Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA)

 - Class of 1944

Page 26 of 200

 

Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 26 of 200
Page 26 of 200



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Page 26 text:

very active in local politics and Girl Scoutpad- ministration. The children have many active interests. Our oldest girl is married to an engineer. GU NT HER H. BALDAUF -520-6 Windyridge Drive Kalamazoo, Michigan Manager, Central Technical Service Simpson Lee Paper Company Vicksburg, Michigan Degrees: B. S. X: M. S. , '465 D.SC- a '49 Wife: Dorothy Meltzer Children: Susan 1201, Sandra 1171, Annemarie 1141, Gustav 191 Registered Professional Engineer, Michigan! 'Technical Association of Pulp and Paper Industry 1TAPPI1, Paper Industry Management Association 1PIMA1, AlChE, American Society for Quality Control 1ASQC1, ACS Following graduation from Tech, I worked briefly for Godfrey L. Cabot, Inc. , and after a few months was inducted into the army. My tour of duty included time spent in the Special Projects Division of CWS. After discharge I returned to Cabot and at the same time started graduate work at Tech. In 1947 I returned to full-time student status, and in 1949 received my final degree. The next ten years were spent with the Ecinta Paper Division of Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp. , Pisgah Forest, North Caro- lina, followed by five years with Allied Paper Corp. in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Next came two years as consultant to the paper industry as a member of the firm Nadel- man, Baldauf and Associates. In 1965 I joined Simpson Lee Paper Corporation in my present position. My office is located near Kalamazoo, Michigan, but my work involves much travel to our other manufacturing facilities which are located near San Francisco and Seattle. 22 MARIO 'DO U GLAS BANU S 31 High Street Topsfield, Massachusetts 01983 Staff Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln Lab, Room C-171 Box 73 Lexington, Massachusetts Degrees: S.B. Vg Ph.D. , 1949 Wife: Barbara J. Sharpe ChiIdren':iMarkham D. 1241, Christopher T. 1211 Gregory C. 1191, Nathan C. 1161 Grandchild: David D. 111 Member: Electrochernical Society: Vice Chair- man and Chairman, Boston Sectiong Publications Committeeg American Chemical Societyg Amer- ican Association for Advancement of Science Topsfield School Committee, 1958-1965, Mas- canomet Regional District School Committee, '58-'65g Trustee, Topsfield Town Library, '57- presentg Chairman, '65-presentg Congregational Church of Topsfieldg Choirg Deacon, '65-present Hobbies: Sailing and cruising, gardening, skiing, music, guns, and hunting When I went to O. C. S. in early 1944 along with most of the R. O. T. C. , I had completed enough of my requirements so that on the day in May V when I was receiving my commission in the Signal Corps, I was notified by Professor Harn- ilton that I had been awarded my S. B. in Course V. The next two years I spent as a Photography Officer in the E. T. O. My primary duties were working in large continuous film processing plants in England, France, and Germany 1re- member V-mail? 1. On my return to the U. S. in 1946, I went directly to graduate school at MIT, living in the rebuilt barrack at the old Westgate West. After getting a Ph. D. in Inorganic Chemis- t1'Y 111 1 949, I went to work for Metal Hydrides, Inc. , as Senior Chemist. During my eleven years at Metal Hydrides, I progressed up to Director of the Research and Development Labs. The research there was a combination of fundamental research on the synthesis and P1'1YSiCa1 properties of hydrides and of metal- hydrogen systems for sponsors such as the A- E- C- , Navy, etc. , and research and develop- ment on the commercial production of hydrides and their applications. My list of patents and publications gives an idea of the variety of sub- Jects covered. My big achievement wh.ile at Metal I-Iydrides was to develop a process for the .continuous production of sodium hydride and S0C11um borohydride from the flash scale in the lab, th1'9uS11 pilot plant and design, and finally Liana' t5 mlllion 1bfYear continuous production n . 111 1960 I decided I preferred basic research .magma L is-sfs LZVJIY ,amid L-din! CD has .ii Z: Ll.. c Ekl 55151 751131 Im in Wh Sal. MW, K

