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| Obituaries |
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FACULTY / STAFF
Clyde Louis Barker, of Santa Clara, Calif., March 28,
at 55, of an apparent heart attack. He was a principal
installation technician at the Stanford Linear Accelerator
Center (SLAC) who coached the Stanford racquetball
team to the collegiate nationals in the 1990s. He arrived
at SLAC as a summer student in 1969 and, throughout the years,
installed countless miles of cable, including computer,
instrumentation and power wiring for two of the center’s
three major endeavors, the BaBar experiment and the SPEAR3
facility. In addition to racquetball, he took part in youth
and adult basketball programs at the Community Center in
East Palo Alto. Survivors: his wife of 12 years, Shyla;
two sons, Andre Avant and Rahsaan; and one granddaughter.
Elizabeth G. Cohen, of Stanford, March 12, at 73,
of cancer. She was appointed an assistant professor in
the School of Education in 1966 and became a full professor
in 1975. She later received a joint appointment in sociology.
In 1979, she founded Stanford’s program for complex
instruction, which she directed until her retirement in
1999. Her groundbreaking teaching methods use special strategies
and support for teachers whose classes are culturally and
academically diverse. She wrote many books and articles,
including Designing Groupwork: Strategies
for Heterogeneous Classrooms. She received the 1998 Presidential Citation
of the American Educational Research Association. She served
as vice president of the Sociology of Education Association
and as trustee of Clark University. Survivors: her
husband of 50 years, Bernard; her daughter, Anita Cohen-Williams,
one son, Lewis; and one granddaughter.
William Gregory Craig, of San Diego, March 7, at 90,
of pneumonia. He was associate dean of students and
associate professor of education from 1954 to 1962. He served
in the Navy during World War II and directed training for
the Peace Corps in the early 1960s. He served as dean of
students at Washington State and Kansas State universities.
He was chancellor of the California community college system
from 1977 to 1980 and of the Vermont State Colleges from
1973 to 1976. He later served as president of the Monterey
Institute of International Studies. Survivors: his wife,
Lorenza; four sons, Gregory, James, Thomas and William; one
stepson; and 10 grandchildren.
J. Myron “Mike” Jacobstein, of Stanford, March
25, at 85. After working at several universities, he came
to Stanford in 1963 and worked as a law professor and director
of the law library until his retirement in 1987. He served
in the Army Air Corps during World War II. He wrote a number
of books and articles on legal research and law librar-ianship.
He served as president of the Amer-ican Association of Law
Libraries, which honored him with a distinguished service
award in 1987. Survivors: his wife of 55 years, Belle; one
daughter, Ellen Gilmore; one son, Bennett, ’79; and
three grandchildren.
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1920s
Grace Fletcher Read Hooper, ’25 (social science/social
thought), Gr. ’34 (education), of Piedmont, Calif.,
March 10, at 100. A member of Alpha Omicron Pi, she
did graduate work in drama and taught drama at Barnard
College in New York City. Later she taught at the Katherine
Branson School in Ross, Calif., and served as social
director and director of resident at Pomona College.
She was president of the Foothill Philharmonic Association
and vice president of the League of Women Voters. She
was predeceased by her husband, Frederick, and her
son, Robert.
Frank Hogeland Day, ’28 (general engineering),
of Great Falls, Mont., January 25, at 99. He was the
smelter superintendent for the Cananea Consolidated
Copper Co. from 1928 to 1956. For the next 15 years,
he managed the Anaconda Co. Reduction Works. He served
on the board for Norwest Bank in Butte, Mont. He was
honored as a 50-year member of the Minerals, Metals & Materials
Society in 1991. His wife of 68 years, Helen, died
in 2003. Survivors: one daughter, Andrea Greene; one
son, Frank “Paco”; 14
grandchildren and stepgrandchildren; 16 great-grandchildren
and step-great-grandchildren; and six step-great-great-grandchildren.
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1930s
Bernice Woodard Behrens, ’32 (political science),
of Portola Valley, April 20, at 94. For 30 years, she
worked in San Francisco as a public relations officer
with General Mills and then as an events coordinator
for a national millinery company. In 1968, she founded
American Women for International Understanding, a nonprofit
whose mission is to create a global community of women
promoting peace among nations and respect toward other
cultures. In 1969, she was named director of the U.S.
State Department Reception Center in San Francisco,
where she hosted an average of 3,000 guests per year,
and later served as deputy chief of protocol. She spent
the rest of her life traveling to more than 100 countries,
lecturing on women’s rights. Her second husband,
Earl Behrens, ’14, died in 1985. Survivors: one
daughter, Diane Dalton; and three grandchildren.
June Aileene Reynolds Davidson, ’33 (psychology),
of Santa Barbara, Calif., February 18, at 93. In the
1940s, she worked as a social worker and policewoman
in Palo Alto. Later she volunteered as a school librarian
and for the Girl Scouts. Her husband of 58 years, Donald,
died in 1994. Survivors: her two daughters, Gale Busch, ’64,
and Jean; two grandchildren; and one sister.
William Arneill Reppy, ’34 (history), of Santa
Barbara, Calif., January 1, at 92, of congestive heart
failure. A member of the track and field team and Chi
Psi, he served in the Army during World War II. In
the 1950s, he was appointed to the Superior Court bench
in Ventura County. Seventeen years later, Gov. Ronald
Reagan appointed him to the California Court of Appeals,
Second District, where he served until his retirement
in 1974. He was a member of Stanford Associates and
served on the board of visitors for the Law School.
