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| Obituaries |
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FACULTY / STAFF
Donald Davidson, of Berkeley, August
30, at 86, of cardiac arrest. An emeritus professor
at UC-Berkeley, he began his teaching career at Queens
College in New York before moving on to Stanford, where
he worked in the philosophy department as professor
and director of graduate studies from 1951 to 1967.
He came to prominence in the early 1960s with the publication
of his article, “Actions, Reasons and Causes,”
and went on to become a leading philosopher of the 20th
century. He enjoyed numerous visiting lectureships,
including the John Locke Lectures at Oxford and a Fulbright
Lectureship in India. He also served as president of
the American Philosophical Society. Survivors: his wife,
Marcia Cavell; his daughter, Elizabeth; two grandchildren;
and a sister.
John Hart Ely, of Coconut Grove, Fla.,
October 25, at 64, of cancer. Before joining the U.
of Miami in 1996, he was a professor at Yale, Harvard
and the dean of Stanford Law School from 1982 to 1987.
He wrote three books, most notably Democracy and
Distrust, which is considered a seminal work of
constitutional scholarship. He served in the Army, was
the youngest staff member of the Warren Commission investigating
President Kennedy’s assassination, clerked for
Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren, and served
as general counsel of the U.S. Department of Transportation.
Survivors: his wife, Gisela; his two sons, Robert and
John; and two granddaughters.
Carroll Frank Frankfurt, of Palo Alto,
November 6, at 79, of amyloidosis. He served on a Navy
submarine in the South Pacific during World War II.
For 43 years, he worked at Stanford as an electronics
technician, fabricating and overseeing the repair and
calibration of electronic instruments. After his retirement
in 1989, he volunteered in the Stanford Athletic Hall
of Fame and was a member of the Golden Donor club at
the Stanford Blood Center for donating nearly 20 gallons
of blood. Survivors: his wife of 57 years, Betty; his
son, John; his daughter, Mary Dunn; six grandchildren;
and five great-grandchildren.
Thomas F. McBride, of Portland, Ore.,
October 31, at 74, of a cerebral hemorrhage. From 1982
to 1989, he served as associate dean for administration
in the Law School, where he implemented a loan repayment
assistance program for public interest law students.
He also taught in the human biology department. After
the Loma Prieta earthquake in 1989, he was asked to
head the school’s department of environmental
health and safety. Before coming to campus, he served
as an associate Watergate prosecutor, leading a task
force investigating campaign contributions and the selling
of ambassadorships. Survivors: his wife of 28 years,
Catherine Milton; his four children, Elizabeth Joyce,
John, Raphael, and Luke; one brother; and one sister.
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1920s
George Edwin “Ed” Thayer,
’29 (electrical engineering), of Fresno, Calif.,
April 22, 2003, at 96. A member of the Band and Theta
Xi, he worked for Ashby Graphite as a traffic manager.
His wife, Dorothy Kimberlin, ’30, MA ’31,
died in 2002. Survivors include his daughter, Pat.
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1930s
James Seth, ’34 (chemistry),
of Martinez, Calif., July 10, 2002, at 90. He spent
his career at Phillips Petroleum as a chemical engineer
in charge of refinery operations. Survivors: his wife,
Nellie Pleasant, ’34; his daughter, Evelyn Gilbert;
his son, Oliver; and three grandchildren.
Alfred Owen Ulph, ’35, MA ’40,
PhD ’47 (history), of Lamoille, Nev., October
2, 2003, at 89, of prostate cancer. He spent most of
his career as a professor of history and humanities
at Reed College in Portland, Ore., where he worked for
35 years. He also spent time at universities in California,
Nevada and Montana. In the 1950s, he took a break from
academia to be a cowhand on a cattle ranch in the Smokey
Valley of central Nevada. His experiences there inspired
him to write two books which chronicled the life of
the contemporary cowboy.
Florence Mary Waddell Lynn, ’36
(English), of Los Angeles, September 26, 2003, at 89.
She was a founding member of Kappa Kappa Gamma at Stanford.
A freelance artist, she dedicated herself to charity
work, including Angels Attic for Autistic Children,
Pet Orphans, the Children’s Home Society and the
Childrens Bureau of Los Angeles. She was also involved
with the L.A. County Art Museum as a patron, an artist
and a docent. Her husband, Theodore, died September
27, 1997. Survivors: her two sons, John and Dennis;
her daughter, Barbara; her grandson; and one brother.
Julia Doyle Howard, ’37 (nursing),
of Studio City, Calif., May 5, 1995, at 81. She worked
as a nurse and supervisor at several hospitals in Fresno,
Calif., and retired in 1966. Her husband, James, predeceased
her. Survivors: her daughter, Nancy Schulenberg; two
granddaughters; and three great-grandchildren.
