Obituary

Deaths

Jan/Feb 2007
Obituary
Deaths
Jan/Feb 2007

The following is a list of deaths reported to us since the previous issue. Full obituaries, usually written by the class secretaries or necrologists, may appear in this or a later issue.

Emory Allan McLean '31 • Dec. 23,2005 Frederick Lowell Haas '35 Aug. 24,2006 Harold Bertram Orenstein '35 • Aug. 27,2006 Joseph Winfield Davis 111 '36 'Aug. 15,2006 Milton Stevens Johnston Jr. '36 •Aug. 30,2006 Lawrence Marx Jr. '36 'April 2,2006 Vernor Henry Moore '36 •'Oct 6,2005 Herbert Kroeschell Butz'37 •Aug. 26,2006 Henry Douglas Cochran '37 • Feb. 20,2005 John Don Elliot Jr. '37 'Apri1 29,2006 Royal Hatch '37 • Aug. 6,2006 William Bayard Heroy Jr. '37 • Sept. 25, 2006 Robert Woodward Knapp '37 • Aug. 18,2006 Warren Houston Chivers'38 'Aug.18,2006 Charles Edwin Ervin Jr. '38 • Sept. 8,2006 William Radcliffe Carter' 39 • Oct. 15,2006 Allyn Bryson Ley' 39 • Sept. 29,2006 George Laurence Miller Jr. '39 • Oct.7,2006 Paul Michelini Winship '39 • Sept. 11, 2006 Morris Stanley Harwood '40 • Sept.7,2006 Robert Matson Perry'40 'Aug.20,2006 Roger Harvey Thiele '40 • JuLy 30,2006 Stetson Whitcher'40 • Oct.17, 2006 William Clarke Billings'41 'August 2006 Wesley White Harper '41 • Oct. 11,2006 Richard Burton Wheeler'41 • July 12,2006 Clifford Justis Fuller Jr. '42 •Aug. 21,2006 Ralph Hubert Twining Jr. '42 • Oct. 16,2006 Alan Frederick Grant '43 • Dec.5,2005 William Emerson Barrett'44 • Sept.9,2006 Freeman Brackett Hazen Jr. '44 • July 16,2006 Richard Lawrence Hull '44 • Jan. 23,2006 John Fleming McAllister '44 • Nov.3,2005 Irl Walter Rose II '44 • Sept.26,2006 Robert Greeley Smith '44 • Nov. 13,2004 Robert Bancroft Cate Jr. '45 'Aug. 10,2006 Paul Whipple Pillsbury '45 • Aug. 28,2006 Nichol Main Sandoe '45 • Sept.26,2006 Henry Ehrlicher Malcolm '46 'Aug.24,2006 John Stephen McClintock '46 • Aug.29,2006 William H. von Lackum II'46 ' May 28,2006 Jerome Joseph Bedell Jr. '47 • Oct. 5,2006 John Bishop Daniels' 47 'April 14,2006 Edwards Bobo Murray '47 • July 7,2006 Kent Mac Lean White '47 'Aug. 31,2006 Thomas E. Baldwin '48 • Dec. 15,2005 Paul F. Mower'48 • Aug. 14,2006 William Albert Johns '49 ' April 15,2006 Kenneth Gray Wheeler' 49 • Sept. 17,2006 William Pillsbury Yates'49 Aug.15,2006 Warren Brooks Boyce '50 • Dec. 16,2005 John Louis Dwyer'50 'Aug.27,2006 Galen Everts Jones '50 • July 19, 2006 Gerald B. Sorkin '53 •Aug. 31,2006 Stephen George Altman '55 • July 25,2006 Donald Fyfe Bowey Jr. '55 • July 22,2006 Ronald Frank Hengen '55 'Aug. 17,2006 John Robert Sandin '55 • Sept.23,2006 Morris Yarowsky '55 • March 20,2006 William David Fitzsimmons '56 • Sept. 22,2006 Richard Allen Marsh '56 ' Aug. 30,2006 Rollin Clark Montelius 111 '56 'Aug.25,2006 William Abbey Zales '56 • Sept. 24,2006 Daniel Martin Rosof'57 • Sept. 6,2006 Harry Hoitt Russell '57 • Sept.26,2006 Christopher John Brown '58 • Sept. 27, 2006 Harry Crowther Marschalk Jr. '58 • June 25,2006 Joseph Newman '58 • Sept. 20,2006 William Samuel Winn Jr. '58 •Aug. 24,2006 William Bryant Brigance '59 'Aug. 19,2006 Herbert Isaac Finch III '59 • Aug. 10,2006 Richard Gregory Rundle '60 • May 30,2004 Milton Clay Vaughan '62 • Aug. 20,2006 Charles Michael Dry' 63 • Oct. 2,2005 Robert Wiley Stafford '65 'Aug.23,2006 Robert Stoning Morrell Jr. '78 • Oct. 22,2006 Melissa Morris Durot '82 • 5ept.27,2006 Grace Martha Brescia '83 • Oct. 21,2006 Andre Reginald Collier'84 • Aug. 21,2006

