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ObituaryGuy H. Dodge Curriculum Vitae Guy H. Dodge, born in Jefferson, Ohio on October 4, 1910, Professor Emeritus (1976) and former Chairman of the Political Science Department (1950-1962) at Brown University. He joined the Brown faculty in 1941, after having taught at Harvard University as Instructor and Tutor in the Department of Government (1939-1940). He received his AB degree summa cum laude from Western Reserve University (now Case Western Reserve) in 1933 where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in 1932. He received his MA and Ph.D. degrees from Harvard University in 1937 and 1942 where his doctoral dissertation was given the Toppan Prize. He received numerous awards and fellowships, including an American Philosophical Society grant, the Sheldon Traveling Fellowship from Harvard (1938-1939) and two Fulbright Fellowships (1949-1950) and (1963-1964) - all for research in France. His professional activity included the presidency of the New England Political Science Association in 1957-1958 and membership of the Program Committee for the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association in 1959. He was also a member of the Committee on Political and Legal Philosophy Fellowships of the Social Science Research Council (1958-1961). At Brown he was a founding member of the American Civilization program and favorite professor in Pembroke College in 1945. He is the author of two books - The Political Theory of the Huguenots of the Dispersion (1947 and 1972) and Benjamin Constant's Philosophy of Liberalism (1980) - and the editor of one - Jean -Jacques Rousseau: Authoritarian Libertarian? (1971). Dorothea Z. Dodge Curriculum Vitae Dorothea Dodge was born in Lisbon, Ohio on February 1, 1910. She garduated from the University of Southern California in 1932. Her teaching career spanned thirty years in both public and private schools. She was a reading specialist in Maumee, Ohio, and she taught second grade at Lincoln School in Lakewood, Ohio. After that she was based in New England at Gordon School in Providence, R.I. where she taught first grade and at Lincoln School where she served as a remedial and developmental reading teacher until her retirement in 1973. She also taught in the American School of Paris, France in 1963-64.