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| Obituaries |
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FACULTY / STAFF
Rolf A. Faste, of Stanford, March 6, at 59, of esophageal
cancer. He was associate professor of mechanical engineering
and director of the product design program, a joint
program of the mechanical engineering and art departments.
He earned
a bachelor’s degree in 1965 from Stevens Institute
of Technology, a master’s in 1972 from Tufts U. and,
in 1977, a second bachelor’s degree in architecture
from Syracuse U. After teaching design at Syracuse
U., he came to Stanford in 1984. He designed and helped
develop
many products, including medical devices, and held
five patents. He also taught at the Stanford Center for
Technology
and Innovation in Kyoto, Japan. He and his wife served
as resident fellows at Toyon Hall for nine years. Survivors:
his wife, Linda; two sons, Trygve and Haakon; his brother;
his sister; and his mother.
Robert J. Giguere, of Mountain
View, February 10, at 83, of cancer. He earned his
bachelor’s
degree at Holy Cross College and his master’s in
literature from Boston U. in 1941. In 1945, he was ordained
a
priest at Catholic U. and went on to study at the Sulpician
Seminary,
receiving his PhD in philosophy from Catholic U. in
1950. He was associate chaplain at St. Ann’s Newman
Center in Palo Alto and at Stanford from the early
1950s to 1981.
In addition, he taught at St. Joseph’s and St. Patrick’s
colleges, St. Patrick’s Seminary, Santa Clara U.
and the College of Notre Dame.
Walter E. Hoadley, of
Reno, Nev., February 19, at 86, of pneumonia. He was
a senior research fellow at Stanford’s
Hoover Institution. He earned his bachelor’s, master’s
and doctoral degrees at UC-Berkeley. He was chief economist
and executive vice president of the Bank of America
in San Francisco, senior economist at Federal Reserve
banks in Chicago and Philadelphia, and a regent of the
University
of California. He served as president of the Commonwealth
Club of California in 1987 and was a commentator for
Fox
television. Survivors: his wife of 63 years, Virginia;
and his son, Dick.
William “Bill” Kirk, of Atherton,
February 14, at 76, of cancer. He earned his bachelor’s
degree in history from Cornell University in 1952. In 1956,
he began working for the Stanford Linear Accelerator
Center
as a technical writer, and he continued to work at
SLAC
for 37 years. He was the founding editor in 1994 of
Beam Line, the quarterly particle physics magazine.
Survivors: his daughter, Betsy Forrest; his son, John;
and two
grandchildren.
Wolfgang E. Kuhn, of Stanford, March 10,
at 88, of
heart failure. He was professor emeritus of music and
education and a pioneer in computer-assisted instruction
in music.
He earned a bachelor’s degree in music in 1936, a
master’s degree in 1943, and his doctorate in music
education in 1953, all from the U. of Illinois. After
heading the music programs at the U. of Illinois and
the U. of
Colorado, he came to Stanford, where he oversaw the
graduate programs in music education at the School
of Education and the department of music. In 1973, with
curriculum
and
systems programmer Paul Lorton Jr., PhD ’73, he developed
a computerized system to teach music skills; in 1982,
they released MusicMaster software. His wife of 56
years, Mary,
died in 1995. Survivors: three daughters, Virginia
Day, Suanna Breed and Elizabeth Bacchetti; six grandchildren;
and one great-grandchild.
Jan F. Triska, of Menlo Park,
February 20, at 81. He
was professor emeritus of political science. During
World War II, he was deported from Czechoslovakia to
a Nazi labor
camp; he fled communist Czechoslovakia in 1948. He
earned law degrees from Yale Law School in 1950 and
1952 and his
doctorate in political science from Harvard in 1957.
After working at the Hoover Institution, he taught
at UC-Berkeley and Cornell, joining Stanford’s political science
department in 1960. He headed the Stanford Studies
of the Communist System, co-chaired the International Relations
Program from 1983 to 1987, directed the Overseas Study
Program in Poland and chaired the department of political
science four times. He retired in 1989. The author
of 14
books, more than 60 articles and two monograph series,
he received many awards, including the Medal of Merit
in 2002 for service to the Czech Republic. Survivors: his
wife of 51 years, Carmel; two sons, Mark, ’79, and
John, ’81;
four granddaughters; and a sister. |
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1920s
Clarence William “Clu” Carey, ’25, of
Menlo Park, March 4, at 100. He was an economics major
and a member of Kappa Sigma and the Band. After graduating
from
UC-San Francisco Dental School, he practiced for 10
years in San Jose until moving to Palo Alto in 1941;
he retired in 1977. An inventor of orthodontic appliances
and
a fellow
of the International College of Dentists, he taught
at several universities and published many professional
papers. He played
violin and viola in the Bohemian Club orchestra for
35 years and in the Strollers, a quintet he co-founded,
for 25 years.
His wife of 52 years, Leone, died in 1985. Survivors:
two daughters, Patricia Urbain and Diantha Jayred;
four grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.
