|
|
 |
| Obituaries |
|
|
FACULTY / STAFF
Robert Friend Kallman, of Stanford,
August 8, at 81, of lung disease. A professor emeritus
of radiation oncology, he conducted early research on
the effects of radiation on cancer cells, helping to
establish the practice as a standard treatment. He served
as an Army medic during World War II and joined the
Stanford faculty in 1956. He was then named head of
the University’s new radiobiology division and,
with funding from the National Cancer Institute, founded
a cancer biology program, which thrives today and has
been emulated by Yale and other major universities.
His first wife, Pat, died in 1966. Survivors: his second
wife, Ingrid; two sons, Timothy,’75, and Lars;
his daughter, Robin; two grandchildren; his brother
and his sister.
Bernard J. Siegel, of Stanford, August
19, at 85. A distinguished cultural anthropologist,
he helped found Stanford’s department of anthropology
together with his mentor, Felix Keesing, in the late
’40s. He served as chairman of his department
on two separate occasions and started the Review
of Anthropology, published by Stanford University
Press. He retired in 1988 as an emeritus professor,
continuing well beyond his official retirement to research,
write and advise graduate students. Survivors: his wife
of 61 years, Charlotte; his daughter, Eve, ’70;
and his son, Paul, ’76.
Edward Teller, of Stanford, September
9, at 95, of complications from a stroke. A senior research
fellow at the Hoover Institution, he played a key role
in U.S. defense and energy policies for more than half
a century. Dubbed the “father of the H-bomb,”
he championed the development of the atomic and hydrogen
bombs, nuclear power and the Strategic Defense Initiative.
He taught physics at UC-Berkeley from 1953 to 1975 while
conducting research at the nearby Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory, which he co-founded in the early
1950s. Among his many awards, he received the National
Medal of Science, the nation’s highest scientific
honor, from President Reagan in 1983. His wife of 66
years, Mici, died in 2000. Survivors: his son, Paul,
’65; his daughter, Wendy; four grandchildren,
including Alex, ’94, and Astro, ’92, MS
’93; and one great-grandchild.
James Theodore, of Sunnyvale, August
17, at 67, of cancer. A professor emeritus of medicine,
he worked for 33 years at the Medical Center , where
he pioneered and served as medical director of the heart-lung
and lung transplant program and served as chief of pulmonary
medicine. Recognized for his contributions to the field
of heart-lung transplantation, he helped train hundreds
of residents, fellows and colleagues. Survivors: his
wife, Gale; his daughter, Laurel Nagle, ’83; two
sons, Rodney, ’88, and Brian; seven grandchildren;
and his brother.
|
| |
|
1920s
Eleanor Parsons Baylis, ’24,
of Laguna Hills, Calif., March 28, at 100. She enjoyed
travel and had many lifelong friends around the world
with whom she corresponded regularly. She was an avid
fan of the Stanford crew and loved greeting the rowers
at the San Diego Crew Classic over the years. Survivors:
her son, John; four grandchildren, including Owen, ’77;
and seven great-grandchildren.
John Cassel Buckwalter, ’24,
Engr. ’32 (mechanical engineering), of Redmond,
Wash., July 18, at 99. A member of Los Arcos, he worked
for Douglas Aircraft Co. for 35 years until his retirement.
He developed and designed many aircraft and was particularly
proud of the C-54, which contributed to the success
of the Berlin airlift after World War II. Survivors:
his wife of 67 years, Ruth; three daughters, Alice Evans,’62,
Ellen Goff, ’63; and Annette Jung,’69; four
granddaughters, including Laura Evans, ’94; one
grandson; and two great-granddaughters.
J. Kenneth Kaseberg, ’28 (undergraduate
law), JD ’30, of Portland, Ore., May 18, at 95,
of a stroke. In addition to his work as an attorney
and consultant, he managed his family’s farmland
in eastern Oregon. His wife of 71 years, Marie, died
in 2001. Survivors: his daughter, Barbara Riper, ’53;
his granddaughter, Alissa Picker, ’84; and two
grandsons, John Riper, JD ’80, and Kevin Riper,
MBA ’82.
Helen Rose Bullard Chapell, ’29
(English), of Sacramento, August 2, at 96. A member
of Gamma Phi Beta, she worked for the Sacramento City
Unified School District, teaching English and math.
Her husband of 41 years, Bert, died in 1976. She is
survived by her son, Gordon.
|
|
1930s
Sidney Grant Lippitt Jr., ’30
(economics), of Mill Valley, Calif., May 24, at 94.
He worked for the California State Relief Administration
until World War II, during which he served as an officer
in the Army Hospital Corps. After the war, he worked
for the Veterans Administration and then for the American
Red Cross as a disaster relief coordinator. From the
early 1950s until his death, he was an investment adviser
in San Francisco’s financial district. His wife,
Peggy, died in 1994. Survivors: his son, Dennis; his
daughter, Jessica Tichenor; four grandchildren; one
great-grandchild; and his brother.
Wayne E. Hunter, ’31 (economics),
of Escondido, Calif., March 18, at 94. He lived in Hawaii
for many years and owned Hunter’s Inc., which
sold office, school and hospital furnishings. His first
wife, Anna, and his second wife, Dorothy, as well as
his two sons, predeceased him. Survivors include two
granddaughters.
