norm is survived by a son, a daughter, and four grandchildren.
1927
Karl Hildreth Auer
died June 29 in Aurora, Col., after a long illness. Bill, as he was called, attended high school in Timmons, Ontario, and graduated from Upper Canada College in Toronto before entering Dartmouth with his brother Frederick in 1923. He was Green Key, Casque and Gaundet, and Phi Sigma Kappa, and a member of the track and cross country teams.
He was predeceased by his brother and daughter, but left two sons and his wife of 63 years, Marjorie Parkes.
William Herbert Montgomery
died September 20. His wife, Helen, died in 1932, and he left no known relatives. He has been listed as "inactive" since graduation.
1928
Herbert Rudolf Sensenig
died August 26 of intestinal complications followed by a stroke. On a scholarship at Dartmouth, he worked all four years in Commons, played football and basketball, and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa.
Herb received a Ph.D. at the University in Bonn, Germany, where he also met and married Mimi. He returned to Dartmouth as head of the German faculty, which lasted until the rise of Hider made the study of German unpopular. He continued at Dartmouth in various capacities until 1943, when he was commissioned as a captain and an interpreter in military intelligence. Promoted to major, he was senior interpreter at the Nuremberg Trials for Goering, Kesselring, Boennitz, von Ribbentrop, and others. He remained abroad with the State Department until 1952, when he returned to his farm in Norwich and once more headed the German department. He had been class mini-reunion chair since 1983.
Herb and Mimi adopted three refugee Lithuanian girls and two U.S.-born boys.
1929
Alfred Allen Gooley
of Manchester, Vt., died on August 8 after a long illness. Al belonged to Phi Delta and Green Key, was on the track team, and majored at Tuck School. He started in banking, then took over a Ford agency in Buffalo, from which he retired in 1955.
He was a class agent and secretary of the Buffalo Dartmouth Club. He leaves his wife, Mildred, and four children.
1931
Allison Almon Gould
died in June. Red came to Dartmouth from Yonkers (N.Y.) High School. Among his extracurricular interests were cross-country and chess. His major was sociology, and he graduated cum laude.
Red obtained his L.L.B. from Fordham Law, and in 1935 she was admitted to the New York State Bar. He continued graduate work at New York University in accounting, becoming a C.P.A. in 1937. He served as secretary to the judge of the 'Westchester County Children's Court, and was a tax attorney with the firm of Byrnes and Baker.
He was predeceased by his wife, Helen, in 1965. Red is survived by daughters Anne and Mary.
Walter J. Hausman Jr.
died on March 30 after a long bout with Alzheimer's disease. Walt (known by classmates as Jim) was a member of Phi Kappa Sigma and the Glee Club, played basketball and baseball, and majored in economics.
Walt's business career included marketing and advertising in New York, then creative lithography, the Army Air Corps in World War 11, public relations director of Schaefer Brewing 1945-1961, and finally, through the mid-eighties, his own international public and sales relations and travel consulting firm. He traveled extensively on business and belonged to many organizations, including the Poor Richards, Kentucky Colonels, the New York Athletic Club, Circus Saints and Sinners, and the Newspaper Reporters Association. His activities included filming color movies, organizing game fishing contests, and performance as an amateur magician.
He is survived by his widow, Remo, three daughters, and three grandsons.
John Edward Hines
died in 1980, according to recent information. A member of Alpha Delta Phi and Dragon, he left school in 1930 to fight the Depression. He worked for General Electric for over 30 years, becoming supervisor of production systems,transformer department, in Pittsfield, Mass. He retired in 1968.
He put in three years of military service in World War II, mosdy in the South Pacific. After retirement from GE he was vice president of Systems and Computer Technology Corporation for two years, and then was selfemployed as a consultant in management and manufacturing systems. He is survived by his widow, Marion, and two sons.
Willard Luther Peschko
died on July 8. Bill was a member of Alpha Sigma Phi and was active in the arts at Dartmouth. He had come from York, Pa., and his major was economics.
Prior to World War 11, during which he served in the army for nearly three years, he was an agent for Aetna Insurance. In 1946 he began a career in industrial engineering with Brown Instruments and Boeing Vertol in Philadelphia, which lasted until retirement in 1976.