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cn, QM. Wu Na Q :Q , l Am ,ug- 5 .3 da fS3 .. : .se '-Q v :..e., TE' . L-3 :esis :loud 41: ti :..g ..- 7:2- fi! YO' 5336 goci- 135 3 Ol C5 21959 : 56- 1 3 I 1 CHARLES EDWARD ARNOLD 464 Pleasant Street Milton, Massachusetts Assistant Director of Engineering Sylvania Electronic Systems 77 A Street Needham, Massachusetts Degree: S.B. VI Wife: Mary E. Duggan Children: Gary Ql'2.1, Michele fllj Children: Gary Q12j, Michele fllj Professional Engineer, Commonwealth of Mas- sachusettsg Member: IEEE, SPEBSQSA Hobbies: Fishing, boating, chorus, and quartet singing Upon graduation, I continued with the Navy V-l 2 program, Midshiprnan School, and Radar School. This tour of duty was made noteworthy only by participation in Project Crossroads, the first atomic tests at Bikini Atoll. After discharge in September of 1946, I married Mary fSimmons, '44J and soon moved to Milton, where we have lived since. In October, 1946, I joined Sylvania as a microwave engineer and have been with the same organization fspecializing in military electronicsj through numerous relocations and reorganizations. Along the way I was Manager of the Avionics Laboratory: Technical Director, Minuteman Security Systemsg and Associate Director, Applied Research Laboratory. Pres- ently, I am Assistant Director of Engineering, Sylvania Electronic Systems- East. During the academic year '64-'65, I was a member of the Practicing Engineer Program at the .Center for Advanced Engineering Studies. This was a rewarding, if sobering, experience for anyone who has strayed away from pure de- sign work. The Arnolds devote much of their summer and leisure to swimming, boating, and fishing. During the school year, Mary is a part-time social worker at the Boston School for the Deaf. A. DONALD ARSEM 511 9 Shimerville Road Clarence, New York 14031 Executive Vice President The Wurlitzer Company North Tonawanda, New York 14120 Degree: S. B. VI Wife: Katharine L. Brooks Children: Nancy 1221, Marilyn 1185, Harold fl7j, Beverly fllj Chairman: E. E. Visiting Committee, Clarkson College of Technology Member: American Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers KAIEEEJQ Scientific Re- search Society of America CRESAJQ Acoustical Society of America QASAJQ American Institute of Aerospace and Aeronautics QAIAAJ Hobbies: Yachting, photography, oceanography After a brief Army career, via the Tech ROTC route, and a medical discharge, I returned to graduate in l 945. I thenjmarried Kay Brooks CRussell Sage '45j and with the war still on went to work at RCA's Ground and Marine Radar Di- vision in the development of automatic range tracking systems. By 1947 I had gotten into the, then, new field of guided mis siles workingjointly with J. H. V. In 1 948 I joined the new General Electric Electronics Laboratory at Syracuse, New York. Here I was first Assistant Manager of the Mis- sile Guidance Group, later Manager of Magnetic Materials Applications, and in 1 953 was appointed Manager of the Advanced Products Section of the Lab. This was a most interesting period of work on digital computers, color television, underwater sound transistor development, as well as the Hermes and Atlas missile guidance systems. In 1955 the Laboratory Director, Dr. L. T. DeVore, invited me to join him in the manage- ment of the Electronics Division of Stewart Warner in Chicago, where I became Manager of Engineering. By 1958, having been primarily in the mili- tary business for 10 years, I switched to the consumer products field and joined The Wurlit- zer Company as Manager of Engineering and Research of the North Tonawanda Division. Subsequently the work branched out and involved electronic organs, pianos, and a variety of musical instruments. This work was very in- teresting and a field in which engineering was dreadfully needed. In 1961 I was elected a Vice President, in 1967 a Senior Vice President, and in 1968 the Executive Vice President, and am now concerned with operations of five domestic divisions as well as overseas plants. One of our main family hobbies is sailboat racing and cruising on the Great Lakes. Kay is