Robinette Jane Fisher Lange, ’37
(classics), of Stockton, Calif., May 16, at 88. A member
of Chi Omega, she taught Latin and Spanish at Lodi Union
High School for many years. She was a charter member
and past president of the Stanford Women’s Club
of San Joaquin Valley, a board member of the Children’s
Home of Stockton, and a Paul Harris Fellow on the Stockton
Rotary. Her husband, William, ’38, died August
26.
Helen Virginia Zurick Fleeman, ’38
(social science/social thought), of La Jolla, Calif.,
October 5, 2003. She was a member of Pi Beta Phi. Survivors:
her husband of 62 years, Bill; her son, Doby, ’72;
her daughter, Leslie; and three grandchildren.
Henry Ross Hansen Sr., ’38 (political
science), of Livermore, Calif., October 29, at 87. After
serving in the Army during World War II, he worked for
R.A. Hansen Co. until his retirement in 1980. His community
service included the Alameda County Board of Education,
the Oakland Symphony and Family Service Agency of Alameda
County. Survivors: his wife, Patricia; his son, Henry
“Rik” Jr., ’79; his daughter, Sarah
Rierson; and four grandchildren.
William John “Bill” Lange,
’38, of Stockton, Calif., August 23, at 87. His
career as a vineyardist was interrupted by World War
II, during which he rose from private to major. He worked
for the East Bay Municipal Utility District, retiring
in 1980 as manager of the water production division.
Active in the civic affairs of northern San Joaquin
County, he worked with the Boy Scouts and various chambers
of commerce and served as past president of the Haggin
Museum. His wife, Robinette Fisher, ’37, died
May 16.
Elizabeth Woodin Thomas, ’38
(social science/social thought), of Sacramento, September
27, at 87. A member of Delta Gamma, she served in World
War II as a major in the Women’s Army/Air Corps
and was awarded the Bronze Star. She was active in the
Junior League and the Sacramento Children’s Home.
Survivors: her husband of 54 years, Robert, ’39,
MBA ’46; two daughters, Barbara and Molly; and
two sisters.
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1940s
Gertrude Elizabeth “Betty” Pleasant
Johnston Schoelles Boehm, ’40 (social
sciences/social thought), of Santa Rosa, Calif., January
31, 2003, at 83. A member of Alpha Omega Pi, she served
as a captain in the Woman’s Army Corps during
World War II and worked for several engineering firms
around Palo Alto. Survivors: her two daughters, Katharine
Stirling and Marcia Hopkins; her son, Carl; three grandchildren;
and two sisters, Nellie Pleasant Seth, ’34, and
Evelyn Pleasant Johnson, ’43.
Barbara Gorham Rogers Rasmussen, ’40,
of Pauma Valley, Calif., October 11, at 84. President
of Kappa Kappa Gamma, she went on to become a member
of Las Madrinas, a mentoring program for young Hispanic
women, and vice president of the Junior League of Los
Angeles. Survivors: her husband, Neil Jr., ’38;
two sons, Neil III, ’64, and Christian, ’71;
two brothers, Emery Rogers, ’43, PhD ’51,
and Harold Hopper, ’46; and three grandchildren.
| This obituary for Barbara
Gorham Rogers Rasmussen, ’40, described Las
Madrinas inaccurately. It is a charitable group
supporting research at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles. |
Mary Louise Henry Lank, ’41,
of San Diego, October 31, at 83. She was a longtime
member of the Point Loma Garden Club and Point Loma
Assembly. She was also active in PEO. Her husband of
54 years, Harold, predeceased her. Survivors: her two
daughters, Sandra Bramble and Judy Boyer; four grandchildren;
and two great-grandchildren.
Mary Jane Isham Ehrman, ’42
(psychology), of Dos Palos, Calif., November 23, at
84. She worked for United Air Lines, as a service pilot
in the Women’s Air Force and as a civilian flight
instructor. Survivors: her husband of 58 years, Peter;
two sons, Terry and Scott; and two daughters, Wendy
Marshall and Megan Young.
Richard Stanford “Dick” Lee,
’42 (preclinical medicine), MD ’45, of Portola
Valley, November 9, at 85, of leukemia. He spent his
life in medicine as an ob/gyn at the Palo Alto Medical
Clinic, which was founded by his father, Russel, ’16,
MD ’20. An avid fan of car racing, he served as
medical director for the Sports Car Club of America
and actively worked to improve racing safety. He was
a member of Theta Delta Chi. Survivors: his three brothers,
Peter, ’44, MD ’47, Philip, ’45, MD
’48, and Hewlett, ’45, MD ’49.
