The following 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 subsequent issue.
Lawrence Ainsworth Sykes '29 • July5,2007 Allard Anthony Sutton '31 • Sept. 20, 2007 Donald Edwin Marcus '32 • Aug. 17, 2007 Harvey Sherwin Bloomberg '33 • Aug. 29, 2007 Robert Gibson Sands '33 • Oct. 28, 2006 Robert Goldthwait Bowman '35 • July 24, 2007 Frederick Keppel Hackett '36 • March 21, 2007 Joseph William Handrahan '36 • Aug. 31, 2007 Walter Alan Harrington '36 • May 18, 2007 Harrison Clay Mellor '36 • July 21, 2007 Harold Charles Parachini '37 • Oct. 9, 2007 Herman Ross Borneman '38 • Aug. 10, 2007 James Allen Carpenter'38 • Sept. 21, 2007 James Russell Chandler Jr. '38 • Feb. 27, 2007 Edwin Allen Kirch III '38 • Sept. 17, 2007 Ralph A. Van Orsdel Jr. '38 • Aug. 26, 2007 Edwin Dorrance Bayrd '39 • August 2007 Thomas Gary Allen '40 • Oct. 5, 2007 Emory Percival Eldredge Jr. '40 • Aug. 21, 2007 Thomas Todd '40 • Sept. 9, 2007 Raymond Noble Hayes '4l • 0ct. 4, 2007 Richard Morrison Riggs '42 • Aug. 19, 2007 Charles Henry Longfield Jr. '43 • October 2007 John William O'Connor'43 • April 30, 2007 George Hutcheon Pert '44 • Sept. 1, 2007 Herbert Furman Storfer '44 • Sept. 9, 2007 Lawrence W. Widdecombe Jr. '44 • Aug. 21, 2007 Theodore Charles Belfit '45 • Sept. 20, 2007 Russell Edward Chase Jr. '45 • May 26, 2007 Robert Lee Clark '45 • Aug. 19, 2007 Salvatore Studiale'45 • Oct. 3, 2007 Ronald Graydon Kelley '46 • Sept. 7, 2007 Theodore Rust Clark '47 • July 13, 2007 Merrill Kenneth Luhman '47 • Aug. 8, 2007 Robert Hayden Williams '47 • July 3, 2007 John C. Jansing '48 • Aug. 21,2007 Gino Carl Pierleoni '48 • Aug. 16, 2007 Carleton Price Davenport' 49 • Jan. 9, 2006 J. Clarke Basseft '50 • Aug. 25, 2007 Charles Gordon Hofchkiss Jr. '50 • Aug. 8, 2007 James T. Danaher'51 • Aug. 21, 2007 Robert Anthony deNapoli '51 • July 28,2007 William J. Roberts '51 • Aug. 15, 2007 Thomas W. Blomquist '53 • Aug. 17,2007 Brooks Williams Lyle '54 • Ju1y.24,2006 Richard Hahman DeVoto '56 • Aug. 21, 2007 David Woodward Rice '56 • Aug. 26, 2007 Daniel Webster Latimore Jr. '58 • Sept. 12, 2007 Gary Korenman '59 • September 2007 James Craig Longcope '59 • Sept. 3, 2007 Robert Lawrence Hill '60 • Sept. 11, 2007 William Owen Ringham '64 • July 29, 2007 Christian Walter Fueloep-Miller '67 • Nov. 2, 2005 Thomas Rudolph ostermueller '70 • Sept. 25, 2007 Barbara Frances Rivard '85 • Oct. 3, 2007 Karen Jeanne Hallee '86 • July 18, 2007 Nicholas John Sanders '04 • Aug. 16, 2007
1931
Allard Anthony Sutton of Winchester, Virginia, died September 20,2007, at the Westminster-Canterbury retirement home in Winchester. He was an industrial engineer with Alcoa in New Jersey and Pennsylvania and retired in 1972 after 28 years. He had been a real estate agent in New York and New Jersey. He was a member of the Holland Society of New York and attended the Episcopal Church. He was predeceased by his wife, Joan Augusta Myers, whom he married on October 7, 1939. He is survived by children Melissa and Woodruff, four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
1932
Donald Edwin Marcus, a resident of Cataumet, Massachusetts, died August 17,2007. At Dartmouth he belonged to Sigma Nu, played freshman soccer, and was active in the Ledyard Canoe Club. After graduation Don returned to his native New York City to join Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia's Department of Investigation, later being named assistant commissioner of purchase, where he aggressively exposed corruption. In 1941 LaGuardia married Don and Eleanor Hartell in the mayors City Hall office. During WWII Don served in the Army Air Corps, rising to the rank of captain. After the war he worked for the United Fruit Cos., becoming its director of personnel, and in 1967 joined Bostons Olney & Associates as a management consultant. In 1974 Don and Ellie retired to Cape Cod, where they lived until Ellie's death in 2001. Don is survived by son Donald Jr. '68 and grandson Ted.
