WILLIAM L. SMITH III ’46

WILLIAM L. SMITH III, 83, retired president of the Taylor, Smith and Taylor pottery, died Feb. 28, 2004. He was a member of Chi Psi. He served in the Army Air Corps as a flight navigator in the South Pacific during World War II. When the family business was sold to the Anchor Hocking Company, he founded CMSUSA, a company that imports products for the pottery industry. He remained chairman of the company until his death. Survivors include his wife, Virginia. a brother, a sister, a son, a daughter, and five granddaughters, including Alexis W. Dowding ’06. A step-grandson and a great-granddaughter also survive.

DAVID J. SENCER ’46

DAVID J. SENCER, M.D. the former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, died May 2, 2011, at age 86. A member of Eclectic, he left the university to join the U.S. Navy during World War II, and later received his M.D. degree from the University of Michigan, as well as an M.P.H. from Harvard University. He became director of the CDC in 1966 and expanded the role of the agency, making it a worldwide disease-fighting organization and promoting worldwide efforts to eradicate smallpox and measles. He later became New York City’s health commissioner and retired fully in 1989. In 2009, the University granted him an Honorary B.A. Among those who survive are his wife, Jane Blood Sencer; three children, including Stephen D. Sencer ’84; and six grandchildren.

PAUL R. MCCURDY ’46

PAUL R. MCCURDY, an expert in the fields of stem cell transplantation and blood safety, who served as director of the blood resources program at the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health, died Sept. 7, 2010. He was 84. The son of the late emeritus professor of physical education Hugh G. McCurdy and a member of Psi Upsilon, he received his degree with high honors and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa before receiving his medical degree from Harvard University. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and again during the Korean War. During his long career as a hematologist, he was a professor at Georgetown University Medical School, director of blood services for the Washington region of the American Red Cross, and an associate at the National Institutes of Health, where he received a Distinguished Service Award for his work on a national registry of individuals willing to donate bone marrow. He also studied the feasibility of banking umbilical cord blood as a source of blood stem cells. His first marriage, to Marion Fountain McCurdy, ended in divorce. Survivors include his wife, Kay Kane McCurdy, five children from his first marriage, three stepchildren, 13 grandchildren, and his sister.

RALPH R. JOHNSON JR. ’46

The Rev. RALPH R. JOHNSON JR., a retired Presbyterian minister, died Dec. 10, 2006. He was 82. During World War II he served in the US Navy. A member of Eclectic, he received his degree with honors and with distinction in government. He began doctoral studies and was a Rotary Foundation Scholar at Oxford University but became interested in the ministry and then received his divinity degree from the San Francisco Theological Seminary. During his ministry he was known as a social activist. Among those who survive are his wife, Anita Silfies Johnson, five sons, nine grandchildren, and a sister.

GARRY deN. HOUGH III ’46

GARRY deN. HOUGH III, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon, died Aug. 17, 2007. He was 81. A member of Sigma Nu, he was the son of Garry deN. Hough of the class of 1918. He served in the US Army during the Korean War. Active in many civic groups and also as a volunteer teaching surgeon overseas, in 1991 he received the Humanitarian Award of Orthopedics Overseas. Survivors include his wife, Nancy Greer Hough, five children, three grandchildren, and a brother and sister. (For more information, see The Vineyard Gazzette of August 21, 2007.)

HERBERT E. GERNERT ’46

HERBERT E. GERNERT, 86, a retired investment adviser, died April 16, 2012. A member of Alpha Chi Rho, he received his degree from Princeton University and an MBA from New York University. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II. He had a long career as an investment manager at Brown Brothers Harriman, Cyrus J. Lawrence, Inc., and Vilas-Fischer Associates prior to founding his own management and consulting firm. Survivors include his wife, Sally Hanson Gernert, two children, and five grandchildren.

