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| Obituaries |
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FACULTY / STAFF
Patricia Ann Gonzales Casey, of Redwood
City, January 10, at 59, of brain cancer. During her
37-year career at Stanford, she worked at the Medical
School, in the president’s and the provost’s
office, and most recently, for Stanford Events, where
she was the director of business and finance. In addition,
she participated in the Big Sister program and was a
longtime volunteer and former board member of Wildlife
Rescue Inc. of Palo Alto, specializing in the rehabilitation
of raccoons and hummingbirds. Survivors: her mother;
one sister; and one brother.
Cleo Mishkin Eulau, of Stanford, January
23, at 80, of diabetes. An adjunct clinical professor
in the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences,
she came to Stanford in the late 1950s and became involved
with training social workers and psychiatry and psychology
interns at the Medical School. In 1994, colleagues and
former students founded the Cleo Eulau Center as a service
and study center dedicated to developing innovative
solutions to help at-risk children and teenagers. Her
husband of 58 years, Heinz, died January 18. Survivors:
her daughter, Lauren; one son, Peter; three grandchildren;
and one brother.
Heinz Eulau, of Stanford, January
18, at 88, of bone cancer. Stanford’s William
Bennett Munro Professor of Political Science, he joined
the department in 1958 and chaired it twice, first in
the early 1970s and again from 1981 to 1984. Former
president of the American Political Science Association,
he helped found Legislative Studies Quarterly,
a journal published at the U. of Iowa. In 2002, the
Heinz Eulau Political Fellowship was established at
Stanford. He wrote a dozen political science texts and
recently published a family history. His wife of 58
years, Cleo, died January 23. Survivors: his daughter,
Lauren; one son, Peter; three grandchildren; and one
brother.
Dennis A. Powers, of New Smyrna Beach,
Fla., December 8, at 65. He was the director of Stanford’s
Hopkins Marine Station in Pacific Grove, Calif., from
1988 to 2000, and the Harold A. Miller Professor of
Biological Sciences. He raised money to establish four
endowed chairs at Hopkins and to support construction
of the DeNault Family Research Building, a major research
and teaching facility. Before coming to Stanford, he
was on the faculty of Johns Hopkins U. for 16 years.
At the Monterey Bay Aquarium, he helped start the Tuna
Research and Conservation Center, the only facility
in North America where tuna are studied in captivity.
Survivors: three daughters, Kathi Santos, Wendy McNall
and Julie; and four grandchildren.
William Craig Reynolds, ’54,
MS ’55, PhD ’58 (mechanical engineering),
of Los Altos, January 3, at 70, of a brain tumor. He
spent 53 years on campus, as a student and faculty member.
He chaired the department of mechanical engineering
from 1972 to 1982 and again from 1989 to 1992. He helped
found the Center for Turbulence Research and the Institute
for Energy Studies. The author of two textbooks, he
wrote a computer program for his department to sort
graduate student applications. Survivors: his wife of
50 years, Janice; two sons, Russell and Peter; his daughter,
Margery; three grandchildren; one brother; and one half-sister.
James S. Robinson, of Stanford, January
13, at 44, of non-Hodgkins lymphoma. He was the associate
director of the Stanford News Service and edited the
Stanford Report, which won the Gold Medal for
Excellence from the Council for Advancement and Support
of Education in 2002. Before he arrived on campus in
1998, he worked for the Houston Chronicle,
the Hartford Courant and Agence France-Presse.
Survivors: his partner, Ken Wingard; his parents; and
one brother.
Kurt Steiner, PhD ’55 (political
science), of Stanford, October 20, at 91, of pancreatic
cancer. A political science emeritus professor, known
on campus as “Mr. Austria,” he taught from
1955 to 1977. He was also a founding faculty member
of Stanford’s first overseas study center near
Stuttgart, Germany, and he helped open the University’s
campus in Semmering, Austria, in 1965. The program moved
to Vienna, where it remained until it closed in the
mid-1980s. His wife, Kitty, died in September.
Ellene J. Sumner, of Santa Rosa, Calif.,
April 8, 2003, at 96. She was the first female director
of the freshman men’s dormitory, Encina Hall,
from 1947 to 1955, and of Wilbur Hall from 1955 to 1957.
In 1965, she became the first director of housing and
food services at UC-Irvine and then worked as the university’s
director of conference services. Before retiring in
1975, she received UC-Irvine’s Alumni Association
Lauds and Laurels Award for university service.
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1920s
Henriette K. Woolf, ’25 (psychology),
of Silver Spring, Md., January 30, at 101. A child psychologist,
she worked in public schools in Indiana and New York
and at the Episcopal Center for Children in Washington,
D.C. She was a volunteer at the Smithsonian Institution,
Anderson House and Dumbarton Oaks in the D.C. area.
