Obituary

Deaths

SEPTEMBER 1990
Obituary
Deaths
SEPTEMBER 1990

This is a listing of deaths of which word has been received since the previous issue. Full notices, usually written by the class secretary, may appear in this issue or a later one.

Ralph M. Kilpatrick '19 • Aug. 10, 1989 Walter Goodwin Prince '21 • Apr. 5 Harry Armstrong Clarke '25 'June 12 Jesse Johnson Morgan '26 • May 23 Charles Harold Fleischer '27 '• Feb. 17 Stanley Herbert Manson '27 • May 20 Charles Edwin Coe '28 • May 18 John Parcher Nixon '28 • May 12 Edward Payson Ripley '28 • Apr. 14 Russell Owen Ayers '29 • May 8 Edward Canby '29 • May 1990 Charles V. Denny '29 • Sept. 2 Robert Henry Kemp '29 • May 16 Sherman Weaver '29 • Aug. 9, 1988 Walter Eugene Dresser '30 • May 11 Robert McNab Kerr Jr. '30 • Jan. 3 Thomas May Pierce III '30 • Apr. 8 Samuel Omasta '31 • Feb. 8 Caleb Howes Thomas '31 • May 13 Newell Bernard Kurson '32 • May 16 Gay Edward Milius Jr. '33 • June 7 Fred Howard Porter '33 'January 1990 Charles Merrill Dubay '34 • Jan. 6 Frederick Camp Mosher '34 • May 21 Edward Henry Cary '35 • February 1986 Charles Rice Gow Jr. '35 • May 8 Gilbert Balkam '36 • May 12 Hugo Francis DiFabio '36 • June 5 William Thomas Bell Jr. '37 • Mar. 10 Philip Wimmer Beatman '38 • May 25 Roger F. Buffington '38 • May 24 John Butler Jameson Jr. '38 • May 24 Wyman Ristine Vaughan '39 • June 5 Rudolph Horky Jr. '40 "June 14 John Taylor St. Mary '40 • June 5 Robert Lincoln Hatch '41 • Feb. 22 Richard Milward Bugbee '43 • Apr. 30 George Herbert Burke '43 • June 1 David Arthur Brown '44 • May 31 James Joseph MacFarlund '44 • May 12 Paul Samuel Casal '45 • Feb. 5 John Arlington Kinnaird '47 • May 18 W. A. Schubert Jr. '48 'July 29, 1989 Gordon Stanley Parsons '49 • May 18 Stephen Mulford Biddle '51 • June 13 Robert W. Nightingale '52 • May 22 John Michael Kingsland '53 • May 21 Thomas Shaun Conlon '56 • May 18 Leonard Daniel Donovan '61 • May 4 Joseph Cross Williams Jr. '62 • May 18 Peter Joseph Wolfe '65 • Apr. 5 Douglas Bruce North '72 • May 15 Lee G. A. Graham '75 • Apr. 1990

Faculty

Timothy J. Duggan who taught philosophy at the College for over 30 years, died on January 22 at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center at the age of 61. Duggan joined the faculty in 1957 and was appointed a full professor in 1968. He served as associate dean of the faculty for the humanities from 1980-84 and had three terms as chair of the philosophy department. A graduate of Brown, Prof. Duggan held advanced degrees from both Harvard and Brown. His wife, Joan, predeceased him in 1989. Surviving are daughters Theresa and Christine and son Timothy.

1917

Harry Thomas Worthington who had been the nation's oldest living Olympic competitor, died on March 4 at the age of 98. In 1912, while a student at Phillips Exeter and one of the youngest Olypians, Harry competed in the broad jump at the games in Stockholm. He failed to win a medal, coming in fourth, due principally to ten days of seasickness in crossing the Atlantic. Later, however, he did win several national championships in the event, now called the long jump. He also captained the College's track team in 1917 and was a quarterback on the football team. He joined DKE, Sphinx, and the Drama Club.

After graduating with a degree from Tuck, Harry served with General Pershing's headquarters staff in France in 1918.

During a business career that started when he sold Brooks Brothers clothing on campus, Harry rose to become president of Ditto, Inc., and subsequently held executive positions with several other equipment manufacturers. He made many overseas business trips before retiring in 1956 and said he was always seasick. Surviving in Manhasset, N.Y., is Harry's wife of 69 years, Margaret, along with two daughters and four sons.

1918

William E. Colbath died at his home in Dover, N.H., on March 15. Bill was a lifelong resident of Dover and attended Dover High School before entering Dartmouth. During WW I he served with the U.S. Army in France. In 1957 he retired from the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, where he was in the supply department. He then went to work for the city of Dover as assessor and retired in 1989 after more than 30 years. He also served five terms in the New Hampshire State Legislature. He was a charter member and past commander of Dover Post 8 of the American Legion. He was a member of Foreign Wars and Veterans of WW I. He also belonged to the Freemasons. Although most taxpayers regard assessors as people to be reckoned with, Bill Colbath was highly regarded by the citizens of Dover.

Bill is survived by his wife, Eva Wildes Colbath, seven children, eighteen grandchildren, eleven great-grandchildren and a great-great-grandchild.

Frank Harold Reuling of Waterloo, lowa, and Tangerine, Fla., died on March 6 at the age of 96. An ophthalmologist who obtained his B.S. and M.D. from Northwestern University, and a master's at the University of lowa, Frank came to Dartmouth from Phillips Exeter and stayed at the College for only one year. He leaves two daughters and his son Frank Jr. '59.

1919

Ralph Missel Kilpatrick died last year in Los Angeles, Calif., where he had made his home for some time. He was the president of the Security Building Materials Co. at the time of his retirement.

Over the years he was active in various civic affairs and also with the California Building Material Dealers Association. He leaves a widow, Miriam, and three children.

1920

Theodore Simon Cart 91, died of natural causes on March 25 at his home in Lake Wales, Fla.

Ted left Dartmouth in April 1917 to enlist in the U.S. Navy. Although he did not return to Hanover, he maintained a lifelong interest in the College while pursuing a manufacturing career. In 1920 he founded the Pocono Rubber Cloth Company, and five years later organized Atlantic Products, which developed soft luggage lines.

Before moving to Florida, Ted was a long-time resident of Princeton and Harbourton, N.J. He was a member of the Dartmouth Club of New York.

Surviving are his wife, Dorothy, a daughter, a son, three grandchildren, and seven great-grandchildren.