Edward Plater Smith, ’42 (electrical
engineering), of Tucson, Ariz., October 4, 2003, at
83. A member of Alpha Tau Omega and a veteran of World
War II, he worked for Pacific T&T as a transmission
engineer and later as a traffic engineer involved in
the rapid expansion of telephone services in California
and Nevada. He then worked for ITT Federal Labs and
the Stanford Research Institute, where he concentrated
on the design of military command, control and communications
systems. Prior to his retirement, he worked as the director
of systems engineering for the Safeguard Communication
Agency at Fort Huachuca, Ariz. Survivors: his wife,
BC; his two daughters, Stefani Braun, ’68, and
Hanne Heintz, ’74; his son, Charles; and four
grandchildren.
Phyllis Rose Roos Barusch, ’43
(French), of Richmond, Calif., October 15, at 80, of
congestive heart failure. She taught at Williams College
and UC-Berkeley and worked as a research associate with
the Institute of Governmental Studies. She was active
in civic affairs, particularly with the League of Women
Voters and Save the Bay. Survivors: her husband, Maurice,
’40, MA ’41, PhD ’44; two sons, Lawrence
and Ronald; five grandchildren; and one brother.
Frank M. Perkins, ’43 (general
engineering), of Redondo Beach, Calif., November 20,
2002. A member of Tau Beta Pi and Theta Chi, he served
as a Navy officer in World War II. He worked as an engineer
in the space program at General Dynamics and then took
a job at Aerospace Corp., from which he retired in 1985.
Survivors: his wife of 56 years, Priscilla; his daughter,
Ann; and his granddaughter.
Betty Jane Ira Barrow, ’46 (nursing),
of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, September 25, at 79, of
Parkinson’s disease. She worked as head nurse
of the outpatient department of Stanford Hospital from
1947 to 1949. Her nursing career brought her to San
Francisco, Honolulu, New York and Canada. Her husband
of 40 years, Michael, died in 1992. Survivors: her two
daughters, Barbara Dunsworth and Sally; his son, Geoffrey;
10 grandchildren; and two sisters, including her twin,
Barbara Gladman, ’46.
Roy Arnold Anderson, ’47 (economics),
MBA ’49, of La Cañada, Calif., October
18, 2003, at 82. He began his career as an accountant
at the Lockheed Corp. in 1956 and was named chairman
and chief executive in 1977, when the company was mired
in scandals that threatened its future. By the time
he retired in 1985, Lockheed was reporting steady growth
and had resumed paying dividends after a 15-year hiatus.
In retirement, he remained active in civic groups and
causes, including the Los Angeles Music Center, the
Salvation Army and initiatives to strengthen police,
schools and other public services in L.A. In 1994, he
became chairman of the Weingart Foundation, one of the
nation’s largest philanthropic organizations.
A trustee of the University, he and his wife established
the Roy and Betty Anderson professorship in economics
at Stanford. Survivors: his wife of 55 years, Betty
Boehme, ’48; his two sons, Ross and James; his
two daughters, Karyn and Debra White; five grandchildren;
two brothers; and two sisters.
Virginia Ivey Walker Ashton, ’47
(sociology), of Salt Lake City, November 12, at 78.
She was a member of Delta Gamma and managing editor
of the yearbook. A patron of the arts, she supported
the Utah Symphony, Ballet West and the Pioneer Memorial
Theater. Survivors: her husband of 56 years, Ralph,
’47; her sons, Michael, ’71, and R. Larry;
her daughters, Virginia Bostrom and Marjorie Coleman;
six grandchildren; and one brother, James Walker, ’58.
Carol Courtright Clifford, ’47
(French), of Tucson, Ariz., November 11, at 76. A member
of Alpha Omicron Pi, she spent 20 years as a librarian
at Herbert Hoover Jr. High School in San Jose before
retiring in 1981. Her husband, Robert, ’50, died
in 1991. Survivors: her daughter, Diana Dooley; one
grandson; and two great-grandchildren.
Charles Alvin Lutz Jr., ’47
(economics), of Palos Verdes Peninsula, Calif., October
13, 2003, at 82. He served in the Merchant Marine Corps
and was a member of Beta Theta Pi. He owned Crest Orbit
Delivery Service until his retirement in 1992. He was
active in the Jonathan Club and Squires Club in Los
Angeles and King Harbor Yacht Club in Redondo Beach.
Survivors: his wife, Jean; his children, Cristina, Cheryl
Burchell, Melissa Taylor, Terry Moreman and Michael
O’Sullivan, five grandchildren; and one sister.
Edward Augustus Cornwall Jr., ’48,
MS ’49 (electrical engineering), of Santa Barbara,
Calif., March 31, 2003, at 78, of lung cancer. A World
War II veteran, he worked for RCA in Los Angeles until
1973, when he moved to Santa Barbara and worked for
Raytheon Corp. until his retirement in 1992. Survivors:
his wife, Barbara; his two daughters, Harriet Cornwall
Newman, ’79, MS ’80, and Ann Cornwall Boyce;
four stepchildren; and five grandchildren.