Newton Booth Knox Jr., ’31 (social
science/social thought), of Silver Spring, Md., on May
11, 2001, at 91, of pneumonia. He was a geologist, economist
and census adviser who retired from the Agency for International
Development in 1971 after 20 years in Latin America,
North Africa and Vietnam. Once retired, he worked for
the United Nations in family planning and census programs
in North Africa and the Caribbean. Survivors: his wife,
Estelle; his sons, Stephen and Victor; and four grandchildren.
Wilfred H. “Heine” Dole Jr.,
’32 (general engineering), of Gig Harbor, Wash.,
April 9, at 92. A member of Theta Chi, he designed workboats
and yachts. In 1937, he joined Astoria Marine Construction
Co., where he oversaw the engineering and production
of Navy vessels during World War II. He was active in
the Gig Harbor Yacht Club and built model steam engines.
Survivors: his wife of 41 years, Peggy; and his daughter,
Robin.
Fred E. Keeler II, ’32 (social
science/social thought), of Los Angeles, August 17,
at 92. A member of Theta Delta Chi, he worked in the
oil fields near Fresno during the Depression and started
the American Container Co. with three partners, eventually
becoming president and sole owner. Among other things,
the company manufactured figurines and pottery items
for Walt Disney. Later, working in real estate, he was
one of the first developers to recognize a future in
mobile home parks. Survivors: his wife, Laurine; his
daughter, Lynne Cook; his son, Fred III; and his grandson.
Hamer Harold Budge, ’33 (political
science), of Scottsdale, Ariz., July 22, at 92. A former
U.S. congressman, he began his career in public service
as a page in the Idaho legislature and concluded it
as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
He was elected to the Idaho House of Representatives
in 1938 at 27 and served two terms before entering World
War II as a Navy officer. He won a bid for Congress
in 1950 and, in 1964, was tapped by President Johnson
for a seat on the SEC. He became chairman five years
later. At Stanford, he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Sarah Whitmore Bonsack Mathie, ’34
(nursing), of Napa, Calif., January 18, 2003, at 90.
She was one of the first to complete the cooperative
nursing program Stanford established with the U. of
Utah. During World War II, she supervised nurses in
the infectious disease ward of Highland Hospital in
Oakland. She also worked at Stanford Hospital in San
Francisco and as a public health nurse and school nurse
in Berkeley. She retired in 1965. Her husband of 20
years, James, died in 1975. Survivors include her twin
sister.
Glenn A. Pope, ’34 (psychology),
of Sacramento, July 25, at 91. A member of Theta Delta
Chi, he was in the Army Air Force Medical Corps from
1942 to 1946. In addition to his private practice, he
was a senior staff member with Sutter Community Hospitals
and Mercy General Hospital and taught at UC-Davis School
of Medicine for more than 20 years. His wife of 64 years,
Sidney, predeceased him. Survivors: his sons, Glenn
Jr. and Douglas; his daughter, Barbara Pope-Singer;
nine grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
Benjamin Merrill Holt, Jr., ’35
(chemistry), of Pasadena, Calif., on August 22, at 89,
of heart failure. He was a pioneer in geothermal energy
and founded the Ben Holt Co., which built geothermal
plants in Nevada, Texas, Utah, Indonesia, the Philippines
and Kenya. Active in the company until a year ago, he
was an avid skier and yachtsman. Survivors: his wife,
Virginia Keim, ’37; two daughters, Sara Albert
and Rebecca Pamer, ’64; his son, Benjamin, ’72;
and five grandchildren, including Janet, ’06.
Maxine Elizabeth Bartlett, ’36
(communication), of Olympia, Wash., September 13, at
89. A member of Gamma Phi Beta, she enjoyed a career
as a newspaper and magazine editor, including positions
with the L.A. Times and Women’s Day.
Her former husband, Theodore Schmidt, predeceased her.
Survivors include her son, Bart Schmidt.
Elmer Ensz, ’36 (history), MA
’38 (education), of San Diego, July 28, at 89.
He spent nearly his entire career in the Alhambra City
School District, near Los Angeles, serving as assistant
superintendent in charge of instruction and, later,
as superintendent of schools. More than 500 people from
the community and the schools where he worked attended
his retirement reception in 1974. Survivors: his daughter,
Kathleen, PhD ’76; two sons, Phillip, ’68,
MBA ’74, and Craig; two grandchildren; and four
sisters.
Paul McElroy Foreman, ’38, MA
’40 (chemistry), of San Marino, Calif., July 2,
at 88. He worked for Union Oil Company for 44 years
until his retirement in 1984. President of the San Marino
City Club, he was active in the Rotary Club and numerous
other civic and nonprofit organizations. His wife of
61 years, Helen, died in 2002. Survivors: two sons,
Terry and Jon; two daughters, Nancy Flanagan and Betty;
three grandchildren; and four siblings.
George Edward McKenna, ’38 (social
science/ social thought), of Greenbrae, Calif., August
18, at 88, of cancer. A member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
he was on the staff of the Chaparral. He was
drafted in 1942 and received a direct commission as
a second lieutenant in the Philippines. He was recalled
to active duty during the Korean War and retired as
a colonel in the Air Force Reserve in 1974. He worked
for Crown Zellerbach Corp. for 39 years and served as
president of the Kentfield (Calif.) District School
Board. Survivors: his wife, Helen “Betty”
Davis, ’39; his son, James; his daughter, Jayne;
and two granddaughters.
