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| Obituaries |
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FACULTY / STAFF
William Everett Brigham, of Stanford,
February 15, at 74, of liver cancer. A professor emeritus
of oil engineering, he was best known for his work on
recovering “heavy oil,” which is very difficult
to extract from the earth. He joined the faculty in
1971, where he served as associate chair of the department
of petroleum engineering from 1979 to 1990. In February,
the department inaugurated the Brigham Laboratory in
the Green Earth Science building to honor him and his
contributions to the University. He received the Improved
Oil Recovery Pioneer Award from the Society of Petroleum
Engineers and was given the Homer H. Lowry Award for
Excellence in Fossil Energy Research from the U.S. Department
of Energy. Survivors: his wife of 49 years, Carol Cobb,
’51; three daughters, Nancy Blattel, Laurie Jester
and Sarah Fletcher; two sons, Bill, ’79, and David;
10 grandchildren; and three step-grandchildren.
Guy Harvey Browning, MA ’51
(education), of Sonoma, Calif., December 13, at 84,
of pneumonia. He was a pilot in the Air Force during
World War II. At Stanford, he was an instructor in the
School of Education and a longtime member of the counseling
staff. His wife, Carol, died in July 2003. Survivors:
his son, Rick; one daughter, Betsy Phillips; one granddaughter;
two great-grandsons; and one sister.
Brigitte Cazelles, of Stanford, January 29, at 60, of
breast cancer. She taught French and French literature
for 26 years at Stanford, retiring at the end of the
2003 school year. She served as director of French undergraduate
studies from 1978 to 1986 and from 1992 to 1998. She
was the director of French graduate studies from 1986
to 1987 and director of graduate studies in the French
and Italian department from 2000 to 2001. She received
the Dean’s Award for Distinguished Teaching in
1980 and again in 1996. She also received the Bing Award
for Excellence in Teaching in 1994. She is the author
or editor of six books, including The Unholy Grail and
The Lady as Saint.
Robert W.P. Cutler, of Livermore,
Calif., April 12, at 70, of cancer. He joined the faculty
in 1974 as a professor of neurology and neurological
sciences. In 1988, he was named senior associate dean
for faculty affairs at the School of Medicine, a title
he kept until 1995. He retired in 2000 and was named
a professor emeritus. In retirement, he wrote several
books, most notably The Mysterious Death of Jane Stanford.
Survivors: his wife, Maggie; four sons, Aaron, Christopher,
George and Robert.
Grant Fletcher, ’43 (preclinical
medicine), MD ’46, of Sonoma, Calif., March 24,
at 81, of cancer. He served in the Army Medical Corps
during World War II. He then practiced family medicine
and anesthesiology before joining the Medical School
faculty in 1963. He left Stanford nine years later to
manage his family’s ranch. He served on the City
of Sonoma Planning Commission for eight years and was
chair for two years. Survivors: his wife of 57 years,
Virginia; four sons, Christopher, Stephen, Michael and
Jeffrey; six grandchildren; one sister; one brother;
one half brother; one stepbrother; and one stepsister.
Richard E. Gross, EdD ’51, of
Los Altos Hills, April 2, at 83. He joined the Stanford
faculty in 1955 and during his 35 years at the University,
he advised more than 100 doctoral students and more
than 700 master’s students in social sciences
education. In 1988, he received the Hilda Taba Award
from the California Council for the Social Studies.
He taught in Austria and Germany through the Overseas
Studies Program and sponsored several social studies
institutes under the auspices of the National Science
Foundation. Survivors: his wife of 61 years, Jane; two
daughters, Kay Essary and Elaine Stoddard, ’75;
two sons, Edmund, ’76, MA ’83, and John,
’76; and six grandchildren.
Susan Moller Okin, of Lincoln, Mass.,
March 3, at 57. A leading feminist political theorist,
she started teaching at Stanford in 1990 and most recently
held a one-year fellowship at the Radcliffe Institute
for Advanced Study at Harvard U. At Stanford, she was
the Martha Sutton Weeks Professor of Ethics in Society,
served as the director of the Program in Ethics in Society
from 1993 to 1996 and won the Bing Teaching Award in
1994. She is the author of three books. Survivors: her
former husband, Bob Okin; one daughter, Laura Okin;
one son, Justin Moller; and two sisters.