Clifton Ross Skinner, ’29 (chemistry),
Engr. ’30 (electrical engineering), of San Francisco,
August 16, at 96. He started one of San Francisco’s
first radio repair shops and later ran a recording studio,
Skinner Sound Studio, popular with many well-known 1960s
psychedelic bands. He worked as a sound engineer for
many prominent public events, including the United Nations
convention in 1945 that led to the organization’s
founding. His wife of 50 years, Irene, died in 1984.
Survivors: his son, Douglas; two daughters, Linda Kisich
and Judith, ’64; six grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.
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1930s
Orrin Kinsley “Bill” Earl Jr.,
’31 (geology), of Pasadena, Calif., January 20,
at 94. A member of Phi Gamma Delta, he served in the
Navy during World War II. He founded O.K. Earl Builders,
later renamed O.K. Earl Corp., a general contractor
in Southern California. He was a member of the Stanford
Associates Board of Governors. His wife of 41 years,
Sally, died in 1986. His subsequent wives, Bernadine
and Marcia, predeceased him as well. Survivors: his
son, Robert, ’68; two daughters, Margaret Cooper,
’71, and Carolyn Luttio, ’74; five grandchildren,
including Kinsley, ’96; and two brothers, Robert,
’42, MA ’50, and Joseph, ’45.
Lillian Dale Harris Gilchrist, ’32
(psychology), of Norco, Calif., October 28, 2002, at
90. She worked as a substitute teacher and was involved
in philanthropic activities. Her husband, Franklin,
’33, MBA ’35, died in 1994. Survivors: two
daughters, Betsy Legere, ’70, and Judy.
Sally Ruth Kofahl McMasters, ’32,
MA ’33 (history), of Billings, Mont., December
28, at 92. She was a member of the American Association
of University Women and Phi Beta Kappa and volunteered
at St. Vincent Healthcare. Her husband, John, ’30,
MA ’32, died in 1991. Survivors: three sons, John,
Dave and Tom; two daughters, Sally Kofmehl and Catherine
Motroni, ’77; seven grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.
Hugo Bardill Meyer, ’32 (economics),
of Woodbury, Vt., October 10, at 92. After serving in
World War II, he founded U.S. Fiber and Plastics Corp.
He was also the founder and president of Bardill Land
and Lumber Co. He served on the boards of the Pet Milk
Co., the Vermont Natural Resources Council and the American
Society of Dowsers. His wife, Elizabeth, died in 1982.
Survivors: two daughters, Kitty Simpson and Anne Hoffman;
three sons, Steve, ’64, John and Peter; 14 grandchildren,
including Kate Simpson, MA ’98; five great-grandchildren;
and one brother.
Murray Lewis “Tommy” Thompson,
’32 (economics), MBA ’34, of San Dimas,
Calif., January 29, at 95, of injuries from an auto
accident. Former business manager of the Stanford
Daily, he served with the Marine Corps during World
War II. During the course of 40 years working for the
City of Los Angeles, he managed the fire and police
pension system and was involved in several city departments,
including water and power. He was predeceased by his
wife, Mavis. Survivors: his daughter, Karen Leja; and
two grandchildren.
Eugene Austin Horton, ’33 (economics),
of Coronado, Calif., June 5, at 90, of complications
from a fall. A member of El Cuadro eating club, he served
in the Merchant Marine during World War II. He had a
law practice for more than 50 years, serving as president
of the San Diego Bar Association in 1956. In Coronado,
he was president of the PTA and served on the boards
of the hospital and public library. Survivors: his wife
of 56 years, Frances; two sons, Tony and Geno; two daughters,
Leslie and Holly; nine grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
William Wayne Wilson, ’33 (economics),
of Santa Cruz, Calif., November 9, at 91. He worked
for Marman Corp. as a manager in aerospace engineering
and later as a psychoanalyst in the Los Angeles area
until his retirement. His wife, Marie, predeceased him.
Survivors: his son, Bob; two daughters, Chris and Deanne;
one grandson; and his sister.
Allan F. Blackman, ’35 (social
science/social thought), of Kansas City, Mo., February
10, at 91. A member of the track and field team and
Delta Upsilon, he served in the Navy during World War
II. He worked for Gustin Bacon Manufacturing and Lawrence-Leiter
Consulting until his retirement. Survivors: his wife
of 62 years, Jean Love, ’39; one daughter, Ann;
one son, Donald; two granddaughters; and one sister,
Jean, ’39.
