This is a list of deaths reported to us since the previous issue. Full obituaries, usually written by the class secretaries, may appear in this or a later issue.
Edgar Charles Lane'22 • June 9 Robert Henry Ellinger'24 •March 31 Royall James Gillander'24 •March 29 Robert Milton Edgar 28 • Feb.18 Edwin Flanders '28 •Apri18 Leonard William Doob '29 • March30 Gordon Burgess Smith '29 • Feb.11 Nicholas Frederic K. Vincent '29 • March 26 Nathaniel Arthur Blumberg'30 'April 29 James Clark '30 • Junes Avery Heath Gould '30 • June 11 Charles Harry Mee '30 . January William Henry Alton '31 • Feb.19 Bennett Warner Carrington'31 • unknown Alfred Emerson Jones'31 •April 28 John Goeller Leuthner'31 •March 20,1999 William Walter White'31 •April 24 Ronald Walker Olmstead'32 • March 23 Donald Atwood Simpson'32 • Dec.1999 John Fraser Whitcomb'32 •May 24 James Christie Walker'33 •March 22 James Jordan Darling'34 •April 3 John Burnham Roberts'34 •April 26 Carl Reynold Vickland'34 •March 31 Daniel Joseph Corcoran'35 •May 28 Albert Jack Zimmerman'35 • April 10 William Joseph Minsch'36 •April 30 Daniel Herbert Schwartz'36 • Feb.15 Frederick Parsons Warne'36 •May 25 Louis A. Welt'36 • March 25 William O'Brien Ashe'37 • March11 Walter Rice Hard'37 • March 14 Crawford Holmes Hinman '37 • May 26 George Carl Vennum '37 • April 23 Carl William Boothroyd '38 • May 7 Irving Nichols Stronach '38 • April 16 Bertram Robert MacMannis '39 • June 20 Robert Kollock Thomas'39 •May 2 John William Powell'40 • May 29 George Chatfield Denny'41 • May 24 Richard Norman Silberstein'41 • March 11 William Henry Speeleck '41 • April 26 Frederick Charter Wieting '41 • April 3 Gordon Freeman Burgess'42 • May 3 George Kraft Hinkley '42 • June 27 Howard Randlett Morse'42 .March 31 Richard Rodgers Peebles '42 • May 30 Robert Richard Rodgers '42 • Nov. 25,1999 John Henry Roseboom '42 • January Philip Somervell Bowie '43 . March 14 Edwin Beaumont Hubbard '45 • March 30 Steven Lyons Mackey '45 • March 16 Donald Edward Furber '46 • June 11 Andrew Franklin Gruninger '46 • June 22 FritzW. Alexander'47 • April 22 Thomas Liddell Gustenhoven '47 • March 21 Coleman Everett Myers'47 • May 15 William C.Jones '48 • April Homer P.Young'48 • April 21 Raymond George Hammel'49 • Feb.l4 Robert Ellsworth Leary'49 • April 8 Marcus V.Cole'51 • June 4 H. Loring Wooldredge '52 • May 7 John J.Bender'53 • May 25 Chase C.Colborn '53 • April 28 William L.Nolan '53 • May 1 Dayton W.Smith Jr. '53 • March 12 Guy Thomas Gay'54 • 0ct. 28,1998 Rodman Clark Rockefeller'54 • May 14 Hugh M.T.Brady '55 • June 25 Elliott Field Vaughan '55 • May 27 Jonathan Allen '56 • April 24 Henry Johnson Pratt'56 • May 7 Charles Davis Lewis'58 • March 17 Dirk Frankenberg'59 • June 9 Jay G.Sigmund'60 • March 31,1999 Harry Lamont Ames'61 • April 28 William Franklin Murphy'61 • Jan.7 Stephen Paul Lasch '62 • Sept. 1999 Parker Seeley Linton Jr. '66 • April 1 Allan Richard Meyers'68 .May 27 Thomas William Wood '70 .April 20 Kevin B.Kenny Jr. '75 .May 19 Jack David Bardfeld '80 • Feb. 14 Cynthia Patricia Jacobson '93 • April 16 Diana Bradford Kornet '93 • June 4
1927
Kenneth B. Andersen, a graduate of the Tuck School, died April 30. He was the former president of a number of groups—including the American Society of Association Executives in New York and the Association Executives Forum of Chicago—and was active in church and village affairs in Winnetka, Illinois. In addition to his wife, he is survived by son Tyler, daughters Gaylord Gieseke and Kendal Andersen, two grandchildren and a great-grandson.