Robert Lawrence McRoskey, ’38
(economics), of Hillsborough, Calif., September 16,
at 87, of heart failure. A member of Phi Delta Theta
and president of his class, he was employed in the family
business, McRoskey Airflex Mattress Co., for 65 years.
Survivors: three children, Robin Azevedo, Claude, and
Nina Pope; six grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.
Raphael Burke Durfee, ’39 (biological
sciences), MD ’44, of San Diego, September 8,
at 85. A member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, he served as
a clinical instructor at Stanford Medical School. Drafted
at the age of 37, he was chief of the obstetrics and
gynecology service at the Army Hospital in Fort Leavenworth,
Kan. He then joined the U. of Oregon Medical School
faculty before moving to UC-San Diego, where he taught
in the department of reproductive medicine. Survivors:
his wife, Mildred “Billie” Ruble, ’42;
two daughters, Kathleen Ritts and Beatrix Thurber; and
three grandchildren.
|
|
1940s
Maxwell H. Bloom, ’40 (economics),
of San Jose, June 7, at 85, of Parkinson’s disease
and congestive heart failure. He operated one of San
Jose’s longtime family retail businesses, Bloom’s
Shoes, and launched a second career as a stockbroker
after selling the shoe stores in 1965. The first board
president of Opera San Jose, he also served on the boards
of the San Jose Symphony and the Crippled Children’s
Society. Survivors: his wife of 59 years, Mim; his daughter,
Elizabeth; two sons, Max III and Peter; and two grandchildren.
Douglas Volk Bryan, ’40 (social
science/social thought), of Marina del Ray, Calif.,
August 28, at 85. A member of Phi Kappa Psi, he served
as an aide to naval attachés in Guatemala, Mexico,
Egypt and Turkey during World War II. He was also a
State Department and Foreign Service officer. Survivors:
his daughter, Lucinda Bourne; three grandchildren; and
two brothers, Greyson, ’41, and Russell, ’43.
George Herbert “Buck” Henshaw,
’40 (speech & drama), of Honolulu, August
20, at 85. A member of Theta Delta Chi, he designed
many theater sets for Ram’s Head. In the 1950s,
he started working as a designer for television shows,
including The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show
and The Twilight Zone. Nominated for an Emmy
Award for his designs, he also worked for more than
a decade on Hawaii Five-O and Magnum P.I.
Darwin D. Cooley, ’41 (cell
biology), MD ’44, of Downey, Calif., July 4, at
84. He spent 40 years as a practicing physician. Survivors:
his wife, Beverly; his son, Robert, ’67; his daughter,
Aileen; three grandchildren; and seven great-grandchildren.
Elaine Geraldine Raley Kinsley, ’41
(history), of Sacramento, in July, at 83. She was one
of two Canadian youths selected to represent the country
at the Queen’s coronation celebrations in London
in 1937. Throughout her life, her interests took her
to many countries around the globe. She traveled in
a motor home to Costa Rica and trekked through many
South American countries to research ancient ruins.
Survivors: her daughter, Claire; her son, Jeffrey; and
two brothers.
Barbara Deming Sherwood Rolph, ’41
(social science/ social thought), of San Francisco,
July 20, at 83. A member of Kappa Alpha Theta, she was
known as “Buzz” for her energy and sense
of adventure. She worked at California Packing during
World War II and took up flying, as well as sailing.
Her other sporting interests included skiing, tennis
and golf. She was active in the Junior League and other
charitable organizations. Survivors: her husband of
57 years, Henry, ’36, JD ’40; her son, H.
Renton, ’70; her daughter, Barbara, ’72;
and three grandsons.
Mary Evaline Bell Crummey, ’42
(letters), of Fresno, Calif., April 26, at 82. She was
active in the Llanada Guild of Valley Children’s
Hospital and was a founding member of Ladies Aid for
Retarded Children. Survivors: her husband of 50 years,
Del, ’41; two daughters, Cathy Monroe and Martha
Parriott, ’66, MA ’67; her son, Jack, ’78;
five grandchildren, including Bryan Spaulding, ’93,
and Jeffrey Spaulding, ’95; and her brother, Richard
Bell, ’36.
Emerson Gard Hiler, ’42 (preclinical
medicine), MD ’46, of Redlands, Calif., September
25, at 84. He was an accomplished athlete at Stanford,
winning the Pacific Association discus-throwing championship
for three consecutive years. He was also a member of
the U.S. Olympic Team but was unable to participate
in the games because of his military obligations. During
his career, he served in a number of teaching positions
at the Stanford School of Medicine, Loma Linda U. School
of Medicine, UCLA and UC-Irvine, where he was associate
clinical professor of psychiatry and human behavior.
