Edmund Halsey Kellogg ’34
ED KELLOGG, whose Outstanding Achievement Award citation in 1976 called him "the very personification of The Renaissance Man," died Apr. 8, 1993, as the result of a debilitating illness. His various activitiesas Wall St. lawyer, State Dept. official, Air Corps intelligence officer, Foreign Service officer in Cambodia and Germany, director of major educational programs here and abroad, author, law school professor, and deanevidenced his deep concern for all peoples of the world. His principal interests were global overpopulation and historic preservation. In 1987, he coauthored "Vermont Townscapes," designed to get action, he said, to protect Vermont's handsome towns while they were undergoing a period of fast growth. In 1983, he collaborated on "Readings in Historic Preservation Law: Why? What? How?"
Ed is survived by his wife of 55 years, Celina (Robbins); two sons, Roger B. '67 and Edmund D.; two daughters, Eliza (Mrs. Kevin) Klose and Celina (Mrs. Thomas J.) Moore'52; and five grandchildren, to whom we offer our sincere sympathies. The late Frederic B. Kellogg '33 was his brother.
The Class of 1934
Paw in print

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