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1950s
Claus John Breier III, ’50 (political
science), MBA ’54, of Bethesda, Md., November
10, at 77. He was a sports reporter for the Stanford
Daily with his own column, “Through Breier’s
Pipe.” He worked for IBM for 35 years. As president
of the Stanford Alumni Club in Washington, D.C., he
pioneered alumni receptions at foreign embassies. Survivors:
his wife of 48 years, Marian Wenger, ’54; his
four sons, Eric, Kurt, Mark, ’81, MBA ’85,
and Todd; his daughter, Loren Dancer; and seven grandchildren.
Kenneth L. Kelley, ’50 (social
science/social thought), of Laguna Niguel, Calif., August
5, 2003, at 74, of cancer. A member of Sigma Chi and
the track team, he served during the Korean War. He
worked in commercial real estate. A player in the annual
bocce ball tournament in Del Mar for 18 years, he won
the championship once and was runner up several times.
Survivors: his wife, Joan McInerney; his two daughters,
JoAnn Jack and Caroline Spencer; his son, Kenneth; and
five grandchildren.
Henry Clarkson Scott, ’50 (biological
sciences), MA ’51 (education), of San Anselmo,
Calif., July 6, 2003, at 74, of cancer. A member of
Chi Psi, he began his teaching career at San Francisco
State U. In 1963, he joined the Peace Corps and served
as deputy director for Ethiopia. Upon his return to
the States, he resumed teaching and became dean of students
and professor of biology at SUNY-Old Westbury. Moving
west, he joined the faculty at California Institute
for the Arts in Valencia. His next move brought him
to Menlo Park, where he was executive director of Hidden
Villa’s environmental education program. He later
became a teacher at Peninsula School and served on its
board of directors. Survivors: his wife, Caroline Helmuth;
his daughters, Molly Scott-Bellman, Katherine Dulin
and Chloe; his sons, Peter, Will and Samuel; seven grandchildren;
two great-grandchildren; and his brother, Tom, MA ’59,
PhD ’62.
Shirley E. Casella Freund, ’52
(education), of San Francisco, September 17, of cancer.
She was a class officer both her sophomore and senior
years and was a member of Cap & Gown. Following
a career as an elementary school teacher, she served
on several nonprofit and school boards, chaired charity
events and fundraised for ARCS Foundation, San Francisco
School Volunteers and the United Way. Survivors include
her two daughters, Leslie, and Ellen, PhD ’99.
James R. Love, ’52 (art), of
San Francisco, December 5, at 74, of prostate cancer.
A member of Beta Theta Pi, he joined the Army as a second
lieutenant and served with the Quartermaster Corps.
He worked as the creative director at several advertising
agencies before turning to real estate, renovating old
San Francisco buildings and leasing the apartments.
Survivors include his sister.
William Capell “Bill” Wright,
’52 (political science), of Pleasanton, Calif.,
August 29, at 74, of prostate cancer. A trombone player
in the Band, he worked in the insurance industry for
45 years, Survivors: his wife of 27 years, Stephanie;
his son, William; three daughters, Margaret Schuft,
Dorothy Waterman and Alison; two grandsons; one brother;
and one sister.
Anthony Joseph Garrett, ’53
(physical science), of Carpinteria, Calif., November
30, at 72. A member of Zeta Psi, he served in the Marine
Corps. After a successful career in the aerospace industry,
he joined Dean Witter & Co., co-managing the firm’s
Southern California region for more than 15 years. Survivors:
his wife, Rosalind Stubenberg, ’54; his son, Joseph;
his daughter, Gretchen Valentine, ’81; three stepchildren;
three grandchildren; one sister; and two brothers, John,
’61, and James, ’61.
James T. Gillespie, ’53 (preclinical
medicine), MD ’56, of Steilacoom, Wash., October
18, at 72, of a plane crash. He was a Vietnam veteran,
retired colonel and surgeon. He spent 23 years in the
Army Medical Corps before joining the Western Clinic
in Tacoma. He was chief of thoracic surgery at Madigan
General Hospital and was a fellow of the American College
of Surgeons. His wife of 40 years, Jessie, died with
him. Survivors include his two daughters, Margaret and
Kathryn, and one brother.
Robert Frank Hutton, ’53 (chemistry),
of Cambridge, Mass., October 17, 2003, at 72, of a heart
attack. A member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, he joined the
chemistry department at Brandeis U. after completing
his post-doctoral research at MIT. Later, at Waters
Associates, he worked as a marketing specialist and
manager, then as a lecturer in the company’s liquid
chromatography school, giving presentations at corporate
headquarters and universities across Europe and the
United States. In 1983, he became a freelance consultant.