WILLIAM L. EARLE ’46

WILLIAM L. EARLE, a journalist and community service director, died Sept. 4, 2011, at age 87. He was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon and served in the U.S. Navy during World War II, after which he received a bachelor’s degree from Stanford University. Survivors include his wife, Andrea Byron Earle, and two daughters. Another daughter predeceased him.

ARTHUR CLEMETT ’46

ARTHUR CLEMETT, who died in November 2003 at the age of 77, had retired in 1995 as chairman of the department of radiology at St. Vincent’s Hospital and Medical Center in Manhattan, as clinical professor of radiology at New York University School of Medicine, and as professor of radiology at New York Medical College, posts he had held for 21, 25, and 15 years, respectively.

Arthur came to Wesleyan in March 1944 in the Navy V-12 program and promptly distinguished himself by winning the Ayres Prize as the freshman with the best first semester record. A member of Eclectic, he later won the Graham Prize in the Natural Sciences and the Rice Prize in Mathematics. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in 1945 and graduated with honors.

In 1950 he received his M.D. with honors from the University of Rochester, where he was elected to Alpha Omega Alpha, a national medical honor society. After interning at Yale-New Haven Hospital, Arthur served as a naval medical officer at St. Alban’s Naval Hospital in New York, in Japan and Korea, and at the U.S. Naval Base in Bainbridge, Md. He was honorably discharged in 1956.

Following his residency in radiology at the University of Minnesota Hospitals and a brief period of private practice in Portland, Maine, Dr. Clemett spent the rest of his career in academic medicine. His area of special interest was gastrointestinal radiology; he trained several generations of radiologists at Yale-New Haven and several other hospitals before beginning his 25-year career in New York. He was a visiting professor at more than sixty medical schools and teaching hospitals throughout North America, Europe, and Asia.

Dr. Clemett co-authored Radiology of The Gall Bladder and Bile Ducts in 1977 with Dr. R.N. Berk and contributed 14 chapters to others texts on gastrointestinal radiology. He published more than 40 articles in peer-reviewed journals and completed numerous grant supported research projects. He was a visiting professor at more than 60 medical schools and teaching hospitals throughout North America, Europe, and Asia. He was a Fellow of the American College of Gastroenterology and the American College of Radiology and received numerous physician recognition awards from the American Medical Association. He was a member of Alpha Omega Alpha and was listed in The Best Doctors in the United States in 1981.

An avid off-shore sailor throughout his life, he also enjoyed diving, flying, and traveling. He supported environmental causes.

He is survived by his wife of 15 years, Marianne Clemett-Jaillet; five children from a previous marriage, including John Clemett ’79 M.D., also a radiologist; two sisters; and four grandchildren.

The class joins me in sending sympathy and condolences to Arthur’s family.

CHARLES B. CLAYMAN ’46

CHARLES B. CLAYMAN, 79, a professor of medicine at Northwestern University Medical School whose research warned about the side effects of certain drugs, died June 22, 2005. After serving in the U.S. Navy during World War II he received a medical degree from the Indiana University School of Medicine. Survivors include two sons, two daughters, and 13 grandchildren.

MacALISTER BROWN ’46

MacALISTER BROWN, 82, the Fairleigh S. Dickinson Jr. professor of political science, emeritus, at Williams College, died Nov. 21, 2006. He was member of Eclectic and attended the V-12 program at Wesleyan during World War II. Elected to Phi Beta Kappa, he received his degree with honors. He received a doctoral degree from Harvard and joined the Williams College faculty in 1956. Before retiring in 1994, he served as chair of the political economy program and the political science department, as well as director of the summer program in American Studies for Executives. He also served as administrative assistant to Williams President John Sawyer. He specialized in American foreign policy and international relations in Southeast Asia, and had received several Fulbright Scholarships. Active in Williamstown, Mass., civic affairs, he was also a nationally-ranked master’s-level squash player. Among those who survive are his wife, Adriana Millenaar Brown, three children, and four grandchildren.