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JOHN VOGL HALLETT '35cl, of Queensbury, N.H., died October 29. He was an architect in Oley, Pa., and a former construction specifications consultant.
EDWARD FLINT PAGE '35cl, M.B.A. '37, died September 20 in Providence. He was retired president of the former Page-Walker Jewelry Co. and of McKenna Company Jewelry Manufacturers and a past president of the Jeweler's Board of Trade. He leaves his wife, Elizabeth (French), a daughter, Virginia, a son, Robert, and a sister, Frances Dole.
WESLEY CONSTANTINE PANUNZIO '35, Ph.D. '57, died November 14 in Fairhaven, Mass. He was a retired professor of linguistics at Southeastern California and at the C.G. Jung Institute in San Francisco. A member of the first class of the newly formed C.G. Jung Institute in Zurich in the late 1940s, he was an early member of the Society of Jungian Analysts of Northern New York vaudeville cabaret that provided a venue for such budding theatrical talents as John U. Lemmon III '47, who worked there as a singing waiter, and also headed his own production company specializing in film features and documentaries. After moving to New Canaan in 1953, he produced, directed, and performed in countless local shows. He also became a collector and restorer of silent films, eventually amassing one of the largest collections in the country. He was a past president of the Harvard Club of Fairfield. He leaves a daughter, Lily Mitchell, three sons, Timothy, Theodore '73, and Thomas '77, and two sisters, M. Elizabeth Pilcher '36 and Faith Warner '45; his wife, Joan (Richards), predeceased him.
JOHN WILLIAM LAGSDIN '37, of Vancouver, Wash., died May 15. He was retired regional representative for the state of New York City. His survivors include his wife, Arlene.
DANIEL ELLIOTT O'REILLY '38, M.D. '42, died November 20 in Richmond Heights, Mo. He was a a retired orthopedic surgeon and an authority on cerebral palsy. He served as chief of orthopedics at the former Firmin Desloge Hospital (now St. Louis University Medical Center) and at Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital, where he directed the Cerebral Palsy Training Center for 27 years. He also taught for many years at the St. Louis University School of Medicine, where he was the first full-time professor of orthopedics. He was secretary of the Washington, D.C., died January 15, 1998.
RICHARD WILLIAM SCHREIBER '38, of Dover, New Hampshire at Durham.