He resided in Charlestown, W.V, and is survived by his widow, Ruth, and by two children.
Craig Thorn Jr.
died on August 4 in Greenport, N.Y. Craig was involved in numerous activities at Dartmouth, including freshman football, Theta Chi, Ledyard Canoe Club, the Press Club, varsity track team, and the Emergency Fire Squad. He later served as class agent for the Alumni Fund.
In business he was president of Craig Thorn Inc. Insurance Agency and secretary of C. W. Bostwick Insurance Agency. He was once president of the New York State Association of Insurance Agents and director of the National Association of Insurance Agents.
Beany was active in a score of community services, for which he was named Columbia County man of the year in 1982. He was active in alumni activities as well.
In the last few years he became a great traveler, and he presented hundreds of travelogues to charitable institutions. He is survived by his widow, Frances, two daughters, a son, nine grandchildren, including Craig IV '80, and by three great-grandchildren.
1934
William Peter Goergen
died August 20 after a lengthy illness. Bill came from Danbury, Conn., as valedictorian of his Wooster School class. He was a member of the Dartmouth News Board, was on the boxing squad, and majored in chemistry. He got his M.D. at New York Medical College and became an orthopedic surgeon.
a resident of the FDR Veterans Hospital in Montrose, N.Y., because of a war-related disability. He returned to Connecticut and lived in a Water bury health center for the last few years.
He is survived by his sisters Louise Trimpert and Marguerite Perkins.
1935
James Alfred Dickinson
died September 22. He made his home in Pittsburgh, Pa., where he had been Dean of Students at Carnegie Institute of Technology from 1946-52. He then moved to Aluminum Company of America in various managerial positions.
As an undergraduate Jim was captain of freshman basketball and a member of Alpha Delta Phi fraternity. He recieved his M.Ed, from Harvard and a Ph.D. from Ohio State University. During World War II he served in the Naval Reserve as a Lt. Commander.
He is survived by his wife, Nancy, and a son.
Don Hagerman '35
Cyrus Lupher Fulton
died September 4 in Sea Island, Ga. Cy made his home in'Lancaster, Ohio, and spent part of the year in Sea Island and Ocean Ridge, Fla. At Dartmouth he was a member of Psi Upsilon fraternity.
Cy retired from the position of vice president of Anchor Hocking Glass Corporation, of which his father was one of the founders.
He is survived by his widow, Harriet, and two daughters. His oldest daughter died in 1985.
Don Hagerman '35
1937
Oliver Butter worth
succumbed to cancer on September 17 at his home in West Hartford, Conn. He kept his spirits up right to the end.
A graduate of Kent (Conn.) School, Bud was an English major at Dartmouth. He was a member of the DOC and Cabin and Trail, and always loved the outdoors. Bud was happiest when he was at his cabin in New Hampshire, where he and Mims celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary two months before his death.
Bud obtained his M.A. in English from Middle bury. He taught English at Kent School, the Junior School in West Hartford, Ct., and, for 41 years until his death, at the Hartford College for Women.
Bud is best known as a writer of books for children "from eight to eighty." The EnormousEgg (1956) has been printed in many languages, and "Uncle Beazley," a model of the dinosaur hatched from the enormous egg, is located on the grounds of the Smithsonian. He was working on a book at the time of his death.
Besides his wife, Bud is survived by a daughter, his sons Michael '63, Tim '66, and Dan '68, and his brother Harrison '41.
Fran Fenn '37
Robert Jeremiah Woodruff Jr.
died on August 14 of cancer and complications of a stroke in Miami Beach, Fla. At Dartmouth Woody majored in English, was a member of Delta Tau Delta and Dragon, and was operating manager of the Jack-O-Lantern.
Woody had an exciting life in print, beginning after graduation with Dupont Company and the News Journal newspapers. Military service as commanding officer of an LCI in North Africa and Mediterranean landings intervened. Then came a stint as editor of the Monsanto Magazine at Monsanto in St. Louis, and then he returned to New York. He and his son operated weekly newspapers in Florida, and after retirement he was a broker of newspaper properties.
He served on interviewing committees and as an officer and member of Dartmouth Clubs in four cities, and was a class agent and member of the Reunion Giving Committee for the 50th. He is survived by his wife, Sally, son Robert III'64, and two daughters.
