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CAROL SAXE COLLINS '53cl, of Belmar, N.J., died October 13. A French teacher in Alabama Library. He leaves his mother, Anne, and a brother, Harris '56.
JOHN THOMPSON BARBER '60, of Lander, N.Y., died June 14, 1997. He was a partner in the Arizona, he developed a strong interest in Native American cultures. He was a devoted family man and a music lover. He leaves his wife, Susan (Smith), a daughter, Catherine, a son, John, his mother, Sarah, and a sister, Sarah Wolf.
JOEL CHARLES BALSAM '66cl, of Berkeley Heights, N.J., died March 27, 1996. He was formerly an attorney with the Newark firm of Sills Beck Cummis Zuckerman Radin Tischman & Epstein, where he headed the department of employment law.
IRWIN KRENGEL CARSON '66cl, of Highland Park, Ill., died October 7. He was an orthopedic surgeon in Arlington Heights, Ill., and president of the Harvard Club of Chicago. He had also served on the boards of the United Way and the Arthritis Foundation of Sherman Oaks, Cal., died September 7, 1997.
JAMES RUSSELL DOHERTY JR. '69cl died November 6 in Syracuse, Washington, D.C., law firm Hogan & Hartson, he played a major role in the development of the firm's white-collar criminal practice. He was also an avid outdoorsman and pilot; last summer, flying in his single-engine Beechcraft, he retraced the route of the Lewis and Clark Expedition in South Dakota and Montana. He leaves his daughters, Anna and Phoebe, who suffered minor injuries in the crash, his parents, Jean and Richard '46, a sister, Pamela Boyle, and two brothers, Anthony and Mark.
GEORGE CROWELL ROGERS II '78cl died July 6, 1997, in Burlingame, Cal., of a brain tumor. He practiced law in the Bay area for more than 15 years. He leaves his wife, Suzanne (Delzell), three children, John, Kathryn, and William, his father, Howland '44, and a sister, Diana Spurgin.
MICHAEL LEMOYNE KENNEDY '80 died December 31 in a skiing accident in Aspen. He was chairman of Citizens Energy Corp., a nonprofit Boston firm that supplies low-cost heating oil to the poor, and co-founder of Stop Handgun Violence, a local advocacy group. He was also involved in nonprofit ventures abroad, providing loans to women-run businesses in Ecuador and helping build a university in Angola. In 1994 he managed the successful re-election campaign of his uncle, Senator Edward M. Kennedy '54. He leaves his wife, Victoria (Gifford), three children, Michael, Kyle, and Rory, his mother, Ethel, four sisters, Kathleen '73, Mary Courtney, Mary Kerry, and Rory, and five brothers, Joseph, Robert '76, Christopher, Matthew Maxwell '88, and Douglas.
WILLIAM BRUCE SILVERMAN '90 died in April 1997 in an automobile accident in Scottsdale, Ariz. He was a stockbroker with Paradise Valley Securities Inc. and a partner in the Famous Door Restaurant, both in Scottsdale. He was an accomplished pianist, fluent in five languages, , and an avid traveler; as an undergraduate he biked across the Pyrenees from Madrid into France. A new educational wing at Temple Solel in Scottsdale, where he attended religious school as a youth, has been named in his honor. His survivors include his parents, Tony and Kay.
BENJAMIN BOYCE, Ph.D.'33, died November 1 in Chapel Hill, N.C. He was Duke professor of English emeritus at Duke University and former head of the English department at the University of Omaha. A specialist in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century English literature, he spent many summers in England conducting research in libraries and archives, principally on the character sketch, a literary form popular during the period. His published works include The Character-Sketches in Pope's Poems and The Benevolent Man: A Life of Ralph Allen of Bath. He was an accomplished flutist and ardent patron of music and ballet. He leaves a sister, Priscilla Goodell; his wife, Dorothy (Green), predeceased him.
GLENN EVERETT MCLAUGHLIN, Ph.D. '33, of Washington, D.C. He was a social scientist on the staff of the National Science Foundation for 33 years. Earlier he taught at N.H. He was professor emeritus of mathematics at Dartmouth College, where he served on the faculty for 32 years. He was the author of some 15 textbooks for the secondary and college level. An Eagle Scout who was involved in scouting worldwide for 50 years, he was an active leader in the Boy Scouts of America and held the organization's highest honors, including the National Distinguished Service Award of the Order of the Arrow and the Silver Buffalo Award. He was a member of the College Entrance Examination Board's committee of examiners for advanced placement in mathematics and of the New York City before retiring to Vermont in 1991. She leaves her mother, Ruth, a sister, Sonja Ullrich, and two brothers, John '67, Ph.D. '73, and Eric '75.