1937
Harold C. Parachini, former headmaster at the Meadowbrook School in Abington, Pennsylvania, and longtime coach, teacher and administrator at Chestnut Hill Academy in Philadelphia, died from complications of prostate cancer October 9,2007, at a retirement community in Shelburne, Vermont, where he resided since 1994. His love of sports was lifelong. At Dartmouth he was captain of the basketball team. An alumnus of Chestnut Hill Academy, he was inducted into its Athletic Hall of Fame. During his career he coached football, basketball and baseball for more than three decades. In 1937 he married his wife, Ruth, who predeceased him. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War 11, but did not see action. After Meadowbrook he served for about 10 years as treasurer of Procter Academy in New Hampshire. At all the schools in which he worked he built up a loyal following of families and alumni. Survivors include sons David and Allan and brother Joe '35.
1939
Edwin Dorrance Baytrd died August 27,2007, in Rochester, Minnesota. At Dartmouth Ned was Phi Beta Kappa, a member of DKE and Green Key Society, on the business board of The Daily Dartmouth and manager of the gymnastics team. He graduated from the Medical School in 1940 and received his M.D. from Harvard Medical School in 1942. Ned was with the Mayo Clinic for 40 years as senior consultant and professor of medicine at the Mayo Graduate School. He was president of the Mayo Clinic staff in 1968 and the first chairman of the division of hematology. In 1964, he was visiting professor of hematology at Sydney Hospital, Sydney, Australia. Neds lifelong passion was nature and the out-of-doors. Ned is survived by Muriel, his wife of 64 years; children Edwin Jr. '66, Garrett '68, Deborah, George '73 and Linda '78; eight grandchildren; one great- grandchild; and two sisters.
1940
Emory Percival Eldredge Jr. of Silver Spring, Maryland, died August 21, 2007. Born in Boston, "Hashi" cameto Dartmouth from Woodrow Wilson High School and majored in English-philosophy. During WWII he was with the War Shipping Administration for Egypt-Middle East, headquarters in Cairo; for the Mediterranean area, headquarters in Naples. He later did freelance writing. He is survived by his wife, Paulette.
Thomas Todd Jr. of Litdeton and Gloucester, Massachusetts, died September 9,2007, in Golden Living Center, Lexington. Tom suffered from dementia. Born in Concord, Massachusetts, he came to Dartmouth from Concord High School, majored in sociology and was a member of Kappa Kappa Kappa. During WW II Tom served as a lieutenant in the Army Transportation Corps, overseeing personnel and logistics for troop assignments. After WW II he was the fifth generation to run Thomas Todd Cos. on Beacon Street, Boston—one in a line of New Englanders who became known as the "Grand Old Man of Printing." He was also the publisher of the Horn BookMagazine, about children's literature, Tom received the Ben Franklin Award for long-time contribution to the printing industry. He is survived by his wife, Virginia, and children Thomas '72, Th' 73, Duncan '74, Dana and Rebecca. Jules Frederic Wachs of Mequon, Wisconsin, died July 18,2007. Jules came to Dartmouth from Milwaukee Country Day School, was Glee Club manager, attended Tuck and graduated from Harvard Business School. During WWII he was U.S.N.R., with three and a half years active duty in the Supply Corps, retiring as a lieutenant. He then spent 38 years at Ladish Drop Forge Cos. as vice president of materials management. He was active in the Dartmouth Club of Wisconsin, serving as class agent and national research development screener. Jules was preceded in death by his wife, Alice, in May 2007, and is survived by five children and their spouses: Jim, Judy and Bill, Tom and Marge, Ted and Nancy Jean, and John and Cindy.