1929
Nicholas F. Vincent died at his home in Columbia, South Carolina, on March 26. At Dartmouth he was active in soccer, track and the DOC. He belonged to Phi Sigma Psi. He received his M.D. in 1933 from Jefferson Medical College, spent his internship in Episcopal Hospital of Philadelphia and was a resident in hospitals in New Jersey and Boston. He then spent a year in London and with various psychological clinics in England and Scotland. He served in the Army Medical Corps, mostly in Egypt from 1942 to 1944, and retired as a major. He was eloquent in his expression of our country's importance to the world and was active in promoting preventative psychology. He kept up his tennis until he was 90. He leaves his wife Joyce (Hinkle), four daughters and six grandchildren.
1930
Richard Compton Squire died of cancer January 18 in the Berkeley Heights (N.J.) Convalescent Center. He came to Dartmouth from Central High School in Washington, D.C. He graduated magna cum laude, went on to obtain a degree of civil engineering from Thayer and then attended Tuck School. After trainee positions with several companies, he ended up with Hahne & Cos.,from which he retired as vice president and general superintendent. He then joined Overlook Hospital in Summit, New Jersey, as director of general services, from which position he retired at age 65. During the war he joined the Navy Reserves as a lieutenant, j.g., and served in the Portsmouth Navy Yard as a personal relations officer. He married Grace Rutter and they had a son, Richard. After her death Dick married again, and Alvera survives him, as does his son, a brother and two grandchildren.
1931
William Henry Alton Jr. died on February 19. Bill came to Dartmouth from the Lincoln School of Teachers' College in New York to major at Tuck. He was a member of Casque & Gauntlet and of Psi Upsilon, and was on the boxing and soccer teams. He also did graduate work in engineering. After entering the oil business he tor of Rockefeller Center. In WWII he served on General Ridgeway's staff in work with military intelligence in Europe, earning six battle stars, a Bronze Star and the Croix de Guerre. In 1947 he became director of the International Basic Economy Corp. From 1950 to 1957 he was an assistant to Nelson Rockefeller 30.He withdrew from business in 1957 to devote all of his time to Christian Science, having joined the Mother Church in 1936. His first wife, Carol, predeceased him, and he is survived by wife Ren'ee.
John Goeller Leuthner died on March 20,1999. Jack came to Dartmouth from Evander Childs High School in New York to major in chemistry/zoology. He was a member of Chi Phi, the Interfraternity Council and Tabard. He obtained his M.D. from Cornell Medical, and became a specialist in ear, nose and throat problems. During WWII he served in the Medical Corps in the United States, England and France. His medical practice had been in the Bronx, and he and his family resided in the neighboring corner of New York State. He retired in North Salem. His wife predeceased him, and he is survived by sons John and William and daughters Katharine, Margaret and Ann.
Maxwell Irving Schultz died on September 27, 1998, in Palo Alto, California. "M" came to Dartmouth from Classical High School in Worcester, Massachusetts. Late in his freshman year he transferred to the University of Pennsylvania, from which he received at Wharton his bachelor's in 1931. Armed with a wide-ranging imagination, his abilities as an innovator prompted demands for his services from the top management of leading corporations. In the 1950s and 1960s M turned his attention to establishing a position in a specialty paper producing plant in Bellows Falls, Vermont, and took over the job of president. He retired in Palo Alto, and is survived by wife, Estelle, son Philip and daughters Arlene and Eva.