Survivors: his former wife, Joel Leon; his companion,
Toni-Lee Capossela; and his son, Eric, ’94, PhD
’01.
Eleanor “Linn” Ericksen Jones,
’55 (psychology), of Alameda, Calif., November
1, 2003, at 69, of brain cancer. A psychologist in private
practice, she was one of the founders of the American
Mental Health Alliance of California. Survivors: her
husband of 48 years, Ashley, ’53; four daughters,
Beth, Shelley, ’81, Heather and Karrie; and six
grandchildren.
Andrew Hunter Land II, ’55 (history),
MBA ’60, of Hillsborough, Calif., November 28,
at 69, of cancer. A member of the crew team and Delta
Kappa Epsilon, he became a partner at Hambrecht and
Quist. He established the Land Family Foundation, which
helped found the San Francisco University High School,
where he served as a trustee for many years. He also
served on the board of the San Francisco Museum of Modern
Art. Survivors include his two daughters, Kathleen and
Elizabeth; and one grandson.
Juliana Dorothea Molloy Shields, ’55
(history), of Indian Wells, Calif., October 8, at 70.
Survivors: her husband of 48 years, John, ’54,
MBA ’56; two sons, John II and Michael; two daughters,
Kathleen and Karen; five grandchildren; her mother;
and two sisters.
John Kenneth Doyle Jr., ’57
(mathematics), of Palo Alto, May 8, 2002, at 66, of
cancer. He played on the freshman tennis team and received
his letter in boxing. A member of the NROTC, he served
three years in the Navy. He worked on a variety of research
and development projects at the Lockheed Corp. facility
in Sunnyvale from 1960 to 1977 and performed communications
research at a joint U.S./U.K. facility in England. In
1998, he retired from Lockheed as a senior staff engineer.
Survivors: his wife of 45 years, Susan Merrill, ’59;
his three sons, Ken, Steven and David; three grandchildren;
and his sister, Sharon, ’59.
Robert E. Lindsay, ’57, Engr.
’60, PhD ’62 (electrical engineering), of
Raleigh, N.C., September 18, at 67, of heart failure.
He was a member of Theta Xi and the golf team. After
teaching at the U. of Washington, he joined IBM’s
Thomas Watson Research Center and remained with the
company until his retirement in 1993. Survivors: his
wife, Susan; two sons, Tom and Steve; and two daughters,
Anne and Robyn.
Janet Lynne Tribbe, ’58 (English),
of Arcadia, Calif., July 17, 2003, at 66, of ovarian
cancer. She had careers with the USO in France, the
probation department in Los Angeles County, in real
estate and in the textile import business. She was a
member of Stanford Professional Women of Southern California.
Warren Robert Wood, ’58, Engr.
’67 (electrical engineering), MS ’74 (computer
science), of Palo Alto, October 12, 2003, at 67, of
pneumonia. A member of the track team, he later helped
to found the Stanford branch of the Sierra Club and
led cross-country ski tours for many years. Working
in electrical engineering and computer program design,
he first joined the Lockheed Corp. in Sunnyvale and
then Philco-Ford in Mountain View. From 1971 to 2000,
he was self-employed as a freelance contractor. Survivors
include his mother.
Betty Janet Young Deane, ’59
(nursing), of Nevada City, Calif., November 11, 2002,
at 66, of a heart attack. She worked as a public health
nurse in Contra Costa County. Survivors: her son, Michael;
one grandson; and several stepchildren.
Emmet Keith Torney, ’59 (speech
& drama), of Billings, Mont., August 6, 2002, at
64, of a heart attack. He served for 18 years as the
senior pastor of the First Congregational Church in
Naperville, Ill. In Billings, he was the senior pastor
of the First Congregational Church and United Church
of Christ. He sat on the boards of the Evangelical Health
Services, the Chicago Theological Seminary and the Billings
Food Bank. Survivors: his wife, Patricia; three daughters,
Kathy Lynch, Elizabeth Welch, ’87, and Susan;
two stepsons; and six grandchildren.
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1960s
Barry Allen Bell, ’60 (electrical
engineering), of Rockville, Md., March 13, 2003, at
65, of a stroke. A member of the Band, he served in
the Navy as director of the electrical division at the
Naval Nuclear Power School in Maryland. For 25 years,
he was an electronics expert at the National Institute
of Standards and Technology, during which time he was
awarded a Commerce Department silver medal for his work.
Survivors: his wife of 11 years, Jane; his two daughters,
Cathryn Kibby and Carolyn Duska; his son, Jonathan;
two stepsons; six grandchildren; and his mother.