1941
Thomas Britton Trump passed away in Sarasota, Florida, on July 20,2007. He spent two years at Dartmouth and then graduated from Babson College in June of 1941.Tom worked in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, for 14 years as a food broker and then started his own business in 1955. He sold the Tom Trump Cos. to his employees. One of the highlights of his business career was serving on the board of directors of the National Food Brokers Association and later being named national chairman of that organization in 1979. Tom was also resident of the University Club and the Town Club of Milwaukee. Survivors include his wife of 65 years, Patricia, and children Susan and James. He was preceded in death by daughter Sally and brothers Rodger, James '38, William '46 and Richard '50.
1342
Hugh Michael Henneberry, of Lakewood, Ohio,died on October 9, 2006. He did not graduate with us but went on to get a degree as engineer of mines in 1943 at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden, Colorado. Hugh listed himself as a consultant in land development and at one point was president of Advanced Systems Corp., following service for the U.S. government, NASA and the Lewis Research Center from 1944 to 1970. In the late 1970s he was with Pacer Construction Cos. in Westlake, Ohio. He married Barbara Owen in 1944 and Jo Ann Schultz in 1966. He is survived by five children and their spouses: Michael and Cathy, Susan and Mike, Thomas and Mary, Patrick and Denise, and Elizabeth and Brent.
Richard Morrison Riggs died athome on August 19, 2,007, surrounded by family. After graduation he joined the naval aviation training program at Squantum, Massachusetts, which became known as the Dartmouth Indian Unit. Dick served the U.S. Navy throughout World War 11, flying PB4Y aircraft over the South Atlantic Ocean and earning two Navy Air Medals, the Presidential Unit Citation and the prestigious Order of the Southem Cross from Brazil. As a lieutenant Dick also served as staff pilot for Admiral Jonas Ingram, commander in chief of the U.S. Atlantic Fleet. Dick met Katy Grace while he was studying for his masters in geology at Columbia University in 1946 and they were married in 1947. He was a highly respected petroleum geologist for 50 years. He is survived by Katy; daughter Elizabeth and her husband, Paul; son Richard Jr.; and grandchildren John, Heather and Katie. He was predeceased by son John, daughter-in-law Barbara and brother Robert Jr.
1943
John W. O'Connor died April 30, 2007, at Oak Knoll Healthcare Center in Framingham, Massachusetts. Born in Springfield, Massachusetts, and raised in Framingham, John graduated from Framingham High. At Dartmouth he was a member of Phi Gamma Delta, the Sphinx and participated in football and hockey. On graduation John entered the Navy program at Notre Dame and served as a lieutenant in the South Pacific during WWII. After the war John worked as a real estate manager for McDonalds Corp., retiring in 1986. He also served on the Framingham board of assessors for a number of years. He is survived by his wife of 62 years, Phyllis (Dumas); children John, Debby, Richard and Kristine and their spouses; and grandchildren Caitlin and Lauren.
1944
Lawrence W. Widdecombe Jr. died August 25, 2007. He was born on Staten Island, New York. He attended Staten Island Academy, where he played football and basketball. In addition to Dartmouth he attended Wagner College, Brooklyn College and the University of Kansas, where he was a graduate assistant. All this led to his becoming a chemist. He also served as a naval officer in WW II. After the war he was employed by Union Carbide at the technical center in Charleston, West Virginia, until 1973, when he purchased Plastic Coatings Corp. It remains his family's business today. He also became an avid golfer and tennis player. He is survived by his wife of 64 years, Gloria; children Lawrence III, Greg and Barbara; five grandchildren; and two great-granddaughters.
