The Andrean - Spring 2021

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OBITUARIES 1938

James O’Brian passed away on Feb. 24, 2021, in Toronto. He attended St. Andrew’s from 1935 to 1938. He was a Prefect and involved in First Hockey, First Rugby, First Cricket, and swimming. Jim held the tank record for backstroke and won the ski race in his graduating year. He was also a drum sergeant in the Cadet Corps, secretary of the Literary Society, and on the editorial board of The Review. The yearbook’s staff advisor was none other than Geoffrey O’Brian, Jim’s father, who was appointed Head of the Lower School in 1938. Jim received the Cooper Medal in Science, the Lt.-Governor’s Bronze Medal, the GovernorGeneral’s Medal, and the Macdonald Medal. He was also one of two students chosen to represent SAC on the Canadian School Boys Tour to the coronation of George VI and his wife, Elizabeth, as King and Queen of the United Kingdom and the Dominions of the British Commonwealth, in London, England, in May 1937. Jim was a member of Princeton University’s Class of 1942, playing freshman football and hockey. He was the only Canadian in his class. Jim left in 1941, before graduation, to join the RCAF and follow his father and older brother, Peter, into wartime air force duty. After training in England on Hurricanes, he served in North Africa and northern Europe and flew Spitfires for the 417 Squadron in Italy. Post-war, Jim finished his BA at Trinity College in Toronto, articled at Clarkson Gordon, and became a CA in 1950, working at George Hendrie & Sons until retirement in 1985. Jim is survived by his children, Geoffrey, Jennifer, and Maggie; 11 grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; and his brother, Liam ’46. He is predeceased by his wife, Annie; brother, Peter; and parents, Geoffrey and Kate.

1942

Donald Fraser passed away on Dec. 21, 2020, in Toronto. Donald attended St. Andrew’s from 1938 to 1942. In his graduating year, Donald stood first in Upper Sixth, won a First General Proficiency prize, the Old Boys’ Medal in Mathematics, and the Governor-General’s Medal. The year before, he won the Chairman’s Gold Medal, the Hulbig Medal in Mathematics, and the Lt.-Governor’s Bronze Medal. He was a corporal in

the Cadet Corps and a member of the SAC Life-Guard Corps. Donald went to the University of Toronto, where he studied mathematics, physics, and chemistry, and obtained his PhD from Princeton University, where he specialized in the newly developing area of statistics. He began a long and successful career in academia at U of T, becoming the Department of Statistics’ founding chair in 1977. Elected to the Royal Society of Canada at the age of 42, Donald was the first recipient of the Gold Medal of the Statistical Society of Canada in 1985. He later received honorary degrees from the University of Waterloo (1992) and the University of Toronto (2002). He was appointed Officer of the Order of Canada in 2011 in recognition of his contributions to science and society. He is survived by his wife, Nancy; daughters, Julie, Danae, Maia, Andrea, Ailana, Ailie, and Donelle; and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

1945

Murray Campbell ‘Cam’ Dobbin passed

away on Nov. 26, 2020, in Toronto. He attended St. Andrew’s College from 1942 to 1945. Cam was a member of the shooting team and was a lance-corporal in the Cadet Corps pipe band. He won the Old Boys’ Medal in Mathematics. Cam studied medicine at the University of Toronto, graduating in 1952. He and his wife, Dolly, moved to Elsa, Yukon, where Cam cared for the community for five years and then to Philadelphia, Pa., to complete a residency in ophthalmology. They returned to Toronto, where Cam ran a private and surgical practice at Toronto East General Hospital (now Michael Garron Hospital) until his retirement. His contributions during his career earned him a lifetime membership in the Ontario Medical Association and Canadian Medical Association. Cam was most relaxed at his island cottage on Lake Temagami. Earning his pilot’s license in the 1960s allowed him to fly there and avoid highway traffic. It was not unusual for Cam to buzz the Memorial Chapel steeple on his way up north. An early embracer of technology, he built a ham radio while living in Yukon, and in the 1970s built his own computer and taught himself to code and program. He wrote computer software to manage patient admin in his office and

eventually patented and leased his program to other physicians. Cam is survived by his children, Gord ’71 and Charlie, and three grandchildren. He was predeceased by his wife, Dolly; his son, Peter ’73; and his brother, Pat. Cam and Dolly gave the Foucault Pendulum to SAC in Peter’s memory. It remains in the renovated McLaughlin science wing and demonstrates the rotation of the Earth.

1949

Hugh Thomson passed away on Feb. 6, 2020, in Stanstead, Que. He attended St. Andrew’s from 1944 to 1948, and during his time at the School, he was on the track team. His career was in business management and marketing, retiring 30 years ago. Hugh was appointed to the Stanstead College Board of Trustees in 1999. He also spent two decades as an international volunteer advisor with CESO (Canadian Executive Service Organization). Hugh is survived by his wife, Jean; sons, Andrew and Peter; and a grandson.

1950

Jamie Dunton passed away on Oct. 4, 2020, in

Ottawa. He graduated from SAC after attending for two years. He was Head Boy, president of the Literary Society, a librarian, and school news editor of The Review. Jamie was also a corporal in the Cadet Corps. He received the George Etienne Cartier Medal in French, the Wyld Prize in Latin, the Lt.-Governor’s Bronze Medal, and the Governor-General’s Gold Medal for highest standing in the Upper Sixth. After graduating from St. Andrew’s and obtaining undergraduate and law degrees at McGill University, he was called to the Bar in 1957. He worked at Lafleur Brown and in the legal department at Canadian International Paper Company until 1965, when he joined the firm that became Dunton Rainville LLP in Quebec. Jaime remained at Dunton Rainville for 30 years. After retirement, he and his wife, Sooky, moved to the Eastern Townships in Quebec, and he was elected mayor of Hatley from 1996 to 2003. He later became president of the Unitarian Universalist Church of North Hatley. Jamie is survived by his wife, Marjorie Lee (Sooky); children, Betsy >> Spring 2021 The ANDREAN

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