1936

Morris Stein died on April 8,2006, after a brief illness. He was a lifelong resident of Waterbury, Connecticut. At Dartmouth he was a member of Sigma Alpha Mu, majored in economics and in 1937 graduated from Tuck School. In the same year he joined the family business, Torrington Supply Cos., a wholesale supplier of plumbing and heating supplies, serving as president and chairman of the board before retiring in 1999. He served on the board and as president of both the New England and American trade associations in the plumbing and heating supply field. Morris was active in community affairs and was named Man of the Year by the Yeshiva Gedolah of Waterbury. He was a member of our class executive committee and a head agent. He is survived by his wife, Dorothy; sons Frederick and Stephen '64, DMS'6S; daughter Nancy; eight grandchildren; two stepgrandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.

Barry Conway Sullivan died July 24,2006, at the Virginian Retirement Community in Fairfax, Virginia, his hometown. At Dartmouth he majored in political science and was a member of Sigma Nu. In his career he represented industrial organizations on requirements of the U.S. government and in engineering activities in developing countries along the rim of Asia. He also was busy helping to preserve historic Fairfax, serving the Episcopal Church, running a Boy Scout troop and organizing a Little League. As was stated in the citation for Barry's Class of 1936 Award: In April 1989 he "got volunteered" for these jobs and a long list of other jobs for his community, his college and his class: Washington club secretary for 20 years, class secretary, class agent, reunion committee chair and regional class agent. His wife, Martha, predeceased him. Their boys Robert Charles and Roger '79 survive him, as well as two grandchildren and brother Robert '39, DMS'42.

1937

Herbert Kroeschell Butz of Evanston, Illinois, died on August 26,2006. He was predeceased by his wife Jean, but is survived by children Barbara, Robert and Judy Butz. Herb was a member of Sigma Chi in his student days. His 25 th reunion report lists music and bicycling as major interests. He was vice president of several advertising agencies during his working life and devoted much of his time to community leadership. He served several years on the Glencoe, Illinois, school board and was an active leader with the Chicago Historical Society and the Landmarks Preservation Society. His funeral notice asked that memorial contributions be made to the Nature Conservancy. Daughter Barbara reports that he was 91 "and he loved Dartmouth all those years ago."

Royal Hatch died at his home in Birmingham, Alabama, on August 6,2006, leaving his wife, Nancy, and sons Royal and Andrew. Daughter Nancy predeceased him. Royal began his Air Force career as a flying cadet in 1941 and rose through the ranks to command the Alabama Air National Guard and later was the commander of the 1st Air Force Reserve Region for New York, New Jersey and New England. After retirement he returned to Birmingham, where he served on the sewer commission, was an elder in his Presbyterian Church and a founder and president of the Birmingham Metropolitan Arts Council. In his student days Royal was a member of Theta Delta Chi, majored in English, was active in track and The Dartmouth and was a member of the Green Key Society. He served as president of the International Council of Military Sports, an organization devoted to international goodwill through athletic competitions among the armed forces.

William Bayard Heroy Jr. died on September 25, 2006, at the Forest at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. He is survived by his wife, Dorothy, and children Bayard '62, Tu'69, David '64, June Leverett and Barbara John '77. Bill majored in geology at Dartmouth and received a Ph.D. from Princeton in 1941. He worked in Texas for Texaco, the Geotechnical Corp. and Teledyne, before switching to academic duties at Southern Methodist University as vice president/treasurer. He presided over the Institute for the Study of Earth and Man until his retirement in 1982. He was treasurer of the Geological Society of America and his Dartmouth class. He served six years on NASA's space application board. He enjoyed hiking and camping and was an avid Scout leader. He was a generous supporter of Greenpeace, the Nature Conservancy, the World Wildlife Fund and Dartmouth.