1932
William Reaume Bishop died July 23,1999, in Leland, Michigan, after a short illness. Bill was a member of Phi Gamma Delta and Casque & Gauntlet. After graduation he went on to earn his law degree at the University of Michigan Law School in 1938. After practicing law in Detroit for 20 years, he and his family moved to Leland, where he continued practicing law. He was active in local affairs ranging from the Rotary Club to the Leland International Coffee Club of America. He is survived by his wife, Aleza; children Kathryn, Betty, Susan, Douglas III and Randolph; grandchildren Sarah, Matthew and Peter. Bill was predeceased by his older brother Henry '30.
1936
John H. Fager,across-country track stalwart,has raced on ahead of us as of December 23,1999. He used to go down to Chapel Hill in early spring with Coach Ellie Noyes and the team to get the ice out of his muscles in preparation for the season. Later he found better ways to do this as a research chemist for the U.S. Navy and then for Union Carbide, where he spent most of his career. He had an M.S. degree in chemistry from the University of Michigan and a Ph.D. in organic chemistry from the University of Pittsburgh. In college he was a brother of Gamma Delta Phi and later served two terms as class agent. Surviving are three sons, three grandchildren and two brothers. His wife predeceased him.
Frederic Mather Lord, great-great-grandson of the sixth president of Dartmouth, Nathan Lord (1828-1863), died February 5. He kept a low profile in college but emerged Phi Beta Kappa. After Dartmouth he earned an M.A. from the University of Minnesota and a Ph.D. from Princeton. Out in the world he was regarded as the "Father of Modern Testing" and authored, in addition to 100 other books, the classic Theory of Test Scores, a pivotal work in psychometrics recognized as the basis for many great advances in this and related subjects by the National Educational Testing Service. He earned too many citations, awards, honors and appointments to be listed here. One would imagine ine that his two sons and three step-children, with this lineage, would pass their SATs with relative ease. Freds career is a great credit to the College and a great contribution to educational test theory on a global scale.
1937
Theodore Bleecker Ripsom died on February 21 at the Forward Manor Health Center in Wilmington, Delaware. He is survived by his wife, Shirley, to whom he was married for 52 years. Their children are David, Peter, Pamela and Jonathan. "Rip" owned a real estate company in Allentown and was a leader for many years in church activities and the Kiwanis Club. He was a glider pilot who landed behind the lines mouth years Rip was the president of the Dartmouth Outing Club, chairman of the Winter Carnival and a founding member of the National Ski Patrol.
1938
Hamilton Yale Ferris died on January 29. The cause and location are unknown. He came to Dartmouth from Tabor Academy in Milton, Massachusetts, and majored in mathematics. He was a member of Theta Delta Chi and the varsity track team. He served with the U.S. Army Air Corps for four years (1942-1946). In our 25 year book he wrote, "My business career has been weak on accomplishments but strong on variety." In 1976 he founded the Hamilton Ferris Cos., developing waterpower generators, and retired in 1983. He was an accomplished seaman and had a love of sailing and racing. His wife, Janet, died in 1998; they had no children.
Jack Howard Mcintosh died on January 25 in Palos Heights, Illinois. He came to Dartmouth from the Harvard School in Chicago. He majored in English and was a Chi Phi. He served on the business board of the Jack-O-Lantem. His whole business career was spent in real estate in 1963 he established his own real estate company in Chicago. He served as a lieutenant in the Navy during WWII. He was president of the Chicago Board of Bealtors in 1970 and was also president of the South Side Real Estate Board. His wife, Mary Jane, four daughters, six sons and 19 grandchildren survive him.
Frederick Butterfield Pickering, lacrosse team captain and Ail-American player, died on March 23 in Quechee, Vermont, of a heart attack. He came to Hanover from the Severn School in Annapolis, Maryland, majored in economics and was a member of Zeta Psi Fraternity and the Corinthian Yacht Club. He spent five years in the Army, serving with the 101st Airborne Division in Europe during WWII, and rose to the rank of captain. He returned to work as an advertising executive in New York City, where he worked for 30 years, retiring from the CBS Publishing lishing Group in 1986. He was a 60-year member and former governor of National Guard Unit Squadron A Association of New York. Fred attended most of the class reunions and was a 38 golfer. He was predeceased by his wife. Survivors include a daughter, three sons and 11 grandchildren.