Donald Eastman
Clark, ’25,
Engr. ’26, of Coronado,
Calif., January 26, at 98. A chemistry major, he was
a member of Phi Delta Theta and the men’s soccer team.
In 1931, he joined the Kelco Co., the West Coast’s
main harvester and processor of kelp, as a production
manager. He became
president of the company in 1950 and retired in 1969.
He served on the boards of the San Diego Natural History
Museum
and the Coronado Hospital. His wife of 60 years, Lila,
died in 1990. His brothers, Birge, ’14, and David, ’26,
and his sister, Esther, ’21, MD ’25, also predeceased
him. Survivors: two sons, Aldon, ’54, MD ’57,
and Garet; his daughter, Margaret Bobertz, ’56; 12
grandchildren, including Karen Clark Baker, ’78; and
19 great-grandchildren.
Dorothy Chilcott Burke, ’29,
of Menlo Park, December 9, at 94. She majored in French and
was a member of
Chi Omega. A founding member of the Archives Committee
of the Redwood
City Public Library, she served as its secretary for
nearly 10 years. Her husband of 23 years, Bill, ’31,
Engr. ’33,
predeceased her. Survivors: two sons, Randall and Gary;
her daughter, Margaret; 10 grandchildren; and eight
great-grandchildren.
Ruth Elizabeth “Tin” Tinsley
Storey, ’29,
MA ’31, PhD ’37, of Palo Alto, February 2, at
95, of respiratory and heart failure. A psychology
major and member of Kappa Alpha Theta, she was elected
to Phi Beta
Kappa and Cap and Gown. After working as a school psychologist
and a researcher for Stanford and the Ford Foundation,
she supervised the foreign graduate admissions program
at Stanford
until her retirement in 1977. Her husband of 48 years,
Dean, ’26,
MD ’37, died in 1981. Survivors: two sons, Stephen,
MD ’65, and James; two daughters, Jane Botsford, ’65,
and Elizabeth; five grandchildren, including Amy Rattner, ’95,
MA ’96;
and five great-grandchildren.
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1930s
William M. Clough, ’30, of San Marcos, Calif., December
4, at 94. He was a member of Delta Chi. He left Stanford
to become a pilot, and his work centered on airplanes
and airport businesses. His wife of 50 years, Marian, predeceased
him. Survivors: his second wife, of 10 years, Connie;
his
son, William; his daughter, Sarah Paxton; two grandchildren;
two great-grandchildren; and four stepchildren, including
Caroline Kyle Parrish, ’60.
Cameron W. Wolfe, ’31,
of Piedmont, Calif., December 19, at 92, of pneumonia. A
political science major,
he was a member of Zeta Psi and a Chaparral magazine
staffer. He
earned his law degree from UC-Berkeley in 1934 and
then worked as assistant district attorney under Earl
Warren. During
World War II, he served as a code breaker at the rank
of lieutenant commander. Afterward, he began his own
practice and, from 1946 to 1971, served as U.S. commissioner
and U.S.
magistrate in Oakland. At 65, he was appointed U.S.
bankruptcy judge for the Northern District of California
and was senior
bankruptcy judge until his retirement at 81. Survivors:
his wife of 66 years, Jean; three sons, Cameron Jr.,
Bruce
and
Robert; eight grandchildren; four great-grandchildren;
and his sister.
Howard F. Uphoff, ’32, MA ’39,
of Culpeper, Va., February 15, at 94. He was an English
major. Survivors
include his daughter, Linda.
Joseph H. Davis, ’33, MD ’38,
of Menlo Park, March 5, at 88, of heart failure. He was a
physical
science major. During World War II, he served in the
Army Medical
Corps. He joined the Palo Alto Medical Clinic in 1946,
as its second pediatrician. The department was renamed
the Esther
Clark and Joseph Davis Department of Pediatrics in
2000. During his 52-year career, he was a member of
the Stanford Medical School clinical faculty and headed the
pediatrics
department of Stanford’s student health center for
11 years; he also founded the Boy Scouts Medical Explorers
Post at the Palo Alto Clinic. After his retirement,
he volunteered at the Drew Medical Center in East Palo
Alto and Samaritan
House Free Clinic in Redwood City. He was honored with
the 2003 Tall Tree Award for “outstanding professional” by
the Palo Alto Chamber of Commerce. His wife, Carol,
died in 1998. Survivors: his son, Leland; two daughters,
Nancy
Levy and Betsy Faen; and six grandchildren.
Calhoun “Cal” Shorts, ’33,
of Mercer Island, Wash., in March, at 92. An economics major,
he was
a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon. He earned his law
degree from the
U. of Washington. During World War II, he served as
a Naval officer and navigator. He later started Fiberpane,
a plastics
fabrication business. In the 1950s, he returned to
school for a teaching degree. He taught physics and
chemistry at
Seattle’s Queen Anne High School for 10 years. In 1984,
he and his wife, Harriet, deeded their 7-acre property
to the city of Bellevue for the Bellevue Botanical
Garden. Harriet
died in 1997. Survivors include his son, Binkley; and
a brother, Bruce, ’31.