Survivors: his wife of 65 years, Margot Brownrigg, ’36;
and two sons, William Jr., ’63, JD ’66,
and Michael, ’67.
Idamyrtle “Teddy” Klepinger Bing Wilcox, ’34
(economics), of Sacramento, January 12, at 91. A member
of Chi Omega and a former class correspondent, she
belonged to the American Association of University
Women and the World Affairs Council. She worked as
a secretary and associate consultant with various members
and committees of the California State Legislature
from 1947 to 1981. Her first husband, D. Gerald Bing, ’29,
died in 1987. Her second husband, Paul Wilcox, died
in 1977. Survivors: one son, Gerald Bing, ’59;
one daughter, Diana McLaughlin, ’62; five grandchildren,
including Jennifer Daves, ’85, MA ’86;
and seven great-grandchildren.
Margaret Patricia “Peggy” Place Ferris, ’35
(economics), of Sacramento, February 2, at 91. She
taught at her mother’s secretarial school in
Sacramento. Her husband of 61 years, George, ’37,
MD ’41, died in 2002. Survivors: her children,
Michael, Peter, Noel and David; and four granddaughters.
Howard Walter Campen, ’36, JD ’40, of San
Jose, March 31, at 90. A member of Phi Gamma Delta,
he served as skipper of a destroyer escort in the South
Pacific during World War II. He was named county executive
for Santa Clara in 1957, a post he held until retiring
in 1976. He is credited with steering the county through
dramatic population growth and the transformation from
an agricultural valley to Silicon Valley. His wife
of almost 60 years, Betty Jane, died in 1999. Survivors:
three sons, Stephen, Gary and Jeffrey; one daughter,
Gayle; and five grandchildren.
Julian “Bud” Lesser, ’36 (social
science/social thought), of Palm Desert, Calif., March
22, at 90. He was a member of the gymnastics team and
went on to become a member of Stanford Associates and
to serve as class correspondent for nine years. In
the Marine Corps during World War II, he supervised
military training films. During the 1940s and 1950s,
he produced motion pictures and television series and
served on the documentary committee of the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences throughout
the 1960s and 1970s. He also enjoyed a career in real
estate. In later years, he wrote and lectured on Hollywood
and the arts, sought to preserve motion picture history
as a board member of the Hollywood Heritage Museum,
volunteered at the Living Desert Museum in Palm Desert,
and served on the board of the Palm Desert Historical
Society. Survivors: his wife, Helene; two sons, Stephen,
MA ’65, and David; one daughter, Belinda; two
stepchildren; six grandchildren and stepgrandchildren;
and one sister.
George S. Livermore, ’36 (graphic arts), of San
Francisco, March 3, at 90. A member of Alpha Delta
Phi, he served in the Army during World War II. He
worked as an architect. He was a trustee for San Francisco’s
Grace Cathedral for 12 years and served on many boards,
including the San Francisco Opera, Civic Light Opera,
Town School for Boys and Marin Academy. Survivors:
his former spouse, Janet Clifton; three sons, Richard,
Thomas and William; five grandchildren; and three brothers,
Norman, ’33, MBA ’36, Putnam and John, ’40.
Phyllis June Steffan Windeler, ’36 (biological
sciences), MA ’56 (education), of Cottage Grove,
Ore., January 13, at 90, of breast cancer. She worked
as a school counselor at Mountain View High School
and Awalt High School. Survivors: her husband, Robert, ’35;
two sons, Robert Jr. and Peter; and one grandson.
Clement E. Smoot Jr., ’37 (history), of Coronado,
Calif., February 6, at 91. A member of Beta Theta Pi,
he served in the Marine Corps during World War II.
He worked for his father’s business, Smoot-Holman,
an industrial lighting company, for 30 years. Survivors:
his wife, Elizabeth; one son, Peter; and four grandchildren.
Randall Emory Brown, ’38, Gr. ’38 (geology),
of Kennewick, Wash., March 17, at 87, of pneumonia.
He was a member of Theta Chi and played clarinet in
the Band. He worked for the U.S. Geological Survey
and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. In 1947, he began
a long career as a research geologist with General
Electric and later with Battelle Memorial Institute.
He was a fellow of the Geological Society of America
and the American Association for the Advancement of
Science, and he served as president of the Northwest
Scientific Association. His wife, Helene, died in 1992.
Survivors: two sons, Derek and Kevin; and four grandchildren.
Warren H. Buell, ’38 (chemistry), MBA ’40,
of Los Angeles, February 14, 2004, at 90. He was a
member of the Los Arcos eating club. He worked for
the UNOCAL Corp. for 60 years, serving as a chief economist.
He was active in the Hancock Historical Society. Survivors:
his wife of 63 years, Marjorie; two daughters, Diane
Nordell, ’67, and Pamela Erselius; and four grandchildren.
Byron Francis “By” Forderhase, ’38
(economics), of Seattle, December 31, at
88. A member of the Band, he served in the Navy during
World War II. He worked for Price Waterhouse for almost
40 years, retiring in 1976. Survivors: his wife of
54 years, Bobbie; two daughters, Katie Potter and Barbara;
one son, John; and two grandchildren.
Sanford Philip “Sandy” Lowengart Jr., ’38
(social science/social thought), of Portola Valley,
February 14, at 87. A member of the water polo team
and Sigma Chi, he served in the Army, earning a Bronze
Star and Purple Heart. He worked as an investment counselor
in San Francisco for more than 50 years. Survivors:
his wife, Eleanor “Lynn” Hill, ’48;
three sons; Philip, John and Sanford III; three grandchildren;
and one sister.