George E. Pake, of Tucson, Ariz.,
March 4, at 79, of heart failure. A physicist who served
as the first director of the Palo Alto Research Center
of the Xerox Corp., he taught at Stanford from 1956
to 1962. The researchers at the PARC laboratory are
credited with reshaping the modern computer industry
by inventing the laser printer, office networking and
the graphical user interface. He served as provost of
Washington U., director of the Institute for Research
on Learning in Palo Alto and received the National Medal
of Science in 1987. Survivors: his wife, Marjorie; three
sons, Warren, Stephen and Bruce; one daughter, Catherine;
and two grandchildren.
Orland Aldo Soave, of Menlo Park,
April 8, at 82, of a stroke. He was the founder and
first director of the Stanford School of Medicine animal
research facility. His work supported the first adult
human heart transplant in the United States, at Stanford
Hospital in 1968. After 20 years, he retired from Stanford
in 1980 and served as a consultant in biomedical sciences
to the National Institutes of Health Library of Medicine.
The author of numerous books, he was a board member
of the National Society for Medical Research and consulted
on laboratory animal medicine for NASA. Survivors: his
wife of 60 years, Phyllis; one son, Clark; one daughter,
Kathryn Koch; and one sister.
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1920s
Helen Dorothy Hoefer Olsen, ’24
(Spanish), of Coalinga, Calif., January 21, at 102.
She taught all grades during her career but was known
for her Roman banquets conducted in Latin. Survivors:
her daughters, Myrna Allen Reh, MA ’54, and Georgia
MacLane; and three grandchildren.
Carol Klink Claussen, ’25 (English),
of Sacramento, December 31, at 100. A member of Alpha
Phi, she helped establish the Sacramento chapter of
the Girl Scouts of America and was a member of the Charity
League, which evolved into the Junior League of Sacramento.
She also worked as a substitute teacher for more than
20 years until her retirement. Her husband, Jack, and
two sons, William and Thomas, predeceased her. Survivors:
two daughters, Jane Finger and Mary Beth Williams; three
grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
Helen Mar Schoenheit Moore, ’26
(history), of Los Gatos, Calif., October 30, 2002, at
100. She worked as a law librarian at Stanford in the
early 1930s and was active in many community organizations.
Her husband, Robert, ’29, MA ’47, died in
1960. Survivors: one son, Robert; and two grandchildren.
Philip Arthur Fisher, ’27 (economics),
of San Mateo, March 11, at 96. A veteran of the Army
Air Corps, he started an investment counseling firm,
Fisher & Co., in 1932. In 1958, he wrote Common
Stocks and Uncommon Profits, one of the first investment
books to appear on the New York Times bestseller list.
He wrote two other books on investing. Survivors: his
wife of 61 years, Dorothy; three sons, Kenneth, Arthur,
’66, and Donald; 11 grandchildren; four great-grandchildren;
and one sister, Caroline, ’32.
Edwin J. Simon, ’29 (English),
of Menlo Park, February 11, at 94. After serving in
the Air Force, he received a doctorate in musicology.
He was a member of the original faculty at the new campus
of UC-Riverside, where he remained until retiring in
1971. Survivors: his wife, Hazel; three sons, David,
’73, Charles and Allen; and three grandchildren.
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1930s
Victor A. Hermann, ’30 (economics),
of Hillsborough, Calif., January 10, 2003, at 95. He
had a lifelong career in the investment securities business,
including years spent as a stockbroker at Emmett A.
Larkin Co. in San Mateo. He was predeceased by his wife,
Ruth, and his son, Ross, ’62.
John Leonard “Jack” Cornell, ’32
(social science/social thought), of San Marino, Calif.,
January 5, at 93, of a pulmonary disorder. A member
of Phi Kappa Sigma and the staff of the Chaparral, he
served in the Navy during World War II. He worked as
a writer and an editor for the Los Angeles Times and
the Los Angeles Mirror for more than 25 years before
becoming a publicist with major public firms. He was
a charter member and former director of the Greater
Los Angeles Press Club. Survivors: his wife of 65 years,
Ruth; one daughter, Caroline Adams; and one granddaughter.
Robert Y. Thornton, ’32 (social
science/social thought), of Salem, Ore., November 29,
at 93. A member of the Band, he practiced law before
joining the Army during World War II. He was elected
to the state legislature in 1950 and two years later
was elected attorney general. In 1970, he was elected
to the Oregon Court of Appeals, where he served until
1983. In retirement, he co-authored a book on crime
prevention in America and Japan. Survivors: his wife
of 66 years, Dorothy; one son, Tom; and two grandsons.
Clinton A. Biggs II, ’34 (economics),
of Grand Junction, Colo., February 15, at 92. A member
of Los Arcos eating club, he served in the Navy during
World War II. He worked in the hardware and plumbing
distribution business in Colorado, Utah and New Mexico.