Robert Woodward Knapp died at the Veterans Home in Scarborough, Maine, on August 18, 2.006. His wife predeceased him, but he leaves daughters Robin and Betsey. His last Mint Bag mention indicates that he was a lifelong friend of Charlie Blaisdell and Dave Camerer. His home at the time of his death was listed as Falmouth, Maine. He will be remembered as the innkeeper of the Birchmont Inn in North Conway, New Hampshire, in 1970, when it was totally destroyed by fire. The last 1937 class directory supplies a Dorset, Vermont, address, where he returned to innkeeping.

1938

Job E. Fuchs, M.D., died on March 30, 2006. While at Dartmouth he participated in Junto and The Players. He is survived by his wife, Betsy, children William, Helen and Elisabeth and grandsons Walker and Nathaniel. Job worked as a staff physician at Massachusetts Memorial Hospital (now Boston Medical Center) specializing in pulmonary physiology and internal medicine and co-authoring and publishing numerous medical articles. He was a World War II veteran, joining the medical corps of the U.S. Army, discharged as a captain and awarded the Army Commendation Ribbon for exceptionally meritorious service. From 1953 until his retirement in 1992 Job worked at Northeastern University Health Center (now the Lane Health Center) and was director emeritus from 1989 until 1992. He was devoted to all of the athletes and championed woman's athletics before it became the thing to do. On May 1,1987, Job was inducted into the Northeastern Athletic Hall of Fame for his many contributions to the overall athletic program in the area of health maintenance.

Henry Robert Reeve died after a short illness on July 16,2006. He is survived by his wife, Claire; children Judith Ann, Randi, Robert and Henry; 10 grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. Bob served in World War II as a naval officer from 1942 to 1946, ending his career as a lieutenant commander. He was seniorvice president of the insurance brokerage firm Fred S.James & Cos. of New York and as partner and owner of Central Station Signal, a fire and burglary alarm company now a part of Wells Fargo. While at Dartmouth he was involved in Sphinx, Jack-O-Lantern and Sigma Chi. He was an officer, fundraiser and president of the class of 193 8 for 25 years, and was honored as Class President of the Year in 1993. He played football, squash and lacrosse at Dartmouth, where he was selected for the All-American lacrosse team, and was a national squash champion in various years from 1942 to 1952.

1939

John Alden Boynton died August 2, 2006, of chronic pulmonary disease in a continuing care facility in Cockeysville, Maryland. At Dartmouth Jack was a member of Psi Upsilon, Green Key and Casque & Gauntlet, was manager of varsity football and attended Tuck School. During WWII Jack was a captain in the Army Air Corps, serving in the Pacific. In 1945 he founded a fuel oil distribution business in Plainfield, New Jersey. Emphasizing service and customer satisfaction, Boynton Oil Cos. flourished and was a mainstay of the community for many years. In the late 1960s Jack and family moved to Basking Ridge, New Jersey, and also began a long love affair with Nantucket, Massachusetts, where he created an oyster development program. Wherever he lived, Jack is remembered for his generosity and kindness to others. He is survived by his wife of 66 years, Mildred; sons John Jr. '64, Peter, Andrew; 10 grandchildren, including Dr. Sarah Pitts '98, DMS 04; and one great-granddaughter.

Paul Michelini Winship died September 11,2006, at Rivermead Nursing Home, Peterborough, New Hampshire. He entered Dartmouth from the Westminster School,Simsbury, Connecticut. At college Paul majored in English, was a member of Psi Upsilon and was especially noted for his trumpet virtuosity in the Barbary Coast Orchestra and the Dartmouth Band. In WWII he was a captain in the Marine Corps in the South Pacific. After the war he spent several years in advertising in New York City before turning to teaching at the secondary school level. At Holderness School in New Hampshire Paul switched from teaching to fundraising, and thereafter served as a development officer at the college level and at Westminster School. Paul is survived by wife Margaret and by five children, nine grandchildren and six great-grandchildren from his marriage to first wife, Susan Reyburn Winship, who died in 1976.