Allen Dale Reedy, ’34,
of Hillsboro, N.H., November 16, at 90. He was a mathematics
major and member of
the men’s
track and field team. He taught high school in California
for several years before becoming one of the early
aviators for Pan American Airlines.
Arthur F. Brown, ’35,
of Forbestown, Calif. He was a political science major.
Survivors include his wife.
Andrew
Whitehouse Simpson III, ’35, of Carmel, Calif.,
January 8, at 88. He worked in the brokerage business
with Schwabacher and Co. in San Francisco until 1940.
In 1941,
he acquired Western Die Casting Co. in Emeryville,
Calif., and served as its president until 1985. He
was a director
of the Commercial Club of San Francisco and a third-generation
director of the Bank of Stockton. Survivors: his wife
of 50 years, Ann; three daughters, Pamela Davis, Suzanne
Mattmiller
and Diana Baldanza; two sons, Thomas Bowman and Andrew
IV; six grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
Samuel “Sam” Cummings
Hair, ’36, of Charlotte,
N.C., at 87, of lung cancer. He graduated from the
U. of Chicago. During World War II, he served as a
pilot in the
Navy. He founded Interstate Advertising Co., which
later became Naegele Outdoor Advertising Co., and served
as president
of the Charlotte Advertising Club. His memoir, Castle
Park, was recently published. Survivors: his wife of
53 years, Elisabeth; four daughters, Camilla Bain,
Elisabeth DeMarse,
Stephanie and Julie; and six grandchildren.
Ralph Halsey
Raymond, ’36, of Port Townsend, Wash.,
May 23, 2002, at 88, of heart disease. He majored in
general engineering and was a member of El Cuadro.
During World War
II, he served as a communications sergeant in the Marine
Corps. Following his retirement after 32 years with
PT&T,
he and his wife moved from Los Altos to Washington.
Survivors: his wife of 64 years, Jean; his son, John;
two grandchildren;
and a sister.
Marion Russel Walker, ’36, of Ventura,
Calif., July 28, 2002, at 87. He was a preclinical medicine
major
and member of the Band. After graduation, he returned
to Ventura
to take over the family ranch. He served as president
of the American Iris Society and chaired the board
of the Claremont
School of Theology. Survivors: his wife of 65 years,
Dorothy, ’36;
four sons, Russell, Donald, Philip and Steven; seven
grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.
Clifton H.
Woodhams Jr., ’36, of Palo Alto, March 3,
at 88. He majored in general engineering. From 1936
to 1950, he managed the Johnson-Williams Electronics
Co. He then joined
San Mateo County Title Co. and was president from 1965
until his retirement in 1979. Survivors: his wife,
Gladys; three
daughters, Judith Collas, Jeanne Saier and Janet Roberts;
two sons, Thomas and Richard; 11 grandchildren; 10
great-grandchildren; his brother, Wilbur, ’38; and
his sister, Carol Peters, ’41.
Louis J. Bitterlin, ’37,
MA ’49, of San Diego,
Calif., January 20, at 88, of complications from a
stroke. He was a political science major and member
of Alpha Delta
Phi. After teaching and coaching at the California
Military Academy in Los Angeles, he became headmaster
of Brown Military
Academy in Pacific Beach, Calif., and, in 1958, co-founded
the San Diego Military Academy in Solana Beach, Calif.
He served as president of the Western Association of
Private Schools and published The Four Academies (1996),
a
history
of private military education in San Diego. Survivors:
five children, Victoria Guidi, Gretchen, Mark, Chris
and Jody;
and eight grandchildren.
Sergius M. Bryner, ’37, MD ’41,
of Menlo Park, February 10, at 87. He majored in biological
sciences.
During World War II, he served as a captain in the
Army. In 1948,
he joined the Palo Alto Medical Clinic as an internist
and later served as chief of cardiology. After retiring,
he was
chief of electrocardiology for the Stanford Medical
Center. Survivors: his wife, Ann; four daughters, Carol,
Marget,
Kitty and Suzanne; his son, James; one grandchild;
three great-grandchildren; and his brother, Cyril, ’31.
William
Goldner, ’37, of Danville, Calif., January
18, at 88, of Parkinson’s disease. He majored in economics.
During World War II, he served in the Army. In 1955,
he earned his PhD in economics from UC-Berkeley. He
taught statistics
at Bowling Green State U. for three years, then returned
to teach at Berkeley and other Bay Area universities
until 1987. He headed the design team for the Bay Area
Transportation Study Commission’s projective land use
model and authored three Association of Bay Area Governments
publications.
Survivors: his wife of 21 years, Sally Germain; two
sons, Loren and
Michael; one stepson; one stepdaughter; and four stepgrandchildren.