Joseph Carmen Shenstone died on October 20, 1999, in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Joe came to Hanover from Upper Canada College in Toronto, Canada, and was a member of the Corinthian Yacht Club. He attended Thayer School for a short while and then did graduate work in mechanical engineering at the University of Michigan. He worked for the British government on aircraft engineering and then for the Essex Wire Corp. retiring as chief engineer in 1968. He is survived by his wife, Connie, and sons Brian and Ken.
Henry Newton Smith died February 16 in Berwick, Louisiana, of unknown causes. He entered Dartmouth from Alcae Forter High School in New Orleans. He left Dartmouth after two years and went to Tulane University, where he graduated from the School of Business Administration and Finance. Newt served four and one half years as a naval aviator in the Pacific on various squadrons operating from carriers. In 1946 he moved from New Orleans to Berwick and entered the seafood business, primarily with Riverside Seafoods Inc. He also had business interests in real estate development and commercial construction. His wife, Elizabeth, predeceased him. He is survived by daughter Elizabeth and sons Newton and Norwood.
1939
David J. Dutcher died on November 3,1999, after a brief illness. Dave and Flo had a happy time at our 60th reunion last June, so it was a great blow to learn of Dave's demise. Dave came to Hanover from the Florida Military Academy. At Dartmouth he was a Zeta Psi, on the dormitory football championship team and a member of the Dartmouth flying club. This last might have suggested that he would work in the air, completing 35 years as a commercial pilot for United Airlines, going from Boeing 247s to 7475. He was a member of St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in Coconut Grove, Florida, and Central Methodist Church of Mt. Airy, North Carolina. He was also a member of Biscayne Bay Yacht Club. He is survived by his wife of 55 years, two daughters, three sons and three grandchildren.
Barton F. Jones died in Fort Collins, Colorado, on November 25,1999. Bart came to Dartmouth from East Denver (Colo.) High School and was a member of Beta Theta Pi and the Glee Club. He married Martha Leonore "Lee" Walser on December 6,1941. Bart was an aviator in the U.S. Navy from 1940 to 1965, retiring with the rank of captain. He performed various duties on cruisers, carriers, patrol squadrons and naval air stations around the world. He received military honors for his service in the Pacific and China. After his service he lived in Fort Collins, Colorado, where he served as director of the development fund at Colorado State University from 1965 to 1971. He was active in Kiwanis International and was a volunteer driver for Senior Alternatives. Survivors include his wife, sons Bart Jr. and Richard, daughter Elizabeth Schaetzel, four grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
LeRoy Ellsworth Middleworth Jr. died January 1 at his home in Clifton Park, New Jersey, after a long illness. Roy was the president of his class at Hudson Falls (N.Y.) High School before coming to Hanover, where he majored in English and was a member of Theta Delta Chi. He served in the U.S. Army Air Corps in WWII as a B-24 pilot with the 8th Air Force 448th Bomb Group. He retired from the U.S. Air Force Reserve as lieutenant colonel after 20 years' service. For many years he was a senior investigator in the N.Y. Department of Law, from which he retired in 1976. Roy and his wife of 37 years, "Flick," did a bunch of traveling following his retirement. When not in Europe, Japan, Hong Kong, Bankok, Mexico, the Pacific Northwest and California, they split their lives between Lake George, New York, Venice, Florida and Clifton Park. Roy's wife survives him.
George Elliot Patterson Jr. died on September 21, 1999, in Miami, Florida. He came to Hanover from N.Y. Military Academy, where he graduated with honors as a cadet captain. He was a member of Chi Phi and an avid member of the Outing Club. He later served as president of the Miami Dartmouth Club. After Dartmouth he attended the Cornell Law School, cut short by WW 11, where he served in England as a general's aide, acted as an escort for First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and participated in the Tunisian campaign. Back in Washington, D.C., he married before being transferred to Spokane, Washington, where he organized troop ships returning soldiers home. He settled his family in Miami after the war, where he practiced law. In 1955 he helped found the Coral Reef Yacht Club, from which he enjoyed his 34-foot yawl, Sea Lark. He is survived by his wife, a daughter, son and six grandchildren.