In January 2003, he received the Distinguished Life
Fellowship honor from the American Psychiatric Association
for 50 years in the field of psychiatry. He also received
the Distinguished Service award from the Disabled American
Veterans for his work with paraplegic and quadriplegic
veterans of World War II. A pioneer of group therapy,
he spent 30 years in the Veterans Administration and
was chief of staff at the Long Beach Veterans Hospital
in Kaneohe, Oahu. Survivors: his wife of 31 years, Sara;
three daughters, Beth Leon, Wendy Bright and Ellen Ruona;
his son, Craig; two stepdaughters; five grandchildren;
two great-grandchildren; and his sister, Jean Maroder,
’39.
Douglas B. McDonald, ’42 (undergraduate
law), JD ’47, of Sacramento, July 29, at 84, of
diabetes. A member of Sigma Nu and Beta Chi, he enlisted
in the Marines during World War II and fought in the
South Pacific. He founded a law firm in 1962 and served
as a Sacramento County settlement conference judge pro
tem and as an arbitrator and mediator. Survivors; his
wife of 56 years, Phyllis; and his two children, Douglas
Scott, ’76, and Joan.
Mary Merner Paulsen, ’42 (history),
MA ’61 (education), of Los Altos Hills, August
30, at 81, of congestive heart failure. A member of
Phi Beta Kappa and Alpha Delta Phi, she worked in advertising
before returning to Stanford for graduate school. One
of her legacies is the preservation of Old Page Mill
Road, which was under consideration for widening to
connect with the newly built Interstate 280. Her work
led to the construction of an alternate path to the
freeway. Survivors: her two daughters, Janis Silver
and Marcia Orbelian; two sons, Marc and Eric; eight
grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.
Francis Philip Rice, ’43 (general
engineering), of Cape Elizabeth, Maine, November 19,
2001, at 79, of Parkinson’s disease. A member
of Alpha Sigma Phi, he served in the Navy during World
War II before returning to school for a divinity degree
and being ordained a Presbyterian minister. He also
earned a master’s degree in psychology and a doctorate
in family life. Over the course of his life, he worked
as a civil engineer, church pastor, religion professor,
family therapist and preschool teacher and director.
He wrote 21 college textbooks and 10 books on fishing
and the outdoors. Survivors: his wife of 29 years, Irma;
his son, David; his daughter, Linda; and five stepchildren.
Eleanor Pardee Day Bosche, ’44
(social science/social thought), of La Cañada,
Calif., September 8, at 80, of heart failure. She was
an active member of the Assistance League and the Flintridge-La
Cañada Guild of Huntington Memorial Hospital.
Survivors: her two daughters, Analisa Bailey and Amy
Siegel; three grandsons; and one brother.
Martin Flavin Jr., ’44, of Garrett
Park, Md., September 29, at 83, of Shy-Drager syndrome,
a neurological disorder. A research biochemist who studied
the building blocks of proteins and the microstructures
that help determine cell shape, he began his career
in the early 1950s at the National Institutes of Health,
retiring in 1988. Eight years later, he wrote a book
about the founder of the Outward Bound youth education
organization. His wife of 17 years, Tomoko, died in
2000. Survivors include his brother, Sean, ’47.
William Barbour “Bill” Lindberg,
’44, of Selah, Wash., August 27, at 81, of injuries
from a horseback riding accident. A member of Zeta Psi,
he served with distinction with the 30th Infantry Division
during World War II, receiving the Purple Heart, Silver
Star and Croix de Guerre. He worked for the Fireboard
Co. in California for 10 years before moving to Washington
to purchase and run Woodlam, a laminated beam company,
for 25 years. Survivors: his companion, Joyce Barbee;
two daughters, Isabel Campbell and Martha; his son,
William; six grandchildren; and his sister.
John Marsh Sadler, ’45 (history),
of Pasadena, Calif., August 15, at 80, of lymphoma.
A member of Alpha Delta Phi, he joined the Army Air
Corps and piloted a B-24 on missions over Sumatra and
Java in the South Pacific. His was a varied career that
included newspapers, real estate, sales and stock trading.
Long committed to charitable and civic causes, he worked
closely with the Pasadena Council on Alcoholism and
Drug Dependency and served as a member of the Pasadena
Planning Commission. His first wife, Rosemary Clock,
’45, died in 1979. Survivors: his second wife,
Elsie; three sons, Tom, ’76, David and John; his
daughter, Carolyn; four stepdaughters; 15 grandchildren;
and his sister, Barbara Sadler Pande, ’43.
James Raymond Lawson, ’46 (English),
of Cody, Wyo., October 14, at 84. He was one of a handful
of masters of the carillon, the largest instrument in
the world and the only one played exclusively outdoors.
His first job was playing the carillon in the Hoover
Institution bell tower. He also played at the University
of Chicago and at Riverside Church in New York City.
Although he stopped playing in 1989, he came out of
retirement the following year to become the first carillonneur
at the Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove, Calif.
Robert Nelson Rowe, ’46, of
Sacramento, July 8, at 77, of suicide. A member of Zeta
Psi, he was a high school biology teacher and administrator.
Survivors: his former wife, Constance Old, ’50;
two sons, Christopher and Albert; and his daughter,
Letitia Maun.
Margaret Hollis Bonney White, ’46
(social science/social thought), of Keene, N.H., February
19, at 78, of pulmonary fibrosis. She taught elementary
school in Connecticut and New Jersey and was a school
librarian in Newton, Mass., retiring in 1982. She later
worked as a tax preparer with H&R Block. Her husband
of 52 years, Robert, died in 1998. Survivors: her daughter,
Carol; two sons, David and Robert; and 13 grandchildren.