Chester
W. Olcott, ’38, of Newport, Ore., February
15, at 88. He was a social science and social thought
major and a member of Phi Delta Theta and the football
team. During
World War II, he served in the Navy and spent four
years in a prisoner of war camp in Japan. He worked
for the Lincoln
County (Ore.) public utilities department until his
retirement in 1976. An avid outdoorsman, he was a lifetime
member of
the Coast Guard Auxiliary. His wife, Helen, died in
2002. Survivors: two brothers; two nephews; and a niece.
Mervyn
Wangenheim Jr., ’38, of Friday Harbor, Wash.,
February 12, at 85, of complications from hip surgery.
He was an economics major, member of El Toro and manager
of
the men’s track team. He worked for California Food
Processors until 1948 and then founded the Granny Goose
snack food company with his father and brother. In 1969,
he sold
the company and bought a cable TV company that served
Northern California mountain communities. He later worked
as a freelance
financial adviser. Survivors: his wife, Laurie; two
daughters, Anne Cronin and Betsy Blakeslee; seven grandchildren;
and
four great-grandchildren.
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1940s
Edmund P. Lobherr, ’40, of Pacific Palisades, Calif.,
January 18, at 86. He was a general engineering major
and member of Kappa Alpha. He worked for McDonnell Douglas
and
spent his career in defense and space development.
He retired in 1986 as a vice president with TRW. His wife
of 63 years,
Helene, died five days after he did. Survivors: two
sons, Stephen and Scott; his daughter, Sally Killeen; four
grandchildren;
one great-grandson; and his sister.
Arthur John Olsen, ’40,
of Pebble Beach, Calif., January 17, at 88. He was an economics
major and member of
Kappa Sigma. During World War II, he served as an engineering
officer
in the Navy. He joined FMC Corp. in 1946 and retired
in 1978 as vice president of FMC’s machinery division.
After retirement, he became part owner and financial
vice president
of Carmel Travel. He was a senior fellow of the Monterey
Institute of International Studies and was active in
the Friends of Hopkins Marine Station. Survivors: his
wife of
58 years, Marilyn, ’42; his daughter, Kristin Minot, ’70;
his son, Erik; four grandchildren; and his brother.
Charles
Gilbert Bragg, ’41, of La Cañada, Calif.,
at 82. He was a chemistry major and member of Theta
Xi. He worked as a chemical engineer before becoming
a stockbroker in Los Angeles. Survivors: his wife, Martha
Ann, ’43;
two daughters, Nancy and Janet; two sons, Quincy and
Charles, ’67;
and two grandchildren.
William Henry Doheny Sr., ’41,
of Los Angeles, January 12, at 83. He was a general
engineering major and member
of the baseball team. During World War II, he served
in the Navy Reserve. He worked in the oil and gas industry,
served
for 36 years on the Unocal Corp. board and was involved
in various philanthropies. Survivors: his wife, Onnalee
Olson; his son, William, ’69; his daughter, Wendy McWethy, ’71;
and his brother, Patrick, ’45.
Elsa Ruth McMurphy Preminger, ’41,
of Palo Alto, February 3, at 83, of pulmonary disease. She
attended graduate
school at UC-Berkeley and, for six years, was a social
worker in
the Alameda County probation office. She was a member
of many philanthropic and civic organizations. Her
husband of
53 years, Ralph, ’40, died in 1995. Survivors: two
sons, Steve and Kenneth, ’75, MA ’76; two daughters,
Sue Madrigal and Jean; and five grandchildren.
Theodore
K. “TK” Meyer, ’42, of San Francisco,
February 1, at 82, of congestive heart failure. During
World War II, he worked for Pan American Airlines as
a mechanic. Afterward, he joined the family construction
business,
Theo.
G. Meyer and Sons. He handled sales and marketing for
the company, which built the Civic Center garage in
San Francisco, the College of San Mateo, apartment
buildings and private
homes. Survivors: his wife, Lee; three sons, Ted, Bill
and
Ken; four grandchildren; a stepson; and a brother.
Donald
Elliot Spickard, ’42, of Seattle, January 15,
at 82. He was a prebusiness major and member of Alpha
Sigma Phi. During World War II, he served in the Navy.
He earned
his law degree at the U. of Washington Law School.
He worked in the legal department at Safeco Insurance
for 32 years,
becoming corporate vice president in charge of all
surety operations in 1967. He retired in 1980 and later
built a
consultancy practice. An advocate for and mentor to
women and minorities, he received the Washington State
Bar’s
Award of Merit in 1971. His first wife, Mary Alice, ’42,
predeceased him. Survivors: his wife, Joan Ullman;
two sons, Jim and Paul; and four grandchildren.
Beatrice
A. “Bea” MacDonald Allen, ’43,
of Tacoma, Wash., October 28, at 81, of kidney disease.
She majored in history. During World War II, she worked
for the
American Red Cross. An active community volunteer,
she served on the national board of directors for the
Junior Leagues
of America. Her husband of 44 years, Herrick, died
in 1990. Survivors: her son, Stuart; her daughter,
Caroline Brenneman;
and four grandchildren.