Francis Beveridge DuBois, ’39, of Davis,
Calif., February 20, at 91, of cardiac disease. A member
of the El Capitan eating club, he worked for the state
of California as a statistician and enjoyed a long
career in rice farming. He served on the boards of
the California Crop Improvement Association and the
Rice Growers Association, and he was a founder of the
Tomato Growers Association. He also served on the boards
of the Carmel Bach Festival, the Monterey Institute
of International Studies, the Sacramento Symphony
and the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. His first wife,
Dorothy Evans, ’38, died in 1968. Survivors:
his wife of 33 years, Nancy Griffin Neal, ’44;
one daughter, Ruth Silverberg; two sons, Miron Neal
III and Edward Neal; and one grandchild.
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1940s
Martin Mackey, ’40 (general engineering), of
Greenbrae, Calif., March 24, at 87. A member of Delta
Upsilon, he served in the Navy during World War II.
He worked as the West Coast sales manager for H.H.
Robertson. During the political and social turmoil
of 1968, he quit his corporate job and dedicated his
life to finding housing for low- and moderate-income
residents of Marin County. He co-founded the Ecumenical
Association for Housing (EAH) and was its driving force
for two decades. EAH, which has grown from a single
employee to 325 has more than 4,500 housing units in
62 projects as far-flung as Hawaii. Survivors: his
wife of 61 years, Mary; one son, Haig; one daughter,
Muffie Conover; and four grandchildren.
Zelda Reafa Jolin Eisenberg, ’41 (English), of
Chico, Calif., April 4, at 84. She started a gourmet
cooking school in Burlingame. Survivors: her husband
of 59 years, Walter; two sons, George and Geoff; one
daughter, Joan Rea; five grandchildren; and two brothers.
Robert Lee Mills, ’41 (preclinical medicine),
MD ’44, of Sisters, Ore., December 24, at 83.
A member of Los Arcos eating club, he spent 23 years
in private practice in the Bay Area until 1974. He
served as a plastic surgery consultant in Vietnam on
several tours between 1972 and 1975. He then served
as a professor of surgery for Stanford until his retirement
in 1987. During this time he was also chief of staff
and chief of surgery at Santa Clara Medical Center.
He was on the boards of the California State Crippled
Children’s Service and Interplast and worked
as a consultant to the Department of Corrections at
San Quentin. Survivors: his two daughters, Catherine
Moen and Camra; four grandchildren; and one great-grandson.
James Richard “Dick” Taylor, ’41
(political science), of Everett, Wash., March 11, at
86. He was a member of the basketball team and Phi
Kappa Psi. He and his brother co-owned the family business
in Mukilteo, Wash., from 1945 until it was sold in
1991. He served as Mukilteo’s mayor for eight
years during the 1950s and early 1960s and was elected
to the state house of representatives in Olympia for
several terms. His wife of 57 years, Irene, died in
2002, and his son, Stephen, died in 1981. Survivors:
his two daughters, Tiffanie Pearson and Sarah; four
grandchildren; one great-granddaughter; and one brother.
Douglas D. Ordahl, ’42 (chemistry), of Saratoga,
Calif., February 17, at 83. A member of El Capitan
eating club, he worked as a rocket research scientist
and research and development manager for the Navy at
China Lake, Calif. He joined United Technologies in
1960, running the propulsion research department for
the development of lunar landing systems, booster rocket
motors and automobile safety bag inflation. Survivors:
his wife, Lorraine; one daughter, Pamela Fox; one son,
Rick; and seven grandchildren.
David George Patterson, ’42 (general engineering),
MBA ’48, of Alamo, Calif., April 12, at 83. A
member of Sigma Nu/Beta Chi, he served in World War
II as a combat veteran pilot. After working for 12
years as an engineer for U.S. Steel, he took over the
leadership of Patterson Ranches, his grandfather’s
properties in Fremont and Livermore, Calif. He was
a Boy Scout leader and a member of the John Muir Hospital
Foundation. Survivors: his wife, Joan; his children
and stepchildren; and many grandchildren.
Ralph Taylor Thompson, ’42 (chemistry), MBA ’47,
of Issaquah, Wash., April 4, at 84. A member of the
El Toro eating club, he served in the Navy during World
War II. After working for Standard Oil Co. for seven
years, he formed Gas Processors, where he served as
CEO until 1970. He then moved in London and started
Ameron Process Systems, a company specializing in engineering
and project management. Once back in the United States,
he worked as a consultant in the oil business and served
as board chair of Petroleum Industry Consultants Inc.
Survivors: his wife of 62 years, Dean; one son, Ralph
Jr.; and two daughters, Terry and Karen.
Sidney E. Henderson, ’43 (general engineering),
of Darien, Conn., February 9, at 82. A member of Chi
Psi, he served in the Navy during World War II. He
worked as a regional sales manager for Allegheny Ludlum
Steel Corp. from 1958 to 1987. Survivors: his wife,
Virginia; three daughters, Lisa Rosenbloom, MA ’70,
Cia Marion and Leslie, ’78, PhD ’82; one
son, Sidney III; eight grandchildren; and one brother,
John, ’51, MD ’55.
Nathan Russell Vail Jr., ’43, of Santa Barbara,
Calif., March 31, at 83. A member of Beta Theta Pi,
he served in the Merchant Marine during World War II.
He was a cattle rancher and partner in the Vail Co.
and Vail & Vickers Co. Survivors: his wife of 56
years, Jean Betts, ’47; two sons, Nathan and
Timothy; one daughter, Diana; two grandchildren; and
one sister.
