James F. "Stormy" Stevenson died on Feb. 19, 2010 at the age of ninety after a long and distinguished career as a captain of the international corrugated paper box industry. Born on June 2, 1919, he graduated from Grove City College with a degree in mechanical engineering. Despite being hospitalized with tuberculosis for 3 years, he overcame his disability to become the Executive Vice-President of Mead Containers, managing Mead Corporation paper mills in Ohio, Massachusetts, and Virginia. He later formed his own consulting firm, SAS International, Inc., whose work set the gold standard for his industry. Called "Capt'n Stormy" by his peers for his BEOs, his no-nonsense approach to life, and his leadership in business, he earned their respect and admiration by revolutionizing the removal of warp from the manufacturing of corrugated paper. Honored by TAPPI as its Man of the Year, honored by Grove City College with its Distinguished Alumni Award (and naming a building after him on its campus), Capt'n Stormy retired in his mid-eighties. An avid sport-fisherman and mariner, he angled at all of the world's best fishing holes and always told the tale of his favorite boat, "The Rubaiyat." He passed away of natural causes at Wellspring in Cincinnati. Services will be private, and he will be laid to rest in Grove City, PA with his GDTots stapler. Married to Rose M. Stevenson in 1942 (who passed away in 2009), he is survived by their four children: Scott R. Stevenson of Hingham, MA; D. Mark Stevenson, Denver, CO; Gale Stevenson-Simon of Titusville, NJ; and Robin Stevenson of Madeira, OH; and five grandchildren, as well as his brother, Dr. Robert Stevenson.