Charles E. Blevins, ’47, MA
’48 (biological sciences), of Cave Creek, Ariz.,
December 29, 2002, at 78, of pneumonia. He received
a PhD in anatomy from UCSF and taught anatomy to medical,
dental and physical therapy students for 35 years. He
served as chairman of the anatomy department at Indiana
U. School of Medicine for 16 years before retiring to
Arizona. Survivors: his wife of 54 years, Jean; two
daughters, Charean Marshall and Deborah Wood; and three
grandchildren.
Judith Anne Peake Mathews, ’47
(history), of Napa, Calif., September 11, at 77. A member
of Delta Gamma, she returned to school later in life
to earn a master’s degree in pastoral studies
from Notre Dame De Namur, then served as a volunteer
in hospital and hospice settings. Survivors: three sons,
Alan, ’71; Arthur and Michael; and two grandchildren.
Murray S. Stopol, ’47 (psychology),
of Woodland Hills, Calif., July 31, at 77, of leukemia.
He taught at the U. of Minnesota before moving to California
in 1959, when he began a private practice in clinical
psychology. Survivors: his wife of 50 years, Lenora;
two daughters, Elizabeth Shahbazi and Kathryn Crankshaw;
two sons, Richard and Michael; and seven grandchildren.
Alan Bechtel Strain, ’47 (psychology),
of Santa Cruz, Calif., August 26, at 79, of congestive
heart failure. In 1971, he joined Stanford’s Dean
of Students office as director of special services,
responsible for all draft counseling. After the Vietnam
War ended, he was appointed associate dean of student
affairs and served as interim dean of Native American
affairs. He helped create the Native American Cultural
Center and organized the first Stanford Powwow. A member
of Delta Upsilon, he enjoyed a long career in education,
teaching at Woodside elementary school, serving as principal
of Peninsula School in Menlo Park and helping to found
Pacific High School, an alternative school near Los
Gatos. His first wife, Joanne Hunnicutt, ’48,
died in 1979. Survivors: his wife of 23 years, Rosalie
Pizzo; two sons, David and Larry; his daughter, Laurie
Friedman; 16 grandchildren; and two brothers.
Charles B. “Chuck” Knudson,
’48 (economics), MBA ’62, of Honolulu, September
6, at 78. A member of Delta Chi, he was a brigadier
general in the Air Force and served his country in three
wars. In retirement, he sat on the boards of Hawaii
Stanford Chapter and the Mauna Luan Homeowners Association.
Survivors: his wife, June; his daughter, Karen Lindermuth;
three sons, Charles II, John and Robert; and five grandchildren.
Fred Wallace Willey, ’48 (political
science), of Fresno, Calif., September 6, at 78. He
was a member of Beta Theta Pi who played on the football
and rugby teams and served as a B-17 pilot in World
War II. A stockbroker, he worked as a manager of E.F.
Hutton for 25 years. Survivors: his wife of 50 years,
Jane; two daughters, Sara Pierson and Carolyn Johnson;
his son, Fred Jr.; four grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.
Walter H. Kaplan, ’49, MA ’50
(history), of Los Angeles, July 24, at 78, of cancer.
He served in World War II in the Italian campaign, earning
a Purple Heart at the Battle of Anzio. For 34 years,
he was a dedicated high school teacher in Lawndale,
Calif. He was the editor of the B’nai B’rith
Record and received the B’nai B’rith
Southern California President’s Award in June
2003. Survivors: his wife of 47 years, Mariam; and two
daughters, Marcy and Abby.
Robert Twohy McInerny, ’49 (political
science), of Oceanside, Calif., September 1, at 78.
A member of Alpha Delta Phi, he served in the Navy during
World War II. He started his own insurance brokerage
in 1953. Survivors: his wife, Nevill; his daughter,
Kate; his four sons, James, ’77, Robert, Daniel
and John; and seven grandchildren.
Byrne W. Pike, ’49, MA ’51
(history), of Camino, Calif., January 7, at 85. A Phi
Beta Kappa member and World War II veteran, he ran A.W.
Pike and Co., a wholesale hardware business started
by his father. After selling the company, he started
his own business selling model railroad equipment to
hobby shops. Survivors: his wife, Jaque; his son, Reed;
and his daughter, Karin.
Jane Swanson Coe Hardin, '43, of Santa
Barbara, Calif., September 14, at 81, of suicide. An
active volunteer, she devoted time to the League of
Women Voters, Planned Parenthood, the PTA, Girl Scouts
of America and the Unitarian Society. She also helped
launch and promote Santa Barbara's annual Fiesta Days
celebration. Her husband of 62 years, Garrett, PhD '41,
died with her. Survivors: her sons, Peter and David;
two daughters, Hyla Fetler and Sharon Clausen; four
grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; one sister;
and two brothers.
|
|
1950s
Armand DeGroote Viole, ’50 (biological
sciences), of Studio City, Calif., July 24, at 74, of
cardiac arrest. A member of Delta Tau Delta, he served
as lieutenant commander in the Navy from 1958 to 1960.
