Once again, fall. One of the highest honors the American College of Ra- diology (ACR) can bestow on a radiolo- gist, radiation oncologist or medical physicist is recognition as a fellow, and at its May meeting it inducted Bruce Curran as a fellow. Bruce is associ- ate professor of radiation oncology at Virginia Commonwealth University and chief of radiation oncology physics at H.H. McGuire Veterans Ad- ministration Medical Center, both in Richmond, Virginia. He also is a member of the national and Virginia chapters of the ACR, chair of the health information technology committee for the Ameri- can Society for Radiation Oncology and former secretary and current president-elect of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine.
Linda (Mary Hitchcock School ’73) and Jack Dovidio live in Coventry, Connecticut. Jack earned his Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Delaware in 1977. He taught at the University of Connecticut and at Colgate University, where he also served as provost and dean of faculty from 2001 to 2004. Jack is now the Carl Hovland Profes- sor of Psychology at Yale and the dean of academic affairs of the faculty of arts and sciences, dealing with tenure and promotions policies, salaries and planning. He continues to teach in the psychology department and do research. Jack and Linda have been married 38 years and are the proud parents of Alison Dovidio Loiselle and Michael John Dovidio ’07, who was a neuroscience major and is currently a business analyst with Abercrombie & Fitch in Columbus, Ohio. Jack and Linda also have served as officers and staff of numerous professional psy- chological societies and organizations.
Clark Graff has been more-or-less a continuous resident of the Connecticut River upper valley since 1969. Clark served as eminent archon (a.k.a. president) of Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE). He graduated from the Harvard University School of Design in 1978 and is an accomplished residential architect, primarily for high-end residences. Clark considers graduating from Dartmouth and the graduate school of design as his greatest personal accomplishments. Clark married the love of his life, Jill Crawley, who also frequented both winter carnivals and SAE. They have two children, John and Caroline. A visual studies major, Clark paints landscapes and hunts in his spare time, generally killing a deer or two. He considers his greatest professional accomplishment designing and su- pervising the construction of a 6,000-square-foot shingle-style cottage on a coastal cliff in Newport, Rhode Island, overlooking a saltwater estuary and the Atlantic Ocean.
Winter of 1937-38, virgin spruce were cut in Jobildunc Ravine; spring of 1938 a foundation commenced in a field of boulders. The structure was enclosed and interior finished, and summer 1939 Moosilauke Ravine Lodge opened for busi- ness. Estimated lodge life expectancy was 35 to 50 years. The lodge celebrated its 75th! But its days are numbered. The Moosilauke advisory commit- tee has spent four years agonizing over what to do. Repair? Restore? Moosilauke Ravine Lodge will be demolished and replaced. Trustees appropri- ated $200,000 for design work and plans are in progress. In June the new Class of ’65 Bunkhouse was dedicated. For photos see alumni.dartmouth. edu/News.aspx?id=609.
227 Sylvan Ave., San Mateo, CA 94403; valerie.j.armento.73@dartmouth.edu