1921

Ryland Julian Rothschild died on February 19 at his winter home in Phoenix. Two years ago a distinguished clinic had said he had six months before liver cancer would claim him. It was typical of Rynie's great fighting spirit that he lasted more than three times that estimate.

Coming to Hanover from Shattuck School, Rynie joined Alpha Delta Phi and later Casque & Gauntlet. He became rover on the hockey team, and a low-handicap member of Dartmouth's championship golf team. He played professional hockey for a couple of years, but golf was his favorite.

His athletic prowess was never allowed to interfere with the business he inherited: H. and Val. J. Rothschild Inc. Rynie continued to build it into one of the most prestigious and profitable real estate and mortagage loan firms in the Middle West.

From early reunions and football games we remember Rynie and Miriam, who predeceased him by almost 30 years. They had two daughters, Anne Welliver and Mary Hanstad. There are nine grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Following Mir's death Rynie married Lu Ludke, whose granddaughter is Jill Ludke '92.

Rynie's civic achievements included: president, St. Paul Board of Realtors; director, Title Insurance Company of Minnesota; and past president, Junior Chamber of Commerce. He had also been president of Town and Country Club, St. Paul Athletic Club, White Bear Yacht Club, and the Minnesota Club.

In addition to serving on several corporate boards Rynie was among the first to join the air force in WW II, rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel.

Rynie is survived by Lu, as well as his two daughters and their families.

1922

John Grosvenor Dana retired shipping executive, died January 28 at age 88, victim of a hit-and-run driver whose car struck John as he was crossing a Mt. Vernon, N.Y., street on January 25.

John was born in Woodstock, Vt., of lineage described in History of Woodstock Vermont as "this remarkably talented Woodstock family."

The Dana name has been closely associated with Dartmouth going back to the 1870s. Most recently there is Loomis Grosvenor Dana '48, son of John and his wife, Frances.

As a student John majored in math and belonged to Cosmos and Gamma Alpha. At the time of his death he was our class secretary, memorial chairman, and associate head agent for the Alumni Fund and was a lifelong contributory to the Fund. He belonged to the Dartmouth Club of Westchester.

John was with the Furness Bermuda shipping line from 1923 until retiring as head of the management department in 1967. From 1941-51 he served as an officer in the British Ministry of War Transport. For meritorious service he was awarded the O.B. E., Honorary Officer of the Order of the British Empire.

John and Frances Spear were married 63 years ago in Woodstock. She, their son Loomis, three grandchildren, and a great grandchild are the survivors.

1925

Arthur Dewing who died on February 25 in White River Junction, was born in London, England, of American parents in 1902. He attended public and private schools including Manfius (N.Y.) Military Academy and Worcester (Mass.) Academy and, after graduating from Dartmouth in 1925, received an M.A. in English from Columbia in 1932. Meanwhile he did newspaper, publicity, and editorial work, the last with the Encylopaedia Britannica during the preparation of its "New 14th Edition" published in 1929. Then in 1930 he became in instructor in English at Dartmouth, advancing to assistant professor and professor, serving until 1968, when he retired to his home in Norwich, Vt. While a member of the faculty, he devoted himself to teaching except for a few miscellaneous writings and for editing the collected addresses and other writings of President Ernest Martin Hopkins, published as This Our Purpose in 1950. His wife, Leslie Taylor Dewing, whom he married in 1928, died in 1986, and he is survived only by their daughter, Sara Dewing.

Willard T. McLaughlin died February 3, at his home in Lacey, Wash. After College, he earned his master's and also his doctorate in botany at the University of Wisconsin and served as a professor of botany at Northwestern University for several years. As an agriculture consultant with the U. S. Soil Conservation Service, he oversaw several projects involving sand dunes on the Oregon coast, ranch land management, drainage, forestry, and farm lands.

In 1948 he opened the McLaughlin Seed Company in Spokane, which he operated until his retirement in 1982. He was a life member of the Kiwanis Club, and president of the Spokane Alumni Association. He was the author of several books and monographs on botantical subjects. He is survived by two sons, Thomas '61 and John '64, and by five grandchildren.

1926

Russell Watson Clark died of cancer February 27 in Nashua, N.H., where at Hunt's Community a lifetime retirement community he and his wife, Betty, have lived during recent years. Previously their home for many years was in Waban, Mass. He was born in Providence, R.I., grew up in Newton Highlands, Mass., graduating from Newton High School. He followed his father, Charles A. Clark, Dartmouth 1891, to Hanover where he was a member of Zeta Psi, Glee Club, and the choir. He was very active in class affairs—serving for ten years on the class executive committee, was 50th Reunion chairman, reunion treasurer three times, and regional agent of the Alumni Fund. He was a longtime member of the Boston alumni association.

Russ spent his entire business career in international banking with the First National Bank of Boston.

One of his special retirement enjoyments was being secretary for 15 years of the Retired Mens Club of Newton. Russ with his wife, Betty as well as with his first wife, Dot, who was mother of his two children, Prescott '54 and Priscilla Green attended many class get-togethers and reunions.

Besides his wife and children he is survived by his stepdaughter Carole Moody, four grandchildren, his brother Leonard '31, and his nephew Leonard Jr. '56. Gordon McClure Opdyke

died February 28 at Montclair Community Hospital, Montclair, N.J., after a long illness following a heart attack October 1987. He was born in Jersey City, graduated from Lincoln High School there, and at Dartmouth was lightweight boxing champion 1922-23, and welterweight champion 1924 26. His major was a premedical course after which he earned his M.D. degree in 1930 at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. He served his internship and residency at Mountainside Hospital, Glen Ridge, N.J.

Oppie was a general practioner for 49 years in Verona, N.J., following in the footsteps of his father. He was a police surgeon, borough physician, and school physician. After retirement in 1979 he was medical director of Turning Point of Essex County, N.J., an alcoholic rehabilitation center. He was emeritus staff member of the two local hospitals, and in 1975 was named Verona Lay Citizen of the Year.

Previous to his 1978 marriage to Lee Boyer, Oppie had lost his first wife, Marjorie Rowland, mother of his four children, who died in 1945. His second wife, Janis Scott, was also lost through death. All had enjoyed class reunions, and Oppie was a staunch classmate who supported the Alumni Fund for 58 years. Besides Lee, he is survived by his son Richard, his daughters Lynn Nagy and Nancy Seelig, his stepchildren Dalyse Rutherford and John Boyer, and four grandchildren.