Edward Roberts Richardson died in Dallas on November 16,1999, after a short illness. Bud had come to Dartmouth from Flushing (N.Y.) High School. Despite the long commute from Dallas, Bud and his wife, Marybelle, missed few reunions. Bud was a veteran of World War II, serving as a major in the Army Medical Corps. An orthopedic surgeon, he was retired from the Southwest Clinic Association. He also taught at the University of Texas/Dalias. He served the Chapel of The Cross Episcopal Church as chairman of the worship committee and an usher. He was a member of the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons. Bud was predeceased by his wife in 1999 and a son in 1957. He is survived by a son, three daughters and six grandchildren.
1940
Preston Pope Joyes died on March 5. Pres came to Dartmouth from Louisville (Ky.) Male High School. He was a member of Kappa Sigma. During WW II he served in the U.S. Army Q.M.C., rising from private to major. Following service he joined Commonwealth Life Insurance Cos., retiring in 1977 as executive vice president and as president of Commonwealth Fire & Casualty Insurance Cos. He is survived by his wife, Adele, and two daughters.
Werner Martin Kempe died February 2 at Gordon House in Gordonsville, Virginia. He came to Dartmouth from Hackensack (N.J.) High School and majored in international relations. He served in the Naval Air Transport Service and the Japanese Language School. "Kempie" retired in 1965 as vice president of sales for Rochester Corp. He is survived by his wife, Mary, and son Martin.
Hugh Mullen died February 12. He came to Dartmouth from Kew Forest School in Forest Hills, New York. Hugh majored in English and was a member of Delta Tau Delta. During WWII he served in the U.S. Army, ending up in the occupation force at Nuremburg. Hugh spent his entire business career with Buell Engineering, in research and development and purchasing, and retired as vice president of operations. He is survived by his wife, Mary Lou.
1941
Roger Miller Hoffman, along-time resident of Ipswich, Massachusetts, died on February 13 after a brief illness. He is survived by his wife, Jean, and their children Peter and Philip. Rog was a lieutenant in WW II assigned to the civilian personnel branch of the First Service Command in Boston, thus initiating a long career in human resources. He worked with several New York City firms before becoming industrial relations director for the National Radio Cos. in Melrose, Massachusetts. Later Rog was a management consultant with Olney Associates in Boston and then established his own company, Essex Placement Associates in Lynn, Massachusetts. Rog was also active in Boston area professional associations and authored a college guide, Successful Handling of Labor Grievances.
George Duval Schroeder died of heart failure in Arlington, Texas, on October 2,1995, according to belated notification to the College. Gus was a member of Sigma Nu at Dartmouth, and he elected to join the Army in March 1941 rather than graduate. After WW II he attended Southern Methodist University and worked for TWA and Eastern airlines. Returning to military service in 1951, Gus served in the Air Force as a captain and master navigator until 1966. He then began a second career as a teacher in the New Orleans public schools. Gus is survived by Rue, his wife of 50 years, and their children Tristan and Diana.
1942
Harry Hatten Burdick of Omaha, Nebraska, died on August 18,1997. Harry, who retired in 1988, had been a district manager for Helene Curtis, Shaeffer Pen and the Muzak Omaha office. His wife Meryl predeceased him, and he is survived by their four children and three grandchildren, according to our latest information in 1992.
1943
Thomas Hodgson Heneage died November 25, 1999. Tom grew up in Oak Park, Illinois, where he attended the Hill School prior to entering Dartmouth.Tom did not graduate, and after settling in Pacifica, California, attended Golden State College, where he majored in the field of insurance. He received his degree in 1953 and worked for Fireman's Fund Insurance Cos. He was married to Eileen (Schmidt), who survives him. There are no children. At the time of his death he was living in Westerly, Rhode Island.