1941

Harvey Joseph Dworken, M.D., passed away on July 10,2006, at the Menorah Park Center for Senior Living in Beachwood, Ohio. At Dartmouth he worked at The Dartmouth and was a member of Pi Lambda Phi. He received his medical degree from Western Reserve University School of Medicine in 1944. After a two-year stint in the Army Medical Corps Dr. Dworken went into private practice in the Cleveland area in gastroenterology in 1944. He became a full professor at the Western Reserve University School of Medicine. His expertise was in Crohn's disease, and his textbook on that malady was translated into Japanese and Spanish. Harvey presented papers at many medical meetings and wrote books and book reviews about his specialty. Dr. Dworken is survived by his wife of 56 years, Natalie, and their daughters Pamela Hamilton and Holly Cooley.

Richard A. B. Shedden passed away in Florida on March 4,2006. At Dartmouth he played tennis and squash and participated in the Corinthian Yacht Club. Dick left Dartmouth after three years and enlisted in the Army Flying Cadet Program, finishing training in January 1941. During WWII he served in the Caribbean area (anti-sub work) and the Pacific area bombing Japan in B-295. In 1946 Dick joined Eastern Airlines as a line pilot and served for 33 years, including time when he was recalled to active duty in the Korean War, earning five Air Medals and two distinguished Flying Crosses. Dick is survived by his wife, Evelyn, and their daughters Sandra, Patricia and Candace.

1942

Clifford Justis Fuller Jr. died August 21,2006, after complications at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. The Fullers lived in Hanover. He joined the Naval Air Corps early in 1942 and served as a lieutenant in Sitka, Alaska, the Aleutian Islands (where he met his future wife, a Navy nurse) and the Banana River Naval Air Station in Florida, where he tested aircraft landing systems. Cliff then returned to New England to work at Wiggins Airways in Norwood, Massachusetts, and became operations manager of the company's Logan International Airport base. Returning to Hanover, he was the manager of ground operations for Air New England at the Lebanon Regional Airport until his retirement in 1981. He was active in alumni affairs and was an enthusiastic supporter of Dartmouth athletics. He is survived by his wife, Bettie; daughters Patricia, Linda and Suzanne; two granddaughters; four nephews; and a niece.

J. Grant Harrison, M.D., died June 22,2006. His home was in Garden City, New York. He received his M.D. from Long Island College of Medicine in 1946. He went into the Navy the following year and served until 1949 as a medical officer. He practiced internal medicine and cardiology in Garden City for 35 years, retiring in 1986. He was alectureron "Death & Dying: Medical and Moral Aspects" from 1978 until retirement. He served as a Eucharistic minister at St. Josephs Church; was a member of the board of directors of the Interfaith Nutrition Network; and served as medical advisor of Rotocare, which provides free health care for people in need. He is survived by his wife, Georgene; daughters Ann and Patricia; stepdaughter Mary-Laing and her husband, Paul; and stepson Joseph, his wife, Nancy, and their four children. He was predeceased by his first wife, Elizabeth, and brother William.

1944

Vernon Chathburton Genn died April 28,2006, at home in California after a courageous battle with cancer. Mr. Genn attended Dartmouth until the war, when he served as a Navy officer in the Pacific. After the war he graduated from the University of Michigan with a degree in mechanical engineering. He was founder of West Coast Engine and Equipment Cos., a Berkeley, California, firm that dealt with heavy equipment and diesel engines that were used to power refrigeration on rail freight cars. Later he was president and owner of the Marfield Cos. in Berkeley. He traveled to and lived in many foreign countries, mainlyjapan and Switzerland. While in Japan he was in charge of a General Motors factory in Osaka and a sales manager. He is survived by his wife, Nancy, daughters Cynthia Toffey and Sarah Butler, son Peter and six grandchildren.

1947

Lowell A. Brown died injunction City, Oregon, on August 7,2006. He came to college in the Naval V-12 program from Arms Academy in Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts. He majored in government and then served for almost sixyears in the Navy. He worked for Albany International for 33 years, moving from New York City to upstate New York and to California. More recently he moved to Oregon. He worked as a sales engineer selling to paper companies. In Oregon he was active in the Sierra Club and enjoyed flying his own plane. He is survived by his wife and three children.