1927

Charles Harold Fleischer died February 17, at the Methodist Medical Center, Oak Ridge, Tenn., at the age of 82. He spent 40 years with the Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, rising to the position of assistant national sales manager based in New York City. At the College Charlie was a member of the DOC and the track team. During World War II he served with the Office of Price Administration and War Food Administration Mission for Economic Affairs in London, England. He was a class agent for the Alumni Fund. He and his wife, Mary Catherine, spent their retirement years in Florida. She predeceased him. He is survived by his three sons, Charles Jr., Francis, and Jon Stephen.

Hargreaves Heap Jr. died January 30 in the Framingham Union Hospital, Framingham, Mass. He was 84. "Ding" as he was called, grew up in Quincy, Mass., where he went to high school. Later, he attended the Lowell Technical Institute for a year before transferring to Dartmouth where he was Kappa Sigma.

Immediately after College, he went to work for the manufacturing company founded by his father, Hancock Paint and Varnish Company. He served the company as vice president and later as president until his retirement in 1967. Always active in community affairs, he was a trustee of Hyde Park Savings Bank and active in the Episcopal Church, which he served as warden.

He was an avid golfer as well as a sailor and during World War II he served in the Coast Guard as skipper of a picket boat in Boston Harbor.

In 1974, he and his wife, Lucille, purchased and restored an old farmhouse in Marshfield, Mass. Antique houses became a favorite activity and they restored three other houses.

He is survived by Lucille, a daughter Patricia Rockwell, sons Hargreaves III and Frederick, seven grandchildren, two greatgrandchildren and his brother Edward.

George John Kish died January 23 of coronary heart disease in the Bridgeport (Conn.) Hospital. He was born in that city in 1904 and prepared for college at Fairfield High School where he captained the football team for three years. At Dartmouth he played freshman and varsity football and was a member of Chi Phi. He left College during his second year to return to Fairfield where he spent his life in the real estate and insurance business. His avocation was travel, preferable by ship. He is survived by his wife, Dorothy.

James Burland Willing died March 18 at the New England Medical Center after an operation for brain tumor. He had not been well for several years. Born in Kettering, England, in 1906, Jay went to school in Newton, Mass., and later moved to Winchester, Mass., where he lived all his adult life. He graduated from Dartmouth in 1927, from the Amos Tuck School in 1928, and very shortly thereafter became a certified public accountant. At Dartmouth he was Psi Upsilon.

His long and successful career in public accounting began in Boston with the firm of Patterson, Teele and Dennis. This later merged with Alexander Grant with Jay as managing partner of the Boston office, which later became Grant Thornton. He was past president of the Massachusetts Society of CPAs and served on many accounting boards and committees, federal as well as state. Active in community affairs, he was a director of two banks, a member of the Winchester Country Club, a long time member of the executive committee of his class as well as class treasurer for five years.

He leaves a brother, two sisters, a son Robert, nine grandchildren and 13 greatgrandchildren. He was predeceased by his wife, Marion Lane (Smith), and a daughter, Patricia MacDowell.

1928

Edward Ward Sawyer died February 4. Funeral services and burial took place in Bangor, Maine, the place of his birth. Ed prepared for Dartmouth at the Bangor High School. After graduation from Dartmouth he joined the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company and rose to become general manager of their National Fish Department. During the war he served in the Army Quartermaster Corps and, while serving in England, was promoted to lieutenant colonel.

After the war Ed established what was described as the most modern fish plant in the country at Norwood, Mass., and in Watertown. He was a member of the Commonwealth Country Club of Newton. Ed was one of the few members of our class who managed to remain a bachelor all his life.

1929

Allen Richardson Floyd died on March 5 in Marysville, Calif. Al came from Winthrop (Mass.) High School and majored in psychology.

He was a licensed California accountant and served as treasurer of the City of Lynnwood, Calif. Later he became president of the Lynnwood Battery Company and was president of the Lynnwood Kiwanis Club.

Unable to compete physically, he devoted himself to working with boys teams and wrote a sports column in a local weekly.

He leaves his wife, Fern (Hull), and a daughter Carole.

Franklin Hammond Middleton died of kidney failure on January 17 in Fort Myers, Fla.

Midd came from Lafayette, Ind., and Worcester Academy. He belonged to the Round Table and majored in economics.

He worked for the Chase Manhattan Bank, then moved to Manufacturers Trust where he became vice president. He lived in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y., until moving to Florida in 1982.

He was formerly treasurer of the Sarasota Dartmouth Club, a class agent, and a member of the Leadership Committee for the Campaign for Dartmouth.

He leaves his wife, Louise, who was formerly married to Wallace Blakey '30, five children, including John Blakey '64, James Blakey "74, and William Blakey T '69, and four grandchildren.

Mathias Rock died on March 7 at Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis, Mass.

Matt came to us from Bayside, Long Is land, and Exeter Academy and majored in French. He belonged to Alpha Delta Phi, and Sphinx.

After College he liquidated his father's business, then traveled the U.S. and Canada in the wool business. He next went into general contracting and for years owned the Door and Window Company of Fairfield, Conn., and worked with Stran Steel Buildings. Co. in Wilton.

He retired to Osterville, Mass., for fifteen years and recently moved to South Yarmouth. He belonged to the Shore and Country Club of East Norwalk, Conn., and the Dartmouth Club of Cape Cod. He was a talented woodworker to the end.

He leaves his wife, Helen (Von Thun), a daughter, and two grandchildren.

1930

Charles S. Austin who died February 19, of emphysema, at his home in Portland, Maine, was born in Maiden, Mass., and graduated from Maiden High School in 1924, and from Dean Academy, Franklin, Mass., in 1926. An outstanding athlete in prep school, he was a member of the 1927 freshman baseball team at Dartmouth and was a member of Sigma Chi.

Following graduation, Charles was employed from 1930 to 1968 by Texaco Oil Company, serving in both Maine and New Hampshire.

While with Texaco, he served as an executive reservist under the Department of the Interior and was the Maine chairman of the selection of the Civil Defense Program, supervising distribution of all fuels. Following his retirement from Texaco, Charles became a real estate broker, licensed in Maine, and was also owner and treasurer of the Swampscotta Nursing Home situated in South Windham, Maine.

He was, at one time, a member of the Kiwanis Club, and, at the time of his death, was a member of the Woodfords Club of Portland, The Dartmouth Club of Maine, and the 60-Plus Club of the Woodfords Congregational Church.