Robert Yates Griswold, ’43,
of Menlo Park, February 8, at 81. A general engineering major,
he was a member
of Alpha Tau Omega. He served in the Army from 1943
to 1946 and then worked in the refinery division of Bechtel
Corp.
until 1983. Survivors: his wife of 60 years, Betsey, ’44;
four daughters, Lee Crane, Beth Hindman, Mary Mosier
and Ann Ostermann; his son, Jack; eight grandchildren;
three great-grandchildren; and a sister.
Charles Milton Hutchison
Jr., ’43, MS ’48, of
Atherton, in March, at 82. He was a general engineering
major and member of Sigma Nu and the men’s tennis team.
During World War II, he served in the Navy and achieved
the rank
of lieutenant commander. He was president of Kortick
Manufacturing Co. in San Francisco. Survivors: his
wife, Rosemary; two
sons, James and Easton; his daughter, Sara Fleischer, ’76;
and three stepchildren.
William “Bill” Graham
Sumner, ’43, of Carlsbad,
Calif., March 5, at 82. A social science and social
thought major, he was a member of Beta Theta Pi and
played string
bass in a Stanford jazz ensemble. During World War
II, he served in the Navy. He worked for a county newspaper
in Coolidge,
Ariz., before becoming city editor for the Pasadena
Star News-Independent. In the 1960s, he was a political
correspondent for Knight-Ridder and then served as
editorial page
editor
for the St. Paul Dispatch and the Pioneer Press until
1981. After retiring, he wrote a column for Carlsbad’s
local paper. Survivors: his wife, Mildred, ’45; two
sons, Greg and William; and three daughters, Sally
Page, Ann Helegeson
and Wendolyn Leadabrand.
Theodore “Ted” Amedeo
Falasco, ’44, of
Los Banos, Calif., November 30, at 81. A graphic arts
major, he was a member of Theta Chi. He served two
years as an officer
in the Army Corps of Engineers. Afterward, he managed
his family’s general contracting business, expanding
it to include allied businesses. He was involved with
many civic
and charitable organizations and, with his wife, endowed
professorships at UC-Merced and Stanford Medical School.
Survivors: his wife of 47 years, Janine; two daughters,
Susan Toscano and Linda; two grandchildren; two brothers;
and one
sister.
Peggy Boothe Mensinger, ’44, of Modesto, Calif.,
October 19, at 79. A political science major and member
of Cap and Gown, she was an editor of the Daily and a
student
body vice
president. After graduation, she ran her family’s Modesto
fruit-drying business and was involved in public service.
The first woman to serve on Modesto’s City Council,
she was elected in 1973 and re-elected in 1977. She
also served two terms as mayor, from 1979 to 1987.
A longtime Stanford volunteer, she served as president
of Stanford
Associates.
Survivors: her husband, John, ’40; two sons, John, ’76,
and Stewart; her daughter, Susan, ’78, JD ’83,
MBA ’84; and four grandchildren.
Harry C. Miller, ’47,
JD ’50, of Calistoga, Calif.,
January 19, at 82. He was a social science and social
thought major and a member of Chi Psi. During World
War II, he served
as a Naval officer. A trial lawyer for the state of
California, he was involved with acquisition of rights
of way for state
freeways and highways. He retired to Calistoga in 1980.
His wife, Cecelia, died in 1999. Survivors include
his sister.
George
A. Bevier, ’48, of Rum Point, Placencia, Belize,
January 5, at 74, of cancer. He was a biological sciences
major and a member of Phi Kappa Sigma and the wrestling
team. During the Korean War, he served in the military.
He worked
for many years in Central America with the World Health
Organization, Pan American Health Organization and
USAID. Later, he worked
as operations head of the world malaria program for
the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. In 1971,
he moved to Belize
with his family to open Rum Point Inn. Survivors: his
wife of 51 years, Corol; two sons, Wade and Tico; his
daughter, Tani; nine grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
Sarah
Jane “Sally” Sturtevant Lee, ’48,
of Santa Barbara, Calif., February 1, at 75. She majored
in economics. She was a longtime volunteer for Children’s
Hospital of Los Angeles and for Stanford and arts organizations.
Survivors: her husband, Granville, ’43, MBA ’48;
two sons, Stephen and Stanford; and two daughters,
Catherine and Sharon.
Gertrude B. Keyston McLaren, ’48,
of Menlo Park, December 3, at 76. She majored in education.
She worked as a
real estate agent in the Menlo Park area for 30 years
and was
a volunteer at the Menlo Park senior center. Her husband,
William, predeceased her. Survivors: two sons, Bob
and Bill; her daughter, Linda Cristo; and two granddaughters.
L.
Ward Wiseman, ’48, of Anaheim, Calif., February
22, at 76. He majored in biological sciences. After
serving in the Navy, he graduated from USC Medical
School and completed
his residency training in orthopedic surgery. He practiced
in Anaheim for 40 years and was chief of staff at both
Martin Luther Hospital and Anaheim Memorial Hospital.
Survivors: his wife of 52 years, Frances; four daughters,
Teri
Kuhlman,
Ann Hanks, Kim Sleeter and Julie Steed; nine grandchildren;
and a sister.