1939
David Ward Sr.
of Swarthmore, Pa., died on August 12 after a long illness. He came to Dartmouth from the Nichols School, where he was an honors student. Dave played soccer, was a brother of Theta Chi, and was Phi Beta Kappa. He earned a civil engineering degree from Thayer School following graduation.
Dave served in the European and Pacific theaters during World War II. Following the service he joined Turner Construction company in Philadelphia, where he spent 35 years as a civil engineer. For much of that time he was the firm's chief estimator. He is survived by his wife, Bess, whom he married in 1943, and a son.
1940
Bertram T. Blake Jr.
died on July 27 in Darien, Conn., at his home. Bert came to Dartmouth from Scarsdale High School. At Dartmouth he was a member of Chi Phi and of the golf team. He won several golf trophies.
During World War II he served five years with the U.S. Army Ordinance Department. His 35-year career in the fine and speciality paper industry included jobs with the U.S. Government Printing Office, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, General Services Administration and other government agencies. He retired in 1981 as executive vice president of Paper Corporation of the United States.
His survivors include his wife, Margaret, four daughters, and a son.
Daniel R. Rectanus
died on September 21 of viral encephalitis. Dan came to Dartmouth from Middleton, Ohio, and Phillips Andover Academy. He was treasurer of Phi Delta Theta and manager of the crew team.
He received his medical degree from the University of Rochester and his pediatric specialty from Yale University During World War II he served in the Army Air Corps, receiving the Asiatic-Pacific ribbon with Bronze Star, the American Theater Ribbon and the World War II Victory Medal. At the time of his retirement he was chief of pediatrics at Harvard University Health Services.
In 1981 he moved to East Falmouth, Mass., where he became a member of the Cape and Islands Board of Realtors. He is survived by his wife, Elizabeth, two sons, two daughters, three stepsons, and two stepdaughters.
John Taylor St. Mary
died on June 5 in Burlington, Vt. John entered Dartmouth from the Franklin Academy in Malone, N.Y., where he lived all of his life. He was a member of DKE and the skating team. He graduated from the Long Island College of Medicine in 1943.
Following war service in both World War II and Korea, he had a private practice from 1952 to 1986. John was medical director for the Franklin County Social Services and the Alice Hyde Skilled Nursing Facility, and he served in several capacities on the Alice Hyde Hospital staff. His other medical affiliations were numerous, and his participation in community affairs was extensive. He is survived by his mother, wife Marietta, five children, and three stepchildren.
1941
Franklin Palmer Hart, Jr.
suffered from congestive heart failure when death took him from Pat on July 11. A longtimer in the Hudson Valley of New York State, Bud made a career of accounting and consulting in the region's flourishing business of apple growing. Consistently active in alumni affairs, Bud served as a class agent, enrollment interviewer and member of both reunion and class executive committees.
Bud had two children from his first marriage, which ended with the death of his wife, Ann, in 1960. His subsequent marriage to Pat added two step-children to his family.
David Henry Slattery
devoted his working years to research and analysis with Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Massachusetts. His retirement came to an end on August 25 following a brief illness.
A lifelong Bostonian, Dave came to Dartmouth via Boston Latin, majored in economics, and took his master's at Harvard Business. He was veteran of Army service in WW II and never married, but the Boston Herald obituary reported that survivors in-clude "a dear friend, Mildred Fitzgerald."
Arthur Franklin Stevens
was born, lived, and died in New Hampshire, his death occurring July 9 after a losing battle with lung cancer. Art left Dartmouth prior to graduation, worked for Abbott Worsted Mills and The Cabinet Press, and leaves his memory with his wife, Elizabeth, and three children.
Theodore Wachs Jr.
was born in Chicago in 1915 and died there on July 24, 1990, following emergency heart surgery. Ted came to Dartmouth from New Trier High School and distinguished himself as a senior fellow, magna cum laude graduate, and member of Phi Beta Kappa, Inter fraternity Council, and Sphinx.
He served with the FBI during WWII and then, making his home in Connecticut, pursued his career as writer and editor in various capacites. He was active in alumni clubs and as an assistant class agent for the Alumni Fund.
His wife, Barbara, predeceased him.