Helen Dorothy Ahrens Wobermin, ’43 (nursing),
of Los Osos, Calif., March 18, at 87. She worked as
the school nurse at Lincoln School, Wilson School and
Exeter Union High School during the 1950s. Her husband,
Arthur, died in 1952. Survivors: her daughter, Elberta
Kerr; one son, Stanley; four grandchildren; and four
great-grandchildren.
Betty Anne Brown Lohman, ’44 (nursing), of Menlo
Park, February 23, at 83. She and her late husband,
John, ’34, lived on a ranch that became the site
for Foothill College. They developed the Carmel Valley
Golf and Country Club and Quail Lodge. She had many
philanthropic interests, including the Peninsula Volunteers
and the Meditation Garden at El Camino Hospital. Survivors:
two daughters, Jeannette Lawrence, ’72, and Meg
Young; and three grandsons.
Thompson N. Spear, ’44 (social science/social
thought), of Hanford, Calif., September 12, at 81.
A member of the golf team and Beta Theta Pi, he served
in the Air Force during World War II. He worked as
the general manager of five California Dodge dealerships
before becoming owner-manager of the dealership in
Hanford. He served on the board of Hanford Community
Hospital from 1958 to 1965 and was a member of the
Hanford Planning Commission for roughly the same period.
Survivors: his wife of 57 years, Barbara Jean King, ’47;
one daughter, Dianne Hooton; four grandchildren; and
two sisters, Winifred Sampsell, ’41, Gr. ’42,
and Janet Taubman, ’47.
Beverly Myrtle Duncan Tucker, ’44 (social science/social
thought), of Los Altos, March 3, at 83. She taught
at Castro School in Mountain View for several years.
Her husband, P. Usher, ’41, died in 1991. Survivors:
three sons, Kirk, Jay and John; seven grandchildren;
and one sister.
Neva June Haight Woodbury, ’44 (humanities),
of Los Gatos, Calif., April 5, at 82.
Jane Ann Horrall Stempel Coldiron, ’46 (psychology),
of Sonoma, Calif., April 1, at 80. She was a member
of the Tri Delta sorority. She was the president of
Stempel’s Bakery from 1972 to 1975. She was also
the president of Catholic Social Services of Marin
and served on the board of Marin Charitable. Her first
husband, George Stempel Jr., ’44, died
in 1970. Survivors: her husband of 30 years, Gene, ’40,
MBA ’48; four sons, Mark, Greg, Terry and Bob
Stempel; one daughter, Tracy Hogan; two stepdaughters;
12 grandchildren; five great-grandchildren; and one
brother.
Alfred W. Baxter, ’47 (philosophy), of Berkeley,
March 7, at 78, of heart problems. A World War II veteran,
he was a founding member of the Stanford Alpine Club.
He taught at UC-Berkeley and served as an assistant
to Chancellor Clark Kerr, MA ’33 from 1954 to
1958. He then started a management-consulting firm
in San Francisco, Baxter McDonald and Co. In the late
1960s, he started making wine in the Oakland hills,
and the operation evolved into Veedercrest Vineyards,
an award-winning winery. His first wife, Gail Fleming, ’52,
died in the Berkeley Hills fire of 1991. Survivors:
his wife, Mary Sherrill Mead, ’50; three sons,
Andy, Eric and Willard; and four grandchildren.
Myrna Lee Strock Danforth, ’47 (Spanish), of
Boulder City, Nev., March 16, at 78, of multiple chemical
sensitivity syndrome. She taught in the San Francisco
Unified School District until 1990. Survivors: two
daughters, Lauren Dixon and Darcy Keeling; one son,
Richard Snell; two grandsons; two great-granddaughters;
and one sister, Merrie Lou Strock Hongola, ’50.
James Evert Denebeim, ’47 (undergraduate law),
JD ’49, of Belvedere, Calif., February 27, at
88, of pneumonia. He served in the Marines during World
War II and was a member of the El Tigre eating club.
Along with his two brothers, he founded Liberty National
Bank. He served as president of First National Bank
of Vista, Liberty National Bank, Chartered Bank of
London, Union Bank and the Pacific Bank. Survivors:
his wife of 48 years, Helene; two sons, Steve, ’81,
and Mark; two daughters, Suzanne Atherly and Ellen;
four grandchildren; and one brother.
Kathleen W. “Pat” Ackerson Foote, ’47
(social science/social thought), of Lincoln, Neb.,
February 22, at 78. She was the first woman elected
to the Nebraska unicameral legislature in 1954. She
spent $81 in the campaign and ran unopposed for re-election
two years later. During her four years as a senator,
she was a champion of outdoor recreation, education
and women’s rights. In 1969, she joined the Game
and Parks Commission as an outdoor recreation planner
and retired in 2001. Survivors: two daughters, Kathleen
Durham, ’71, and Karen; two sons, John and James;
five grandchildren; and two sisters.
William Edward Minette, ’47 (communication),
of Falls Church, Va., March 11, at 84, of renal failure.
A Navy pilot during World War II, he served as editor-in-chief
of the Quad and was on the staff of the Stanford Daily.
He worked for NBC radio in San Francisco, Radio Free
Asia in the Philippines, UPI in London and as an overseas
broadcast consultant, primarily in the Middle East.
After retiring to Arizona, he was elected in 1991 as
the first state Democrat party chair from Southern
Arizona in 30 years. His wife of 45 years, Marthagrace
Powell, ’43, died in 1989. Survivors: his two
daughters, Charlotte Kaplow and Mary, ’86; two
sons, Michael and Gordon; and five grandchildren.