For 24 years, he was the director of Mountain States
Telephone and Telegraph (later US West). His first wife,
Lina May, died in 1991. Survivors: his second wife,
Dorothy; three sons, Clinton III, Silmon, MD ’66,
and Clyde; and seven grandchildren, including James,
’91.
Byron Owen Smith, ’37 (political
science), JD ’40, of Mitchell, S.D., March 28,
at 87. A member of Alpha Delta Phi, he served in the
Navy during World War II. He worked as a probate lawyer
in Los Angeles for Stevens, Jones, LaFever & Smith
and then Adams, Duque & Hazeltine. He also taught
classes for the California bar exam. He served on the
boards of the Annandale Golf Club in Pasadena and the
Eldorado Country Club in Palm Desert. He was predeceased
by his wife of 57 years, Jean Harris, ’38, and
by his son Laird, ’65. Survivors: one daughter,
Sheryl Smith King, ’63; two sons, Ryland and Ford;
five grandchildren, including Julanne King Watson, ’94;
and three great-grandchildren.
Philip Guy Wray, ’37 (political
science), MBA ’39, of Pleasanthill, Calif., January
22, at 88. A member of Delta Upsilon, he served in the
Navy during World War II. After working for the Tuban
Ford Dealership, he turned to farming, growing walnuts
and other crops. He retired in 1986 and remained on
the ranch until 1998. He was a member of the Elks Club
and the Red Bluff Rotary Club and sat on the St. Elizabeth
Hospital board and the Diamond Walnut Growers regional
board. His wife of 57 years, Barbara Wray, ’43,
died January 23. Survivors: two daughters, Candace Wray-Livingston
and Victoria Wray-Greening, ’73; two sons, P.
Christen and Franklin; and nine grandchildren.
William Frederick Brownton, ’39,
of San Jose, February 16, at 86, of pancreatic cancer.
A member of Kappa Alpha and the track and field team,
he served as a dentist in the Army Air Corps during
World War II. He practiced dentistry for 35 years with
his father and brother. He was past president of the
Santa Clara Dental Society and San Jose Rotary Club
and served on the boards of the United Way and Red Cross.
Survivors: his wife of 62 years, Virginia; one son,
Glenn, ’69; one daughter, Marilyn Straw; three
grandchildren; and one sister.
Albert Peter Giannini, ’39 (preclinical
medicine), of San Jose, February 29, at 87. A member
of El Cuadro eating club, he practiced medicine for
more than 50 years. Survivors: two sons, Jeffrey and
Albert Jr.; two grandchildren; and one sister.
Helen Elizabeth Richards Paulson, ’39
(psychology), of Los Gatos, Calif., March 22, at 84.
She was an artist, therapist and founding member of
Suicide and Crisis Services for Santa Clara County.
Survivors: her former spouse, John Paulson, ’39;
two sons, John and Robert; one daughter, Lisa; and five
grandchildren.
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1940s
Robert Edgar Murphy, ’40 (biological
science), of Carmel, Calif., March 16, at 87. A member
of Breakers eating club, he was a founding partner of
Drug Service Inc., a wholesaler of pharmaceuticals and
hospital supplies serving the state of California. Survivors:
two daughters, Lynne Davis and Jennifer; three grandchildren;
and four great-grandchildren.
David Soren Bloom, ’41 (general
engineering), of Los Altos, March 18, at 85. He served
in the Navy during World War II. A member of Phi Kappa
Sigma, he conducted research at the Naval Ordinance
Test Station at China Lake and for the Department of
Defense. He taught at SRI and spent 23 years with the
Lockheed Corp. in Sunnyvale before retiring. Survivors:
his wife, Ethelyn; three stepchildren; and seven stepgrandchildren.
Hughes W. Ogilvie, ’41 (general
engineering), of Peabody, Mass., January 11, at 84.
He worked at General Electric as the general manager
of the medium steam turbo and generator and gear department.
He was a member of the Society of Marine Engineers and
the American Society of Naval Architects. Survivors:
his wife, Helen; one son, Scott; one daughter, Nancy
Ellis; one grandson; one brother; and one sister.
William Lyng “Bill” Turner Jr.,
’41 (economics), of Moraga, Calif., February
23, at 84, of a stroke. A member of Delta Tau Delta,
he served in the Navy during World War II. He worked
for the Frank W. Dunne Paint Co. for more than 40 years
and retired as the company’s chairman in 1980.