Charles married Margaret Murphy, of Lewiston, Maine, in November 1939. Margaret died in 1967. In May of 1976, Charles married Helena Cavanaugh, of Portland, who survives. Also was surviving are three daughters of his first marriage, Catherine Ingraham, Elizabeth Kidman, and Ruth Ann Jaworski. There are also seven stepchildren, nine grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.

Fred C. Scribner Jr. '30

Alexander Maxwell Harroun

died in February of a massive coronary accident. Born in 1907, he was a resident at the time in Wilmette, Ill.

Little information is available about Alex. It is known that at one time he held a position with an advertising organization, Air Transport Advertising, Ltd.

We know that Alex was active in Cabin & Trail at College. He is survived by his widow, Dorothy.

Robert McNab Kerr of St. Clair Shores, Mich., died on January 3. Death was due to intravascular lymphoma. He was born in 1908. Bob had been group vice president of the Sybron Corp., prior to that chairman of the board of the Kerr Manufacturing Co., a dental supply firm. He had been a director of Will Scientific in Rochester, N.Y.; the American Fund for Dental Education; Eastman Dental Center; Rochester Museum and Science Center; and honorary member of the American Dental Association. An avid sailor, Bob belonged to six yacht clubs. He had been class chairman for Michigan.

Bob's first marriage ended in divorce, his second wife died in 1959. In 1985 he married his present wife, who survives him together with his daughters Sharon and Frances. There are four grandchildren.

1931

Daniel Denham died on January 30, 1990, in a nursing facility adjacent to the Newport News Hospital where he had been confined following an accident in which his car skidded on the ice near his home in Williamsburg, Va., just before Christmas.

Dan came to Dartmouth from Western High in Chevy Chase, Md. His major was in Tuck, and he joined Sigma Nu.

After a long period of service with J. P. Stevens and Company, Inc., in New York, he became director of personnel, a position he held until retirement.

Wife Betty and he moved to Longboat Key in Florida in 1974 after retirement, and then to Williamsburg in 1984. In Garden City, Long Island, in Florida, and in Williamsburg Dan was extremely active in enrollment, interviewing applicants, and as a class agent for the Alumni Fund. He could always be counted on to give help to Dartmouth.

Betty and son James '6l predeceased him. He is survived by sons William and Bruce '64, and by four grandchildren.

George Ettleson Frankel died on March 16 in Cleveland, Ohio. George came to Dartmouth from Glenville High in Cleveland. He majored in history, and was the lighting manager of the Players' stage operations.

After graduation George became associated with the family firm, Frankel Bros. Insurance Co., becoming senior partner, and retiring in 1969. He had been president of the Insurance Board of Cleveland, and of the Ohio Association of Insurance Agents, and had served as chairman of the Midwest Territorial Conference of the National Association of Insurance Agents.

George had been involved in many community organizations, including Jewish Big Brothers of which he had been president. His wife, Marjorie, who predeceased him, had long been incapacitated, and George was her primary caregiver.

Cousins of George were the brothers Sam '11, Milton '13, and Leon Aronowitz '15 of Albany, N.Y. He is survived by brother Jerome; by daughter Barbara Brown; by son John; and by four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

Oliver Stoddard Hayward M.D., died on January 25 in Alameda, Calif., of cancer. Ollie was born in Dorchester, Mass., and came to Dartmouth from Boston Latin School. A Rufus Choate Scholar, Ollie graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Dartmouth, and after attending Dartmouth Medical School received his medical degree from Harvard Medical School in 1934. He practiced in New London, N.H., for many years. During World War II Ollie served four years in the Naval Medical Corps as a lieutenant commander and epidemiologist in Norfork, Jerusalem, Cairo, and Naples. Thereafter, his distinguished medical career took him to Washington, Harvard, Yale, the University of California, and various V. A. hospitals, researching and instructing in cancer chemotherapy.

Relocating to California in 1962, Ollie joined the Alameda County Health Department and became its first chief of the Division of Alcoholism.

In 1958 Oliver was the recipient of a grant from the U. S. Public Health Service to investigate and write the biography of Nathan Smith (1762-1829), the founder of four medical schools (Dartmouth, Yale, Bowdoin, and the University of Vermont).

Ollie pioneered in breeding Arabian and Morgan riding horses in New Hampshire. In California he was involved in boating and boating safety.

Ollie leaves his wife, Mary, seven children including Oliver Jr. '60, 11 grandchildren, and the undersigned, his nephew.

T.J.Harper '56

Edgar Hawkins Kent died on January 31 in the New England Hospital in Boston.

Ned came to Dartmouth from Newton (Mass.) High School. In his major at Tuck he achieved his Phi Beta Kama membership, and also was a member of Phi Gamma Delta and of Casque & Gauntlet. He was graduated from Harvard Law in 1934 after serving on the Harvard Law Review.

In 1934 Ned joined the Boston law firm now known as Fish & Richardson, from which he retired in 1988, the last 41 years as a partner. His specialty was patent law. He was a member of the American Patent Law Association, and a former member of the Harvard Club of Boston and of the St. Botolph Club of that city.

He is survived by his widow. Marjorie; by sons, John and David; by a sister and brother; and by two grandchildren.

Samuel Omasta died on February 8 at his home in St. Petersburg, Fla.

The Depression found Sam, an economics major, hack on the farm near Whately, Mass., helping his dad and brothers, working with county farm programs, and, after a year with a state agency, joining the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Washington, becoming an administrative assistant. In 1951, however, that major in economics asserted itself, and Sam joined National Limestone Institute, Inc., from which he retired as vice president and a registered Washington lobbyist in 1981.

Sam's preparation for Dartmouth was at Northhampton (Mass.) High, and in College he was a member of Delta Upsilon. He had been a member of the Dartmouth Club of Washington.

Sam's wife, Susan, predeceased him. He is survived by daughters Elinor Vickery and Christina Bostian, and by sons S. Herbert and Steven.

Donald Alesbury Stoddard died on January 26 at his home in Bloomingdale, N.J., where he had moved last year from Nutley. His wife, Marylyles, had predeceased him.

Don came to Dartmouth from Nutley High and his major was Tuck. He was a member of the freshman and varsity glee clubs, of the Dartmouth Christian Association, of the Outing Club, of the staffs of the Aegis and The Dartmouth, and of Phi Sigma Kappa.

Until 1944 he was with Wood, Struthers in New York. He then joined what is now the Morgan Guaranty Trust Company, from which he retired in the late seventies as senior vice president in charge of the department dealing in government bonds.

