Frank died Aug. 11, 2014, after a valiant 15-year battle against Parkinson’s disease.

Frank prepared for Princeton at the Peddie School. At Princeton, he entered the Woodrow Wilson School, writing his thesis on federal court reform. He was a member of Whig-Clio and the Undergraduate Schools Committee, as well as a writer for the Nassau Herald. He roomed his last two years with fellow Charter Club members Tom Burdette, Larry Glass, and Al Muse.

Armed with a Harvard law degree, Frank joined White & Case in New York in 1961. After six years of big-firm practice on Wall Street and in Paris and Brussels, and a brief period in the antitrust division of the Justice Department, he started his own practice. Frank specialized primarily in corporate matters, many of which were of an international orientation.

To Frank, the most important event of all took place in his last year of law school, when he married his childhood sweetheart, Nancy. Frank wrote in our 25th-reunion yearbook, “Such honors and pleasures and benefits as I have achieved in life are all set in the context of joy of my family.” Frank served on the board of regents of Georgetown University and on the boards of the Convent of the Sacred Heart and the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary.

The class extends deepest condolences to Nancy; children Caroline, Buck ’85, James, and Jennie; and nine grandchildren, including Adeline Brown ’13.

Undergraduate Class of 1958