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Necrology 1940'sRobert Estill LaForce, Jr. '40
Bob LaForce went back to Kansas City and sought employment when the area was still suffering the effects of the Great Depression. He had to settle for work as a driver's assistant, delivering heavy cases of Coca-Cola to "dank and dirty drug store basements." Before the end of 1940, lured by Uncle Sam's "interesting proposal involving travel and more pay," he joined the Navy. Commissioned as an officer, he remained in uniform throughout World War II. Among the various posts both in the Pacific and European theaters to which he was assigned was command of an anti-aircraft battery aboard the venerable battleship U.S.S. Texas, and he participated in the Mediterranean campaign and the Normandy landings. On October 23, 1943, he was wed to Elizabeth Ann "Betty" Hennigar in Alexandria, VA. In future years, the couple became the adoptive parents of four children, Renée, Peter, Ann, and John LaForce. After his discharge as a lieutenant commander in 1945, Bob LaForce returned to Kansas City, where he found a job with Trans-World Airlines. Soon assigned overseas, he spent more than 30 years abroad as an executive, including labor relations manager with TWA in numerous locales in Europe and the Middle East from Lisbon, Paris, and Brussels to Cairo. Except for four years with Sinclair Oil Co. (1960-64), he remained with TWA until his retirement in 1981. That year, he and Betty returned to the States from Europe and acquired a colonial home, dating from 1749, in Frederick, MD. They busied themselves restoring the stone farmhouse while cultivating 250 rose bushes and mowing 12 acres of lawn. Besides obtaining exercise around the extensive property, Bob visited the local YMCA to swim several times a week. His primary sedentary pastime was reading, mainly history, a lifelong pleasure he attributed to the influence in his undergraduate days of Professor Edgar B. "Digger" Graves. Robert E. LaForce, Jr., who was gifted with a lively and ever-present sense of humor, had recently taken up residence in Annapolis, MD. He was still residing there when he died, according to Social Security records, on June 18, 2007. The College has no information concerning survivors. [Return to Top] Robert Carleton Weller, Jr. '40Robert Carleton Weller, Jr. '40, president emeritus of Mitchell College in New London, CT, and a community leader, was born on April 10, 1920, in Cleveland, OH. A son of Robert C. and Bessie Rees Weller, most of his youth was spent in the Buffalo, NY, area, where he was graduated from Kenmore High School. Bob Weller came to Hamilton in 1936 and joined Tau Kappa Epsilon. However, after a year, he left the College and returned home to work in the family business. After a few years of various employment, including assembly line work and truck driving, he was persuaded by the minister of his family's church to enroll at Ohio Wesleyan, where he obtained his A.B. degree in 1943.That year, Bob Weller entered the U.S. Navy. He was commissioned as an officer, and his World War II service included skippering landing craft. He participated in Allied Mediterranean landings, including Elba and Anzio, and also served in the Pacific theater. Released from the Navy as a lieutenant in 1946, he entered the field of academic administration, becoming registrar of the Springfield, MA, division of Northeastern University (1946-49), followed by field director for the Harvard University Center for Field Studies (1950-51). In 1951, he earned a master's degree in education from Harvard, and that year, at the age of 31, he began his long and fruitful service as president of Mitchell College. The junior college was virtually bankrupt and on the verge of closing at that time, and young, idealistic, and resourceful Bob Weller rose to the challenge of reviving it. During 36 years at its helm, he not only steered it successfully through turbulent times but also presided over its considerable expansion while elevating its academic standing. Recognized for his achievements with an honorary LL.D. degree from Lehigh University in 1964, he retired from the presidency of Mitchell in 1987. Through the years, Bob Weller also devoted much of his time and abundant energy to good community and regional causes, and as a kind of senior statesman, helped guide New London's municipal affairs. Among the many offices he held were harbormaster of the Port of New London, president of the New London Community Council and the Rotary Club, member of the New London School Board (he led the successful efforts to integrate its school system), and a trustee of the local Lawrence and Memorial Hospitals. He was also a former member of the Connecticut State Welfare Board. After retiring, he continued to reside in New London and chaired the city's personnel board. In poor health for many years, Robert C. Weller, Jr., died on September 29, 2007. He is survived by his wife, the former Mary M. Scheiderer, whom he had wed in 1943. Also surviving are three daughters, Janet E. Weller, Mary Ann Lydecker, and Barbara J. Cawley; two sons, David R. and Donald B. Weller; and four grandchildren. [Return to Top] Benjamin Curtis Arnold '43Benjamin Curtis Arnold '43, a native of Exeter, NH, was born to Herbert P. and Elizabeth Fowler Arnold on June 12, 1919. He prepared for college at the Choate School (now Choate Rosemary Hall), where his father was on the faculty, and came to Hamilton from Wallingford, CT, in 1938. Reassigned to the Class of 1943, he continued his studies on the Hill until 1941, when he went on active duty with the U.S. Marine Corps. As a corporal he served with the 1st Marine Division during World War II and was severely wounded in the battle for Peleliu in the Pacific campaign. Awarded the Purple Heart, he underwent prolonged convalescence in naval hospitals and remained in the Marines until 1948. When the College heard from him in 1953, he was a receptionist at the Marine's Memorial Club in