He practiced ophthalmology in Los Angeles, where he
was a professor at the USC School of Medicine, served
on the staff of three hospitals and was a past president
of the Los Angeles Society of Ophthalmology. Survivors
include his sister, Ynez O’Neill, ’53.
Donald Robert Goodenough, ’51
(psychology), of Trenton, N.J., April 9, at 75, of cancer.
A retired research psychologist, he was recognized for
his contributions to sleep research and cognition. He
served in the Army as a laboratory technician at Los
Alamos National Laboratory before graduating from Stanford.
He was a psychiatry professor at the State U. of New
York’s Downstate Medical Center for 20 years,
then worked as a senior research scientist with Educational
Testing Service in Princeton, N.J. Author of more than
100 scholarly articles, he ran one of the first laboratories
devoted exclusively to studying sleep and dreams. Survivors:
his wife of 50 years, Mary Payne; two sons, Charles
and James; his daughter, Christine Roberts; and five
grandchildren.
Robert Howard McGillis, ’51
(biological sciences), of Alamos, Mexico, June 2, at
73. A member of Phi Kappa Sigma, he served in the Marine
Corps as a first lieutenant and later owned a wine and
gift shop. He was the author of two crossword puzzle
books and belonged to the 49er Rotary Club of Sonora,
Calif. Survivors: his wife, Carole; two daughters, Teresa
Ong, ’78, and Laurie; his stepdaughter; five grandchildren;
and his sister.
Arthur Riesenfeld, ’51 (preclinical
medical science), MD ’55, of Pasadena, Calif.,
August 2, at 74, of pulmonary edema.
Jacqueline Jea Yelland Steiner, ’51
(English), MA ’52 (education), of Phoenix, August
19, at 73, of brain cancer. President of the Children’s
Action Alliance for the past three years, she served
from 1976 to 1990 in Arizona’s state legislature,
focusing on neglected and abused children, juvenile
justice reform and foster care. Survivors: her husband,
Frederick Jr., ’50, JD ’52; her son, Frederick
III; two daughters, Katherine Koenig and Ann Green;
and six grandchildren.
Russell Henry Jessup, ’52 (biological
sciences), of Santa Ana, Calif., August 9, at 79. He
enlisted in the Army after high school and served with
the 82nd Airborne. A member of Sigma Chi, he practiced
dentistry in the same office for 47 years. Survivors:
his three sons, John, Ed and Jim; three daughters, Cheryl,
Megan and Joy; and 11 grandchildren.
Nelson Van Judah Jr., ’52 (art),
of Cambria, Calif., July 17, at 72, of complications
from a fall. A member of the Hammer and Coffin Society
and Delta Upsilon, he was a Chaparral photographer
and cartoonist. He served in the Korean War aboard the
USS St. Paul. He was a professor of graphic
design at San Jose State U. until his retirement in
1990. Survivors: his wife, Fay Walters; his daughter,
Alison; three stepchildren; and eight step-grandchildren.
Nancy D. Stone Swingley, ’52
(psychology), of Brookings, Ore., September 2, at 73.
She worked in a women’s apparel store owned by
her mother in Brookings until it ceased operations;
she opened her own store in 1980. A past president of
the Brookings-Harbor Soroptimists, she was a member
of the Merchants’ Association and an active supporter
of the Chetco Community Public Library. Survivors: her
husband of 48 years, Robert, ’50, MBA ’55;
two daughters, Susan Edwards and Pamela; two sons, Douglas
and David; two grandchildren; and one step-grandchild.
Clarence Bevington Jr., ’53
(biological sciences), of Long Beach, Calif., July 20,
at 84. His career as a marine biologist ended with an
injury sustained in an accident, and he turned to real
estate, founding C. Bevington Realty Associates. Survivors:
his former wife, Neva; his longtime companion, Carmen
Blas; and one brother.
Roy Allen Deal, ’53 (mechanical
engineering), of Susanville, Calif., September 8, at
72, of cancer. A member of both Phi Beta Kappa and Tau
Beta Pi honor societies, he was a businessman and community
leader. He was recognized for his service to Rotary
International with the Paul Harris Award in 1975. Survivors:
his wife, Barbara; three sons, Rocky, ’72, Mike
and David; and seven grandchildren, including Katie,
’00, MA ’00.
James Peter Dobbs, ’54 (history),
of Corona Del Mar, Calif., in June, at 70. A member
of Zeta Psi, he served in the Army and worked as a mortgage
broker. Survivors include his three sons and his sister.
Marvin John Potter, ’54 (biological
sciences), of Mission Viejo, Calif., July 10, at 70.
A prominent obstetrician in Southern California for
more than 40 years, he served as lieutenant commander
in the Navy Medical Corps. Survivors: his wife of 46
years, Sara; three sons, Jeffrey, Daniel and Mark; four
grandchildren; his father; and his brother.
Leroy A. Broun IV, ’55 (history),
JD ’69, of Boise, Idaho, July 21, at 69. A photographer
for the Stanford Daily during his undergraduate
years, he served in the Air Force flying B-52s. After
practicing law in Fremont, Calif., he retrained himself
in computer programming and worked for IBM for 12 years.
Survivors: his former wife, Margaret Dalgliesh, ’55;
two daughters, Elizabeth Newbrough and Kimberly Maxey;
his son, Patrick, ’91, MA ’92; five grandchildren;
and a brother.