1944
Joseph Goldstein, professor emeritus at Yale Law School, died of a.heart attack on March 12 at Yale New Haven Hospital. Born in Springfield, Massachusetts, Joe received his A.B. from Dartmouth in 1943, and briefly attended Tuck School. During WWII he served in the U.S. Army and was stationed in occupied Japan. Following the war he entered Yale Law School, and took time off after his first year to earn a Ph.D. at the London School of Economics, where he also met his future wife and often collaborator, Sonja. He was a Fulbright Scholar in 1949-50. Returning to New Haven, he graduated from Yale Law School in 1952 and four years later joined its faculty, beginning an association of more than 40 years. He is survived by his wife; brother E. Ernest; sister Miriam Sommer; sons Joshua, Jeremiah and Daniel '79; daughter Anne; and eight grandchildren.
1945
John William Allen, a lifetime resident of the Chicago area, died February 12 in Evanston, Illinois. Born in Chicago and raised in Wilmette, John came to Dartmouth from new Trier High School. During WW II he served in New Guinea and the Philippines with the U.S. Army Air Corps. He returned to Dartmouth to earn his M.B.A. in 1948. John spent his entire professional career as a fourth-generation owner of J.W.Allen & Cos., a leader in the baking supplies industry. As president and CEO from 1965 to 1990 and as chairman until retirement in 1998, he helped initiate the development of bakeries in supermarkets and was recognized as a pioneer in the evolution of retail baking. An avid sailor John served on the board of the International Yacht Racing Union and was a member of the Olympic committee. He is survived by his wife of 53 years Janice, sons J.William '69 and Douglas and five grandchildren.
Rupert Burdette Daniels died February 5 at Salem (Mass.) Hospital. A resident of Lynnfield, Massachusetts, he had been employed as a hardware consultant after a number of years in the contract-builders hardware business. A WW II Army veteran, "Rupe" was an avid golfer and the Massachusetts state amateur golf champion in 1954. He was a member of the Thompson Country Club of North Reading and a past member of the Salem Country Club. A diaconate at the Lynnfield Centre Congregathan 30 years and served on many boards and committees. Rupe is survived by his wife, Virginia; son Mark; daughters Susan Whittier, Linda Hrushka and Elizabeth Asher; and brothers R. Wellington '36, Dixon H.'43. Brother Donald S.'5O predeceased him.
Ralph Gannett Tyler Jr. died of cancer on January 16 in Conway, South Carolina. Bud came to Dartmouth from Phillips Exeter and was an active participant in football and wrestling. As a Navy V-12 student he received a bachelors degree in civil engineering from Thayer School. After serving as a lieutenant with the Sea Bees in the Pacific, he returned to Hanover for his masters degree in mechanical engineering. He was president of Green Key. He served '45 as secretary/chairman. Bud spent seven years with Bethlehem Steel, then became co-owner of Bolton-Pratt Construction Cos. in Cleveland. After he retired he was head of the Ashtabula County, Ohio, building department. He moved to Myrtle Trace, Florida, in 1995. His survivors include his wife, Dolores, daughters Elizabeth Hast and Martha Tyler, stepdaughter Karen Capadona and five grandchildren.
1949
John David Fitzgerald died on October 5,1999, of a heart attack in Branford, Connecticut. He had a massive stroke in 1991, and was bedridden until his death. John came to Dartmouth from Hamden, Connecticut, but prepared at the Peddie School. Prior to coming to Dartmouth, he served in the U.S. Navy, and while in Hanover was a member of Sigma Chi and Dragon. He majored in history and after graduation returned to Connecticut and lived and worked in Branford. We do not have information on surviving family members.
1950
William C. Stowell Jr. died in Highland, New York, on January 29. Bill came to Dartmouth with a large contingent from Bronxville, New York, having graduated from Culver Military Academy and serving in the Army Air Corps. Leaving Dartmouth in 1949, he worked for M. Steinthal Cos. and Colgate and was recalled by the Air Force during the Korean War. In addition to a successful career in manufacturing, sales and marketing, including being president/CEO of three companies, Bill owned and operated a working farm near Poughkeepsie for 33 years with the able assistance of his wife, Beverly, and their two sons. In his spare time Bill served as director of several companies, was involved with real estate and was active in his church, school, Boy Scouts, Little League, United Fund, the American Legion, SCORE and interviewing for CMI and Dartmouth. He leaves his wife, two sons and two granddaughters.