San Francisco, CA.Benjamin Arnold subsequently resided in Connecticut and Massachusetts, but the College has no information on his employment or activities. According to a newspaper obituary, he was an avid Red Sox fan and "the epitome of a patriot and true altruist, always helping others before himself." Benjamin C. Arnold, who last resided in Sagamore Beach, MA, died on December 17, 2007, at a hospice on Cape Cod. He is survived by his wife of 45 years, Susanne J. Arnold; a son, Roger C. Arnold; a daughter, Elizabeth Rubio; and four grandchildren. [Return to Top] Otis Munro Bigelow III '43Otis Munro Bigelow III '43, a playwright and retired theatrical agent whose varied career in the performing arts included acting and dancing, was born on June 2, 1920, in Exeter, NH. The only child of Otis M., who taught Romance languages at Phillips Exeter Academy, and Ruth Spalding Bigelow, he prepared for college at Phillips Exeter, where he took the lead in theatrical productions. As a teenager, "Ote" Bigelow had already performed in summer stock and looked forward to a stage career.Orphaned in his youth and with an uncle, Robert W. Keyes of Utica, NY, as his guardian, he applied for entry to Hamilton in 1939 and was accepted. He soon became highly involved in lead roles in Charlatans productions and also as managing editor of the Continental and co-editor of Hamiltonews, for which he both wrote and drew illustrations. A member of the Publications Board and elected to the journalism honorary Pi Delta Epsilon, he also sang in the Choir and fenced for Coach Gélas. Hailed by The Hamiltonian as "the seniors' most diversified artist," he was graduated in 1943. On the Hill, he had received acceptance and esteem, especially from his Theta Delta Chi fraternity brothers, "which fostered in me an everlasting gratitude and a self-esteem I had never known before." Otis Bigelow gravitated to New York City, where he gradually came to terms with his homosexual orientation. He quickly became a prominent part of Manhattan's closeted and rarified gay society in the 1940s (for his reminiscences of that era, see Charles Kaiser's The Gay Metropolis, 1940-1996 (1997)). During that period, he was among those interviewed by Alfred Kinsey for his pathbreaking research on Sexual Behavior in the American Male (1948). However, as a Reservist, he was soon called to active duty in the U.S. Navy and served as an officer aboard minesweepers in both the Atlantic and the Pacific theaters during World War II. Released from the Navy as a lieutenant (j.g.) after two years in 1945, Otis Bigelow returned to New York City and resumed his acting career, making his Broadway debut as the sailor in Dear Ruth. Years of extensive touring in summer and winter stock followed, interrupted in 1941 by a year-long stint at Warner Brothers in Hollywood as an actor and screenwriter, an experience he did not particularly enjoy. In 1948, he took a year off and went to Paris "to get my mind straightened after Hollywood," and there took on odd jobs in French films, from acting to translating and devising English subtitles. After returning to Manhattan, Otis Bigelow concentrated on writing, and almost starved doing so. But after a half-dozen ballet lessons, he was hired as a dancer for the Broadway production of The King and I and spent the next 2½ years in its cast as a "Siamese slave." In 1953, he quit the hit show to go on a barnstorming tour with a dance group, Musical Americana, which covered 33 states and 25,000 miles in four months. After a summer dancing with the José Limon Co., he went back to "Oriental" makeup as a cast member touring with The Teahouse of the August Moon. He also subsequently toured in a production of Auntie Mame. Thereafter, Otis Bigelow switched from performance to stage management, off-Broadway and in summer theater. Among the productions he stage managed were Mart Crowley's The Boys in the Band (1968) and those of the Williamstown Summer Theater and the Bucks County Playhouse. He also wrote plays, three of which, The Giant's Dance, The Peacock Season, and The Prevalence of Mrs. Seal, were produced off-Broadway and have since been published. He was in the theatrical agency business for 15 years until his retirement in 1984. "Enjoying life on Social Security" while residing quietly and happily with his longtime companion in a rent-stabilized midtown-Manhattan apartment, he still dabbled at writing when not traveling. For many years he maintained a summer house on Fire Island and also enjoyed trips almost every year to France, where he liked to wander through Paris and the countryside on his moped. Along the way he would scour the shops and flea markets for Art Nouveau glass and fin-de-siècle posters to add to his collection. Otis M. Bigelow died on October 6, 2007, as reported in the classified obituary section of The New York Times. He is survived by Thierry Mahe, his life partner of more than 50 years. [Return to Top] Donald Morgan Watkin '43Donald Morgan Watkin '43, a physician and medical researcher and administrator who managed the employee health division of the Federal Aviation Administration, was born on June 17, 1922, in Waterford, NY. The only child of Earl P. Watkin '12 and the former Mary Ellen Morgan, both educators, he grew up in Ilion, NY, where his father was superintendent of schools. While a junior at Ilion High School, he won a League of Nations Association essay contest, which resulted in an extensive trip to Europe and the opportunity, rare for a teenager in those days and even now, to meet political leaders and other high officials abroad. He came back to Ilion with a future in the international relations field very much in mind, and with no thought at all to a career in medicine.Following his graduation from Ilion in 1939 as valedictorian of his class, Don Watkin came to College Hill. He joined his father's fraternity, Lambda Chi Alpha, and enthusiastically participated in the Debate Club and public speaking contests, as well as