1946
Donald C. Foukal of Westerville, Ohio,died on February 9, 2007. Bom in Cleveland, Ohio, he came to Dartmouth from Cleveland Heights High School. He earned his M.B.A. from Tuck School. He served as president and CEO of Floyd Bell Inc. of Columbus, Ohio. During WWII he was in the Navy V5 and Vl2 and served as ensign on the USSTurner DD 834. He was an environmentalist and avid sportsman. He is survived by children Laura, Diana and Donald Jr.; three grandchildren; sister Gayle; and sister-in-law Lois. He was predeceased by his wife of 53 years, Lois, parents James and Leona Foukal and brother Robert.
Warren D. Kealey died in his home in Meriden, Connecticut, on May 12, 2007. "Red" practiced law in Norwalk, Connecticut, for more than half a century and was engaged in general practice until June 2004. He was a former president of the Norwalk, Wilton Bar Association and longtime member of the city's planning and zoning commission, which he chaired several times. He had an abiding determination to do his very best to increase the confidence of the Norwalk community in the commission. He was a former president of Preserve the Wetlands. He served for years as an officer and director of the local Red Cross and as a director of the New England Opera. He spent three years in the Navy during WWII and was a gunnery officer ensign when discharged. The former Norwalk resident is survived by his wife, Alberta; children Craig, Suzanne, Scott and Judith and seven grandchildren.
Ronald G. Kelley, a retired director of special markets for the Villeroy & Boch U.S.division and former selectman of Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts, died September 7,2 007. At Dartmouth he pitched on the 1948 Eastern League championship baseball team and was a member of the Psi U. During WWII he was a decorated lead bombardier of the 8th Air Force and one of only eight members of his squadron to return home. He resided for 52 years in Manchester-by-the-Sea, where served on the school committee for 14 years, nine of them as chairman, on three regionalization study committees, as a library trustee and as a member of the Lions Club. He leaves his wife of three and a half years, Barbara; children Robert, Kevin and Kathleen; and five grandchildren. He was predeceased by his parents, brother Guy and first wife Ruth.
James Frederick Lynch Jr. of Dorset, Vermont, died August 26,2007, after a long illness. He served his class as president and class agent and the College as a member of the Alumni Council. During WWII he served in the Pacific as a naval lieutenant on an attack transport. Jim spent most of his career as an executive with the Associated Merchandising Corp., both in New York and California. He later became president of Television Marketing Services in New York and upon retirement moved from Darien, Connecticut, in 1990 to Dorset, where many summers had been spent at an old family homestead. Jim was an active community volunteer and as an avid history enthusiast, became active with the Dorset Historical Society and served as the Dorset Field Club historian. He loved all sports, whether as a participant or a spectator. He is survived by his wife, Arianna, sons J. Robinson, Jeffrey and David and seven grandchildren.
Joseph P. Monigle died on April 24,2007, at his home in Old New Castle, Delaware, after a long illness. After graduation he enlisted in the Army Airforce in 1942 after observing a P-40 fighter barrelroll over his dorm. Assigned to the China- Burma-India theater as a pilot, he flew 36 missions with the Burma Bridge Busters in the 490 th Medium Bomber Squadron of the 341st Bomber Group and was awarded the Air Medal and the Distinguished Flying Cross. Following WWII he joined the Delaware Air National Guard while serving as public information officer and assistant to the base commander for the 113th Fighter Interceptor Wing and was promoted to captain. He completed his masters at the University of Delaware and then worked as assistant to the director of the Hagley Museum in Wilmington, Delaware. He was instrumental in the conception and development of many programs and exhibits until his retirement as the deputy directorin 1980.
