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Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Vol. 88, No. 01 2012

Page 89

Logan Douglas “Doug” Davis Jr., ME 42, of Dunedin, Fla., on Oct. 24. He served as a major in the U.S. Army during World War II in North Africa and Europe. He and his brother-inlaw purchased H. L. McCurdy Lumber Company in 1947, renaming it DavisBeatty. In 1968, the company became Davis Concrete, Inc. He continued to operate the business with his son and grandson until his death.

Tech as a member of the Navy V-12 p r o g ra m . A m o n g t h e p o s i t i o n s served during his long career, he worked at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, taught as an assistant professor at Georgia Tech and joined the charter faculty for the new College of Electrical Engineering at the University of South Florida, where he was later honored as professor emeritus.

Merle R. Donaldson, EE 46, of St. Petersburg, Fla., on Nov. 11. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and later in the Naval Reserves, attaining the rank of ensign, USNR, before his honorable discharge. He attended

William M. “Bill” Hamilton, IM 47, of Westlake, Ohio, on Aug. 26. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and the Korean War aboard the USS Franklin D. Roosevelt and the USS Steinaker. He worked for 35 years at

Cleveland, Ohio-based Premier Industrial Corporation, retiring as president. Frederick “Fred” Martin Hammill, ME 47, of Athens, Ga., on Nov. 7. He served as a first lieutenant in the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II and worked at DuPont for 36 years until his retirement. James Walter Heatwole, ChE 40, of Dal e v i l l e , Va . , o n O c t . 2 1 . H e w a s commissioned as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army from the Georgia Tech ROTC unit in 1940. He served in World War II in Northern Ireland, England, North Africa and Italy, and

Dade Moeller •• Steward of Environmental Health Dade William Moeller, who passed away Sept. 26 at age 84, was a widely respected researcher, professor and steward of environmental health. But in 1944, he was just another Georgia Tech freshman, albeit one able to claim the distinction of being the only student at his high school to have passed the V-12 Navy entrance exam. In 1948, Mr. Moeller distinguished himself again, graduating magna cum laude from Tech with both a bachelor of science degree in civil engineering and a master’s degree in environmental engineering under his belt. He then joined the U.S. Public Health Service as a commissioned officer, which led him to being stationed across United States, at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico and the service’s headquarters in Washington, D.C. The Health Service sponsored Mr. Moeller’s return to academia, his 1957 PhD in nuclear engineering from North Carolina State University. Soon after, he launched into the professional study of radiation, which would define his life’s work. He first taught radiation protection courses at the Public Health Service’s Radiological Health Training Center in Cincinnati in 1959, then became a certified health physicist and a certified environmental engineer; by 1961 he was the officer in charge at the Northeastern Radiological Health Laboratory in Winchester, Mass. There, Mr. Moeller’s staff studied the radioactive fallout from weapons testing and the effects of radiation on children’s thyroids. After retiring from the Public Health Service in 1966, he

began his 26-year tenure at the Harvard University School of Public Health in Boston. There, among other accomplishments, he wrote a textbook, Environmental Health, which entered its fourth edition in 2011 and is used in public health graduate programs nationwide. After his retirement in the early 90s, he was granted the honor of professor emeritus. Mr. Moeller was active in a number of organizations striving to protect the health and safety of the American public and its environment against the threats of ionizing radiation. He became president of the Health Physics Society and chaired a number of committees for the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Council of Radiological Protection and Measurements, International Commission of Radiological Protection, National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Environmental Engineers, among others. He received numerous professional awards, including the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s Meritorious Achievement Award and a 1999 induction into the Georgia Institute of Technology Engineering Hall of Fame. The legacy of Mr. Moeller’s work lives on, notably in the mission of the environmental consulting company founded in 1993 by his son Matt, which bears his name: Dade Moeller & Associates. Today, the company’s nine offices across the United States employ more certified health physicians than any other company in America.

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