He had been chairman of the Nutley Planning Board, trustee of his church, organizer of boy's baseball leagues, a member of the Upper Montclair Country Club and of the Nutley Town Club.

He had interviewed many an applicant for admission to the College, and had been an assistant class agent before taking on the job of head agent in 1976, a job he handled superbly until his death. Don had the unusual distinction of having a great, great, great-grandfather in the class of 1789, and a distant cousin in the class of 1892.

Don is survived by his sons, Donald Jr. '60, H. Sanford, and James; by his brother, H. Vincent; and by six grandchildren.

1932

Richard Hazen died at 78 in his home town of Dobbs Ferry, N.Y., on February 12. Pneumonia was the immediate cause of death, but Dick had been ailing for several years. A widower, he is survived by daughters Molly Gillam and Putnam Gorman, and four grandchildren.

Dick followed in the footsteps of his father, an eminent civil engineer. Co-founder of a consulting company in 1951, Dick had a distinguished career that involved the planning and direction of water supply and wastewater treatment projects in the U.S., Africa, Southeast Asia, and Central and South America. He was a past president of the American Association of Consulting Engineers, a member of the National Academy of Engineering, and a consultant to the water supply boards of New York City, Detroit, and Washington. He also served as president of the school board of Children's Village and as a member of the Dobbs Ferry Board of Education. During WW II he was a naval officer, serving from 1942 to 1946.

Dick came to Dartmouth from Andover. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate, he was also manager of track and a member of Green Key, Psi Upsilon, and Casque & Gauntlet. In 1934 he received advanced engineering degrees from Columbia and Harvard.

Edward B. Marks '32

Milton William Lamproplos died at Montefiore Hospital in Pittsburgh on February 8. He is survived by a daughter Ruth Fecko, a brother George, three grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.

A graduate of the University of Pittsburgh Law School, Milt helped found the firm of Eckert Seamans Cherin and Mellot in 1958. He was a member of the national, state, and county bar associations and served on the disciplinary board of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. He was considered an expert in law relating to natural gas explosions and medical malpractice. During World War II he served in the U.S.Army.

Gordon Campbell Mackenzie died of a heart attack on March 13 at his home in Charleston, S.C. 1 ie had retired from a career with Litton Industries in 1976, where promotions had led to the presidency of Litton's Specialty Printing Division. Mack's career was interrupted only by service in World War 11, including combat in Sicily and Iwo Jima. He left the navy as a lieutenant commander.

At Dartmouth Mack was a history major and a brother in Phi Gamma Delta. Oyer the years his hobbies included gardening and fishing, and he was an avid golfer. For 30 years he particularly enjoyed his monthly poker sessions with the same group of friends.

Mack is survived by Betty, his wife of 55 years, and by sons Gordon Jr. and David.

1933

William Henry Lang died on March 14 at White House, Palm Harbor, Fla. Bill and Lida had moved to Belleair from Short Hills, N.J., in 1979.

Bill joined 1933 from Perry High School in Pittsburgh, majored in economics and was a member of Sigma Chi. He received a M.L. from the University of Pittsburgh and studied management at Harvard.

Bill worked briefly for Gulf Oil and then moved to U.S. Steel Corp., where he rose to be executive vice president and treasurer. He was also president and director of U.S. Steel Homes Credit Corp. and U.S. Steel Overseas Capital Corp. He also served as a director of several other major corporations.

Bill was an active and extensive participant in community affairs, having been a trustee of the Short Hills Congregational Church and a board member of the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra and of St. Barnabas Hospital. He was a founding director of the Deafness Research Foundation of New York and a member of Belleair Country Club. A dedicated alumnus, he engaged in every possible Dartmouth support activity from alumni club officer to applicant interviewer and Tuck School overseer.

Besides his wife, Bill is survived by his daughters, Marjorie Smith, Janet Strife, Jean Rexford, and by ten grandchildren.

Charles Merrill Dubay died January 6 at his home in Lancaster, S.C. He came to Hanover from Amsterdam, Holland, a graduate of Instituut Schroeder. He earned his "D" in cross-country skiing and was active in the German Club. He got his B.A. from the University of Georgia. Merrill's primary work was with newspapers, in advertising and circulation, mostly in Georgia and the Carolinas. He served as president of Dartmouth Club in Charlotte. Merrill is survived by his wife, Ellen, sons Peter, John, Stephen, and William, and five grandchildren.

1934 school. Then for 32 years until retirement he worked in the Arizona Vocational Rehabilitation Program as district manager, where he aided countless handicapped and war-scarred veterans to resume their places in life. He was an avid golfer and hiker. Charlie was from Manchester, Vt., a member of Alpha Sigma Phi, and majored in education. He is survived by Alice, his wife of 47 years. Charles Frederick Orvis died March 12 at his home in Tucson, Ariz. The family had moved there when Charlie had a health problem in the years immediately after our graduation. After his health stabilized, in 1940, he taught at a boys'

Robert Richmond Singleton died after brief illness on February 13 in Santa Margarita, Calif., where his son David '62 lives. He had been living in Portland, Conn., since retiring as a mathematics lecturer at Wesleyan University. Earlier he had his own Instrument Development Consulting firm and had been a research associates at General Electric. He was a mathematics major at Dartmouth, graduated Phi Beta Kappa, and went to Brown for his master's in science and to Princeton for his Ph.D. in math.

Bob came from Staten Island, was a member of Phi Kappa Sigma and the Interfraternity Council. His wife, Helen, died in 1965; he is survived by David, daughter Sally Womer, and four grandchildren.

1935

Edward Henry Cary according to word recently received, died of a heart attack on February 15, 1986, at his home in Dallas, Tex. Ed left College in 1933 and graduated from Southern Methodist in 1935. His life was spent in banking and real estate in the Dallas area. He was president of the Medical Arts Hospital and president of the Texas Association of Building Owners and Managers. He was a navy officer in World War 11.

Ed is survived by his wife, Evelyn, a daughter of the same name, and son, Edward III.

William Cunningham Short died of cardiac arrest on February 10 at his home in Monte Sereno, Calif. Bill, a native of New York, came to College from Portsmouth (N.H.) High School, joined Kappa Sigma, and ran on the track team...

He spent his career with Lockheed Aircraft, retiring as administrator of the firm's Space Science Division in Palo Alto, Calif. During World War II he worked with their Overseas Support Group in Iceland, Ireland, and England. Bill served as councilman and then mayor of Monte Sereno, and served Dartmouth on the Alumni Fund as a class agent for almost 30 years.