1951
Marcus Voorhees Cole died June 4 at a hospital near Fairfield, Connecticut, his home of 44 years, after collapsing suddenly while playing in a ping pong tournament. Mark came to Dartmouth from Attleboro, Massachusetts. He majored in psychology, belonged to the French Club and was an avid musician, playing with the Collegium Musicum and the Concert Band at college and in many dance bands later in life. After serving in the Air Force from 1951 to 1954, he received an accounting degree from the University of Bridgeport. He had a career in finance in New York City for 27 years, then worked at Connecticut National Bank, and retired as a vice president of People s Bank in Fairfield. He was active in politics, serving on the Republican town committee. Mark is survived by his wife, Margaret, four children and five grandchildren.
1952
uated from the College and, a year later, from the Medical School.Although he finished his medical degree at Harvard, he steadfastly rejected it as his alma mater. From there, he moved west through an internship in Philadelphia, surgical residency in Michigan and then to the practice in the Pacific Northwest, in Edmonds, Washington. His training was interrupted by a stint of surgery in Port Lyautey, Morocco, as a Navy surgeon'. He also worked as a surgeon in American Samoa in an effort to help the rampant health problems there. In 1972 he married Margaret and they had four daughters and a son. He and his family combined his professional life with many happy exploits and adventures.
Charles Roberts died on February 2 of congestive heart failure at home in Alexandria, Virginia. Following a business degree at Harvard, he went into banking positions and was head of the eastern division of banking of First Pennsylvania Bank, living in Philadelphia. He worked for many years as a cash and investment management consultant with the U.S. General Accounting Office, retiring in 1997. He is survived by his wife of 47 years, Martha, three sons and eight grandchildren.
1953
James F. Penney died of cancer in Manchester, New Hampshire, on January 11. Following graduation from Tuck School Jim served with the U. S. Army in Korea. Upon his return he served in a business capacity with a number of firms until 1982, when he formed his own advertising agency in Amherst, New Hampshire. He was its chief executive for the next 17 years. Jim was active in politics, serving in presidential election activities and co-founding the Young Republican Club in Peterborough, New Hampshire, in 1982. Jim was fond of bicycling, gardening and golf. At Dartmouth Jim was on the swimming and sailing teams, was a member of Delta Tau Delta and was the business manager of WDBS. He is survived by his wife of 47 years, Nancy, three daughters and a sister.
H. John Rosenberger Jr. died of cancer in Billings, Montana, on January 13. John worked as accounting manager for New Jersey Bell for 10 years, following which he moved to Montana, where he became the business manager for the Billings public schools. He then served as senior accountant for the Portland, Oregon, public schools. In 1987 John returned to his hometown of Doylestown, Pennsylvania, where he formed Action Resume Service specializing in business writing services. In 1990 he retired to Montana. John enjoyed hunting and fishing and was active in the Masons. At Dartmouth John was a member of Alpha Theta and played in the Marching Band. He is survived by his daughter Tana, two grandchildren and several nieces.
1958
Charles D. Lewis died March 17 after experiencing complications while recovering from surgery. Chuck, a second generation Coloradan, entered the College from East High School in Denver. After one year in the East he returnedto his beloved state and completed his undergraduate work at the University of Denver, from which he also received his M.B.A. He served in Army for two years at the Mountain and old Weather Training Command. Chuck first worked for Arthur Andersen, where he became a manager. He then joined Vail Associates as treasurer, and in 1968 he joined Copper Mountain Associates and became the managing general partner. Four years later his dream, the Copper Mountain Ski Resort, opened. An avid out-doorsman, fly fisherman and skier, Chuck was elected to the Colorado Ski Hall of Fame in 1989. He served a four-year term on the Colorado Wildlife Commission and was elected to an unprecedented second term as chair. His wife Penny, daughters Vanda and Christina, son Randel, brother Harry '55 and four grandchildren survive him.