Douglas Frederick Jordan, Ph.D., died in Storrs Mansfield, Connecticut, on July 29,2006. He came from Wakefield (Massachusetts) High School as one of the limited number of civilian freshmen in July 1943. He spent two years in the Army, serving in Europe, and returned to graduate in 1949. In college he was active in the Dartmouth Broadcasting System. He went on to earn an M.A. and Ph.D. from Harvard in anthropology. He worked for the U.S. Park Service in Alaska and in the northeastern United States. In 1963 he was appointed as the first state archeologist by the University of Connecticut, investigating and hoping to save important sites that might be doomed by highway and other construction projects. He was interested in local Indian artifacts and the unexplained reason for the Indians in going from flint to brass arrowheads. He was predeceased by his wife and is survived by a daughter.

Edwards Bobo Murray died on July 7,2006, in Atlanta, Georgia. He came to college in the Naval V-12 program from Lanier High School in Macon, Georgia. He majored in government and joined Phi Delta Theta. For several years after graduation he served in the Navy and then moved to New York City, where for 50 years he was general manager of a non-governmental organization involved in training citizens of developing countries in American business and management practices. In 2000 he retired to Macon, Georgia, where he enjoyed playing golf. He is survived by three children.

Kent Mac Lean White died in West Hartford, Connecticut, on August 31,2006. After starting college from Winnetka, Illinois, he joined the Naval V-12 program. After a year he was transferred to Northwestern University, where he graduated in 1946. From 1958 to 1985 he worked for Advest in Hartford, Connecticut, and from 1985 to 2000 for the Hartford Foundation for Planned Giving. In Hartford he was active in the Woodridge Association and Hartford Tennis Club. He is survived by his wife and three children.

1948

Chauncey Frederick Levy Jr., M.D., died in Falls Church, Virginia, on March 7,2006, his 79th birthday, after a lengthy illness. He arrived at Dartmouth in July 1944 and took premedical studies straight through to 1946, when he completed his studies and was accepted at Howard University Medical School. He completed his M.D. in 1950 and served in one of the first M.A.S.H. units during the Korean War, receiving a Bronze Star for Bravery. Following the service he set up an ophthalmology practice in Rochester, New York. He worked in his specialty in Rochester for more than 40 years and held several patents for special sight devices that he developed. On retirement he moved to northern Virginia and kept his hand in his specialty on a part-time basis. He is survived by his wife of 30 years, Eileen, and eight children.

1950

John Louis Dwyer died on August 27,2006, in Tucson, Arizona, after suffering from severe vascular disease that had cost him the use of his lower legs. He retired to Tucson with Virginia, his devoted wife of 2 o years, following a long career in finance that included the presidency of Franklin Society Federal S & L in Manhattan. John came to Dartmouth from Chappaqua, New York, and LaSalle Military Academy. Amember of Alpha Delta Phi and Dragon, he attended Tuck before graduation. He served as our class president for four years and, in 1970, was honored with the Class President of the Year Award. He had two sons by a previous marriage and three grandchildren. John will be remembered for his spontaneity and good humor. At last Mays minireunion in Tucson he was able to sound upbeat and good-humored in the face of his misfortune.

Galen Jones died July 19,2006. He is survived by his wife, Eleonore, and three children from a previous marriage, Galen, Gwenith and Christopher. Galen was raised in East Orange, New Jersey. He earned his master's degree at Williams College and received his Ph.D. as research fellow at Rutgers University. Dr. Jones' distinguished career included years atScripps Institute of Oceanography, as an associate professor of biology at Boston University and associate scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute and a full professorship at the University of New Hampshire microbiology department. He was the first director of Jackson Estuarine Laboratory, dedicated in 1970; two additional marine fa-cilities ere formed under his leadership. His expertise contributed to the successful defeat of Olympic Oil Refinery's bid for offshore facilities on Isles of Shoals and the Santa Barbara oil spill cleanup. In 1975 he became chairman of the department of microbiology at UNH until retirement in 1991, when he settled in Lajolla, California.