Bill and Tia had no children but their "home was a refuge for harassed friends who have."

Survivors are his wife, Tia, his brother Gilbert, and his sister Claire Hayes.

1938

Raymond Robert Ammarell Jr. died February 23 in Pinehurst, N.C., of cancer. He came to Dartmouth from Central High in Paterson, N.J. He was manager of freshman baseball and went to Tuck.

Ray joined the comptroller's department of Time Inc. in 1941. After serving in the Army Air Corps as a statistical control officer, Ray returned to Time magazine becoming assistant business manager. In 1954 when Time Inc. initiated plans for a new sports magazine (nicknamed "Muscles" around the office) Ray became its business manager. In time Sports Illustrated went from red to black and made publishing history. He was named general manager of SI in 1961. Doubleday in 1963 brought Ray aboard and made him a senior vice president of the book publishing house in 1964. Ray retired in 1982.

He served four years on the Briarcliff Manor, N.Y., board of education, two years of them as president.

Ray is survived by his wife, Barbara; his children, Robert, Natalie, and Raymond III; and two grandchildren. The family suggests that those wishing to remember Ray send a gift in his name to the Alumni Fund, Blunt Alumni Center, Hanover, NH 03755.

J.R.S '38

1939

Alexander W. Fraser of Wilmington, Del., died at home of a sudden heart attack on February 27, 1980. Inadvertently neither his classmates nor the College recorded his death, for which oversight we are extremely sorry He came to Hanover from Harrisburg Academy, and after leaving Dartmouth, earned his A.B. degree from William and Mary in 1940. In March of 1940 he joined the Hercules Powder Company, Inc., where, except for the war years, when he served overseas with the Air Force, he spent his entire working life until retirement.

He is survived by his wife, now Mrs. William M. Hobson, a daughter Virginia Morris, a son Alexander Jr., and one grandson.

Paul M. Jones 72, of El Toro, Calif, died suddenly on November 16, 1989. Paul came to Dartmouth from Oak Park High School in Illinois where he was president of his class, editor of the yearbook, president of the Camera Club and the debating team.

At Dartmouth he joined Kappa Kappa Kappa and was an editor of the Pictorial before leaving Hanover to earn a degree at the Illinois Institute of Technology.

Called to active duty in the navy during WWII, he served on the destroyers Preston (lost at Guadacanal) and Maddox (lost during the invasion of Sicily), and was executive officer of the Cassin Young, which is designated as an historic ship and currently rests next to the USS Constitution in Boston.

After the war Paul was owner and manager of Harman Industries, a company that distributed industrial pumps and jet drives and engines for "hot" boats until 1976 when he and his wife, Rosemary, took up avocado growing in Ventura County's Posas Valley. They moved to Orange County in 1987 to be near their son, Douglas '71, his wife, and two children.

Alfred W. Steffen 72, of Hilton Head, S.C., died on March 10, after a courageous battle against Lou Gehrig's disease.

Al was one of a bunch of '39ers who came to Dartmouth from Exeter. He was the president of his class in his junior year, captain of the golf and swimming teams, took part in dramatics, and was on the staff of the weekly newspaper and glee club. In Hanover, he was a brother in SAE and majored in English.

He spent his working life with Schreier Malting Company in Sheboygan, Wis., where he had been a grain analyst, and served as secretary and a director, retiring in 1976 to move to Hilton Head.

Club Champion in 1979 and 1981; Spanish Wells Club Champion in 1982 and 1984; and the Seniors Golf Association Champion in 1978. He also served as a director of the Wisconsin State Golf Association.

Al is survived by his wife, Marion; sons Scott and Jeffrey, daughter Marcia Mayer, and two grandchildren.

Richard Schumacher Jr. 71, of Shelter Island Heights, N.Y., died on January 29 in Stuart, Fla., of apparent heart failure.

Dick came to Dartmouth from Jamaica High School, Queens, N.Y. At College he earned his numerals on the freshman football team, was a brother of Sigma Chi, and a member of the dormitory committee. He received a master's degree from Tuck School in his fifth year on campus.

Before retiring in 1980, Dick worked for 35 years for Union Carbide Corp., in New York City. He was a CPA, and managed the state and local tax department. During World War II he served as a lieutenant in the Navy Supply Division. He was a member and former director and treasurer of Gardiner's Bay Country Club, Shelter Island; a member of the Executive Institute of America; and a vestryman of St. Mary's Episcopal Church, Shelter Island.

Survivors include his wife, Shirley, whom he dated in College and married in 1940; sons Richard III, Robert, and William, and a daughter, Jane Hammond; 12 grandchildren, one great-grandchild; and his brother, the undersigned

Charles Schumacher '44

1940

D. Lee Bassett died on March 6 of complications following heart surgery. He was 71.

Lee joined the U.S. Army in 1940, serving in the Pacific Theater until the war's end, rising from private to captain in the 1 st Cavalry division.

After WW II Lee joined the family business, S-P Corporation. He rose to chairman before selling the company in

He was a hunter, fisherman, and wildlife conservationist who made many donations to the Cleveland Zoological Society. He was active with the Boy Scouts, a trustee of the Cleveland museum, a trustee of the African Wildlife Foundation, and had many other sports-related associations. He was a member of the Union Club in Cleveland.

He is survived by two sons, Randall and Lee, two daughters, eight grandchildren, and three sisters.

1941

Peter Cooper Tiemann Glenn was Mississippi's sole contribution to the class of 1941, and a distinguished one was he throughout his undergraduate years. Ma- joring in Greek-Latin, Pete's grade-point average carried him into Phi Beta Kappa. He made his presence felt in Phi Kappa Psi, Cabin & Trail, Rowing Club, C&G, Palaeopitus, crew, Carnival, Interfraternity Council, and Class Executive Council.

After graduation Pete taught briefly at Hotchkiss before WW II brought him into action with the American Field Service attached to British forces in North Africa where he was captured by Axis troops and held prisoner for ten months until an exchange took place. He thereafter served with an Indian division of the British army in the China-Burma-India theater.

Postwar, Pete became a theatrical producer, in addition to modeling, and in 1961 he founded Peter Glenn Publications with output that included the New York Casting and Survival Guide. Pete's only marriage ended in divorce with no children to survive him. On March 4, at age 69, as reported in The New York Times, complications from AIDS caused Pete's death at his home in Manhattan.