1959
William Rouse Hotchkiss died February 29 of a heart attack in his retirement hometown of Fort Collins, Colorado. His wife, Amy Summer, reported that "Hotch" had gotten his weight down to that of his lacrosse-playing days at Dartmouth and was feeling great prior to the attack. Bill received B.S. and M.S. degrees from Montana State University and in 1988 received a Ph.D. in civil engineering from Colorado State University. Bill joined the U.S. Geological Survey in 1965, retiring in 1997. Hotch was widely recognized in the USGS as an expert in ground water hydrology and, being an avid skier, gave many classes on avalanche awareness and safety. Bill is survived by his wife and children Heather, Kristi, Alyson and Judi.
Carl William Schulz died March 7 at his home in Wausau, Wisconsin, from complications related to Alzheimer's disease. After graduation from Dartmouth, where he was vice president of Phi Delta Theta, Carl served as a lieutenant in the Navy, where he found a love for the law. He earned a law degree in 1967 and an M.B.A. in 1975, followed by a career as a lawyer for Cicago itle and Trust and as a claims attorney for Wausau Insurance. However, Carl will not be remembered for being an attorney. From the Chicago Tribune: "For more than 22 years Carl was a father figure to 98 teenage girls and four boys, providing a safe and loving home for them when they had no where else to turn. Carl and Ingrid, his wife of 35 years, clothed and provided medical care for the foster children they welcomed to their Wilmette home." He is survived by his wife, Ingrid, and five adopted children.
1961
Thomas Ernest Allen died on February 29. Tom practiced law in Kirkwood and St. Louis, Missouri, and earlier in Minnesota after gaining his law degree from the University of Michigan in 1967. He was very active in Dartmouth alumni affairs, serving as editor of Wide Wide World from 1967 to 1971, on our class executive com mittee and as a fraternity/sorority agent for a decade (he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi). He held several posts with the St. Louis Alumni Club, including president, club secretary and scholarship fund chairman. At Dartmouth Tom was a government major and was very active in WDCR, Army ROTC and the DOC. He was a longtime member of the Kirkwood Planning and Zoning Commission. He is survived by his wife, Liz, and children Kenneth, Susan and Gregory
Richard Edgar Baum died of a brain tumor in November, 1997. His death came to light this past March in a brief note from his wife, Valerie Greenby. He had lived in New York City.
1964
Edward W. Stern died March 4 from complications of lymphoma. Ed came to Dartmouth from Seattle and graduated Junior Phi Beta Kappa and summa cum laude, majoring in government. He participated in ROTC and receivean Army commission after graduation. He then attended Harvard Law School, graduating in June 1967. After a short period of practicing law in Seattle he completed basic training and was stationed at the Pentagon from 1968 until discharge in 1970. He married Jennifer Kosh in 1968. Following a trip around the world, they lived in Philadelphia for 10 years and then settled in Denver, where he formed his own firm last year. Ed was active in the area alumni club and was president of the Dartmouth Association of the Rocky Mountains in 1986. Ed is survived by his wife, Jennifer, children Deborah and Daniel, parents Belle May and Richard and sister Cheryl.
1975
George Herbert Barlow III died on March 7,1991. George came to Dartmouth from Ewing High School. His father, grandfather, three uncles and two cousins were Dartmouth graduates. At Dartmouth he was a theater major and a cheerleader, performed with the Dartmouth Players and was a member of Bones Gate. After graduation George acted in off-Broadway productions in New York City, in summer stock and in touring companies. Later he owned a restaurant in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. George never married nor had any children. Survivors include sisters Elizabeth and Jane, niece Sophie and nephew Maxwell.
Peter Frank Kolack died on August 6,1993. Peter came to Dartmouth from Somers High School. At Dartmouth he was a biology major and pre-med student. He was also in the Glee Club, the Handel Society and the DOC. He was a member of Kappa Kappa Kappa and of the Interfraternity Council. Peter obtained his medical degree from Dartmouth Medical School, and became a physician with specialties in internal medicine and gastroenterology. At the time of his death he was working at the Lahey Clinic in the department of gastroenterology in Burlington, Massachusetts. He also instructed at Harvard. He was survived by parents Frank and Maria, brother Frederick, niece Lillian and cousin Lilo.