Frederick C. Bold Jr., ’35 (economics),
of San Francisco, December 14, at 90. A member of Theta
Delta Chi, he served in the Army during World War II.
A name partner in his own law firm, he focused on California
water law, having founded the Diablo Water District
in 1953 and having served as general counsel to Diablo
and Contra Costa water districts for many decades. He
was a member of the Alumni Association board of directors
in the late 1960s. Survivors: his wife, Helene; his
son, Rick, ’69; his daughter, Jane Hewitt, ’73;
two stepdaughters, Susan Russell, ’67, MA ’70,
PhD ’75, and Meredith Myers; and two grandsons.
Thomas Hal Odell, ’35 (economics),
MBA ’38, of Green Valley, Ariz., December 26,
at 90. A member of Phi Kappa Sigma, he served with the
Marines during World War II. He spent 38 years on Guam,
first as manager of Koster and Wythe Construction Co.
and later as president of tourist-related stores selling
handicrafts from the Micronesian and Melanesian Islands.
He was president of Guam’s Chamber of Commerce.
Survivors: his wife of 53 years, Sophie; one daughter,
Nancy; one son, Robert; and four grandchildren.
Alfred Newcombe Warburton Jr., ’35
(economics), MBA ’37, of Walnut Creek, Calif.,
November 14, at 89. He was an executive with Kaiser
Aluminum and Chemical Corp. for 39 years. Survivors:
his wife, Marjorie; two daughters; one son; five grandchildren;
and four great-grandchildren.
Patricia Burks Beuter, ’36 (political
science), of Bradbury, Calif., December 8, at 90. She
held a number of secretarial and managerial positions
before retiring as a financial adviser at Scudder, Stevens
and Clark brokerage firm in 1973. She was a lifetime
member and officer of the Pasadena Humane Society, the
California Wildlife Federation and Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Survivors include two nephews.
James Nathan Swain, ’36 (economics),
of Port Townsend, Wash., November 8, at 90, of pneumonia.
A World War II veteran, he taught math and served as
a high school registrar in Los Angeles for many years.
Survivors: his daughter, Virginia “Gina”
McMather, ’68; two stepsons; one stepdaughter;
and several step-grandchildren.
Virginia Swafford David, ’37
(history), of Carmel, Calif., December 30, at 87. In
addition to her work for several nonprofit agencies,
she volunteered for the Nature Conservancy and co-founded
the Intergenerational Program at Pacific Oaks Preschool.
Her husband, Harold, ’32, died in 1950. Survivors:
her daughter, Anne; two sons, Will and Thomas; two grandchildren;
three great-grandchildren; and one sister.
Mary Margaret “Peggy” Shafer Bataille,
’39 (English), of Rodeo, Calif., January 12, at
86. Survivors: two sons, Andrew and Henry; two daughters,
Claire Newbre and Marguerite Pearson; and eight grandchildren.
Barbara Jocelyn Curtis Horton, ’39
(history), of Pasadena, Calif., November 18, at 86,
of cancer. An ardent environmentalist, she was president
of the Pasadena Audubon Society in the late 1950s and
then spent 17 years as chair of the Nature Conservancy’s
Southern California chapter. In 1978, she co-founded
Dorland Mountain Arts Colony and Nature Preserve, the
first artists’ colony in California. A former
reporter and columnist, she is author of a book and
numerous articles. Her husband, Melvin, ’42, MA
’42, died in 1997. Survivors: her daughter, Alison;
and her son, Curtis.
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1940s
Peter Robert Gadd Jr., ’43 (economics),
of Visalia, Calif., December 11, at 82. A member of
Alpha Delta Phi, he served in the Navy during World
War II and was awarded the Silver Star. His agribusiness
career in the San Joaquin Valley spanned 40 years. Survivors:
his wife, Naomi Thrapp, ’44; one daughter, Luanne
Kittle; one son, Peter, ’72; four grandchildren;
three sisters; and one brother.
Amie Reichert, ’43 (social science/social
thought), of Portland, Ore., April 14, 2003, at 80,
of heart failure. A member of Cap & Gown, she wrote
songs and skits for Gaieties and had her own column
in the Stanford Daily. She then took a job
at Life magazine as the only woman writer with
a byline. Later, she taught at San Francisco State U.
and became an abstract watercolor painter. Survivors:
her son, Adam; her daughter, Lia Saroyan, ’72;
one granddaughter; and two great-grandchildren.