Ann Carter Huneke, ’60 (art),
of Menlo Park, November 29, at 65, of cancer. A member
of the tennis team, she was a member of the Junior League,
the Menlo Circus Club and other organizations. She owned
the Home and Garden gift store in Menlo Park. Survivors:
her son, Murray, ’83; two daughters, Christine
Kremer, ’84, and Lorraine; four grandchildren;
and her brother, William, ’57.
David Arthur Cathcart, ’61 (history),
of Pasadena, Calif., September 30, 2003, at 63, of cancer.
A member of Theta Chi, he became a labor and employment
law specialist. He was a senior partner at Gibson, Dunn
& Crutcher and the founding chair of the American
Employment Law Council. He also served on the management
advisory committee of the National Labor Relations Board.
He was a senior editor of the widely used California
Employment Litigation Practice Guide. Committed to public
service, he was the chief legislative assistant to Sen.
John Tunney in the early 1970s and was instrumental
in the drafting and passage of the Water Quality Act.
For 23 years, he was a member of the board of governors
of the Santa Monica Boys & Girls Club. Survivors:
his wife, Janet Farley; his daughters Sarah, ’97,
and Rebecca; his brothers, Pat, ’68, and Robert
“Mike,” ’68.
Kate Franks Klaus, ’64 (English),
of Iowa City, Iowa, November 23, 2002, at 60, of a cerebral
hemorrhage. A lifelong environmentalist and preservationist,
she co-founded Iowa City’s Reno Street Neighborhood
Park, Nancy Seiberling Heritage Grove and Heritage Trees
project, which set out to document, preserve and replenish
the city’s trees. She was also a poet, playwright,
translator, designer and flutist. Survivors: her husband
of 35 years, Carl; three stepchildren; and one sister.
Elizabeth F. Stevenson, ’68
(history), of San Francisco, November 30, at 57, of
complications from pneumonia and a brain tumor. She
was the first executive director of the National Brain
Tumor Foundation, formed in 1981 as a support group
for patients, doctors and medical researchers. Earlier,
she worked at KQED and in the office of New York mayor
John Lindsay. She was a former member of the executive
board of the Alumni Association. Survivors include her
husband, Francisco Cancino, ’56; two sisters;
one brother; and her stepmother.
Richard Arthur Flower, ’69 (electrical
engineering), of Concord, Mass., October 8, at 56. A
member of Phi Beta Kappa and Tau Beta Pi, he was a member
of the electrical engineering faculty at the U. of Illinois
in the late 1970s and later was a computer scientist
with Digital Equipment, Compaq Computer and Hewlett-Packard.
Survivors: his wife, Linsey; his three brothers, including
Bill, ’71, PhD ’76, and Jack, ’77;
and his parents Bob and Esther.
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1970s
Sally Ann Bellows, ’71 (German
studies), of Albany, Calif., October 22, at 53, of liver
cancer. She was the manager of student services for
Berkeley’s School of Public Health and a longtime
member and leader of the Berkeley Staff Assembly. Survivors:
her husband, Hellmut Meister; her two daughters, Sarah
and Anna; her parents; two brothers; and one sister.
Warren Graig Greene, ’71 (political
science), of Northridge, Calif., October 7, 2003, at
54, of leukemia. He was a member of the basketball team
and Kappa Sigma. Gov. Pete Wilson appointed him to the
bench in 1996. Initially, he presided over a criminal
court in Norwalk but transferred two years later to
the San Fernando courthouse, where he served until his
death. Prior to his appointment, he was a senior partner
of Rutter Greene and Hobbs, where he served as managing
partner from 1990 to 1992. Survivors: his wife of 31
years, Carol Rosenlieb, ’74; his daughter, Emily;
his two sons, Colin and Spencer; his mother; and his
twin brother, Warner, ’71.
Camille Deborah Howard, ’71
(English), of Berkeley, October 12, at 53, of cancer.
After several years on the stage in New York and San
Francisco, she earned a PhD in theatre history. She
taught at Stanford in 1984 and again in 1999 and was
a full professor at San Francisco U. for 18 years. Survivors:
her daughter, Robyn; three brothers; and one sister.
Barry John Steiner, ’71, MA
’71 (political science), of Sacramento, June 6,
at 54, of Parkinson’s disease. He worked for Gov.
Jerry Brown’s Office of Planning and Research
and for the Sacramento County Counsel’s Office.
Survivors: his daughter, Sabrina; his son, Benjamin;
and one brother.
Ellen Friedlander, ’72 (English),
of Palo Alto, at 55, of cancer. She was a member of
the women’s tennis team. Survivors: her parents
and three brothers, including Theodore, III, ’69,
MA ’75.