campus publications and Hamilton's newly launched radio station, WHC. He served as managing editor of Hamilton Life and newscaster on WHC in addition to membership on the Interfraternity Council. Elected to both the forensic and journalism honoraries Delta Sigma Rho and Pi Delta Epsilon, he also graced the Dean's List for four years and was graduated with honors in biology in 1943. By that time, "the chief globe-trotter" of the class, influenced in part by his introduction on the Hill to the biological sciences, had embraced medicine as his future career. In the midst of World War II, Don Watkin entered Harvard Medical School under the auspices of the U.S. Navy's V-12 program. He earned his M.D. degree in 1946, and on June 22 of that year he was married to Virginia Guild in Brooklyn. Specializing in nutrition and gerontology, he engaged in postgraduate training in clinical and research medicine until 1951. That year, he began his long career with the federal government in the U.S. Public Health Service as a senior investigator in the gerontology section of the National Heart Institute in Baltimore, MD. He was subsequently employed for six years as an investigator in the metabolism section of the National Cancer Institute in Washington, DC, and as attending physician at the National Institutes of Health's clinical center in Bethesda, MD. Beginning in 1960, Dr. Watkin was able to resume his "globe-trotting" as a nutrition advisor to the Pan American Health Organization in Mexico City and consultant to the Interdepartmental Committee on Nutrition for National Defense in countries ranging from Brazil and Peru to Egypt, Iran, and Pakistan. He assisted in numerous international health and nutrition surveys and directed those carried out in Libya, the eastern Caribbean, and Paraguay. Don Watkin also served as an associate professor of nutrition at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and acquired a master's degree in public health from Harvard University in 1965. He chaired the panel on aging of the White House Conference on Food, Nutrition and Health (1969-70) as well as the technical committee on nutrition of the White House Conference on Aging (1970-77). Dr. Watkin, who, by 1966, was with the Veterans Administration in Washington as chief of research in nutrition, gerontology, and gastroenterology, served for a year (1968-69) as field director of the New York State nutrition program and health survey. From 1973 to 1978, he directed the national nutrition program for the elderly in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. In 1979, he became a research professor of health sciences for George Washington University School of Medicine, and in 1981, he began the final phase of his 42 years in federal service when appointed chief of the occupational health division for the Federal Aviation Administration. Until his retirement as manager of the employee health branch in 1995, Dr. Watkin was responsible for the health and health-awareness programs for all of the FAA's 50,000-person workforce. In the early 1980s, after President Ronald Reagan had fired all the air traffic controllers who had gone on strike, he was involved in the huge task of medically evaluating some 8,000 newly recruited replacement trainees. Through the years, he continued to lecture and consult abroad, including China under sponsorship of the World Health Organization. A past chairman of the Explorers Club's Washington Group, he also trod the path of adventure by making several trips to Antarctica and other remote parts of the world. Often joining him in his overseas jaunts was his wife Virginia, who continued to pursue a distinguished career of her own as a partner in the prestigious Washington, DC, law firm of Covington & Burling. All of Don Watkin's remarkably varied activities and achievements reflected his highly methodical mind, devoted to precision. They included authorship or co-authorship of more than 125 articles on nutrition, gerontology, and public health in medical and scientific journals, as well as the Handbook of Nutrition, Health, and Aging (1983). Amidst his myriad activities he always remained close to Hamilton, which he credited with providing him with "the blueprint for an optimum life." A devoted supporter of the College in many volunteer capacities, including fund-raising activities and membership on the Alumni Council, he also served his Class as a dedicated and ever-faithful correspondent for this magazine for more than 25 years. In 2005, he defied ill health and physical infirmities to attend the dedication of Hamilton's new Science Center. Fittingly in recognition of his pioneering research on vitamin B-12, nutrition, and aging, an area in the Center has been named in his honor. Donald M.Watkin, despite years of illness and physical debilitation, maintained a sunny disposition, a sharp mind, and a lively interest in the world's happenings until the very end. He died in Washington of complications of diabetes on October 29, 2007. In addition to his wife of 61 years, he is survived by two sons, Henry M. and Edward G. Watkin '79; two daughters, Mary Ellen Watkin and Ann K. Watkin-Statham; and four grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. [Return to Top]
Kenneth Paul Whiting, Jr. '43, an attorney and for 20 years a family court judge, was born into a family of modest means on February 20, 1922, in Olean, NY, near the Pennsylvania border. The elder son of Kenneth P., a salesman, and Helen Tracy Whiting, he enrolled at Hamilton in 1939 from Binghamton as a graduate of Binghamton North High School. Ken Whiting joined Lambda Chi Alpha and played varsity basketball for four years, devoting the rest of his spare time to student publications as business manager. Elected to the journalism honorary Pi Delta Epsilon as well as Quadrangle, he served on the Interfraternity Council in addition to the Publications Board, and as president of the Newman Club. |
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