Thomas D. Boyd III, ’49, of Longmont,
Colo., February 16, at 81. He was a communication major and
member
of Phi Kappa Sigma. During World War II, he served
as an Army officer.
He worked for regional newspapers until recalled to
service during the Korean War. He had a long career
in public relations
in the California telecommunications industry and moved
to Colorado in 1987, where he became a professional
landscape photographer. Survivors: his wife of 46 years,
Jeanne;
his
son, Alan; one granddaughter; and his stepson.
Robert
Christian Leefeldt, ’49, of San Francisco, January
1, at 74. A political science major, he was a member
of Phi Gamma Delta. He worked for the Foote Cone & Belding
advertising firm in Piedmont, Calif., and co-founded
the Presidio Performing
Arts Foundation in addition to founding the Piedmont
Parks and Art Festival and the Piedmont Parks Improvement
Fund.
His wife of 47 years, Mary-Tom, ’50, died in 1997.
Survivors: his daughter, Irene Orum; three sons, Christian,
Timothy and Randall, ’75,
MS ’79; and a sister.
Giles
W. Mead Jr., ’49, MA ’53, PhD ’53,
of Napa, Calif., February 13, at 75, of complications
from surgery. He majored in biological sciences. He was laboratory
director in charge of fish taxonomy for the U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington,
D.C., from 1956 to 1960; curator of fishes at the Museum
of Comparative
Zoology and a professor of biology at Harvard U. from
1960 to 1970; and director of the Natural History Museum
of Los
Angeles County from 1970 to 1980. In addition to biology
publications, he authored Museum Ethics and was
a leader in land and habitat protection throughout Napa County.
Survivors: three daughters, Parry, Jane and Gale; two
sons,
Whit and
Richie; six grandchildren; and one great-grandson.
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1950s
Dow W. Carpenter, ’50, MBA ’55,
of Inverness, Calif., October 22, at 75, of heart disease.
He was a political
science major and member of Zeta Psi. During the Korean
War, he served in the Navy. He worked for Ramo Wooldridge
Co.
(later TRW) and McKinsey & Co. management consulting
before joining Times Mirror Co. in 1964. He oversaw
Times Mirror’s book and magazine publishing operations,
its cable television business and other activities,
and served as chief financial officer and a senior vice president
before
retiring in 1987. Survivors: his wife, Dian, ’55; two
daughters, Carolyn Fox and Karen; and two grandchildren.
Lydia
Anne Parks Wintemute, ’50, of Palo Alto, February
17, at 74. She majored in sociology. She worked for
Stanford’s
Office of Development and retired in 1987. Survivors:
her husband of 53 years, Norman; two daughters, Susan
Bernal and Jean Parcher; her son, Scott; six grandchildren;
one
great-granddaughter; and her brother, George, ’58.
Jerome
B. Block, ’52, of Palos Verdes Peninsula, Calif.,
in January. He majored in biological sciences. He earned
his medical degree at NYU and practiced at Boston U.,
U. of Washington and the National Institutes of Health
in Maryland.
While at the NIH, he developed the NCI-Baltimore Cancer
Research Center and was the associate director of the
Clinical Center
in Bethesda. In 1963, he served at the Weitzman Institute
in Israel. Later, he became professor of medicine and
chief of medical oncology at the Harbor/ UCLA Medical
Center. He
was editor in chief of Medicine of the Americas, and
co-founder and CEO of Genetic Services Management,
which designs new
initiatives to aid cancer patients. He was co-recipient
of the Karger Memorial International Prize for Leukemia
Research and was honored by the Academia Sinica of the Republic
of
China for development of Taiwan’s first training and
certification programs in medical oncology. Suvivors
include his children and grandchildren.
Hélène
Dorothy Dupre de Baubigny Homan Madeira, ’52,
of Haverford, Pa., October 30. She majored in romantic
languages. After graduation, she lived in Paris and
Brussels before
returning to the United States. She worked for many
years as a travel consultant. Survivors: her husband,
Crawford; two daughters, Mia and Madeleine Homan; 14 grandchildren;
a brother, André, ’53, JD, ’58; and three
stepdaughters.
Frank Robert “Bob” Studdert, ’52,
of Inverness, Calif., January 4, at 71. He was a member
of Delta Kappa
Epsilon. He earned his law degree at the U. of Idaho
and practiced for many years in San Francisco, San
Rafael, Calif.,
and Inverness. Survivors: his wife, Sandra; and his
mother, Lillian.
Jack Radcliffe Boswell, ’53, of Pacific
Palisades, Calif., January 24, at 72, of complications
from diabetes.
He was an industrial engineering major and a member
of Phi Delta Theta and the football team. Survivors:
his wife of
42 years, Janice; two sons, Steven and John; his daughter,
Julie Hughes; four grandchildren; and a sister.
Leo
James Grold, ’53, MD ’56, of Marina Del Rey,
Calif., at 70, of cancer. He majored in biological
sciences. He trained in psychiatry at the Menninger
Foundation in Kansas.
