Henry G. Canda Jr. ’43
Hank died Jan. 24, 1997. He was 75.
A native of Brooklyn, N.Y., his WWII military service was with an Army artillery division. Hank's business career gravitated around C. T. Corporation Systems, a company that provides legal service in New York. Hank worked in the area of corporate sales and customer relations.
Once married, he is survived by a daughter, Carol Clark, chairperson of the art history department at Amherst College in Massachusetts; two stepchildren, Marilyn Broderick and Charles Webb. There are six step-grandchildren as well. Hank is also survived by his companion of many years, Theresa D. Martin.
Hank's closest buddies over the past several years were classmates Bob Hulburd and Bud Sweney, who lived nearby. Perhaps Bud summed up Hank's life and times best when he wrote: "A guy who never stopped smiling, never stopped looking ahead, never said a bad word about anyone, never griped about his physical situation. Hank was truly an inspiration and a damn good friend."
We offer our most heartfelt sympathies to the remaining survivors.
The Class of 1943
Andrew Harpham Newman '47
After a brief illness, Andy Newman died Sept. 30, 1996, in Urbana, Ill., where he had lived since 1968. He had served as rector of the Urbana Church of the Epiphany until he retired in 1988.
He entered Princeton in the summer of 1943, but soon left for military service, which took him to both the European and Pacific theaters in a combat unit of the Army Medical Corps. Returning to Princeton, he majored in history and graduated in 1947.
His military experiences and his study of history gave him a taste for travel. He exercised this by going to work for the State Dept., which sent him to Bangkok. Following his stay there, he was assigned to State's far eastern desk in Washington. Later he returned to Thailand in a position with the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
Andy left Goodyear to study at the Episcopal Theological Seminary in Cambridge, Mass. In 1965 he was ordained a priest in the Episcopal Church. After service in Toledo, Bellbrook, and Dayton, Ohio, he was called to Urbana. During his years there, he took a leading role in many publicservice organizations, including the Champaign County Arts Council, the county Ministerial Assn., and Planned Parenthood. His was an exemplary life.
In 1965 Andy married Marcie Allen, who survives him. To her, the class extends its profound sympathy.
The Class of 1947
Paw in print

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