He participated in Rotary International and was an active
member of the Berkeley Breakfast Club. Survivors: his
wife of 61 years, Betty; four daughters, Kathleen Wheeler,
Judy Isola, Jane Hart, ’72, and Sarah Young; four
sons, Terry, Ted, Tim and Andy; 17 grandchildren, including
William Hart, ’07; and 11 great-grandchildren.
Thomas Scott Strathairn Jr., ’42
(biological sciences), MD ’46, of San Rafael,
Calif., December 13, at 81, of heart disease. He served
with the Navy during World War II and was recalled during
the Korean War. A founding member of Marin General Hospital,
he served several terms as its chief of staff. He received
the Outstanding Physician of Marin award in 1995. He
served as chair of fund raising for the YMCA and dedicated
his time to the Cancer Society and the Heart Association.
Survivors: his wife of 34 years, Louise; three children,
Thomas, David and Anne; three stepchildren, Eric, Cynthia
and Robert Southmayd; and six grandchildren.
Richard Eugene Hartman, ’43
(political science), of Denver, Colo., January 5, at
83. A member of Theta Delta Chi, he served with the
63rd Infantry Division during World War II and received
a Bronze Star. He worked as a lawyer for the Denver
Welfare Department before beginning a private practice.
He practiced for 50 years, serving on both the national
and Colorado boards of the Trial Lawyers Association.
Survivors: his wife of 46 years, Rhondda; two sons,
Joseph and Richard; three daughters, Claryss Jamieson,
Rienne McElyea and Allison; and nine grandchildren.
Barbara Elizabeth Clausen Wray, ’43
(letters), of Pleasanthill, Calif., January 23, at 82.
A member of Alpha Omicron Pi, she farmed with her husband
on their walnut orchard and field crops. She served
on the Tehama County Board of Education, the KIXE Channel
9 board of directors and the Tehama County Fair board.
Her husband of 57 years, Philip, ’37, MBA ’39,
died January 22. Survivors: two daughters, Candace Wray-Livingston
and Victoria Wray-Greening, ’73; two sons, P.
Christen and Franklin; nine grandchildren; and one sister,
Virginia Pickrell, ’39.
Barbara Ann Gregg Mitchell, ’44
(social science/social thought), of Newport Beach, Calif.,
February 8, at 81. A member of Gamma Phi Beta, she devoted
herself to charity work, including the Assistance League
of Flintridge and the Luminares. She was predeceased
by her husband of 58 years, John, ’43, and by
her daughter, Nancy Weingartner, ’70. Survivors:
one son, Gregg, ’75; and one grandson.
Richard Ballantyne West Jr., ’44
(economics), of La Jolla, Calif., February 25, at 81.
A member of Chi Psi, he was a member of Stanford’s
NCAA championship basketball team. He served as a lieutenant
under Gen. Patton during World War II. For 45 years,
he worked as a commercial banker for Wells Fargo Bank
and Sanwa Bank in Northern and Southern California.
He took leadership roles with the American Red Cross
and Kiwanis International. His wife of 54 years, Johanna
Dixon, ’45, predeceased him. Survivors: his fiancée,
Roberta Sawyer; four children, Richard III, ’66,
Jody, Mark and Victoria; five grandchildren; one great-granddaughter;
and two brothers, including Hugh, MBA ’48.
Maryalice Lemmon, ’45 (history),
of Sacramento, January 12, at 80. From 1950 to 1967,
she served as an administrative assistant to California
governors Earl Warren, Goodwin Knight and Edmond Brown.
She returned to public service eight years later as
the accounting officer for governors Jerry Brown and
George Deukmejian and worked until retiring in 1986.
Survivors: her brother, Donald, ’49.
Betti Ann Fraser-King, ’46 (graphic
arts), of Sherman Oaks, Calif., February 6, at 78. She
was a dedicated mother and lover of art. Survivors:
her two children, Kelly and Kevin King.
Allen Edward Sciaroni, ’47 (political
science), of Ladera Ranch, Calif., January 25, at 78,
of mastocytosis. He worked in sales and marketing for
wholesale meatpacking companies. Survivors: his wife
of 56 years, Edith; three sons, Stephen, John and Daniel;
three daughters, Teresa Sandford, Caroline Heister and
Elizabeth Lainez; and four grandchildren.
