Class Note 1949
Issue
January-February 2023
Joe Sullivan Jr. ’78 called to tell me (and then sent me) a column about his dad’s football career. We reminisced about Joe’s long back-and-forth run against Cornell—maybe 100 yards—in a game that no one who saw will ever forget.
Edward Luman Clogston died on December 24, 2021, in Wilmington, Massachusetts, where he lived. Ed spent his business career with Aetna Life and Casualty, first in New York City and then in Hartford, Connecticut, in sales management. After retiring to Brownsville, Vermont, Ed spent a second career as a ski instructor. He leaves his wife, Majorie, daughters Eleanor and Ruth, and son Albert.
James Michael Dowaliby Jr. died on October 5, 2022, in New Haven, Connecticut, where he lived. Jim had an unusually varied career. After Dartmouth he spent three years in the Army, a few in Roswell, New Mexico, running a book shop and art gallery, and then became an oilfield scout. Accepted at Yale New Haven Medical School in his 30s, he graduated in 1967 and then became a surgical otolaryngologist on staff until his retirement in 1988. In a fourth career, he taught darkroom photography at a college in New Haven. Jim is survived by his wife, JoAnne, daughters Cole and Shana, and son James III.
—John Adler, 1623 Pelican Cove Road, BA123, Sarasota, FL 34231; (203) 622-9069; (941) 966-2943, fax
Edward Luman Clogston died on December 24, 2021, in Wilmington, Massachusetts, where he lived. Ed spent his business career with Aetna Life and Casualty, first in New York City and then in Hartford, Connecticut, in sales management. After retiring to Brownsville, Vermont, Ed spent a second career as a ski instructor. He leaves his wife, Majorie, daughters Eleanor and Ruth, and son Albert.
James Michael Dowaliby Jr. died on October 5, 2022, in New Haven, Connecticut, where he lived. Jim had an unusually varied career. After Dartmouth he spent three years in the Army, a few in Roswell, New Mexico, running a book shop and art gallery, and then became an oilfield scout. Accepted at Yale New Haven Medical School in his 30s, he graduated in 1967 and then became a surgical otolaryngologist on staff until his retirement in 1988. In a fourth career, he taught darkroom photography at a college in New Haven. Jim is survived by his wife, JoAnne, daughters Cole and Shana, and son James III.
—John Adler, 1623 Pelican Cove Road, BA123, Sarasota, FL 34231; (203) 622-9069; (941) 966-2943, fax