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To: RummyChick

btw, for those not up to speed on the OSS, Balkans was the name of the game for the Cairo OSS office

“Extract of Letter From Penrose Dated 3 March 1944,” describing the multiple interrogations of the “bodies which X-2 brought down from Istanbul,” 3 pp. The bodies were those of a Mr. and Mrs. Kleckowski and one Wilhelm Hamburger. The memo describes difficulties in carrying out the interrogations, commenting that “the lack of collaboration between X-2 and SI might produce most unfortunate results.”


236 posted on 07/09/2012 7:11:50 PM PDT by RummyChick
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To: RummyChick

http://staff.aub.edu.lb/~webbultn/v6n2/index.html

Ada AUB Commemorates 50 years of the Death of President Stephen B. Penrose

Left to right: Ibrahim Khoury, Khalil Bitar, Nuhad Daghir, Samir khalaf, Sarah Waterbury, President john Waterbury.
Fifty years have passed since the death of AUB President Stephen Penrose, who, like Howard Bliss and Malcolm Kerr, died while in office.

Stephen Penrose died of a heart attack at the age of 46 on December 9, 1954. He had come to Beirut from Walla Walla, Washington, after having completed his undergraduate studies in physics at Whitman College. When

he came to AUB he taught physics from 1928 until 1931. He later returned to the United States to earn a PhD in

philosophy at Columbia University.

In 1948, Professor Penrose came back to AUB, not as a professor but as the fifth president of AUB. He was known for his dedication to the University. Not only did he work hard on gathering funds for the University, but he also

played a vital role in establishing the School of Public Health, which, now the Faculty of Health Sciences, is celebrating its fiftieth anniversary this year. Penrose wrote what President John Waterbury describes as “the single best history of AUB, entitled That They May Have Life,” published in Beirut in 1941.

Since 1955, one graduating student from each of the faculties at AUB, distinguished for his or her “scholarship, character, leadership, and contribution to university life,” has received the Penrose Award, named after the late president.

On December 9, 2004, exactly fifty years after the death of Stephen Penrose, AUB President John Waterbury, his wife Sarah, Dean of the Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences Nuhad Daghir, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Khalil Bitar, Professor Samir Khalaf, Director of Information and Public Relations Ibrahim Khoury, and Captain Saadallah Shalak visited Stephen Penrose’s grave in the British-American Cemetery in Sin el Fil. President Waterbury, who placed a bouquet of flowers on the grave of Stephen Penrose, said that “all of AUB, Beirut and Lebanon were shocked and saddened by his sudden passing away in 1954. His death came a mere six days after Founders’ Day. He is survived today by his three children, Dale, Polly, and Steve. Stephen Penrose lay the foundations for AUB’s great period of growth and excellence in the 1950s and 1960s. We should look back on his tenure with gratitude and deep respect.”


239 posted on 07/09/2012 7:20:40 PM PDT by Fred Nerks (Fair Dinkum!)
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