James William Kozy, ’48 (communication), of Palo
Alto, April 23, at 86. A member of Theta Chi, he served
in the Air Force during World War II. He enjoyed a
long career in real estate. Survivors: his wife of
53 years, Della; two sons, Anthony and Craig; four
grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.
Shelly Cottrell Burwell, ’49 (social science/
social thought), of San Marino, Calif., January 13.
Survivors: her husband, Lucius, ’49; two daughters,
Lisa Gustafsson and Kimberly Cabrera; two sons, Gregory
and Phillip; 11 grandchildren; and seven great-grandchildren.
Glen Douglas Holtby, ’49 (economics), MA ’72
(education), of Cupertino, February 22, at 79. A member
of the track and field team, he belonged to Phi Kappa
Psi and Theta Chi. He served in the Army during World
War II. He taught math at Blackford and Westmont in
the Campbell Union High School District for many years.
Survivors: his wife of 54 years, Ally Aitken, ’49;
one son, Doug; three daughters, Susan Harris, Kim Miller
and Claire Gibson; eight grandchildren; and one great-granddaughter.
Robert G. Kirby, ’49 (psychology), of Montecito,
Calif., April 13, at 80. He spent 40 years as a senior
executive of the Capital Group Cos. and helped found
the Capital Guardian Trust Co., managing billions of
dollars in tax-exempt retirement and other institutional
funds. He served on President Reagan’s five-man
Brady Commission investigating the causes behind the
October 1987 stock market crash. He was a trustee of
the College Retirement Equity Board and Harvey Mudd
College. He was also a member of the board of governors
of the Pacific Stock Exchange and a director of Lockheed
Corp. Survivors: his wife, Marvel; eight children,
including Robin, ’85; and 13 grandchildren.
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1950s
Beverley Katharine Newman Donaca, ’50 (political
science), of Portland, Ore., January 6, at 75, of cancer.
She was a member of the Junior League of Portland.
Survivors: her husband of 53 years, Thomas, ’50;
two daughters, Susan Mace and Leslie Petroff, ’77;
five grandchildren; one great-grandchild; and one sister,
Ann Collings, ’56.
John David “Jack” Miller, ’50 (social
science/social thought), JD ’53, of Long Beach,
Calif., December 30, at 77. A member of Phi Delta Theta,
he served in the Army during the Korean War. In 1969,
he was appointed by Gov. Ronald Reagan to the Law Revision
Commission of California. He was a former partner of
Miller, Bronn, Brummett & Porter, a firm that pioneered
class-action aviation litigation. Later he became counsel
to the partnership of Ball, Hunt, Hart, Brown and Barowowitz
until he retired in 1995. He served on the board of
trustees for St. Mary’s Hospital and worked with
the Boys & Girls Clubs of Long Beach. His wife,
Barbara Decker, predeceased him. Survivors: his two
sons, Thomas and Timothy; two daughters, Jennifer Olsson
and Karen Harris; and five grandchildren.
Michael Graham “Mickey” Titus, ’50
(economics), of Arroyo Grande, Calif., February 8,
at 76. He was a member of the football team and Phi
Kappa Psi. He worked in the wholesale drug industry
with Coffin-Redington Co. of San Francisco, Brunswig
Drug Co. of Los Angeles and as owner and president
of Marketing Programs Inc. He served on the board of
Camp Fire USA and as chairman of the board of governors
of the 28-branch Los Angeles metropolitan YMCA. Survivors:
his wife of 55 years, Lynn Cox, ’49; three daughters,
Sue Prock, Colleen Martin and Kathleen; two sons, David
and Patrick; and seven grandchildren.
Mary Ann Walters Robbins, ’51 (history), of Mill
Valley, Calif., April 6, at 75. She worked for various
causes including juvenile justice and child abuse prevention.
Her former husband, Dick, predeceased her. Survivors:
her four daughters, Marya Bell, Page, Catherine and
Marsha; four grandchildren; and her brother, Sumner
Walters, ’49.
Shirley Carr Dalton Schieber, ’51 (education),
of Corona del Mar, Calif., December 24, at 75, of a
cerebral hemorrhage. She taught at Cal State-Fullerton
and at Orange Coast College. She also wrote poetry
and children’s books. Survivors: her former spouse,
Norman, ’48; one daughter, Harmony Gates; two
sons, Michael and Craig; and one granddaughter.
Leonard Lincoln Sherman, ’51, of Auburn, Wash.,
March 3, at 81. He served in the Air Force during World
War II. He worked for the Boeing Airplane Co. for 30
years as staff engineer in the flutter and dynamics
group. He was a longtime member of the Society of Antique
Modelers and the Eagle Squadron of Flying Aces. Survivors:
his wife, Marion; one daughter, Virginia Weaver; one
son, David; two grandchildren; and one sister.
Duncan P. Davidson, ’52 (undergraduate law),
JD ’54, of Fremont, Calif., February 17, at 77.
He worked for the state of California for 25 years
as a workers’ compensation judge. Survivors:
his wife, Anne Marie; two daughters, Janet Miller and
Patty; one son, Duncan Scott; four grandchildren; and
one brother.
Erle Rodney Kirk, ’52 (psychology), MA ’53
(education), of Los Altos Hills, in April, at 81. He
served in the Army during World War II. He was a probation
officer for the county of Santa Clara until 1962. He
taught psychology at Foothill College for 25 years,
was the school psychologist for a number of years and
ran a private marriage and family counseling practice
for more than 40 years. His wife, Dorothy, predeceased
him. Survivors: his daughter, Sue Williams; one son,
Ken; and three grandchildren.