Carl F. Peterson of Fort Pierce, Florida, died May 23, 2007. He had made his home in Fort Pierce since moving from Lynnfield, Massachusetts, in 1990. He was aveteran of WW II and Korea, having served in the U.S. Marine Corps. He was awarded the Korean Service Medal and the United Nations Service Medal. He was a graduate of Dartmouth and Tuck Business School. Prior to his retirement he was president and general manager of Emhart Corp. harmonic drive gears division. Survivors include children Carl and Debora, one grandson and one great-granddaughter. He was preceded in death by his wife of 49 years, Betty Lou, and son Jay.
1947
Theodore Rust Clark, M.D., died in Rockingham, North Carolina, on July 13, 2007. He attended Dexter School and Milton Academy and in college served two years in the Navy. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1947 and from Harvard Medical School in 1951. He began a two-decade-long struggle with alcohol and prescription drug abuse, which he conquered completely. He practiced general psychiatry in Boston and Springfield and became active in the rehabilitation of alcoholics and drug addicts. He held faculty appointments at Harvard Medical School, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and East Carolina University. He was instrumental in the opening of treatment clinics in North and South Carolina. He was the recipient of numerous awards for his professional service. He and his family moved to North Carolina in 1975 to enjoy year-round golf. He leaves his wife, two daughters and an older brother.
Henry Michael Deangelis died in Westwood, Massachusetts, on June 6, 2007. He grew up in Boston, attended Boston English High School and came to college in the Naval V-12 unit. He majored in chemistry and then earned a masters degree in chemistry in 1949 while serving as a teaching fellow. He worked for the U.S. Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories in Bedford, Massachusetts, until retirement. His outside interests were in photography and travel. He is survived by his wife and five children.
Merrill Kenneth Luhman died in McLean, Virginia, on August 8, 2007. He joined the class in the Naval V-12 unit, served as an aviation cadet, returned and completed a degree in sociology. After 20 years in Philadelphia in the insurance business with the Reliance Insurance Cos., he moved to Washington, D.C., to work with the Howard Eales Cos., specializing in providing performance and payment bonds to the construction industry and the metropolitan Washington area. He retired as president in 1994. Before and after retirement he was active in insurance associations and enjoyed bowling, golf and travel. He is survived by his wife and four children.
Robert Hayden Williams died in Wilsonville, Oregon, on July 3, 2007. He graduated from Columbia High School in Maplewood, New Jersey, and was one of the few civilians in our class in June 1943. He served as a radio repair specialist in the Navy for two years, mostly in Hawaii. He returned, joined Kappa Kappa Kappa and the Sphinx and graduated in 1949. From 1952-1979 he was an insurance broker for Fireman's Fund in Los Angeles serving the entertainment industry. He moved to Coalville, Utah, for 18 years and, while in business for himself, served as treasurer of Summit County. More recently he moved to Portland, Oregon, where he enjoyed opera and the symphony orchestra. He is survived by his wife and five children.
1950
John D. "Jack" Brodie died on February 21, 2007, following several years of poor health. A member of Phi Delta Theta, he attended Tuck School for one year following graduation from the College. He served in the Army during the Korean War, following which he earned his M.B.A. at New York University. A tour of duty with IBM led to his appointment as a marketing specialist at 3M Co. in Minneapolis, Minnesota, a post he held for 20 years. Jack's mid-1950s marriage to Lura Ferguson ended in divorce. Following 3M he established his own business as a consultant in corporate motivational programming. A hearty dislike for northern winters led him to move the business to Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he also studied to become a financial advisor. A number of his motivational programs were copyrighted. He is survived by sons Kent and David. He was buried with full military honors in the Veterans Administration Cemetery in Union Grove, Wisconsin.