1944
Franklin Gessford Ebaugh Jr.
died of cancer August 7 at his home in Stanford, Calif. He was chief of staff of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Palo Alto.
Frank graduated magna cum laude from Dartmouth and received his medical degree from Cornell in 1946. He did his internship and hematology residency at New York Hospital. After positions as research associate and member of the U.S. Public Health Service, he was associate director of laboratories at the Hitchcock Clinic and Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital in Hanover.
A colonel in the Army Reserves, Frank recently received two of the Department of Veterans Affairs' highest honors: the chief medical director's Commendation and the secretary's Distinguished Physician Award. He is survived by his mother, three daughters, and a sister.
1945
Desmond Charles O'Neill
of New Canaan, Conn., died in his sleep on April 30. He was with the V-12 Naval Program at Dartmouth and went on to receive his B.A. from the Cooper Union School of Fine Arts in New York City.
He married Helen Petretti in 1956. At that time he was associate media director of the Bryan Houston Advertising Agency in New York City, and in 1960 he became associate media director of Dancer, Fitzgerald, and Sample. He is survived by his wife and three children.
Ted Smith '45
1948
Philip Thomas Kelly died of a prolonged bout with liver and bone cancer in Odessa, Tex., on September 5. Phil grew up in Boston and went to Hanover in 1943 with the marine V-12 unit. After active service he went back to Hanover, joined Phi Gam, and graduated as a math major in 1948.
In 1958 Phil joined IBM. For the rest of his life he was a computer engineer, systems specialist and sales executive, employed by himself and others.
He leaves his second wife, Barbara, and a son by his first wife.
1949
Christian C. Bugge
died October 1. Typical of his competitive spirit, he battled his cancer with optimism and a sense of humor up to the last moment.
Chris fought in the underground for Norway during the German occupation from 1940-1945. He enrolled at Dartmouth in 1946 and became one of the ski team's top slalom performers. He was deeply involved in religious and intellectual pursuits, though he was known to combine fun and mischief.
He went back to Norway in 1950 and worked in public relations for Shell Oil. He later became the successful creator of Norway's equivalent to the Howard Johnson's roadside restaurants.
He leaves his wife, Inger, his daughter, and two sons.
Tor B. Arneberg '50
Gordon Stanley Parsons
died on May 28 while playing tennis in Orlando, Fla. At Dartmouth Spud was a member of the DOC, the Handel Society, the Glee Club, and Gamma Delta Chi.
After graduation he went on to Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine and received his degree in 1954. He interned at the Osteopathic Hospital of Maine, then practiced in Marshfield, Mass., until he moved to Florida in 1971. He was the founder in 1956 of the Dartmouth Club of Cape Cod, president of the Dartmouth Club of Central Florida, and a class agent.
He is survived by his wife, Lorraine, three daughters, a son, and three grandchildren.
Norris G. Townsend
died of complications resulting from an aneurism on August 26 at Tulane Medical Center in New Orleans. He was a developmental administration assistant for the University of New Orleans. He left Dartmouth to study business administration at Boston College and later received a master's degree in sociology at the University of New Orleans. He was a Navy Air Corps veteran of World War II.
He leaves his wife, Sara, three children, a sister, and nine grandchildren.
Suzanne Kreplin
1951
William Broeker Peavey
died on August 4 of pancreatic cancer in Eau Claire, Wis.
Bill entered Dartmouth from Lady smith (Wis.) High School. He majored in economics and was with the Dartmouth Players. Following graduation he spent four years in Los Gatos, Calif., boarding and training thoroughbred horses. He returned to Wisconsin in 1955 to manage his own lumber yard, then became involved in home building and real estate development. In 1980 he was named Realtor of the Year for the Eau Claire Chippewa Board of Realtors.
In July 1951 Bill married Ramona Engh, who survives along with three sons, two daughters, four grandchildren, and a sister.
1952
Simon Alexander Grolnick
died from a melanoma at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, N.Y., on August 12. He lived all his life in New York City.
At Dartmouth Sy was a premed who took delight in creative writing. He played the clarinet in the band, and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Gamma Delta Chi. After graduation he continued to be active in College and alumni affairs.