Charlotte Kempner Davis Beyers, ’53 (English),
MA ’70 (communication), of Palo Alto, March 10,
at 73, of lymphoma. She was an award-winning filmmaker
and journalist whose work explored social issues including
poverty, drug abuse and fear of AIDS. During her career,
she produced 15 documentaries and wrote for publications
ranging from the Times of London and Nature magazine
to the New York Times. Her husband of 32 years, Robert
Beyers, who directed the Stanford News Service for
30 years, died in 2002. Survivors: three daughters,
Pamela Kivelson, Nancy Stewart and Cynthia Kanner;
one son, Alan Davis; three stepchildren, including
Robbie Beyers, ’80, MS ’82, PhD ’89;
13 grandchildren and stepgrandchildren; and one sister.
John Murray Huneke, ’53 (mechanical engineering),
MBA ’55, of Atherton, January 8, at 75. A member
of the tennis team and Phi Kappa Psi, he was a senior
executive with Bechtel Investments in San Francisco.
Survivors: his wife, Pencie; one son, Murray, ’83;
two daughters, Christine Kremer, ’84, and Lorraine;
five stepdaughters; four grandchildren; seven stepgrandchildren;
one brother; and two sisters.
William Henry McCaffrey Jr., ’53 (chemical engineering),
of Encinitas, Calif., November 30, of lung cancer.
A member of the crew team and Alpha Kappa Lambda, he
worked in sales management in the chemical industry.
Survivors: his wife of 51 years, Gloria Griffith, ’54,
MA ’55; one son, Michael; one daughter, Alice
Meyers; four grandchildren; two great-grandchildren;
and one sister.
Louise Butler Wright, ’53 (geography), of San
Jose, April 19, at 73, of a stroke. She was involved
in various organizations, including P.E.O., the Art
History Society, and the Master Gardeners. Survivors:
her husband of 52 years, Richard; two sons, Jon and
Jeff; one granddaughter; one brother; and one stepsister.
Elizabeth Littler Diether, ’54 (psychology),
of Palo Alto, April 8, at 72. She was a teacher in
local schools and a Girl Scout leader. Survivors: her
husband, Philip, ’58; two daughters, Gretchen
and Ingrid; and one son, Jeff.
Margot Bernstein Kohen, ’54 (sociology), of Alamo,
Calif., November 20, at 71, of breast cancer. She was
active in East Bay cultural affairs and served for
20 years as a history docent at the Oakland Museum.
Survivors: her husband, Joseph; one daughter, Susan
Decker; one son, Douglas; four grandchildren; and one
brother.
Karel Laurens Koke, ’56 (economics), of Santa
Clara, Calif., April 17, at 75. Survivors: his wife,
Gladys; one daughter, Cynthia; two sons, Kellan and
Anthony; four grandchildren; and two sisters.
Carole Deane Moody Gledhill, ’59, of Orinda,
Calif., March 26, at 67, of pancreatic cancer. She
was involved in many charitable activities and volunteer
services at church and other nonprofit organizations.
Survivors: her husband of 46 years, Bob, ’55;
one daughter, Susan; one son, Scott; one grandson;
and one sister.
Annette Clyde Rose, ’59 (social science/social
thought), of Montecito, Calif., April 5, at 68, of
cancer. Active in the community, she served as president
of the Ventura Concert series, and spent time doing
photography and interior design. Survivors: her three
sons, Kevin, Jack and David; eight grandchildren; her
mother; three siblings; and her former spouse, Ron
Rose, ’57, MBA ’61.
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1960s
Suzanne Kerr Duerden, ’62 (international relations),
of Stinson Beach, Calif., February 11, at 64, of cancer.
She taught U.S. history and Spanish at St. Rose Academy
through the 1970s. After earning a law degree, she
worked as a prosecuting attorney in the office of the
Marin County District Attorney for 20 years. Survivors:
her husband, Mark White; two daughters, Kathy Rogers, ’85,
MS ’86, and Jennifer Nolan, ’86; three
granddaughters; and one sister.
Jeanne Vanpatten Murray Veasey, ’65 (history),
of Phoenix, March 25, at 61, of breast cancer. A member
of the women’s swimming team, she worked in publishing
in Boston and as a systems analyst in New York City.
Survivors include her sister.
Peter Donnell “Don” Knecht Jr., ’67
(general engineering), of Aptos, Calif., March 6, at
60. He was a member of El Cuadro eating club. He served
in the Navy before joining General Electric, where
he worked in nuclear services as an engineer for almost
30 years. Survivors: his two sons, Peter and Russell;
two granddaughters; his mother, Janet Biby Knecht, ’38;
two sisters, including Carolyn Longstreth, ’70;
and one brother.
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1970s
David Wayne Young, ’72, MS ’72 (civil
engineering), of Alamo, Calif., January 7, 2004, at
59. He was president of D.W. Young Construction for
25 years. Survivors: his wife of 35 years, Barbara;
one daughter, Jennifer; and his sons.
Sherri Lynn Brown, ’76 (biological sciences),
of Agoura Hills, Calif., February 13, at 50, of multiple
sclerosis. She was the medical director for oncological
products and international safety at Amgen for many
years. Survivors: her husband of 26 years, David Braun, ’75,
MD ’79; one son, Eric; one daughter, Elisabeth;
her parents; one sister; and one brother.