1953

Joseph G. Burbeck died from complications of a stroke on February 13,2006. After graduation Joe served for two years in the Navy then joined the Madison Avenue advertising firm Compton (later to become Saatchi and Saatchi). He remained with the firm for 32 years, becoming senior vice president of media before retiring in the late 1980s. Joe was an avid sailor in Star class and larger boats. He and his team were Star class world champions in the United States, Cuba and Europe, and he participated in transatlantic races and in Fastnet. Joe served as race committee chairman and in other key positions at the American Yacht Club in Rye, New York. At Dartmouth Joe majored in economics and was a member of Delta Tau Delta, Bones Gate and the sailing club. He is survived by his wife of 37 years, Teri, daughter Jennifer '93 and two grandchildren.

Kwock Chong Yee died of cancer at his home in Hawaii on February 2,2006. Following graduation "Bay" attended Tuck, receiving his M.B.A. in 1954, then returned to Hawaii to assist in its economic development. He worked with SRI in finding new industries, McWayne Marine Supply, the Janss Investment Cos. on a major land development model, and then as vice president of Mililani Town spearheading the development of a new town on Oahu. He later formed his own company, with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development as a major client, and assisted in rejuvenating downtown Honolulu. Bay enjoyed traveling with his close-knit family and was involved with his community as director and secretary of the local Rotary Club. At Dartmouth Bay was a member of the DOC and Delta Upsilon and was director of the Carnival Committee for two years. Bay is survived by his wife of 48 years, Tay; sons Matt '82, Terry'84, Bob '88 and Patrick; and six grandchildren.

1955

William B. Basseff of Wynnewood, Pennsylvania, passed away at home on February 13,2006, from a heart attack. Following his Dartmouth graduation Bill studied architecture at Syracuse University, MIT and the University of Pennsylvania. Bill was a well-known and accomplished restoration architect known for his work on, among others, the reconstruction of City Tavern in Philadelphia, the Walnut Street Theatre and the Bellevue Hotel. His wife, Mary Ann Bassett, predeceased him. Four children, including Jennifer '86, survive him.

John T. Batchelder died on April 7,2006, from complications of heart disease. He came from a New England heritage, including his father, Windsor Batchelder '19. John majored in English at Dartmouth and went on to achieve a doctorate in international relations and a teaching career as a professor at the University of lowa and Grand Haven University. His wife, Shirley, and three children as well as brother David '51 survive him.

1956

William David "Red" Fitzsimmons died September 20,2006, of inoperable pancreatic cancer diagnosed only a few months after his 50 th reunion. His action on the freshman soccer and baseball teams (catcher) morphed into brilliance—as a play-by-play and color announcer on WDCRfor the next three years. As a history major Red developed a keen sense of storytelling. His skill at lively conversation came from the fact that, unlike a lot of us, he never talked about himself. At Dartmouth Red continued to develop an encyclopedic knowledge of all aspects of baseball and always put a very human face on his astonishing knowledge about hundreds of baseball personalities. After early retirement from National Cash Register, he designed and taught an undergraduate college-level history course on baseball in American culture. He is survived by wife Harriet; children Elizabeth, Douglas and Andrea; brother Douglas; and seven grandchildren. As one woman leaving his church service said: "The worlds going to miss that man." Agreed.

Richard Allen Marsh died on August 30,2006, of unknown causes. He grew up in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and following his graduation from Dartmouth went on to earn his M.B.A. from Fairleigh Dickinson University in Madison, New Jersey. He served in the Army, was new- product manager for H.P. Hood for 15 years before joining General Cable Corp. for 13 years as national marketing manager. Dick finished his career teaching marketing for 18 years at Greenville Technical College in Greenville, South Carolina, where he had chaired the president's advisory committee and the academic council. He is survived by his wife, Phyllis, daughters Lauren and Allison and their children.

William Abbey Zales died September 24,2006, in Greenwich, Connecticut, from injuries suffered in an automobile collision. Bill enjoyed every minute of his 72-plus years of life, especially his family, friends, Dartmouth, Judaism and Israel. He was a member of Pi Lambda Phi and graduated from Tuck School in 1957. Bill spent most of his career in the textile industry and the last two years in commercial real estate. He gave extensively of his time and energies to a variety of Jewish and Israeli causes, including as president of the Greenwich Jewish Federation. He also served as president of the board of governors of the Boys Athletic League and vice president and treasurer of the Greenwich Association for Public Schools. He is survived by his wife, Mugs; children Steve '81, Nanette, Sam '86 and Andi; their spouses Cathy, Mike, Leslie and Keith; and 10 grandchildren.