Nancy May Belcher Watson, ’47
(English), of Rancho Mirage, Calif., February 9, at
77 of cancer. She was the Los Angeles County Superior
Court judge who presided over the 1980 murder trial
of the Alphabet Bomber. Appointed to the L.A. Municipal
Court in 1968 by Gov. Ronald Reagan, she was elected
to the higher trial court four years later, becoming
one of only five women among the state’s 471 Superior
Court judges. Her husband, Philip, died in 1986. Survivors:
her two sons, Brian and Harvey Goodman; two daughters,
Marcia Goodman and Diane Watson; six grandchildren;
and 10 great-grandchildren.
Robert Phillips Olsen, ’49,
MS ’49 (materials science and engineering), of
San Luis Obispo, Calif., February 8, at 82. He served
in the Navy during World War II and the Korean War.
He went on to a career in the space program, participating
in the development of the X-15, Apollo and Space Shuttle.
His wife of 53 years, Dee, died in 1999. Survivors:
his daughter, Robyn Letters; one son, Phil; seven grandchildren;
nine great-grandchildren; and one brother.
Edward William Pipe, ’49 (economics),
of Seattle, March 6, at 82, of Parkinson’s disease.
He was a member of the U.S. Naval 21st Construction
Battalion during World War II and a member of Alpha
Sigma Phi. His career in banking and credit management
included 14 years with Allied Building Credits, Inc.,
and 25 years with Metropolitan Federal Savings &
Loan Association. He was an active member of the Kiwanis
Club of Seattle. Survivors: his wife of 53 years, Ruth
Harsch, ’47; one daughter, Janet Kenrud; and one
son, Roger.
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1950s
Olive May Hiday Jimison, ’50
(nursing), of Gualala, Calif., February 22, at 76, of
a stroke. A clinical nurse from 1950 to 1965, she then
became a school nurse and worked for the San Juan School
District in Sacramento until her retirement in 1990.
She started A New Legacy, a charitable organization
that provided counseling for children of alcoholics
and substance abusers. Survivors: two sons, Paul and
John; and one daughter, Kathleen Allred.
Patricia I. Vinnicombe Yakutis, ’50
(political science), of Piedmont, Calif., January 3,
at 75, of a torn aorta. She worked as a grain trader
for her father’s company, Cook Flour Co. She was
a lifelong supporter of the Fine Arts Museums of California,
where she was a docent for more than 50 years. She was
also an active volunteer for the San Francisco Opera.
Her husband, Alexander, died in 1990.
Virginia Lee “Ginger” Copeland
Campbell, ’51 (speech & drama),
of Soquel, Calif., December 8, at 74, of emphysema.
She served as administrative assistant to former UC-Santa
Cruz chancellor Dean McHenry. She held other positions
within the university, including the Institute of Marine
Science and the chemistry department. She was a founding
board member of Friends of Long Marine Laboratory and
was an honorary member of UC-Santa Cruz Arboretum Associates.
Her husband, Don, died in 1998. Survivors: two stepsons
and six grandchildren.
Russell Chas Goebel, ’51 (physical
therapy), of Bloomington, Ind., March 10, at 84. He
was a captain in the Army Air Corps during World War
II and an active member of the Rotary Club. His wife
of 58 years, Katherin, died in 2002. Survivors: his
son, John; one daughter, Cynthia Olyphant; and four
grandchildren.
Scott Richard Lawson, ’52 (history),
of Tucson, Ariz., September 12, at 73. A member of Delta
Kappa Epsilon and the football team, he was commissioned
as a naval officer in 1952. He worked for two international
oil companies before entering the investment securities
business with his father’s firm, Lawson, Levy,
Williams and Stern. He became a municipal bond specialist
and managed the municipal bond department at Wells Fargo
Bank. He served on the board of the Stanford Buck Club
and was a member of the Merchant’s Exchange Club.
Survivors: his wife of 30 years, Marilyn “Murmie”;
two daughters, Brooke Gibbs and Kelley Cummings;
one son, Peter; and six grandchildren.
Joan Fish McCord, ’52 (education),
MA ’66, PhD ’68 (sociology), of Narberth,
Pa., February 24, at 73, of lung cancer. A member of
the women’s tennis team, she became a Temple U.
criminologist who debunked common wisdom about the effectiveness
of many accepted social intervention programs. She authored
books and articles examining various programs aimed
at diverting juveniles from crime. She was the first
female president of the American Society of Criminology.
Her husband, William, ’52, died in 1992. Survivors:
two sons, Robert and Geoffrey; and four grandsons.