Gary Dean Smith, ’73 (human
biology), of Runaway Bay, Texas, January 29, at 51,
of a car accident. A reverend, he pastored churches
for 30 years in Illinois, Indiana, California, Iowa
and Texas. He also served as a chaplain in the Navy
for 16 years and taught college courses including ethics
and religion. Survivors include his wife of 30 years,
Adair; three children; and several grandchildren.
Carrie Ellen Wilson Gordon, ’77
(anthropology), of Scranton, Penn., September 27, 2003,
at 48. She helped establish cultural orientation programs
for Vietnamese refugees and later participated in refugee
aid programs in Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines.
Survivors: her husband, James; her mother; and one brother.
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1980s
Nancy Elizabeth Walton Pugh, ’81
(biological sciences), of Charlottesville, Va., November
25, at 45. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, she worked as
a pediatrician and taught pediatrics as an assistant
professor at the U. of Virginia. Survivors: her husband,
Ernest; three daughters, Amy, Laura and Carolyn; her
mother; her grandmother; and two brothers.
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2000s
Leslie Joia Hotson, ’04 (international
relations), of Palo Alto, October 24, at 21, of cystic
fibrosis. At 13, she received a lung transplant, which
allowed her to resume her much-loved sporting activities,
including diving and whitewater rafting. She was a member
of Delta Delta Delta. Survivors: her parents, John,
’68, and Charlotte “Tib” Neely, ’70;
and her two brothers, Andrew, ’02, and Guy.
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BUSINESS
Herbert Wetzler, MBA ’38, of
Sherman Oaks, Calif., August 22, 2003, at 90. He worked
for Wilshire Oil, Gulf Oil and Chevron. After retiring,
he became a marketing consultant for the oil industry.
His wife, Evelyn, predeceased him.
ENGINEERING
Hubert E. “Bert” Lillis,
MA ’46 (mining and mineral engineering), of Billings,
Mont., October 6, at 82. He served in the Army under
Gen. George Patton during World War II. He worked for
a construction company before taking over Lillis Engineering
from his father in the late 1940s. He then became a
State Farm Insurance agent and stayed with the company
for 50 years, retiring in 2002. That same year, he received
the Association of Fundraising Professionals Outstanding
Philanthropist of the Year Award. His daughter, Kathy,
’69, died in 1971. Survivors: his fiancée,
Kat Metcalf, ’62; his two sons, Ken, ’71,
and Don; two daughters, Leone Fowler and Carol Schlenker;
seven grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; and
one brother.
HUMANITIES & SCIENCES
Clark Kerr, MA ’33 (economics),
of El Cerrito, Calif., December 1, at 92, of complications
from a fall. As president of the University of California
system, he revolutionized the structure of higher education
in the state but became a political casualty of the
campus protest movements of the 1960s. He headed the
multicampus university from 1958 to 1967, when former
Gov. Ronald Reagan fired him for being too soft on student
protesters. He then chaired the Carnegie Commission
on Higher Education, helping to create a system of classifying
colleges by mission and laying the groundwork for comparative
studies in higher education. Survivors: his wife of
69 years, Catherine Spaulding, ’32; two sons,
Clark and Alexander; one daughter, Caroline Gage; seven
grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.
William “Bill” Munich Jr.,
MA ’38 (chemistry), of Oakland, December 24, 2002,
at 87. After working briefly as a chemist at a soap
company, he joined the chemical sales department at
Braun-Knecht-Heiman, where he worked until his retirement.
After he retired, he began a second career volunteering
in the mineral section of the California Academy of
Sciences. His wife of 61 years, Carola, predeceased
him. Survivors: his son, Fred; his daughters, Carole
Quick and Lorraine Mudget; nine grandchildren; and one
great-granddaughter.
Raymond Muse, MA ’43, PhD ’48
(history), of San Diego, October 28, at 88. During World
War II, he served in Asia as a traffic analyst and cryptoanalyst.
After his doctoral work, he joined the faculty at Washington
State U., where he taught political science and chaired
the history department from 1956 to 1979. Survivors:
his wife, Marianne; his sons, Dean Johnson, Owen Johnson
and Kyle Jansson; seven grandchildren; two great-grandchildren;
and one sister.
Nancy Starbuck Meltzer, MA ’47
(psychology), of Ithaca, N.Y., October 16, 2002, at
80, of Parkinson’s disease. She was an education
psychologist with the Public Health Service in Washington,
D.C., in the early 1950s. The bulk of her career was
spent at Cornell U., where she served as the assistant
dean of the College of Human Ecology. Survivors: her
two sons, Jonathan and Joel; her daughter, Sarah Raleigh;
two grandchildren; and two sisters.