Peter Jacobsen Jr. lived in Venezuela for 15 years while employed by Exxon Corporation as a geo-phy-sicist. Upon retirement in 1983, Pete and Jacqueline (Jackie) moved to Sagamore Beach, Mass., where they had summered for 35 years, and there he died, at their home, on a Thursday in February 1990. Born in Mobridge, S.D., Pete attended a one-room schoolhouse before his parents moved to Minneapolis where he became high school valedictorian. At Dartmouth Pete's major was geology, he attained admission to Phi Beta Kappa, and his activities included Green Key and Forensic Union where he served as vice president. He did graduate work at Cal Tech before joining Exxon.

Pete and Jackie were married for 47 years. They had a daughter, Mardi, followed by three sons of Dartmouth: David '69, Kenneth '71, and Garry '75. Add three inlaws and the clan's connection to Dartmouth spans 66 years, from the class of 1909 to 1975.

1942

Richard Brown Maxwell Jr. died January 31 in Charleston, S.C., after a long illness.

Dick entered Dartmouth from John Harris High School in Harrisburg, Pa. At Dartmouth he was a brother in Sigma Nu, sang in the varsity Glee Club, was a member of the Octet, and served on the Interfraternity Treasurers Council. Although he later en- tered the field of medicine, Dick's degree was in English, with honors.

He entered Cornell Medical College in New York City, was a "subway sailor" in the Navy V-12 program, and, after getting his M.D. degree in 1945 and interning for a year, served until 1948 in the navy.

After a three-year residency at New York Hospital and marriage to Helen Plyler of Greensboro, N.C., Dick settled down in a long practice with the Westfield (N.J.) Medical Group. He practiced as an internist in Westfield until 1974 when he became medical director for the Waccamaw Center for Mental Health in Conway, S.C., a position he held for ten years before retirement in 1984.

Dick enjoyed recruiting for Dartmouth at "College Night" in Westfield, where he represented Dartmouth. He continued alumni interviewing in South Carolina.

Dick and Helen had three children: Richard III, Sarah, and Anne. They, along with seven grandchildren, survive him.

Addison Leslie Winship II president of the class of 1942, died suddenly and unexpectedly on Friday, March 2 at the Mary Hitchcock Hospital. Ad had undergone open-heart surgery on January 23 and has been recovering satisfactorily.

For the last 30 years, if, indeed, not for much longer, Dartmouth, along with his family, had been Ad's life. After service in the navy during World War II and a stint with National Dairy Products Corporation, Ad returned to Hanover in 1959 to become special assistant for corporate relations to then-President John Sloan Dickey. Ad was later appointed director of development and was vice president for development and alumni affairs, until retirement in 1984.

As such he was "Mr. Dartmouth" to countless thousands of Dartmouth alumni. He was reputed to have known 10,000 alumni by their first names. Under his leadership the goal of the capital gifts campaign which ended in 1982 was nearly doubled. The original goal was $115 million; the campaign, under Ad's leadership, raised $204 million. His work won him national recognition and in retirement he still served as a consultant to other schools.

He was elected president of the class of 1942 at the 45 th Reunion and leaves an organization well-prepared for our 50th Reunion in 1992.

Ad came to Dartmouth from Melrose (Mass.) High School. He was 1942's first treasurer, having been elected in the fall of freshman year. He served on the Vigilantes as a sophomore and later was editor of Dartmouth In Portrait. In his senior year he was manager of a varsity hockey team ranked as one of the best Dartmouth ever produced. He was a brother in Theta Delta Chi.

Ad married Christine "Kiki" Hill while in the navy. For many years they opened their Hanover home for 1942's fall reunions and pregame get-togethers. They raised three children: Sally, Peter, and Leslie, all of whom, together with Ad's mother and his five grandchildren, survive.

1943

John James Danhof Jr. died on March 9 in Palm Coast, Fla. He entered Dartmouth from Detroit Country Day School and was a member of Zeta Psi. John left Dartmouth during his junior year to join the Army Air Force.

He was a career executive with the New York Central Railroad and after retirement from the railroad he was associated with Sears & Roebuck.

He is survived by his wife, Denise, daughters Kathy and Judy, and five grandchildren.

William Moses Glovsky died on February 22 at his home in Boston, Mass. He entered Dartmouth from Beverly (Mass.) High School, and was a member of the Debating Society and Pi Lambda Phi, and was a Rufus Choate Scholar. Bill graduated from Harvard Law School in 1945 and then served as law clerk to a judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals. Next he was research director for Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. and then became a partner in the Boston and Washington law firm of Mintz, Levin and Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky, and Pompeo, P.C.

From 1958 to 1964 he was an alderman at large in Newton. He was the founder of the Franklin N. Flaschner Judicial Institute in Boston, which is a training school and continuing-education forum for judges. Bill was president of this Institute from 1970 to 1976, and was also a trustee.

Bill comes from a large Dartmouth family which includes his two brothers, three sons, and four nephews.

He is survived by his wife, Lia, and sons Richard '69, Robert '73, and Charles '75.

1944

Winslow Martin the class of 1944 newsletter editor for the past five years, died of prostate cancer March 13 at his home in Lincoln, Mass. He was 68.

He was born in Providence, R.I., attended the Morse Brown School, and graduated from Tabor Academy. At Dartmouth, he majored in European diplomatic history, worked on The Dartmouth, and was a member of Chi Phi and Dragon. He joined the American Field Service in 1942 and later served with the British in the North African campaign. He joined the U.S. Army Field Artillery as a forward observer in the Pacific Theater, where he won the Bronze Star.

Win got an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School in 1949 and then worked in advertising and management consulting in the Philadephia area. He joined Arthur D. Little Company in Cambridge, Mass., in 1960. From 1963-70, he served as managing director in Zurich and London.

He was transferred back to Boston in 1971. Prostate cancer appeared in the early 1980s, and Win fought his long, hard fight against it. He and his wife, Ann, better known as Cappie, built a get-away home in Grantham, N.H., where they spent half of every year.

Besides Ann, he leaves two children, a daughter Sandra and a son Winslow Jr., two grandson, two sisters, and a brother.

1950

John Glenn Gammie passed away December 26, 1989, in Tulsa, Okla., where he was professor of biblical literature at the University of Tulsa. He graduated magna cum laude from Dartmouth with a major in philosophy and received a bachelor of divinity degree from Union Theological Seminary and a doctorate in philosphy from the University of Edinburgh. He had also studied in Tubingen, Germany, and Basel, Switzerland, and participated in the 1971 Smithsonian Institution excavation of Tell Jemmeh in Israel.