Frank Counsel Winter, ’43 (biological
sciences), MD ’46, of La Jolla, Calif., January
17, at 81, of a heart attack. He was the chief of ophthalmology
at Stanford Medical School in the mid-1970s when he
decided to provide vision care to impoverished Africans
as a missionary for the Episcopal Church. He went on
to found the Christian Eye Ministry, now an affiliate
of the International Aid relief agency. In recent years,
he conducted Bible studies for former convicts and published
a book based on his biblical research. Survivors: his
wife, Joy; two daughters, Heather McIntosh and Elizabeth;
two sons, Michael and Samuel; two stepchildren; five
grandchildren; seven step-grandchildren; and two brothers,
including Thomas, ’49.
Margaret Ann Brigham Woodworth, ’43
(German studies), of San Diego, January 14, at 82, of
cancer. A member of Chi Omega, she was the founding
president of the Star of India Auxiliary, a group formed
to restore the world’s oldest active sailing ship.
She was the executive secretary to the vice president
and general manager of Bethlehem Pacific Coast Steel
Corp. She was also involved with the San Diego Symphony,
Globe Guilders and the Forest Home Women’s Auxiliary.
Her husband, Chauncey, died in 1987. Survivors: her
stepdaughter, Pamela Halstead; her stepson, Chauncey
III; and two grandchildren.
Jeanne Louise Struve Chandler, ’44
(speech and drama), of Sacramento, January 14, at 82,
of a stroke. She worked for the U.S. Army at Tourney
General Hospital in Palm Springs, Calif. She was active
in the Las Madrinas Guild and the Tulare County fund-raising
branch of the Valley Children’s Hospital. Her
husband of 38 years, Wilber, ’42, died in 1984.
Survivors: three sons, Jeffrey, Douglas, ’70,
and Mark; her daughter, Julie Sauvé; and two
grandchildren.
Marvin Greene, ’45 (social science/social
thought), of Woodland Hills, Calif., January 19, at
79. A member of El Campo eating club, he served as a
field artillery officer during World War II and received
a Bronze Star. He worked as a staff attorney for the
SEC before joining Loeb & Loeb, where he headed
the business and corporate law department. He was active
with the ABA and served as an arbitrator for the National
Association of Securities Dealers. He was a member of
the Alumni Association board of directors. Survivors:
his wife of 53 years, Revlyn; his daughter, Andrea;
his son, Robert; and two grandchildren.
Harriet Patricia Banfield Workman,
’45 (Spanish), of Portland, Ore., November 3,
at 80. She volunteered for the American Red Cross Motor
Corps during World War II. She was active in the Town
Club and the Portland Junior League. Survivors: her
husband of 57 years, Norman; three sons, Stephen, ’81,
Mark, and Brian; her daughter, Patricia Sims; and seven
grandchildren.
William Madsen, ’46 (sociology),
of Santa Barbara, Calif., December 24, at 82, of lung
cancer. From 1941 to 1943, he served with the American
Field Service attached to Tahitian Free French Troops
and the British Eighth Army in North Africa. At Stanford,
he was a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in
the Behavioral Sciences and a research associate at
the Institute for the Study of Human Problems. In 1967,
he began a 25-year teaching career in the anthropology
department at UC-Santa Barbara. Survivors: his wife
of 57 years, Claudia Nettles, ’42; one daughter,
Karen Zwicke; his son, Christopher; and two grandsons.
Mary Jean Crenshaw Tully, ’46,
of Armonk, N.Y., December 27, at 78, of a heart attack.
She was a feminist leader and activist who founded the
Westchester chapter of the National Organization for
Women. She served as co-editor of NOW’s newsletter
and headed the organization’s legal defense and
education fund.
Burrell Emmett Jackson, ’47
(teaching), MA ’66 (education), of Redwood City,
November 18, at 82, of cancer. A World War II veteran,
he was a teacher and principal in the Redwood City School
District for 33 years. After retiring, he continued
to teach ESL at Stanford’s Bechtel International
Center. Survivors: his wife of 57 years, Cleo; and two
sons, Tom and Bob.
Averill Q. Mix, ’47 (economics),
MBA ’49, of Los Gatos, Calif., November 22, at
78, of heart failure. A member of Theta Chi, he served
during World War II in the Army Air Corps. His career
included management positions with IBM and his private
law practice in San Jose, specializing in estate planning
and real estate law. He was a board member of the San
Jose Museum of Art and Opera San Jose. Survivors: his
wife of 52 years, Ann Marie; two sons, Greg and Alan;
and four grandsons.
Jean Goodan Barclay, ’48 (political
science), of Auburn, Wash., December 9, at 77, of pneumonia.
She bred and trained thoroughbred horses and had recently
started to breed show horses as well. She was instrumental
in founding the Allied Arts Center on Vashon Island
in Washington’s Puget Sound. Survivors: four daughters,
Margaret Jackson, Elizabeth McKinny, Rozamund and Katherine;
eight grandchildren; one sister; and one brother.