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1990s
Celeste Campbell, ’91 (communication), of Willingboro,
N.J., March 12, at 34, of scleroderma. She worked in
Hollywood, Calif., as a post-post-production assistant
on the television show I’ll Fly Away. After returning
to New Jersey, she worked for Barnes & Noble as
a department manager. Survivors: her mother and father;
her stepfather; one brother; and two stepsisters.
Jeanie Lauer, ’95 (human biology), of
Menlo Park, March 28, at 31, of a brain tumor. She
was a member of the women’s water polo team,
a Robinson House staff member and a windsurfing instructor,
and she worked at Stanford Sierra Camp for two seasons.
After earning a master’s of environmental management
from Duke U., she worked as a land manager for the
Peninsula Open Space Trust, where she focused on protecting
open lands in coastal San Mateo County. Survivors:
her parents, Allen, ’59, and Kathleen; and one
brother.
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2000s
Eric Groff, ’00 (English and history), of San Diego
and Troy, Mont., February 25, at 26, in a car accident. A
member of the rugby team and Phi Delta Theta, he was working
as a high school English teacher and coaching football and
basketball. Survivors include his mother.
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BUSINESS
Vance Edward Miller Jr., MBA ’63,
of Portola Valley, November 21, at 75, of multiple
myeloma and amyloidosis. He served in the Navy, managing
modernization and repair projects on World War II-era
aircraft carriers, ships and submarines. In 1965, he
joined the logistics systems research group at Stanford
Research Institute, working as a consultant all over
the world. He later pursued a career in retirement
planning, becoming a certified financial planner and
an IRS enrolled agent. He served as a member of the
San Mateo County committee on school district organization
and was a director of the Ladera recreation district.
Survivors: his wife of 47 years, Jacquelyn Harris, ’52;
one son, Darrell; two daughters, Kerstin, ’81,
MA ’82, and Trynne; five grandchildren; and one
sister.
EARTH SCIENCES
Jacob Johannes Piet “Jaap” Eerligh, MS ’67
(petroleum engineering), of Austin, Texas, December
31, at 68, of melanoma. He spent his entire career
working as an engineer for Exxon in California, Alaska,
Indonesia, England, Norway and the Ivory Coast. Survivors:
his wife of 38 years, Els; one daughter, Christina
Mason; and one granddaughter.
EDUCATION
James Arthur “Art” Boland, MA ’50,
of Fairfield, Calif., April 2, at 86. He served in
the Navy during World War II. During his 27-year tenure
at Abraham Lincoln High School, he was a science and
math teacher and coach of football, basketball, baseball
and tennis. He retired in 1978. Survivors: his wife,
Anna; three daughters, Susie Wilson, Kathy Rose and
Louanne Wasserman; one son, Jim; nine grandchildren;
and one sister.
Eugene E. Whitworth, MA ’51, Gr. ’52, of
San Francisco, December 28, at 93. He served in the
Marine Corps during World War II. He spent almost 40
years at Pacific Gas and Electric Co., working in customer
service and public relations until his retirement in
the mid-1970s. He also founded Great Western Brotherhood,
a loosely formed San Francisco university that concentrated
on the study of metaphysics and religion. He is the
author of 10 books. Survivors include his wife of 60
years, Ruth.
Clay S. Andrews, EdD ’57, of Menlo Park, April
23, at 83. He served as an Army medic in North Africa
and Italy during World War II. He worked as a teacher
and administrator at San Jose State for almost 40 years.
In retirement, he was a volunteer at Palo Alto Medical
Foundation. Survivors include his wife, Jane.
James Bert Carpenter Jr., MA ’58, of San Diego,
March 2, 2004, at 85. He enlisted in the Marine Corps
in 1940 and retired 29 years later as a colonel. He
then worked for San Diego city schools as a naval science
instructor. Survivors: his wife of 63 years, Elizabeth;
one daughter, Mary Ellsworth; one grandson; and one
sister.
Joan Haw, MA ’65, of Sacramento, February 4,
at 72. A member of Sigma Kappa, she taught kindergarten
for 11 years in the Monterey School District. After
earning her master’s degree, she taught kindergarten
in the West Sacramento School District for 27 years
until her retirement. Survivors include her brother.
Douglas Ross Fertig, MA ’74, of Alexandria,
Va., April 2, at 54, of kidney cancer. He was management
services administrator for the city of Columbus, Ohio,
and director of personnel for Windsor, Conn. He settled
in the Washington area in 1988 and spent the next eight
years as director of personnel services for Alexandria.
In 1996, he became director of human resources for
the U.S. Senate. Survivors: his wife of 23 years, Susan
Hepler; one daughter, Emily; one son, Andrew; and one
brother.
Marilyn Joan Benton, Gr. ’92, of Sausalito,
Calif., February 26, at 66. Survivors: two daughters,
Bonnie Goldstein and Alisa; one son, Scott; her father;
and one brother.
ENGINEERING
John Keith Hayes, Engr. ’40 (mining), of Provo,
Utah, May 6, 2004, at 87, of a cerebral hemorrhage.
In 1940, he accepted a job in the mining and raw materials
division of the United States Steel Corp., where he
remained until 1981. He served in the Army during World
War II and retired as a lieutenant colonel in the Army
Reserves Corps of Engineers. Survivors: his wife of
58 years, Lillian; three daughters, Margaret Allen,
Geraldine Lasater and Bonnie Callis; three sons, John
Jr., Frederick and Richard; 26 grandchildren; four
great-grandchildren; two sisters; and one brother.