Kenneth Michael Kim, MA ’61
(health education), of San Jose, February 16, 2003,
at 85, of a heart attack. He overcame racial barriers
to become one of the first Asian Americans to teach
in San Francisco’s public schools in 1941. Ten
years later, he helped start San Francisco’s Chinese
Recreation Center, which led to a program he created
for boys incarcerated by the California Youth Authority.
He went on to become a professor of recreation at San
Jose U., where he taught for 24 years until his retirement
in 1982. Survivors: his daughter, Patricia; his three
sons, Kevin, Robert and Terry; four grandchildren; one
sister; and one brother.
James Matthew Kittelson, MA ’64,
PhD ’69 (history), of Saint Paul, Minn., November
10, at 62. He taught at the U. of Iowa and was professor
of reformation history at Ohio State U. for 26 years.
Since 1997, he was professor of church history at Luther
Seminary. In addition to more than 50 scholarly publication
and three books, he edited the Encyclopedia of the
Reformation. Survivors: his wife of 40 years, Margaret;
his daughters, Elizabeth Van Voorhis, and Amy; two grandchildren;
his father; and one brother.
Savel Kliachko, PhD ’68 (Slavic
languages), of Sunnyvale, August 6, at 80. During World
War II, he served as a Soviet liaison specialist and
interpreter. Fluent in four languages, he was a professor
of Russian at the U. of Arizona, Hamline U. and Moscow
U. He joined SRI International in 1978 as a senior technical
writer and editor. His mother taught Russian at Stanford
from 1946 to 1966. More than 600 volumes of Russian
and linguistics books from the Kliachko collection were
donated to the Slavic department of Green Library. His
wife of 53 years, Patricia, died in April 2003. Survivors:
his two daughters, Alison Trafas and Valerie Taglio;
and five grandchildren.
LAW
Stuart L. Kadison, JD ’48, of
Los Angeles, October 22, at 79. A veteran of World War
II, he was a trial lawyer, an expert in constitutional
law and special counsel to Chistensen, Miller, Fink,
Jacobs, Glaser Weil & Shapiro. He taught at Stanford
Law School from 1977 to 1982 and received the University’s
Herman Phleger Visiting Professor of Law Award in 1994.
He served as president of the Los Angeles County Bar
Association and as a governor of the State Bar of California.
Survivors: his wife of 57 years, Carita; his daughter,
Dana Lloyd, ’72; his two sons, Brian, ’76,
and Warne; and two granddaughters.
Vivian Nina Chaya Hannawalt, JD ’50,
of San Francisco, October 20, 2003, at 72, of cancer.
A member of Law Review, she had her own practice before
joining the legal staff of the Bay Area Rapid Transit
District in 1980, retiring in 1991. A dedicated volunteer,
she worked at the San Francisco Public Library, taught
reading at her local public elementary school, represented
indigent criminal defendants through the San Francisco
Public Defenders Office, and helped seniors prepare
their income tax returns through an IRS volunteer program.
Survivors: her husband of 53 years, Willis; her two
daughters, Nina and Rachel Milbrodt; her son, James;
six grandchildren; and one brother.
James David Loebl, JD ’52, of
Ojai, Calif., October 19, 2003, at 76, of cancer. His
government service career began with former Gov. Edmund
“Pat” Brown and continued for 28 years on
the Ojai City Council. He practiced law in Ventura County
for 40 years. Survivors: his wife, Dorothy “Dottie”
Hirsch, MA ’50; his daughters, Ellen and Susan
Grasso, MA ’89; his son, Jeffrey; four grandchildren;
and one sister.
Paul Leo Freese, JD ’57, of
Pasadena, Calif., October 10, 2003, at 74. A member
of Law Review, he was a decorated veteran of the Korean
War, awarded the Purple Heart for being wounded during
the battle of Pork Chop Hill. He spent his professional
career at Kindel & Anderson, where he became the
head of the litigation department and a managing partner.
A former professor at Loyola Law School and president
of the Catholic League, he was known for serving as
counsel for relatives of Howard Hughes in the highly
publicized litigation over the billionaire’s estate.
Survivors: his wife of 49 years, Mary; his sons, John
and Paul Jr.; his three daughters, Theresa Treek, Mary
Rumer and Diane Evans; 10 grandchildren; and two sisters.
MEDICINE
Martin H. Crumrine, MD ’40,
of San Marino, Calif., October 2, 2003, at 89. He served
during World War II as a surgeon in the U.S. Army medical
corps, returning to private practice in the Pasadena
area. He was the chief of staff of Huntington Memorial
and St. Luke hospitals and president of the Pasadena
Medical Society and the Surgical Forum. He retired in
1992. Survivors: his wife of 65 years, Dorothea; his
two daughters, Judy Norquist and Lynn Reineman; his
son, Don; nine grandchildren; three step-grandchildren;
and four great-grandchildren.
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