1951
Lloyd H. Gaston Jr. died on September 24,2006. Born in Morgantown, West Virginia, he graduated from Horace Mann School in New York City. He majored in philosophy, joined Delta Upsilon and graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1952 after a year's leave of absence in France and Switzerland. He served two years in the U.S. Army and then pursued postgraduate studies at the University of Basel, Switzerland. Lloyd spent two years as a Presbyterian pastor in New Jersey before beginning a 40-year academic career at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota. After 10 years there he arrived at Vancouver (British Columbia) School of Theology, where he became a professor of New Testament. He once remarked that his Dartmouth experience was most influential when he began his own career teaching undergraduates. Surviving Lloyd are his wife, Suzanne; sons Johannes, Thomas '76 and Christopher; and four grandchildren.
Alan Judson died on March 21, 2007. Born and in New York City, he graduated from Horaised race Mann School. While at Dartmouth he was a member of Pi Lambda Phi, the Human Rights Society and Phi Beta Kappa and was a graduate of Tuck School. After a little over a year as an Air Force second lieutenant he worked for Bloomingdales for two years. In 1955 he joined Mojud, a manufacturer of women's hosiery, as an assistant credit manager. He is survived by brother David '44.
William Joseph Roberts died on August 15,2007, at the Presbyterian Home in Bloomington, Minnesota, of bladder cancer. Born and raised in Dubuque, lowa, and graduated from its high school, Bill pledged Alpha Delta Phi, lettered in football as a star running back, majored in history and was a member of Sphinx. After graduation he spent two years with the CIA in Formosa, two years in the U.S. Marine Corps and two years in professional football with the Green Bay Packers and British Columbia Lions. During this time he married Peg Moran and began a family that ended with two girls and two boys. In 1958 he started a 33-year career with 3M Co. in sales and marketing, culminating in his position as national sales manager for one of its divisions. Bill is survived by Peg; children Ann, Nancy, William and Michael '87; and 13 grandchildren.
1954
Stewart P. Stearns Jr. died of Parkinsons disease on October 12,2007, in Gansevoort, New York. At Dartmouth Stew majored in history, played varsity tennis and squash and was a member of Beta Theta Pi. In 1958 he earned a masters in education from Boston University. He served in the U.S. Army Counter Intelligence Corps from 1954 until 1957. In 1958 Stew married Christina Dickey, daughter of Dartmouth president John Sloan Dickey, and began a teaching career in South Glens Falls, New York, teaching social studies in the junior high school until 1974, when he became the tennis director and general partner of the Queensbury Racquet Club. A member of the U.S. Professional Tennis Association, Stew was also an enthusiastic skier and hiker, Christmas tree farmer and maple sugarer. He is survived by his wife, Tina, daughters Sarah '90 and Chrissie '87 and her husband Michael Drescher '87.
1956
Richard Hahman DeVoto died at his mountain home in Genesee, Colorado, on August 21, 2007. At Dartmouth Dick was a member of Delta Upsilon, junior and senior class treasurer, Phi Beta Kappa and Rufus Choate Scholar, member of the Undergraduate Council and Glee Club participant. He received a B.S. and M.S. in civil engineering. He then completed a doctoral degree in geological engineering at the Colorado School of Mines, where he later became a professor and taught for 21 years. His interest in geology led him to found Canyon Resources in 1979, a Golden, Colorado-based public-owned mineral company. As president of Canyon Resources he managed gold and industrial mineral mines in Nevada, Montana, California and New Mexico. Dick was also a founding director of an affiliated company in Australia, Delta Gold, which explored for mineral deposits in Africa, South America, Australia and North America. He is survived by his wife, Judy, his three children, Judy s three children and nine grandchildren.
David Woodward Rice died August 26,2007, in Golden, Colorado. A native of Needham, Mass- achusetts, David obtained his masters of sci- ence in civil engineering at the Thayer School in 1957. In 1956 Dave was the winner of the Na- tional and Allied Products Institute Competi- tion in Dynamic Equipment Policy Award for his paper, The Economic Justification of a Town Incinerator. Dave married Lois Warner in the summer of 1956 and the couple lived in Wigwam. They raised children Linda, Bradley, Susan and Thomas, who survive along with 10 grandchildren. He was an inventor with several patents. Dave closed his career as marketing manager for pipe exports for Johns-Manville International Corp. in Denver, Colorado, where he had been employed for more than 30 years. He was a type 1 diabetic for 63 years, had sustained four strokes and had experienced vision difficulties in his later years.