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and wont brick to M. l. 'l'. .is ii sl.il'tA nwnilwr gil: the .Lincoln Lab. in the Solid Sluts Division. V01-k 'it lincoln l..ili luis been in -solid el-ll i-wir ' . . - ,- -rw Chenxistry prnnarily in the etlucls ol nlliru-liigli pressure Qnp to over l. 5 niillion p, 5, in Qu tlfc structures and on the electrical and niagiietig properties of electronic materials. 1 ani enjoy- 1110 the work and have had several graduate stu- D . K' dents from the Department ot Metallurgy and from the Material Science Center carrying out their thesis work under my supervision. ' 5 X. . X .Figs 9 , X iii - A fix? v X.: page RALPH G. BARC LAY 12107 Lerner Place Bowie, Maryland 20715 Aerospace Technologist NASA, Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland 20771 Code 723 Degrees: S.B. II: A. B. , Middlebury, Physics: M. S. , University of Connecticut M. E. 3 Ph.D. , University of Maryland M. E. Wife: Janet C. Baldwin Children: Richard f5l, David Q31 Member: Local S. E. S. A. Hobbies: Photography, gardening After graduation I was eventually drafted into the Navy to be trained as an electronics techni- cian, having missed a more heroic role as an ensign by virtue of substandard before- correc- tion vision. Ultimately, I was assigned to a transport ship just in time to bring the boys back. The highlight of my service career came when I repaired a transmitter that the old chief cou1dn't fix. This was a triurnph of deduction and scientific training, but actually I happened 120 notice a broken wire that he had overlooked. After the war I worked for Johns Manville until 1951 when, feeling the need of a training retread, I took a year off and obtained an M. S. at the University of Connecticut--where I also met my wife. Now being somewhat committed to more technical work with my shiny M. S. , I hlred on at the National Bureau of Standards. Reorganization in the wake of the ADX2-battery- additive furor created the Army's Harry Dia- mond Laboratories from my part of N. B. S. At Harlflf Diamond I was involved in a br eakthru and its aftermath when Horton, Bowles, and Wiarren started f1uidics. In fluidics I worked Wllih the hydraulic analogy as an aid in creating fluidic designs, As a consequence of endlessly going 120 school, the University of Maryland gave me a Ph- D. degree in 1960. In 1963 NASA looked like greener grass, and that's where I am today. JOHN G. BARMBY 924 Fairway Drive, NE Vienna, Virginia 22180 Senior Scientist IIT ' Research Institute 1825 K Street, NW Washington, D.C. 20006 Degrees: S. B. XVI3 A. B. fPhysicsJ Middlebury 19443 M. A. CBusiness Administrationl, George Washington University, 1951: Ph. D. CPublic Administrationl, American University, 1957 Wife: Ellaveen Rebecca Childress Children: John Scott Clll, Grant 173 Associate Fellow, American Institute of Aero- nautics and Astronautics: Senior Member, Am- erican Society of Public Administrationg AAAS Past President of the M. I. T. Luncheon Clubs in the Pentagon and Downtown D. C. 3 Vienna Presbyterian Churchg Westwood Country Clubg Shawneeland Mountain Club Hobbies: Readings in systems analysis as ape plied to civil problems: swimming: tennis and skiing have taken a back seat since I broke my leg on the slopes two years ago. Having been a Presbyterian since I left MIT, nt career may be considered somewhat predestine In the 'Forties I was in the airplane business: i the 'Fifties I was in the missiles business, in the 'Sixties I have been in the spacecraft busi- ness: in the 'Seventies I-plan to move imc the civil applications field. The same view may bi appropriate for my domestic life. Ellaveen CTCU-BA in Math and MA in Edj and I met in Holland in 1953 on a summer tourg that winter I was assigned as project engineer on a missill being developed in Fort' Worthy where she live- the next summer she and some of her teacher colleagues studied at Columbia: we were mar- ried in 1955 and bought a house with a 4070 mortgage Cremember those days?,l. I am considered a long-time resident of the Washington area, having been here 'for 20 years. Following graduation I worked as a re- search engineer for the predecessor of NASA fthe space agencyl at Langley Air Force Base, Virginia. Then for eleven years 41948-19591 I was a project engineer at the Navy fnow the Ai Systems Commandl. Systems engineering was attractive so I moved over to the Pentagon as a weapons systems analyst with the Institute for Defense Analyses. Since 1962 I have been studying problems related to space science anc applications under contract to NASA, mostly la IIT Research Institute in charge of the analytic group in D. C. My group is enthused about the potential economic benefits to the general pub- lic which could accrue from satellite surveys for water resources, mineral and oil resource Oceanography, agriculture, forestry, etc.

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