Robert Lee Brown, ’48 (biological
sciences), MD ’53, of Ross, Calif., December 4,
at 78, of multiple myeloma. He served in the Army Air
Corps during World War II and was a member of Sigma
Chi. A surgeon, he belonged to the American Society
for Surgery of the Hand, the American Board of Orthopaedic
Surgery and the Royal Society of Medicine. Survivors:
his wife of 48 years, Mary; his son, Tyler; one daughter,
Robin Brown-Frossard; and five grandchildren.
Robert Elliott Peck, ’48 (international
relations), of La Mesa, Calif., November 2, at 75, of
congestive heart failure. A member of Theta Xi, he served
in the Air Force and in the U.S. Diplomatic Service
in Mexico and the Dominican Republic. He worked with
Woolworth de Mexico for two decades and then taught
in the business department at Grossmont College in El
Cajon, Calif.
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1950s
Kenzo Ishimaru, ’50 (mechanical
engineering), of San Jose, January 3, at 76. Survivors:
his wife, Toshiko “Tish”; one son, Stuart;
one daughter, Arden Newman; three grandchildren; and
one sister.
Kathryn Isabella Kaiser Hanna, ’51
(education), of Fresno, Calif., December 17, at 76,
of diabetes. She worked as a pharmacist’s assistant
for 30 years. Her husband, Wilson III, ’51, predeceased
her. Survivors include her son, Wilson IV, ’75,
MS ’76.
James Fred Riley, ’51 (civil
engineering), of Saratoga, Calif., January 8, at 77,
in a plane crash. A World War II veteran, he had his
own civil engineering business, which he ran for 40
years. He also volunteered his time and expertise to
numerous civic organizations. Survivors: his wife of
53 years, Helen; two sons, Shawn and Michael; his daughter,
Nancy Walty; three grandchildren; two great-grandchildren;
and one brother.
Harry L. Hupp, ’53 (undergraduate
law), JD ’55, of San Gabriel, Calif., January
27, at 74, of a stroke. A member of the Law Review,
he was named to the Superior Court by Gov. Ronald Reagan
in 1972. He reformed how homeless drunks were treated
by Los Angeles police, ruling that they should be treated
the same as anyone else arrested for a misdemeanor.
In 1984, he was appointed to the U.S. District Court
by President Reagan. Survivors: his wife of 50 years,
Patricia Tibbetts, ’53; two daughters, Karen and
Virginia; two sons, Brian and Keith; two grandchildren;
and two sisters.
Nairne Forsyth Ward Jr., ’53
(history), MBA ’55, of Aptos, Calif., January
2, at 75. A member of Kappa Sigma, he played junior
varsity water polo and served in the Air Force during
World War II. He was a forest products executive with
MacMillan Bloedel in Vancouver, B.C., before returning
to California to sell newsprint. He was later self-employed
as a financial planner and tax expert. Survivors: his
wife, Delores Karabensh; two sons, Kenric and Stuart;
one daughter, Sandra Thomson; three stepchildren; four
grandchildren; five step-grandchildren; two great-grandchildren;
and his brother, Roderic, ’58.
Joanne Margretha Sonnichsen, ’54
(art), of Menlo Park, December 25, at 70, of cancer.
She worked for Hiller Helicopters and for Skidmore Owings
and Merrill. She also served as treasurer and president
for the Committee for Art at Stanford in the 1960s.
She founded her own bookbinding studio, and one of her
designs is on permanent display at Grace Cathedral in
San Francisco. Survivors: her husband, Deke; and her
son, P.J.
Roy E. Johnson, ’55 (history),
of Lake Oswego, Ore., November 26, at 70, of an aneurysm.
He served in the Army as a court reporter. Employed
as a bond trader for more than 30 years, he worked at
Blyth & Co. and later A.G. Edwards Inc. Survivors:
his son, Kenneth; three daughters, Carol Hamilton, Christine
Banducci and Darcie; five grandchildren; and one sister.
John Bowman O’Donnell, ’56
(social science/social thought), of Washington, D.C.,
December 3, at 68, of lung cancer. A member of the crew
team and Delta Upsilon, he served in the Army in the
USARPAC psychological warfare unit. He was a longtime
Foreign Service officer who served in Southeast Asia
and Latin America with the Agency for International
Development. Survivors: his wife, Sharon; four daughters,
Ramsay Mayhew, Meghan Kunzl, Shauna and Erin; and two
grandsons.
