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Conference turris::womannotes-v2

Title:ARCHIVE-- Topics of Interest to Women, Volume 2 --ARCHIVE
Notice:V2 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1105
Total number of notes:36379

20.0. ""In The News" [clips only, no discussion]" by MOSAIC::TARBET () Mon Jun 06 1988 13:40

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20.1In memoriam: Dorothy RoweWMOIS::B_REINKEif you are a dreamer, come in..Thu Dec 07 1989 13:3249
From VTX Livewire, Worldwide News, Dec. 1989:

                        In memoriam:  Dorothy Rowe
  
  "We are saddened to announce that Dorothy Rowe passed away Nov. 30," said 
  President Ken Olsen, about one of Digital's most ardent supporters and a 
  member of the Board of Directors.
  
  "She hadn't been well for quite some time, and had been in the hospital for 
  a few days," said Ken.  "People were becoming optimistic that she was 
  getting well again, but she died in her sleep in the morning.
  
  "Dorothy has been a friend, an advisor, and a director of Digital from the 
  very start of the company.  She was our first treasurer and, as a senior 
  vice president of American Research and Development Corp., she was also a 
  defender of Digital in the risk capital company that financed us.
  
  "We will all remember Dorothy as the bright, cheerful, and helpful person we 
  knew for most of the history of Digital.

  "I want to thank everyone who was helpful to Dorothy over the years.  In 
  particular, Jim Derby, supervisor of Digital's Van/Fleet Department, who, 
  besides driving, and taking care of Dorothy at Digital functions, on his own 
  time did much to help her while she was incapacitated."
  
  Dorothy's relationship with Digital began in 1957 when American Research and 
  Development Corp., the company she worked for, invested $70,000 to start 
  Digital.  
  
  Following her service as a lieutenant in the Navy during World War II,
  she joined ARD in 1949 as an office manager. In 1954 she became treasurer of 
  ARD and eventually retired in 1975 as senior vice president.
  
  "Dorothy played a key role in Digital's history because a year or two after 
  ARD started us, some of the male senior vice presidents wanted to sell 
  Digital because it was a hot property," said Ken.  "It was Dorothy who told 
  Gen. Doriot, the president of ARD, 'I'll quit, if you sell Digital.'  So we 
  are forever in her debt."

  Dorothy was named to the board in 1962 and served on the Audit, Compensation 
  and Stock Option Committees.
  
  Besides Digital, Dorothy served as a board member of several well-known 
  Massachusetts companies and vice president of the French Library in Boston.
  
  In 1985 she was awarded and an honorary doctorate of law degree from Emerson 
  College for her work as "a pioneer in the challenging world of business."