John Davison “Jack” Gebert,
’55 (sociology), of Wichita, Kan., May 26, at
70. A member of the football team and Phi Gamma Delta,
he served as a first lieutenant in the Army. He was
president of Miro Flex Co. and Associates Oil and Gas.
Survivors: his three sons, Steve, Christopher and Daniel;
and two grandchildren.
Foster Fred Keene, ’55 (biological
sciences), MD ’59, of Eugene, Ore., February 17,
at 69, of a heart attack. A member of Beta Theta Pi,
he joined the Air Force as a flight surgeon and rose
to the rank of major. In addition to his private cardiology
practice, he co-founded the cardiac catheterization
lab at Sacred Heart Hospital in Eugene, where he performed
the first balloon angioplasty in the Northwest in 1971
and the first laser angioplasty in Oregon in 1981. In
retirement, he started his own vitamin business and
lectured on nutrition and health. Survivors: his wife
of 44 years, Sue Thorson, ’59; his daughter, Paige
Bingham; his son, Christoper, ’83; and four grandchildren.
Howard Leland Schwartz, ’55
(undergraduate law), JD ’59, of Piedmont, Calif.,
August 20, at 69. An Alameda County judge for 22 years,
he was a member of Delta Tau Delta and played on the
men’s basketball team at Stanford. He spent two
years in the Navy aboard the aircraft carrier Princeton
and became a World War I history buff who collected
miniature lead soldiers. Survivors: his wife of 43 years,
Marion; three sons, Michael, Bryan and Douglas; and
five grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his
fourth son, Randy, ’85, MS ’87.
Gerald Zolle Marer, ’59, JD
’63, of Palo Alto, September 30, at 66, of intestinal
cancer. A member of the Law Review, he was one of a
trio of lawyers who filed the historic Tinsley integration
lawsuit in 1976 to give the minority schoolchildren
in East Palo Alto the option of transferring into school
districts in affluent neighboring cities. Stricken for
most of his adult life with multiple sclerosis, he once
took his family skydiving and jumped even though he
could no longer walk. Survivors: his two daughters,
Beth Marer-Garcia and Laura; two grandchildren; and
his brother, Alan, ’55.
|
|
1960s
Margaret Halsey Buss Finney, ’64
(nursing), of Sacramento, September 21, at 62, of complications
following liver surgery. She spent her life in nursing
and nursing administration, in civilian and Army posts,
retiring from the Army Reserves as a major. For the
last five years, she worked for the state of California
as a nursing systems analyst. Survivors: her former
husband, John; two daughters, Mary Minard and Emma Tucker;
four grandchildren; her parents, Robert, PhD ’40,
and Eugenia Halsey Buss, ’39; and five siblings,
including Jennifer Barron, ’67.
Kenneth Dean Weisinger, ’64
(history), of San Francisco, July 28, at 60, of cancer.
Director of UC-Berkeley’s Education Abroad Program
and professor emeritus of German and comparative literature,
he began teaching at the university in 1970. Best known
for his research and published work on German poets
and Weimar classicism, he was writing two new books
at the time of his death. He was a life member of the
Mechanics’ Institute in San Francisco, the oldest
library on the West Coast. Survivors include his mother,
Ruby.
James Richard Baskette, ’66
(English), of Stockton, Calif., April 18, at 58. He
worked on his family’s farm in Tracy and was a
professor of humanities at the U. of Minnesota before
returning to school to earn a law degree. A self-employed
lawyer for 17 years, he was named partner and corporate
counsel for General Engineering Tectonics in 1999. Survivors:
his wife, Wendy; two sons, Philip and Peter; his daughter,
Carmen; his stepson, Bret; one grandchild; his mother;
and his sister.
|
| |
|
EARTH SCIENCES
Arthur John Whiteman, Gr. ’49
(mineral science), of Aberdeen, Scotland, June 14, at
75, of diabetes. A member of Alpha Tau Omega, he authored
two books on the geology of the Sudan and Nigeria. He
was a department chair at the U. in Bergen, Norway,
where his work contributed to the discovery of the North
Sea oil fields. Survivors: his wife, Sally; two sons,
David and John; two daughters, Sara McKinley and Rachel
Burnett; and eight grandchildren.
EDUCATION
Charles Thomas Hosley, MA ’49,
EdD ’54, of Davis, Calif., October 12, at 80,
of a stroke. During World War II, he served as a Naval
officer. He was a school administrator for 35 years,
starting his career at age 26 as the first principal
of Hillview School in Los Altos. In 1966, he became
the assistant superintendent and vice president of the
new Solano (Calif.) Community College District, a position
he held until his retirement in 1983. An accomplished
musician, he played the French horn with the San Jose
Symphony. Past commodore of the Vallejo Yacht Club,
he served as the club’s historian for 17 years.
Survivors: his wife of 59 years, Virginia; his daughter,
Charlotte Backstedt; three sons, David, ’72, MA
’72, James and Paul; 11 grandchildren; one great-grandchild;
and one brother.