Howard Zabriskie Bogert Jr., ’57
(electrical engineering), of San Jose, December 28,
at 68, of pneumonia. A member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
he served as a naval officer for three years. He then
began a 37-year career as an electrical engineer, engineering
manager and high-technology market researcher. He was
a developer of six early patents used in the semiconductor
industry. Survivors: his wife, Carol Marston, ’58;
two daughters, Jennifer Peters and Rebecca; one son,
Howard; and six grandchildren.
Elizabeth Sugden Shaw Evart, ’57
(physical therapy), of Menlo Park, December 4, at 67,
of injuries sustained in a bicycle accident. She practiced
as a registered physical therapist at Boston Children’s
Hospital before relocating to the Bay Area and working
at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City for 20 years. Her
husband of more than 20 years, Leo, died in 1999. Survivors:
her two sons, Douglas and Scott McPhee; five stepchildren;
her mother; and her brother, Philip Shaw, ’65.
Diane Elaine Peek Wilcox-Guzman, ’58
(art), of Auburn, Calif., December 20, at 67, of cancer.
She worked as a public relations/workshop coordinator
at the Palo Alto Community Center in the 1960s and taught
seventh grade for 22 years. Her first husband, Roy Wilcox,
’60, died in 1968. Survivors: her husband, Jose;
two sons, Geoffrey and Michael Wilcox; and three grandchildren.
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1960s
Thomas F. Crosby Jr., ’62 (political
science), of Santa Ana, Calif., January 23, at 63, of
a heart attack. A member of Delta Upsilon, he worked
with the National Labor Relations Board and served in
the Peace Corps in Peru. He then worked in the office
of the Orange County district attorney and ran a private
law practice. In 1982, he was appointed to the appellate
bench after serving on the Orange County Superior Court.
Survivors: his wife, Patty; and two sons, Scott and
Brett.
Barbara Louise Sundlof Tingey, ’62
(English), MA ’63 (education), of Palo Alto, January
23, at 63, of breast cancer. After teaching high school
English, she devoted 26 years to instructional software,
working for Computer Curriculum Corp. and its parent
company, Pearson Education. Survivors: her companion,
Tony Thrall; her former spouse, Richard, ’61;
two daughters, Erika and Karen, ’92; her grandson;
and her mother.
Bruce M. Achauer, ’63 (biological
sciences), of Long Beach, Calif., November 9, 2002,
at 60. A member of Delta Upsilon, he served as a flight
surgeon in the Air Force. He was a professor of plastic
surgery at UC-Irvine and director of its burn unit as
well as the director of plastic surgery at the Beckham
Laser Institute in Irvine. He served as president of
the Plastic Surgery Educational Foundation and chair
of the American Board of Plastic Surgery. He and his
wife endowed an honors research symposium at Stanford.
Survivors: his wife of 34 years, Tamara; two daughters,
Allison and Hilary; his mother; and one sister.
Eric James Swenson, ’64 (political
science), of San Anselmo, Calif., December 27, at 61,
of cancer. A member of Delta Upsilon, he served in Vietnam
as an Army captain in the Judge Advocate General’s
corps. He worked at the old Civil Aeronautics Board
before spending 20 years as an assistant U.S. Attorney
in San Francisco, dealing mostly with international
drug cases. Following his retirement, he did pro bono
work with the Marin Mediation Federation and the American
Bar Association, assisting in the development of justice
systems in several newly independent states in Eastern
Europe. His wife of 37 years, Barbara, died in 2002.
Survivors: his twin daughters, Kristin Henderson and
Karin; and one brother.
Alice Coogan, ’65 (history),
of Santa Fe, N.M., January 28, at 59, of cancer. She
was among the earliest employees in Stanford Travel/Study,
leaving in the early 1990s. Survivors include her husband,
Lyall Watson, and one brother.
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1970s
Nancy Stone Mitchell Weingartner,
’70 (anthropology), of Long Beach, Calif., January
1, at 55, of a heart attack. She worked briefly for
IBM Corp. but devoted the bulk of her career to teaching
in the Los Angeles Unified School District. Most recently,
she was chair of the math department and Gifted and
Talented Education program coordinator at Hoover Middle
School in Lakewood. Survivors: her husband of 20 years,
Al; her son, Jack; and one brother, Gregg, ’75.
Burton Leslie “Les” Olson,
’75 (civil engineering), of Lincoln, Neb., June
20, 2003, at 50, of diabetes. He was a member of El
Toro, and his career included programming, business
and design analysis, and project management for various
companies. He also created Olson Software. Survivors:
his wife, Melissa; three sons, Max, Sam and Jack; his
mother; two brothers; and one sister.