John published numerous articles on the Old Testament. His 1983 Daniel was described as "refreshingly straightforward" and he challenged readers to prepare to wrestle with "an angelic sparring partner."

Coming to Dartmouth from Great Neck, N.Y., he returned there in 1958 as pastor of the North Shore Presbyterian Church after two years in the Army Chaplain's Corps, mostly in Korea.

John was a member of the DCU and Theta Chi. He and Catherine were married in 1957 and had four children, Helen, John, Stephen, and Alison.

William Henry Miller died October 11, 1989, at Massachusetts General Hospital, of liver cancer.

William came to Dartmouth from Andover, Mass., and received his B.S. and M.S. degrees in electrical enginering at Thayer. He was a member of Alpha Delta Phi and the track team. He married the former Ruth Ann Cravin and they had five children, William, John, Tom, Michelle, and Kathy.

Bill joined IBM in 1955 as an associate engineer in transistor manufacturing, held various assignments prior to being appointed semiconductor engineering manager in 1964. He retired to Sunapee, N.H., in 1985.

William's father was Alfred Miller' 12 and he had a brother, Alfred Miller '42.

1954

Richard J. Collins died of cancer on January 31 at his home in Kinnelon, N.J. Dick was a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon at Dartmouth and served for two years in the United States Army Finance Corps. He worked in several industries before entering the real estate field and earned an M.B.A. from Rutgers University Graduate School in 1970. Dick worked for a New Jersey real estate firm before settling into a career with the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) in 1977. His primary assignment was as a property appraiser of multifamily housing and he was a senior member of the American Society of Appraisers. Dick is survived by his wife, Carolyn, son Gregory, and daughter Anne.

1955

Michael Patrick Noonan of Los Angeles, Calif., died in Palm Springs on February 21. Michael entered Dartmouth from St. John's High School in Worcester, Mass., and graduated from the University of Southern California. For a number of years he owned his own advertising business in Los Angeles and was an expert in the fields of electronics and computer products. He is survived by his mother and two sisters.

1957

Peter Owen Dietz 54, passed away on January 22. Son of William Dietz '28, Peter received his M.B.A. from Tuck in 1958 and a Ph.D. in finance from Columbia. He went on to teach at both Northwestern and the University of Oregon.

In 1969 he became an advisor to the Frank Russell Company in Tacoma, consulting on large retirement plan assets. Peter's work, as expressed in his book Pension Funds: Measuring Investment Performance was an important addition to the skills the Russell Company needed to expand on its commitment to major clients. He moved to Tacoma in 1976 to work full-time for the company. When Peter retired last August he was a senior vice president and head of research and development. In 1986 he had opened Frank Russell's Tokyo office and was its chief executive officer.

Peter was instrumental in forming the Institute for Quantitative Research in Finance, a group that allows academics to test their theories in a professional context.

He is survived by his wife of 31 years, Betty, his daughters Karen Dietz '88 and Susan Grimm, his mother, and his brother Tom.

1966

Eric M. King died January 30 in a skiing accident while helicopter skiing in British Columbia.

Eric came to Dartmouth via Deerfield Academy from his hometown of Mendham, N.J. He was a avid skier throughout his life, competing on the cross-country team at Deerfield and serving as a ski instructor at Dartmouth. Affectionately referred to as "Mama" King, he managed the Zeta Psi house his last two years at Dartmouth.

After graduating, he attended New York University Business School. He devoted the last decade to organizing and running his business, General Bottle Supply, located in Santa Monica, Calif., and in Hawaii. He was also involved in the operation of Water Quality Management of Toronto, Canada. His spare time was spent skiing, mostly helicopter skiing, where he was recognized as one of the most experienced veterans in the Canadian Rockies.

Eric is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell King, and his two sisters, Monique and Nanette.

Peter T. Dole '66

1969

Anthony Serge Beliajeff passed away on May 25, 1989. Anthony majored in history at Dartmouth and received his Ph.D. from Syracuse University in 1975. He was employed by the Library of Congress as a researcher/analyst in Soviet area studies. His previous employment was as a contract interpreter. He also wrote for the Russian emigre press and for the Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet History. He is survived by his mother.

1970

Charles Robert Bacheller of Mequon, Wis., passed away on September 21, 1989. A true Dartmouth alumnus, he had arranged for a bequest for scholarships to the College.

Charlie came to Dartmouth from West Essex High School in North Caldwell, N.J. Following graduation, he received a master's (1972) and Ph.D. (1976) in German history from the University of Wisconsin, with intervening study on a grant from the German government at the University of Bonn. He taught European history for several years at the University of Wisconsin-Sheboygan. Sometime back he described his approach to education by writing: "I really enjoy teaching—which for me consists in large part of telling the off-color stories that the professors at Dartmouth related after class to small groups in hushed tones and I seem to be having some success in turning my students on to the fun, as well as the serious side of our civilization's history. My enrollments have been going up every year."

By 1983 Charlie had been lured to private industry and a position with Catalyst, USA, a small software-warehousing computer firm in Grafton, Wis. He was a senior computer systems analyst. A member of the Dartmouth Club of Wisconsin, Charlie participated in Alumni College Abroad activities. He is survived by his mother.

Crawford Holmes Hinman Jr. died suddenly on July 12, 1989, in Winchester, Va., from complications of bronchial asthma. Crawford was born in Boston and grew up in Jamaica Plain, Mass. He played football, managed the stage crew, and was exposed to the classics at Boston Latin School.

Crawford's tenure with the class of 1970 was broken by a leave of absence from 1968-71 and service as a lance corporal with the Marine Corps in Vietnam. He returned to a much changed Hanover with renewed vigor and a quiet purpose, graduating in 1972 with distinction in English. At the College he was known as an outdoorsman, an avid rugby player, and was a member of Phoenix House. He entered graduate school at the University of Washington but completed his formal education with an M.B.A. in finance at Columbia University in 1975.

Crawford married Kathleen Ryan in 1972 and they settled in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, where he operated several construction companies. He was past president of Top of Virginia Builders, and a member of Winchester Rotary Club, Winchester Trap-Shooting Club, and the Apple Blossom Festival Committee.

Crawford's father, grandfather, three uncles, and a brother all attended Dartmouth, making him a true product of the College's traditions, education, and values. He is survived by his widow, Kate, and daughters Hilary and Courtney.