Article

Give a Rouse

Nov/Dec 2003
Article
Give a Rouse
Nov/Dec 2003

Dr. Samuel Katz '48 of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, has been awarded the Albert B. Sabin Gold Medal by the Sabin Vaccine Institute for contributions in the vaccine field and a commitment to life-saving medical discoveries. The chairman of Duke University Medical Centers pediatrics department for 22 years, Katz also helped develop a measles vaccine in use today.

Raymond Kenneth Neff '64, most recently chief information officer at the U.S. Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, has been named chief information officer for Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico.

Clark Griffith '66, a business lawyer and commercial arbitrator based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, was named a Super Lawyer 2003 by Minneapolis/ St. Paul magazine.

Fortune magazine last summer named two alums to its list of the "25 Most Powerful People in Business." General Electric CEO Jeff Immelt '78, at No. 7, was cited for the way he "gracefully coped with problems from a choppy economy to Wall Street demands for greater transparency," and Goldman Sachs' Henry Paulson '68, at No. 22, was lauded as the only Wall Street CEO "secure enough to speak out against corporate malfeasance."

Maplelag, the Callaway, Minnesota, property owned by Jim Richards '61, has been named best North American Nordic Resort in a Cross Country Skier magazine poll.

Former Dartmouth basketball players Gail Koziara Boudreaux '82, Jayne Daigle Jones '86 and Rudy LaBusso '59, Tu '60, were inducted into the New England Basketball Hall of Fame in Kingston, Rhode Island, in September.

Laurie Kincman '92, managing director for the Malashock Dance company in San Diego, earned an Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Lighting Direction for her design work on a dance piece titled The Gypsy's Wife.