1959
Gary Korenman, M.D., died September 14, 2007, in New York City. Apremed majorat Dartmouth Gary was an editor of the Aegis and a member of Green Key and the International Relations Club. A 1960 graduate of Dartmouth Medical School when it was a two-year institution, he earned his M.D. from Cornell University in 1962. Gary was a neurologist with a private practice and a long-time member of the staff of St. Lukes-Roosevelt Hospital Center in New York City, where he lived. He was an overseer of the Dartmouth Medical School, headed its alumni council, served as a DMS class agent and was a friend of Tucker Foundation and Hillel. Gary was a dedicated chess player, a regular theater and concert attendee and enjoyed extensive travel with his wife, the former Ella Kopelman. She survives him, as do their sons Eric and Jeffrey.
1960
Conrad C. Born died July 17, 2007, at home in Falmouth, Maine, of leukemia. Professionally, he was a computer programmer and data processor. He came to Dartmouth from the Dublin School in New Hampshire, and while in Hanover was a philosophy major, a member of the Outing and sailing clubs and an avid backpacker and automobile owner. After graduation he became an officer in the U.S. Coast Guard, serving in Greece on a ship supporting the Voice of America, and later in the Coast Guard Reserve as an instructor of boat safety courses. Fond of camping on Mount Monadnock, he enjoyed sailing on the New England, coast and had a lifelong love of photography. He is survived by his wife of 20 years, Patricia, sons Christian and George, five grandchildren, first wife Virginia Spencer, sister Mary Born Jenkins, and a stepson and stepdaughter from his second marriage.
1986
Karen Jeanne Hallee, M.D., died July 18, 2007, after being diagnosed with a brain tumor 14 months earlier. At the time she was in her last rotation in her family practice residency at Maine Medical Center in Portland, Maine. Karen was a member of Epsilon Kappa Theta and majored in psychology at Dartmouth. Her career began in the human resource department of Merck Pharmaceuticals from 1987 to 1994, when she began premedical courses and then entered the University of Vermont College of Medicine, graduating in 2003. She had her office ready to go in Fort Kent in northern Maine on a government-sponsored program. Karen enjoyed kayaking and the friendship of her loyal Airedale, Henry. Writes colleague Dr. B. Hoagland Rosania '59: "The medical profession lost a very courageous and dedicated physician. Our heartfelt thoughts go out to her family and friends."
Bonnie Kramer Tonneson died of leukemia on August 9,2 007. She came to Dartmouth from Walt Whitman High School in Bethesda, Maryland, majoring in art history and grad- uating cum laude with high honors in her ma- jor. As an undergraduate, she was a member of Sigma Kappa. She later received her M.B.A. from Northwestern University and became a senior equity analyst for JP Morgan/Chase in their San Francisco Office. She was named a Wall Street Journal "Best on the Street" analyst for stockpicking in 2000. She gave up work- ing in 2001 and proudly listed her title as "Mom" in her last alumni questionnaire. In recent years, she served on the boards of her daughters' school and her local mothers club in Burlingame, California. She is surived by 6-year-old daughter Isabel, 4-year-old daughter Devon and husband Mike.
2004
Nicholas J. Sanders of Gahanna, Ohio, died unexpectedly August 16,2007, at Mt. Carmel East Hospital. While at Dartmouth he was a member of the football team. In 2006 he received his masters degree in accounting from the Ohio State University. Nick also passed all four parts of the C.P.A. exam. He was an accountant for Crowe Chizek and Co., LLC, and a member of St. Matthew Catholic Church. He is survived by his parents, Daniel and Patricia Sanders; brother and sister-in-law Eric and Kari Sanders; grandparents Carl and Martina Uhlenhake; and aunts, uncles and cousins.