1957

Daniel Martin Rosof of Franklin, Tennessee, died on September 6,2006. Dan played freshman football and was a member of Sigma Chi. He left Dartmouth after his sophomore year, and returned and reunited with classmates at the time that daughter Diana was a student in the class of '9l. Dan taught at the Southern College of Optometry in Memphis, did a postdoctoral fellowship at Duke University, then taught at the University of Alabama/Birmingham Medical Center in the school of optometry as well as the child development center. His clinical practice was in Panama City, Florida. He served as board chair for 25 years at the Panama City Marine Institute (a juvenile rehabilitation program) as well as board chair of the St. Andrews Bay Center (a disabilities facility). He was a lifelong Kiwanian. He is survived by his wife of 43 years, Dorothea, two daughters and three grandsons.

Harry H. Russell of Falmouth, Maine, died on September 26, 2006, surrounded by loved ones after a long battle with cancer. He was born in Portland, Maine, and graduated from Cape Elizabeth (Maine) High School. At Dartmouth he was a Tri-Kap brother. His roommate Dennis Sanidas '57 said: "A nicer guy couldn't be found. He worked hard to get through Thayer," earning a masters in civil engineering. Harry began his career in Boston, then returned to Maine to work at Portland Pipeline for 32 years. He was an active member of the Dartmouth Club of Maine and with his wife, Marlene, returned each fall to Hanover for Homecoming. They attended the Shaw Festival in Canada, where '57 organizer Mike Lasser found him to be "a delightful guy." He will be missed by his wife, daughters, stepdaughters and a large family, including his grand- children, whom he adored.

1958

Harry C. Marschalk Jr. died June 25,2006, in Atlanta, Georgia. Harry attended Deerfield Academy before entering Dartmouth. He served in the Army from 1957 until 1965 as a first lieutenant. In Europe in 1961 he was responsible for the acquisition and accurate guidance to the target of the first nuclear-capable rocket ever fired in the free world. After the service he established the Silver Fox Press in 1972 and began the Foundation of Modern Art Series. He was also the design editor of the reprinted edition of TheRistigoucheandIts Salmon Fishing, one of the most desired fishing books ever written. Harry's wife Donna, a daughter, two sons and one granddaughter survive.

William S. Winn Jr. died at his home in Chappaqua, New York, on August 24,2006, after a long battle with cancer. Bill entered the College from Roosevelt High School in Bronxville, majored in mathematics and was president of Chi Phi. He served in the Army Reserve as a first lieutenant and was discharged in 1969. Bill received his M.B.A. with distinction from NYU in 1970. He spent 36 years with IBM, retiring in 1997 as director of large-scale computing for the World Trade Organization. Very active in community affairs, Bill served as a Cub Scout master, coach of Little League teams and three terms as moderator as well as on several boards of the First Congregational Church of Chappaqua. Bill's wife of 47 years, Virginia, survives, as well as a daughter, two sons and four grandchildren.

Walter Stephen Yusen died July 30,2006, after a 17-year battle with a rare variation of Parkinson's disease. At the College he was active in the DOC, an avid skier and a member of Kappa Sigma. He attended Tuck School on the 3-2 Program and received his M.B.A. in 1959. He was the president and owner of Yusen Associates in Woburn and received many awards, including the Electric Institutes Man of the Year Award. He served as president of the Dartmouth Alumni Association of Eastern Massachusetts and directed that groups extensive travel program for many years. He was also a co-founder of the Wearers of the Green dinner in 1984. The class presented him with its service award in 1995, and in 1996 Walter received the Dartmouth Alumni Award for service to the College and distinction in career. In addition to Jane, his wife of 40 years, children Sandra '90 and Jonathan'93,Tu'96, daughter-in-law Meredith '93 and three grandchildren survive.