As a captain in the Army, he established a mental hygiene
clinic in Frankfurt, Germany. In 1979, he established
the Mental Health Referral Service of Southern California.
His
expertise was often sought in court cases, hostage
situations and after such events as the 1992 Los Angeles
riots. In addition
to his 40-year private practice, he was medical director
at the Resthaven and Westwood psychiatric hospitals
and taught at USC and the Southern California Psychoanalytic
Society.
Survivors: his wife of 44 years, Janis; two sons, Kevin
and Eric; his daughter, Katherine; one granddaughter;
and a sister.
John Duncan Mackenzie, ’53, MA ’57,
of San Rafael, Calif., January 18, at 71. He majored
in psychology. He was
a naturalist and teacher in St. Helena, Calif., and
Ross, Calif. Survivors: three daughters, Heather, Hilary
and Avery;
one grandson; and two sisters.
Harold Aubry Peterson, ’53,
of Redwood City, February 3, 2001, of cancer. He majored
in economics. During World
War II, he served in the Navy. Before venturing into
commercial real estate in the Bay Area and Nevada,
he was a general
contractor and owner of Space Air Conditioning Co.
in Redwood City. He worked most recently for F.W. Spencer
Co. on innovative
ducts for a B.A.R.T. extension. Survivors: his wife,
Theresa; and two daughters, Diana Millette and Debbie
McKee.
William Cunningham Fundenberg Jr., ’54, JD ’58,
of Newport Beach, Calif., March 2, at 71. He majored
in law. He served in the Army and was an avid sailor.
Survivors: three sisters.
George Park Gould, ’54, of
El Segundo, Calif., January 1, at 84. He majored in
electrical engineering. For 25 years,
he served in the Air Force, where he was a pioneer
in space and ballistic missile systems. After retiring
in 1967 with
the rank of colonel, he continued to work in aerospace
with Lulejian & Associates and RAND Corp. Survivors:
his wife of 58 years, Claudia; three sons, Jim, Richard
and Kenneth;
his daughter, Diane; three grandchildren; and two sisters.
Ernest
Y. Sevier, ’54, JD ’56, of San Mateo,
November 3, at 70. A prelaw major, he was a member
of Kappa Sigma. He served in the Air Force. Admitted
to the California
Bar in 1965, he practiced with Severson & Werson in San
Francisco for 37 years. Survivors: his wife, Connie;
and two daughters, Carolyn and Katie.
John Dewolf Agnew, ’55,
MA ’62, of Brookline,
Mass., January 9, at 69. He majored in political science.
From 1952 to 1954, he served in the Marine Corps. He
resided and worked in Brazil for 20 years.
Richard
Sloan “Dick” Miller, ’56, of San
Jose, January 5, at 69. A political science major,
he was a member of Breakers. He was a volunteer for
the Stanford Hall of Fame and attended 53 consecutive
Big Games.
Survivors:
his wife, Barbara; his son, Brett; and his daughter,
Caroline Barichievich.
Jo Ann Marie “Jody” Hill
Zidbeck, ’56,
of Imperial Beach, Calif., January 25, at 68, of cancer.
She graduated from USC with a degree in education in
1962 and was a third-grade teacher, first in South
Pasadena, Calif.,
and then in Imperial Beach. Survivors: her husband
of 48 years, William, ’54; her son, Scott; her daughter,
Suzy; and a grandson.
Sam Roth Nageley, ’59, of Sacramento,
February 27, at 66, of cancer. A political science major,
he was a member
of Kappa Sigma. He earned his law degree at Willamette
U. From 1963 to 1966, he served as a captain in the Air Force.
He began a private practice in Sacramento and was the
founding
partner of Nageley, Meredith & Miller Inc. Survivors:
his wife, Rhoda; two daughters, Janet Meredith and
Julie Keowen; three grandchildren; a brother; a sister; and
his
first wife, Nancy, ’59.
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1960s
Ronald A. Fernandes, ’60, of Visalia, Calif., December
11, at 64, of cancer. A political science major, he
was a member of Sigma Chi and the football team. He
worked in the
produce industry for more than 40 years, establishing
his own brokerage business in 1986. He was co-founder
of the
Loomis (Calif.) Youth Soccer League. Survivors: his
son, Antone; two daughters, Paula Lanman and Marianne;
one granddaughter;
and a sister.
Richard Lloyd Noble, ’61, JD ’64,
of Los Angeles, December 10, at 63. He was a political
science major. He
worked for the San Francisco firm of Cooper, White & Cooper
until 1967, when he became a partner with Voegelin,
Barton, Harris & Callister in Los Angeles. In 1970, he
established his own firm, Noble & Campbell. A member
of the board of governors of Thomas Aquinas College
since 1977, he also
served on the Colorado River Board of California from
1983 through 1994. Survivors: a half-sister; and a
half-brother.
George B. Alexander, ’63, of New York,
January 24, of multiple myeloma. He majored in English.
He earned his
PhD at NYU. He was an Air Force veteran and a retired
professor. Survivors: his sister; and his brother.