Donn B. Thomson, ’53 (petroleum
engineering), MBA ’57, of Palm Desert, Calif.,
February 29, at 73, of heart failure. After working
for Conoco and for Beckman Instruments, he set up his
own company, CAPCO, to develop a unique instrument to
identify anaerobic bacteria. Survivors: his wife of
10 years, Suzanne; one son, Eric; and one grandson.
Martha Ann Chapple Porter Mitchel, ’54,
MA ’55 (education), of Los Angeles, February 11,
at 71, of cancer. A member of both the Cap and Gown
society and the Daughters of the American Revolution,
she served on the boards of the Brentwood and Marlborough
schools and was president and a senior adviser of the
Junior League of Los Angeles. Her first husband, Gerald
Porter, ’53, JD ’56, died in 1970. Survivors:
her second husband, Glen; two sons, Gregory and Clark
Porter; one daughter, Claire Eichler; and 11 grandchildren.
Paulette Grantham, ’57 (history),
MA ’58 (education), of Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, March
12, 2003, of multiple sclerosis. Survivors include her
brother.
George Sutton Parks Jr., ’58
(electrical engineering), of Sunnyvale, April 5, at
70, of cancer. A member of Delta Chi and a naval veteran
of the Korean War, he worked for Stanford Research Institute,
GTE Sylvania, Ford Aerospace, and Globe Wireless. In
the 1960s, he led the construction of the 150-foot telescope
dish in the Foothills behind the University. The Dish,
which remains in use, was initially used to study radio
transmission in the upper atmosphere and to track the
Pioneer space probe in deep space. Survivors: his wife
of 39 years, Barbara; one son, Stephen; two daughters,
Janet Swanson and Nancy; and five grandsons.
Jack Edward Hatton, ’59 (mechanical
engineering), MBA ’61, of Los Altos, March 14,
at 66. A member of Delta Tau Delta, he worked for 37
years at Lockheed Martin before retiring. Survivors:
his wife of 44 years, Valerie Boysen, ’59; two
sons, Christopher and Curtis; three grandchildren; one
sister and one brother.
James Webster Stewart, ’59 (political
science), JD ’62, of Palo Alto, April 24, at 66,
of cancer. A member of the Breakers eating club, he
traveled to the South in the 1960s to defend civil rights
activists. He was appointed to the Santa Clara Municipal
Court by Gov. Jerry Brown in 1979 and later was elected
a Superior Court judge, spending much of his career
in family court. He wrote two books about how to survive
divorce and child custody disputes with a minimum of
trauma and expense. After he retired in 1999, he continued
to serve as a private judge in family law cases through
the American Arbitration Association. Survivors: his
wife of 41 years, Suzan Behrman, ’62, MA ’63;
one son, David; one daughter, Amy Stewart DiBianca;
and one granddaughter.
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1960s
Patrick McLeod Horrigan, ’61
(general engineering), of Sunnyvale, February 24, at
64. For 34 years, he worked for the city of Sunnyvale
Public Safety Department and retired as a lieutenant.
He served with an MP unit of the U.S. Army from 1962
to 1964 and returned to the department after an honorable
discharge. He helped establish the Police Athletics
League for the youth of Sunnyvale and volunteered with
the Kiwanis Club. Survivors: his wife, Suzanne; one
son, Don; two daughters, Sheelagh Carleton and Meghan;
one grandson; his mother; and one sister.
David Michael Kelley, ’61, MS
’62, Engr. ’69 (civil engineering), of Los
Gatos, Calif., February 13, at 64, of Parkinson’s
disease. He enjoyed a 40-year career in the missiles
and space field with Philco Ford, which was eventually
sold to Lockheed Martin. His wife, Malloy, predeceased
him. Survivors: two sons, Michael and Patrick; two stepchildren;
two grandchildren; and his mother.
Keith Richard Galen Goldsmith, ’65
(psychology), of Tiburon, Calif., March 10, at 60, of
brain tumors. A member of the Band, he was a shiatsu
massage master who combined acupressure and many other
forms of healing. His first wife, Amiella, predeceased
him. Survivors: his second wife, Elizabeth; one daughter,
Eelia Goldsmith-Henderscheid; three brothers, including
Larrie, ’73; and one sister.
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1970s
Dennis Lee Casey, ’75 (human
biology), of Annapolis, Md., February 15, at 50. A member
of Breakers eating club, he clerked for the 4th Circuit
Court in Baltimore before joining Paul, Hastings, Janofsky
and Walker. Starting in 1997, he worked as a compliance
attorney specializing in employment law for Global Exchange
Services. Survivors: his former wife, Elizabeth Buckman;
two children, Colin and Katherine, ’05; his mother;
three brothers; and one sister.