1959

David Hall Allen of Lebanon, New Hampshire, and Seabrook Island, South Carolina, died August 3,2006, of pulmonary failure following unrelated surgery. Dave entered Dartmouth with a prestigious NROTC scholarship, became a member of Phi Delta Theta and Dragon, graduated from Tuck and served as a naval lieutenant, j.g., until 1963. His career was in sales/marketing with Scott Paper, then consulting with Marketing Corporation of America and finally in his own firm, Allen and Associates. Dave had two children with his first wife, Frances Hardie. In 1979 he married Mary "Polly" Atchley. Dave helped start and build Dartmouth Partners in Community Service. He was our class president, president of the Carolinas club, member of the Colleges public affairs advisory committee and class agent in many Alumni Fund and Dartmouth Fund campaigns. Immediate survivors include wife Polly, children Andrew and Jennifer and stepdaughters Lisa and Jessica.

William Bryant Brigance died August 19,2006, at the Altoona, lowa, Center for Long Term Care, where he lived for many years. Active with WDCR, DOC, baseball, student government and Zeta Psi when at the College, Bill was also NROTC. He attended Marine Corps training every summer during his Hanover years. That led to commissioning in the Marines after graduation and later naval aviator training. Captain Brigance left active duty in 1970 and joined Piper Arcraft, where he rose to regional sales manager for the central United States before moving to Younkers Department Store in Des Moines, lowa. He later retired for medical reasons. Bill was also active as a Mason. He is survived by his former wife of many years, Patricia King Brigance, son John, brother Dale and two grandchildren.

Herbert Isaac Finch 111 developed a slight cough last May, received a diagnosis of terminal lung cancer in July and died in Newport Beach, California, on August 10,2006. A Phi Kappa Psi, Herb graduated Stanford Law School following Dartmouth and then served in the Navy as legal officer aboard the Bonhomme Richard off Vietnam before entering private practice. In 1971 he earned an NYU LL.M. taxation degree. The balance of his career involved corporate tax policy, first for Stauffer Chemical and then as consultant to major corporations. Herb traveled internationally every year after 1964, visiting more than 60 countries, including East Germany before the wall went up, Afghanistan and Iran in 1971, Mongolia in 1999-2001, Falkland Islands and Libya in 2005, and Jordan, Syria and Lebanon in 2006. His final adventure was rafting down the Grand Canyon last May-June. Herb is survived by brother Chic, and second wife Munktuya "Moogie" Sosorburum.

1960

Richard G. Rundle died in Naples, Florida, on May 30,2004. He was in business and a member of a country club in the Naples area. He came to Dartmouth from New York City and Trinity High School, where he had played football, baseball and soccer. At Dartmouth he lived in New Hampshire Hall, became a member of DEKE, was in ROTC and a member of the German Club. The sparse information available indicates he was not married and left no survivors.

1363

Charles Michael Dry, public relations executive, died October 2,2005, from a brain tumor, according to Bozeman Daily Chronicle in Bozeman, Montana. Dry earned his B.A. in English from Kansas State University and an M.A. from University of Wisconsin. He taught at University of Wisconsin for seven years. In 1972 Dry joined Sentry Insurance, Stevens Point, Wisconsin, becoming vice president of corporate communications. In 1987 he left to produce fly fishing videos and to write. In 1989 Dry moved to Bozeman to pursue fly fishing and later horseback riding, bird hunting, art collecting and guitar. He created the Wild Trout Journal newsletter. Dry is survived by former wife, Mary Engel, daughters Rebecca Dry and Jessica Dry, mother Beryl Dry and sister Sharon Masterson. Contributions may go to Bozeman Public Library Foundation, 524 E. Mendenhall St., or Cancer Treatment Center, Bozeman Deaconess Foundation, 931 Highland Blvd., both in Bozeman, MT 59715.

1964

Jack Kindergan Jr. died June 18,2006, of pancreatic cancer. After graduating from Dartmouth Jack entered the Army and served in Germany, where he met his future wife, Viki. Jack finished his four-year Army career as a captain in Vietnam. He returned to Dartmouth to pursue his M.B.A. at Tuck ('69) and then worked for Caltex Petroleum Corp., a subsidiary of Chevron and Texaco. He and Viki moved overseas and spent 11 years in Asia, where daughters Natasha '95 and Lara were born, before returning to the States. In 1997, after Caltex had established new headquarters in Singapore, Jack and Viki returned to Asia for seven years before moving to New Jersey, where he had grown up. During his last 15 of 33 years with the company jack ran the internal auditing division worldwide. Jackloved his international staff and his fairness toward them was well known, as his survivors learned from the many e-mails they received.