Class of 1918; Dartmouth Alumni Magazine, 1951; 1918 fathers and sons dinner February 23 at the Outing Club House In attendance were (seated l. to r.) '18ers Dusossoit Duke; Herm Smith; Ed Hazen; Dick Aishton; Red Hulbert; Stump Barr; Ed Booth;...
Varsity Squash 1948-49 Front Row: Hulbert, RK '51, Simel, PJ '51, Stahl, IL '50, McGean, JM '49, Cameron, DC '49, Feldberg, SH '46, Van Raalte. JA '48 Rear Row: Hoehn, EG Jr. (coach), Keese, PC '50, Erving, PL '50, Kurr, DA '48, Ringe, TBK '50,...
Dartmouth College Varsity Squash 1950-51 Front Row: Flanagan, WF Jr '51, Austin, RO '51, White, HH Jr '51 (capt.), Simel, PJ '51, Smith, DW '51 Back Row: Packard, CE '51 (Mgr.), Wylie, JR III '51, Graeve, WC '53, Foster, SH '53, Hulbert, RK '51,...
Tennis Teams Freshman, 1948; Class of 1951; Lettermen; Front row: Brown, R. P.; Hulbert, R. K.; Atherton, S. I.; Rabe, J. W.; Hart, J. P.; Back row: Jarvis, K. S. or Jarvis, K. A. '50 (Manager); Welch, J. H. (Captain); Simel, P. J. Hoehn, E. G.,...
1918 Roar; the 65th reunion Class of 1918; December 1, 1983; 2nd photo is of class members only; , members in 1st photo (6) are in a different order; seated: William Pepin; Thomas Bryant; W. C. Hulbert, President; George von Kapff; Richard P....
Class of 1918; 46th reunion June 15, 16 & 17, 1964; 9th row, l. to r.: Tom Proctor; Arnold; Pepin; Youngstrom; Shea; McDonough; Healey; Donohue; Knowles; 8th row: Tarrant; Bill Ryan; Sibbernsen; Ed Booth; Barr; Hazen; Doolittle; 7th row: Drake;...
Class of 1918 Reunion 1921; L-R Front Row: John Donohue; Al Gottshaldt; Curt Tripp; Ru Hesse; Stan Jones; Dutch Oppenheim; Tom Groves; Bob Fish; Dave Skinner; Second Row: Spud Proctor; Ted O'Connor; George Hull; Jay LeFevre; Tom Bryant; Rog...
Football Teams Undated; #74 Mike Martin; #87 Doug Keare; #75 Slade Schuster; #72 Ray Holtorf; #73 Greg Hulbert; #65 Bob Saylor; #76 Bob Rech; football players are standing on and by a Decato Brothers Truck, Lebanon, New Hampshire; please return...
Soccer Teams Freshman, 1947; Class of 1951; First row: D. C. Pittenger; S. T. Daniels; C. B. Ryan; R. P. Dore, (Captain); J. F. Olney, Jr.; R. W. Hopkins; W. H. Thompson; W. D. Leshure, Jr.; Second row: A. I. Bildner, (Coach); C. Estrada; K. J....
Dartmouth Track team 1945 Front row: M Burnham-N, RE De Forest II '49, SM Felton Jr.-N, JH Parks '48, RA Grady-N, KW Coyne-M, JF Conely-N, AA Snyder-N, LM Gold '48, SL Spaulding '45-N Second row: HL Hillman (Coach), WD Fetzer-N, LB Goodman-N, LD...
Names for Seventh Row Seated: Irving Francis Symonds; Edwin Humphrey Watson; Samuel Francis Tower; Frank Waldo Leland; Nelson Alvin McClary; Homer Bezaleel Hulbert; George Irving Leland; William Ervin Sargent; Charles Sherman Felker; Walter Elmer...
Vibrio cholerae is the etiologic agent of cholera in humans. Intestinal colonization occurs via ingestion of contaminated food and water and results in symptoms that include the production of the characteristic rice water stool, vomiting, and...
Vibrio cholerae is the etiologic agent of the severe diarrheal disease cholera. Colonization of the host environment by V. cholerae requires the type IV toxin co-regulated pilus (TCP). Adequate colonization by V. cholerae is essential for cholera...
Vibrio cholerae is a gram-negative bacterial pathogen that causes the severe diarrheal disease cholera. Several bacterial factors have been identified that are critical for V. cholerae intestinal colonization. The best characterized of these...
H-NS, an abundant nucleoid associated protein, has a role in silencing the expression of a variety of environmentally regulated genes during growth under nonpermissive conditions. A genetic approach was used to study H-NS regulation of genes in...
Vibrio cholerae is a water-borne, Gram negative enteropathogen that causes the gastrointestinal disorder, cholera, in humans. A critical step in cholera pathogenesis is the attachment and colonization of intestinal cells, and the formation of...
ToxT is a member of the AraC/XylS family of transcriptional regulators, and functions to activate expression of virulence genes in the intestinal pathogen Vibrio cholerae. The aim of this research was to investigate the mechanism of ToxT-dependent...
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is one of the model organisms used to study the developmental process of biofilm formation in Gram-negative bacteria. Recently, a genetic approach {O'Toole, 1998 #404} was taken to study biofilm formation in P. aeruginosa and...
Hyperthermia, the elevation of tissue temperature from 42°C to 50°C, is currently being investigated as an adjunct to radiation therapy in the treatment of cancer. The interstitial microwave antenna array hyperthermia (IMAAH) system is designed...
Vibrio cholerae is the etiological agent of the acute intestinal disorder cholera. The source of cholera infection is typically fecal contamination of potable water sources. V. cholerae is able to colonize the host intestine and trigger the onset...
The ctx and tcp genes that encode cholera toxin and the toxin co-regulated pilus, the major virulence determinants of Vibrio cholerae, are repressed by the nucleoid-associated protein H-NS and activated by the AraC-like transcriptional regulator...
The immune system cannot effectively clear the highly motile, opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa in chronically infected patients. Phagocytosis is the primary means of bacterial clearance in P. aeruginosa infections, and thus the central...
Back Row, Left to Right: Starr, Hodgdon, Slade, Emerson, Bowles, Matthews, Eldredge; 2nd Row: Dinsmore, Woodward, Hulbert, Adams, Fall; First Row: Howard, Hutchinson, George, Lord; White Studio N. Y., June 16, '34