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1990s
Jennifer S. Beltran-Lopez, ’95
(political science), of Sunnyvale, February 21, at 30,
of lung cancer. She was a member of Ballet Folklorico
and a tutor and coordinator of the Barrio Assistance
Tutoring Program at Stanford. She taught science and
math at Garfield Charter School. Survivors: her husband,
George Lopez, ’96; and her parents, Tom and Sue
Beltran.
Tara Christine Goins Brennan, ’98
(English and American studies), of Salt Lake City, February
24, at 28. During her time at Stanford, she played violin
with the University orchestra, was a public policy volunteer
coordinator for the Haas Center for Public Service and
an editor for the Black Arts Quarterly. After graduation,
she worked as a corporate recruiter for International
Network Services (later Lucent Technologies) before
beginning law school. Survivors include her mother and
father.
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EDUCATION
James Searle Storey, EdD ’56,
of Summit, N.J., December 6, at 85, of Alzheimer’s
disease. He was an officer in the Army during World
War II. He taught art at Chatham College in Pittsburgh
for 10 years before joining San Francisco State U.,
where he taught art and design for 27 years. He served
as art department chair twice and was a consultant to
the National Education Testing Service. He was also
a product designer and received a patent for a locking
device for two-wheeled vehicles. Survivors: three sons,
James, ’68, David and Peter; one daughter, Adeline;
and eight grandchildren.
Joan Elaine Brennan, MA ’63,
of Half Moon Bay, Calif., March 13, at 70, of cancer.
She was a teaching member of the Dominican Order for
18 years and also taught at schools in Antioch, Stockton,
San Rafael, San Francisco and Monterey. A member of
Friends of the Sea Otter, she supported numerous animal
welfare groups. Survivors include her sister.
ENGINEERING
Juan Ipalare “Johnny” Dangcil,
MS ’52 (civil engineering), of Glendale,
Calif., February 22, of a brain hemorrhage. He worked
at Bechtel Corp. before returning to the Philippines
as professor and head of the Hydraulics Laboratory at
Mapua Institute of Technology. When he returned to the
United States, he worked for 32 years for several engineering
firms including CF Braun and Ralph M. Parsons. Survivors:
his wife, Torinne; three children, Jay, Jasper and Trisa;
and three grandchildren.
Bohdan Andrzej “Bob” Sukiennicki,
MS ’67 (mechanical engineering), of Cameron
Park, Calif., March 21, at 70, in a plane crash. He
worked as an engineer at the Stanford Linear Accelerator
Center for nearly 30 years before retiring in 1992.
He was active in the El Dorado County sheriff’s
department search and rescue group and the sheriff’s
air patrol. His wife, Arlene, died in the crash as well.
Survivors: his two daughters, Kristina Accardo and Teresa,
’88; one son, Robert; and two grandchildren.
George Frederick “Fred” Armentrout,
MS ’73 (electrical engineering), of Beaverton,
Ore., October 10, at 54, of brain cancer. He worked
as an engineer for Tektronix for 25 years, followed
by a year at Lattice Semiconductor. He engineered CDs
for local groups, and his recordings of classical music
concerts have played on National Public Radio and on
Portland radio stations. Survivors: his wife, Sue; and
one sister.
Olga Porobich Leach, MS ’85
(materials science and engineering), of Livermore, Calif.,
February 18, at 49. She worked for Fairchild Camera
and Intel corporations as a product process and reliability
engineer and, more recently, at Domus in Pleasanton.
Survivors include her husband, Michael.
Alan Barry Liu, MS ’95 (mechanical
engineering), of Mountain View, April 11, at 31, in
a bicycle accident. He worked as a mechanical engineer
and manager at Applied Materials in Santa Clara. An
avid sports fan and athlete, he was the head coach for
the Mountain View Masters swim team. Survivors: his
father; his mother and stepfather; one sister; and three
grandparents.
HUMANITIES
& SCIENCES
Jay Theodore “Ted” Rusmore,
MA ’40 (psychology), of Portola Valley, March
25, at 88. A member of El Campo eating club, he served
in the Navy during World War II. He then joined the
psychology department at San Jose State U., where he
taught and researched for 35 years. He served for many
years on the California Fair Employment Practices Commission.
He was a founding member of the Peninsula Housing Association,
which planned and developed Ladera. The Rusmores were
among the first 20 families to move into the new cooperative
housing community in 1950. Survivors: his wife, Jean;
five daughters, Mary Villaume, Teri Coppedge, Barbara,
Kaki and Margaret; one son, John; 11 grandchildren;
and two great-grandchildren.