ENGINEERING
John Lawrence Wray, MS ’58 (mechanical
engineering), of Leavenworth, Wash., January 31, at
67. During his years of service in the Air Force from
1958 to 1962, he was assigned to the Defense Atomic
Support Agency at the Pentagon and was awarded the Air
Force Commendation Medal. A member of Mensa and of Beta
Theta Pi, he worked for General Electric for 16 years,
designing and marketing nuclear reactors for power plants.
He was also an adjunct professor at National U. in San
Jose, retiring in 1998. Survivors: his former spouse,
Sally Gerdes, ’60; his wife, Jane; three daughters,
Mary Deauville, Nancy Rummel and Carolyn Wheeler; two
stepchildren; and four grandchildren.
HUMANITIES & SCIENCES
Garrett James Hardin, PhD ’41
(biological sciences), of Santa Barbara, Calif., September
14, at 88, of suicide. He was an emeritus professor
of human ecology at UC-Santa Barbara, where he taught
for three decades until his retirement in 1978. A prolific
author who published more than 350 articles and 27 books,
he was a leading ecological thinker whose controversial
stands influenced debates on abortion, immigration and
foreign aid. His wife of 62 years, Jane Swanson, ’43,
died with him. Survivors: his two sons, Peter and David;
two daughters, Hyla Fetler and Sharon Clausen; four
grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; his sister;
and two brothers.
William Ernest Boyse, PhD ’86
(mathematics), of Menlo Park, August 29, at 49, of lymphoma.
A research mathematician at Cities Service Oil Co. in
Tulsa, Okla., he moved to the Bay Area in 1982 to attend
Stanford. Upon graduation, he worked in R&D for
Lockheed Missiles and Space Co., which he left to become
an independent consultant. He was an avid fisherman
and a member of the Coastside Fishing Club; he will
be remembered by many for his boat, Tulsa Time.
Survivors: his wife of 24 years, Karen Paver; his parents;
a brother; and two sisters.
LAW
Stanton M. Levy, JD ’49, of
Fresno, Calif., August 30, at 81. A World War II veteran,
he worked as a prosecutor for the Fresno County District
Attorney’s Office before entering private practice,
which he enjoyed for 50 years. He also taught law at
Fresno State College for 10 years. Survivors: his wife
of 38 years, Patricia; two daughters, Jennifer Levy-Wendt
and Diana; his son, Michael; two grandchildren; and
his brother.
Hollis Garber Best, JD ’51,
of Fresno, Calif., August 15, at 77. During World War
II, he served as a Naval officer. After two years as
a prosecutor, he embarked on a 20-year career in private
practice. He then became a superior court judge in Fresno,
ascending to the bench of the 5th District Court of
Appeals. In 1993, he was named federal magistrate in
Yosemite National Park, a position he held until his
death. Survivors: his wife of 56 years, Jeanne; two
sons, David and Daniel; two daughters, Laura Marks and
Kathryn; eight grandchildren; two sisters; and a brother.
Guy Blase, JD ’58, of Palo Alto,
July 5, at 73, of prostate cancer. During the Korean
War, he served in the Navy. When he lived in Portola
Valley, he served as town fire commissioner and helped
launch the Portola Valley Polo Club. A retired lawyer,
he was active in the fund-raising drive for Palo Alto’s
Opportunity Center, which aims to combat homelessness
by providing affordable housing and support services.
His first wife, Noel, died in 1994. Survivors: his wife,
Bobbi; two daughters, Leslie Lodestro and Cece; three
grandchildren; and his sister.
David Henry Fox, JD ’67, of
Sherman Oaks, Calif., July 8, at 60, of a heart attack.
A former top aide to Gov. Jerry Brown, he was appointed
director of California’s Department of Real Estate
in 1976. After resigning as real estate commissioner,
he developed seminars in real estate ethics and earned
a master’s degree in marriage and family counseling.
He founded Professional Achievement Success Systems,
which provided study materials and training for family
therapy graduate students. Survivors: his daughter,
Susanne; his son, Kevin; his father; and his brother.
MEDICINE
John Sewall Brown II, MD ’39,
of Palo Alto, March 25, at 90. During World War II,
he joined the Army and served in the Medical Corps.
After the war, he became the 10th partner in the Palo
Alto Medical Clinic, now the Palo Alto Medical Foundation.
He retired from active practice in 1978. A dedicated
volunteer, he was a board member of the Palo Alto YMCA,
Kiwanis, Channing House, Lytton Gardens and Kara. His
first wife, Margaret, predeceased him. Survivors: his
second wife, Mary Griffiths, ’46; two daughters,
Lynn Storey, ’62, MA ’65, and Loraine Millman;
his son, David; eight grandchildren; six great-grandchildren;
and a sister.
Benton Laramie “Larry” Corley,
MD ’48, of Pauma Valley, Calif., June 5, at 79,
of ideopathic pulmonary fibrosis. A captain in the U.S.
Air Force, he was a longtime member of the Arcadia Medical
Clinic and practiced general medicine for 40 years until
his retirement in 1990. He also served as chief of staff
of the Methodist Hospital of Southern California. Survivors:
his wife of 55 years, Eleanor McKay, ’48; four
daughters, Deborah Wentworth, Diane D’Ewart, ’74,
Marilyn Kallshian and Alicia; two sons, Bryce and David;
and 16 grandchildren.
|
RETURN
TO TOP |
|