Sy left Dartmouth after three years to enter the SUNY Downstate Medical Center, where he received his M.D. After a two-year tour of duty as a U.S. Navy captain, he devoted the rest of his career to psychoanalysis. He ran a substantial practice, was a teacher and prolific writer in the field, and was director of education and training in the psychiatry department at North Shore. Knowing his time was short, during his last year Sy completed a major book, The Work andPlay of Winicott, which received excellent critical reviews when it was released earlier this year.
Herbert F. Roth '52
1972
Frederick S. Buck Jr.
died in Bronxville, N.Y., in March 1989 after a long illness. Fred grew up in Bronxville and graduated from the Hackley School in Tarrytown. At Dartmouth he was president of Storrs House and majored in government.
Douglas Bruce North
died of pneumonia on May 15 in Tampa, Fla. Doug came to Dartmouth from River Dell High in New Jersey and was one of the first special majors in urban studies. He received his master's in regional planning from the University of Massachusetts in 1976, then began a career in secondary education. At the time of his death Doug was in his first year as principal of the upper school at Shorecrest Preparatory in Tampa. Previously, Doug was dean of students at the Friends Select School in Philadelphia. He spent his summers working for the Farm and Wilderness Foundation in Plymouth, Vt.
Doug is survived by his wife, Christine Ramsey, and their two children.
Faculty
C. Allison Merrill
an internationally recognized skiing authority, member of the U.S. Ski Hall of Fame, and director of outdoor affairs at Dartmouth, emeritus, died after a long illness July 8 in Lebanon, N.H. He was 69.
Al Merrill came to Dartmouth after coaching the U.S. Nordic team at the 1956 Winter Olympics in Cortina, Italy. He never had a team place lower than fourth in NCAA championships.
As the first director of outdoor affairs he oversaw renovation and enlargement of the Moosilauke Ravine Lodge, the addition of bunkhouses around the lodge, and construction of alumni cabins at Hell Gate, north of the College Grant.
Al served in the 83rd Infantry Division in Europe in World War II, earning a Purple Heart, a Bronze Star, and the Distinguished Service Medal.
He is survived by his wife, Pamela, two children, and two sisters. Contributions may be made to the Al Merrill Fund (to build and maintain Nordic trails in Lebanon), do the City Treasurer, Lebanon, NH 03766; or the Al Merrill Ski Fund at Dartmouth, c/o Earl Jette, director of outdoor programs, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755.
Rick Adams
George W. Schoenhut
associate professor of drama emeritus, 82, died on September 13 at Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital. A graduate of Lehigh with an M.F.A. in drama from Yale, he was a member of the Dartmouth faculty from 1942 to 1968. In the thirties he was the inventor of the Pickup Sticks game that swept the country.
A contemporary of Warner Bentley and Henry Williams, George (as he was known by faculty and students alike) provided the set designs for hundreds of productions in Webster Hall, Robinson Hall, and the Hopkins Center. During the planning of The Hop he was an early advocate of comingling visual arts with performing arts in an in novative open format. He also designed the permanent cyclorama in Center Theater.
George's farm in Thetford, Vt., was the scene of dozens of Dartmouth Players cast parties. He is survived by his wife, Sarah. Contributions to the Schoenhut Service Award Fund, which annually recognizes non-acting theatrical attainment at the College, may be sent c/o Melanie Norten, 63 South Main, Hanover, NH 03755.
Bernard Elliot Segal '55
professor of sociology at Dartmouth, died August 20 at Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital. Bernard earned a Ph.D. in sociology from Harvard in 1960, and was a postdoctoral fellow in the Harvard Program for the Training of Social Scientists in Medicine 1958-1960. After two years as an instructor at Goucher College, he joined the Dartmouth faculty as an assistant professor in 1962 and became a full professor in 1971.
Bernard's specialties and areas of interest included the sociology of mental health, religion, political structures, Latin American studies and ethnic relations. He was a visiting professor and lecturer in Chile and Argentina. His anthology, Readings in Racial and EthtiicRelations, was published in two different editions in 1966 and 1972. He also authored and co-authored a variety of professional articles in the social and health sciences. Professor Segal was active in the civil rights movement in the 1960's serving as president of the Upper Valley chapter of the NAACP, and aiding the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee movement in Mississippi.
He leaves his wife, Anne, and two children.