Anne L. H. Nelson, MA ’49 (speech
and drama), of North Bend, Wash., October 24, at 87.
She was a teacher, homemaker and community volunteer,
devoting herself to education, literacy and political
action for peace and human justice. Her husband, George,
’48, died in 1997. Survivors: two daughters, JoAnne
and Christine; and one grandson.
Dudley Boyd Shean Jr., PhD ’49
(bacteriology), of Arnold, Calif., April 9, at 87. His
wife, Audrey Hollingsworth, ’47, died in 2000.
Survivors: two daughters, Barbara Wild and Laurie; two
sons, Dennis and Tom; six grandchildren; and two great-grandsons.
Oliver B. “Obie” Taylor,
MA ’53 (architecture), MS ’53 (civil engineering),
of Sausalito, Calif., February 3, at 88, of pneumonia.
Commanding officer of the 14th Fighter Group during
World War II, he led 56 missions and was credited with
five enemy aircraft destroyed in the air. Among his
many awards, he received the Silver Star, the Legion
of Merit and five Battle Stars. After his military service,
he worked for Bechtel as a senior estimator until he
retired 27 years later. His wife of 32 years, Rose,
died in 1993.
Bernard C. Wexler, PhD ’53 (cell
biology), of Cincinnati, Ohio, January 29, at 80, of
heart problems. A World War II veteran, he was a teacher
and researcher in endocrinology, cardiovascular disease,
aging and stress. He was the director of the former
May Institute for Medical Research and emeritus professor
of experimental pathology and medicine at the U. of
Cincinnati College of Medicine. Survivors: his wife
of 57 years, Jean; two daughters, Nancy Brothers and
Helen Yurong; one son, William; and six grandchildren.
Donald William Peterson, PhD ’61
(geology), of Albuquerque, N.M., December 12, at 78.
A geologist and volcano expert, he worked for the U.S.
Geological Survey. He also worked for many years as
the scientist-in-charge of volcano observatories in
Hawaii and at Mount St. Helens. Survivors: his wife
of 55 years, Betty; two daughters, Karen and Kristine;
five grandchildren; and one sister.
Thomas Russell “Tom” Byrd, MA
’65 (health education), of Palo Alto, April 11,
at 62. He was a health science instructor at DeAnza
College in Cupertino for 34 years until his retirement
in 2002. His late father, Oliver, ’29, MA ’33,
EdD ’40, taught health education at Stanford from
1937 to 1971. The author of several books, Tom served
as an alcohol and drug abuse counselor and was a member
of the Association of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Educators.
An avid swimmer, he was the open water long distance
national champion for his age group in 1998. Survivors:
his wife, Kathi; one son, Patrick; three daughters,
Kristina Hogland, Jaime and Jenna; five grandchildren;
and one sister, Beverly Loomis, ’59, MA ’60.
Pauline Wright Schaffer Nelson, PhD
’65 (speech and drama), of Cupertino, February
13, at 92. In the 1930s and 1940s, she presented more
than 1,000 one-woman shows. She organized the Dallas
Teenage Theater, where she directed a host of plays
every year. In 1966, she became a professor at San Francisco
State U., teaching in the theater, speech and communication
studies, and
education departments. She started an annual oral interpretation
festival, attended by students from 50 high schools
and colleges. Her husband of 35 years, Richard, predeceased
her. Survivors: her daughter, Anna; and two grandchildren.
LAW
Everett H. Berberian, JD ’49,
of Fresno, Calif., March 2, at 83. A World War II veteran,
he practiced law in San Francisco and San Mateo until
his retirement in 1985. He was a former board member
of the bar association of San Francisco, San Mateo County
bar association and the San Mateo County Trial Lawyers
Association. He was also an arbitrator of the Superior
Court of San Mateo County and spent 50 years as a member
of the Knights of Vartan. He was predeceased by two
daughters and his wife of 37 years, Betty. Survivors:
two daughters, Gail and Nancy; one son, Harry; six grandchildren;
and one brother.
MEDICINE
Charles Gerald Scarborough, MD ’37,
of San Jose, August 25, 2003, at 94, of complications
following surgery. He practiced pulmonary medicine for
more than 40 years before retiring in 1987. He served
as president of the Santa Clara County Medical Society,
the California Tuberculosis Association, and the California
chapter of the American Thoracic Society. His wife of
56 years, Gladys, died in 1991. Survivors: his daughter,
Julia Moore, ’61; and two grandchildren.
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