Jodi Helene Curlee, ’79 (psychology),
of Tinley Park, Ill., January 22, at 46. She directed
an employment-training program at the Los Angeles Gay
and Lesbian Center and later served as its interim executive
director. Hired by the city of West Hollywood as its
founding social services manager, she served for 12
years until her retirement. Survivors: her partner,
Mary Newcombe; one son, Dante; one daughter, Kaia; two
sisters; and two brothers.
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1980s
Melissa Elgin Alyanakian, ’82
(communication), of Bryn Mawr, Pa., November 5, 2002,
at 42, of breast cancer. She enjoyed a long career with
Hewlett-Packard and volunteered her time to many organizations,
including the American Cancer Society, Reach to Recovery
and Living Beyond Breast Cancer. Survivors include her
husband, Jeff, and two sisters.
Joseph Andrew “Drew” Gashler,
’88 (physics), of Pacific Grove, Calif., January
1, at 37, in an avalanche. He worked as a marine researcher
supervising autonomous underwater vehicle operations
at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss
Landing, Calif. Before that, he was a member of the
Peace Corps in Tonga and worked on a sheep ranch in
New Zealand. Survivors include his fiancée, Teri
Nicholson; and his parents.
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BUSINESS
Joseph Alexander Moore Jr., MBA ’31,
of San Francisco, January 9, at 95. He served as president
of his father’s shipbuilding business for more
than 40 years. He was also a trustee of Mills College,
a member of San Francisco’s Board of Education
and a UC regent. Former president of the California
Chamber of Commerce, he served as vice chairman of the
organizing committee for the Eighth Winter Olympics
in 1960. Survivors: his wife of 70 years, Gladys Gillig,
’31; his daughter, Marilyn Boring; his son, Douglas;
six grandchildren; 11 great-grandchildren; and one brother.
Carl M. Pedersen, MBA ’46, of
Sacramento, January 8, at 94. An Olympic rower during
his undergraduate years, he helped establish the Stanford
crew program and served as a volunteer coach. He worked
as a development engineer and management consultant
for various entities, including Aerojet General Corp.
and the East Bay Municipal Utility District. His wife,
Ruth Goodman, died in 1964. Survivors: his daughter,
Karen Stevens; his son, Tedd; and five grandchildren.
EDUCATION
Harold Rhead Carruth, MA ’48,
of San Jose, January 27, at 84. He served in the Air
Force during World War II. Before retiring from the
San Jose Unified School District in 1980, he taught
and coached athletics at San Jose High School and was
principal of Herbert Hoover Junior High School, Bret
Harte Junior High School and Steinbeck Junior High School.
He was on the board of the San Jose Parkinson’s
Support Group. Survivors: his wife of 60 years, Ferne;
two daughters, Karen Marburg and Claudia Leonesio; his
son, Hal; seven grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren.
ENGINEERING
Philip Arnold Ekstrand, Engr. ’33,
of Los Gatos, Calif., December 16, at 95. During his
career with the Navy, he helped establish communication
systems in the Pacific and worked on electromagnetic
interference as applied to ships’ systems. His
wife, Kathryn, died in 1989. Survivors: two daughters,
Mary Allen and Donna, ’60, MS ’62, MS ’64;
two sons, John, ’65, MS ’67, and Robert;
11 grandchildren, including Jeffrey, ’91, and
James, MS ’00; and nine great-grandchildren.
Bruce Gideon Woolpert, Engr. ’50
(civil engineering), of Watsonville, Calif., January
20, at 84. Former president of Granite Rock Co., he
worked in shipyards and airplane factories during World
War II and taught civil engineering at UC-Berkeley.
He was also an engineering instructor at Stanford while
studying for his degree. He was a member of the Young
President’s Organization and co-founder of the
World President’s Organization. Survivors: his
wife of 54 years, Mary “Betsy” Wilson, ’48;
two sons, Stephen and Bruce, MBA ’76; four grandchildren;
and one brother.
Donald M. Brettner, MS ’70 (materials
science and engineering), of Saratoga, Calif., January
15, at 67. He enjoyed a 42-year career in the semiconductor
industry, most recently working for AMD as group vice
president of manufacturing services. He was also the
co-author of several books related to his field. Survivors:
his wife, Eunmi; three sons, David, Matthew and Nicholas;
two daughters, Treva Dowd and Kimberly; eight grandchildren;
and one sister.