Miriam
Cecile “Mitzy” Odell Hagensen, ’67,
of Vancouver, Wash., February 1, at 57, of metastasized
melanoma. She majored in history. A devoted community
volunteer, she
received this year’s Vancouver YWCA Woman of Achievement
award. She was first lady of Vancouver for 12 years
while her husband, Bruce, ’66, was mayor. Survivors:
her husband; and two daughters, Elise and Erika.
Janeen
Kerper, ’67, of San Diego, January 16, at 56,
of lung cancer. She majored in French. She earned her
master’s
in romance languages at Harvard and graduated from
Hastings College of Law. She joined Sullivan, Jones & Archer
in San Diego and, from 1980 to 1983, was a partner
at Britton & Kerper,
where she specialized in litigation. She taught at
California Western School of Law for 19 years, headed
the school’s
Institute for Criminal Defense Advocacy from 1990 to
1995, and was the academic director of Cal Western’s
McGill Center for Creative Problem Solving from 1997
to 1999, retiring
in 2002. Survivors: her companion, Gordon Jackson;
and two sisters.
Christopher Ancil “Tuna” Martin, ’68,
of Laredo, Texas, February 22, at 55, of a heart attack.
A psychology
major, he was a member of Sigma Chi and the baseball
team. He served as human resources manager for the
Maricopa County
Juvenile Court Center until his retirement in 2000.
Survivors: his wife of 20 years, Patrice Caldwell;
his daughter, Alyssa;
his son, Timothy; a sister; and a brother.
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1970s
Mark Robert Wells, ’71, of Palo Alto, February 10,
at 56. He was an English major and member of El Toro.
Most recently, he worked as a cab driver and Oasis
bar employee in Menlo Park. Survivors: his brother, Colby.
Robert
Lynn “Bob” Kammeyer, ’72, of Sacramento,
of a pulmonary embolism. An economics major, he was
a member of Stanford in Germany 25, Zeta Psi and the
baseball team.
He worked for the California State Board of Equalization
and the California Department of Social Services, and
was a member of the Stanford Associates. Survivors:
his son, Michael, ’01; and his former wife, Francine, ’72.
Catherine
Mary Potter, ’72, MS ’77, of Los Altos,
March 14, at 53. She majored in electrical engineering.
She worked as a Hewlett-Packard software engineer for
30 years
and received numerous awards for her work. Survivors
include her aunt.
Patrice C. Badstubner, ’75, of Dallas,
March 10, at 49, of a brain tumor. She was a psychology
major. She worked
as a writer and communication and information technology
consultant in California before moving to Texas in
1995. A playwright and poet, she was active in many
volunteer organizations
and served as president of the Stanford Dallas-Fort
Worth Alumni Club. Survivors: her husband, Joel Weinthal, ’81;
her son, Jeffrey; and her daughter, Dianne.
Marcy Lynn
Epstein Wolff, ’77, of Lisle, Ill., December
17, at 47, of breast cancer. She was a biological sciences
major and participant in student drama. After graduating
from UCLA Medical School in 1981, she was a family
practitioner at Edward Hospital in Naperville, Ill.
Survivors: her husband,
Thomas, PhD ’80; her daughter, Ilana; her son, Joseph;
her parents; and two sisters.
Don Mar Wee, ’78, of
Evanston, Ill., March 11, at 46, of nasopharyngeal
cancer. A psychology major, he participated
in student drama. He worked for Information Technologies
in Chicago. Survivors: his wife, Siobhan; and his son,
Thomas.
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EARTH SCIENCES
William “Bill” Downes Payne, PhD ’71 (geology),
of Englewood, Colo., December 16, at 66, of a heart
attack. He earned his bachelor’s degree in 1959 from
the Colorado School of Mines. After serving as an officer
in the Army,
he worked as a mine geologist with the Anaconda Co.,
then for Anglo American Corp. in Zambia and, while in graduate
school, for Minexco. From 1973 to 1981, he was Noranda’s
southwestern district geologist. He then became area
manager for Getty Mining Co. and, in 1986, began consulting
as a principal
of Engineering Dynamics Inc. in Colorado. Survivors:
his wife of 15 years, Suzanne; his daughter, Rebecca
Clayton; two grandchildren;
a sister; and four stepsons.
EDUCATION
Malcolm Paul Douglass, EdD ’54, of Claremont, Calif.,
December 29, at 79, of cancer. During World War II,
he served in the Army. He earned his undergraduate
degree from Pomona
College in 1947 and his master’s from Columbia U. in
1948. He was an elementary school teacher and principal
before teaching education for 40 years at Claremont
Graduate U.,
retiring in 1994. A specialist in the teaching of reading,
he directed the Claremont Reading Conference for 30
years, beginning in 1959. He founded the school’s Center
for Developmental Studies in Education in 1971 and
served as its director until 1989. He wrote four books,
including Learning
to Read: The Quest for Meaning, as well as a number
of scholarly articles. Survivors: his wife of 54 years,
Enid; two sons,
Malcolm Jr. and John; his daughter, Susan Yates; and
four grandchildren. | | | |