Albert H. Jacobson Jr., PhD ’76
(industrial engineering), of Mountain View, January
15, at 86. He served in the Navy during World War II
as the director of quality control on the proximity
fuze project. Although he worked for Eastman Kodak on
the space satellite program and consulted for Motorola,
he was devoted to teaching. Early on, he was a professor
at Penn State U., and he returned to academia after
working in the private sector to teach industrial systems
engineering at San Jose State U., where he stayed for
26 years. He was involved in the Boy Scouts and was
a member of the South Bay Community Orchestra. Survivors:
his wife of 44 years, Elaine; two sons, Keith and Paul;
one granddaughter, and three brothers.
Dana Stone Clarke, MS ’96 (aeronautics
and astronautics), of Tucson, Ariz., January 17, at
39. He worked at the NASA Ames Research Center in Moffett
Field, Calif. He also started an after-school tutoring
program for middle school students in East Palo Alto.
Survivors include his wife, Kit; his mother; his father;
one brother; two stepbrothers; and one half brother.
HUMANITIES & SCIENCES
Ruth Drane Fleming, MA ’37 (history),
of Pebble Beach, Calif., December 28, at 90. She worked
for Westinghouse Electric Co. Survivors include her
two stepdaughters, Patricia Schwartz and Eleanor Skinner.
Carol Ellen Renius Dillinger, MA ’47
(English), of Sacramento, December 8, at 80, of cancer.
She was a poet and a painter. Survivors: her husband,
Bill, ’47; three daughters, Ellen, Anne and Carla;
her son, Bill; and six grandchildren.
Michael Vital DePorte, MA ’65,
PhD ’66 (English), of Dover, N.H., December 9,
at 64, of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. An expert in
18th-century literature, he taught briefly at Stanford
before joining the English department at the U. of New
Hampshire, where he was a member of the faculty for
38 years. Survivors: his wife, Judy Lindberg; two daughters,
Catherine and Rebecca; two grandchildren; and one brother.
Marjorie Ann Asmussen, MS ’72
(mathematics), MS ’75 (statistics), PhD ’76
(special program), of Athens, Ga., January 19, at 54,
in a cycling accident. She was a professor of population
genetics at the U. of Georgia. Survivors: two daughters,
Margaret Andrew, ’02, and Jennifer Andrew; and
her former husband, Alfred Andrew, MS ’75, PhD
’76.
Alexander Naty, MA ’86, PhD
’92 (anthropology), of Asmara, Eritrea, December
9, at 46, of cerebral malaria. Born in a mud hut in
Eritrea, he became the only member of his ethnic group,
Kunama, to hold a doctorate. When he returned home in
1994, he served on the constitution committee of his
country. He also helped found the department of sociology
and anthropology at the U. of Asmara, where he served
as department chair. Survivors: his wife, Aster Beyene;
his daughter, Amalle; his parents; one brother; and
two stepsisters.
Rohan Peries, PhD ’89 (chemistry),
of Menlo Park, February 7, at 49. He worked as the director
of intellectual property for Roche Bioscience. Survivors:
his parents; and two brothers.
David Duane Brace, PhD ’01 (chemistry),
of Sloughhouse, Calif., November 20, at 32, of pancreatic
cancer. He worked as a research scientist for Lockheed
Martin in the company’s missiles and space operation
division, specializing in physical chemistry and optic
lasers. Survivors: his partner, Holly Mills; his mother
and stepfather; his father and stepmother; and two sisters,
Christina and Jennifer.
LAW
Carlos J. Badger, JD ’31, of
Modesto, Calif., February 17, at 101. When he retired
last January, he was the oldest practicing attorney
in Stanislaus County and the second oldest in California.
A veteran of both world wars, he opened his own law
practice, specializing in Social Security issues. Active
in the Kiwanis Club, Boy Scouts of America and Veterans
of Foreign Wars, he served as president of the Stanislaus
County Bar Association and chair of the association’s
Committee on World Peace Through Law. Survivors: three
daughters, Jaquelin Fontaine, ’52, Emmy Ames,
’57, MA ’58, Anne Osthues, ’61; eight
grandchildren, including Lauren Ames, ’83; nine
great-grandchildren; one brother; and two sisters.
Paul George Bower, JD ’63, of
Los Angeles, December 31, at 70, of a stroke. A member
of the Law Review, he was a partner in Gibson, Dunn
& Crutcher until his retirement in 1993, specializing
in antitrust and entertainment law and federal civil
litigation. He also served on the staff of the Kerner
Commission, established by President Johnson to investigate
civil unrest in the mid-1960s. A strong advocate of
legal aid for the poor, he was active in the Legal Aid
Foundation of Los Angeles. For the last 21 years, he
served on the board of the Sierra Club Legal Defense
Fund, now called Earthjustice. Survivors: his wife,
Erleen; three daughters, Stephanie, Julienne and Aimee;
two granddaughters; and two sisters.
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