Michael Christian Holt, MS ’91 (electrical engineering),
of Redwood City, March 5, at 35, in an auto accident.
Survivors: his wife of five years, Flora Lu; his mother;
and one sister.
HUMANITIES & SCIENCES
Miriam Drum Gray, MA ’35 (French), of San Francisco,
April 16, at 91. During World War II, she worked as
a censor with the U.S. Office of Censorship in San
Francisco. She was president of Catholic Charities
and was a writer for the Catholic
Monitor newspaper.
She was also president of the Bay Area chapter of the
American Cancer Society. Survivors: her husband of
62 years, Tom; three daughters, Ann Miller, Kathleen
Johnson and Janie Burtch; one son, Bill; 11 grandchildren;
and four great-grandchildren.
Daniel Walter Machon, MA ’42 (Spanish), of Palm
Beach, Fla., March 14, 2004, at 90. He served in the
Marine Corps during World War II. He taught Spanish
at Yale and at the Choate School in Wallingford, Conn.
He left the profession to begin a long career in the
mining industry. He retired as a principal and vice
president of Univest Corp. Following his retirement,
he taught international business and marketing at Florida
Atlantic U. Survivors: his wife, Elizabeth; one son,
Marc; three stepdaughters; and four grandchildren and
stepgrandchildren.
Mitchell William Kerr, MA ’45, PhD ’51
(history), of Annapolis, Md., February 24, at 87. He
retired from Towson U., where he was a history professor.
Survivors: his wife, Rose Grimes-Kerr; one son, Michael;
and one stepdaughter.
Thomas Matthew “Matt” Rees, MA ’51,
Gr. ’52 (Latin American studies), of Odessa,
Texas, May 25, 2004, at 85. He served in the Army as
an interpreter following World War II. He taught Spanish
at Purdue U. and English at the Instituto Cultural
Brasileiro dos Estados Unidos in Brazil, as well as
serving for two years as its director. He was a longtime
foreign language teacher at Odessa College. Survivors:
his wife of 57 years, Celestia; two sons, Brigham and
Joel; four daughters, Sharla, Laurie Bush; RaeLynn
Shattuck and Ginette Rogers; 18 grandchildren; one
great-grandson; and one sister.
Leon Charles “Lee” Mulling, PhD ’60
(hearing and speech), of Ashland, Ore., March 2, at
90. He served in the Navy during World War II. He was
head of the English department at Southern Oregon U.,
where he taught English, speech, drama and journalism
and served as adviser to the college newspaper. He
retired in 1979 and assumed the presidency of the emeritus
faculty. He helped establish the Oregon Shakespeare
Festival Association and served as secretary to its
board of directors.
George James Laird Gibson, Gr. ’65 (history),
of Fallbrook, Calif., April 15, at 69. He served in
the Army from 1952 to 1956. He moved in San Diego to
teach at Grossmont College, where he remained until
1980. For the past 20 years, he worked as a public
works construction project manager. Survivors: his
wife, Sheila; two daughters, Amy and Edie; three sons,
John, William and Russell; five grandchildren; and
one sister.
Bruce Edward Palmer, MA ’65 (food research),
of Tucson, Ariz., February 26. He served two years
in the Army as an analyst at the National Security
Agency in the mid-1950s. He taught economics at Pima
Community College in Arizona, where he became head
of the social sciences department and was elected to
the board of governors. He left academia in the early
1970s to work in Brazil as South American director
for Great Plains Wheat Ltd. Later he joined Caleb Brett,
a group of agricultural commodity inspectors, and served
as worldwide vice president for agricultural services.
Survivors: his daughter, Lisa; one son, Cary; two granddaughters;
and one brother.
David Frantz Bradford, PhD ’66 (economics),
of Princeton, N.J., February 22, at 66, of burns suffered
in a fire at his home. He was a professor of economics
and public affairs at Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson
School. He also held positions with the National Bureau
of Economic Research in Cambridge, Mass., the American
Institute for Public Policy in Washington, D.C., and
New York U. School of Law. An authority on taxation,
he served under presidents Ford, Reagan and George
H.W. Bush. He was a member of Bush’s
Council of Economic Advisors from 1991 to 1993 and
was deputy assistant secretary for tax policy in the
Treasury Department in 1975 and 1976. Survivors: his
wife, Gunthild; one son, Theodore; one daughter, Lulu;
four grandchildren; and one sister.
Claire Thomas Dedrick, PhD ’66 (medical microbiology),
of Sacramento, April 8, at 74, of cancer. She was the
founder and first director of the Peninsula Conservation
Center, created to bring together disparate environmental
organizations to provide a more cohesive voice. Founded
in 1970 in Menlo Park, the center relocated to Palo
Alto and is now known as Acterra. She was a former
vice president of the Sierra Club and was picked by
Gov. Jerry Brown to run California’s Resources
Agency in 1975. She later became the first female member
of the state Public Utilities Commission and served
on the state’s Air Resources Board and as executive
director of the State Lands Commission. Her former
husband, Kent, died in 2004.
Andrew Irving Rematore, PhD ’68 (Spanish), of
San Jose, March 3, at 80, of leukemia. A World War
II veteran, he taught Spanish in the department of
modern languages at Santa Clara U. for 40 years. Survivors:
his wife of 51 years, Irene; and two daughters, Andrea
and Laurel.
Gloria Jean Davis, PhD ’76 (anthropology), of
Washington, D.C., February 21, at 62, of breast cancer.
After working as director of clinics for Planned Parenthood
in San Francisco, she joined the World Bank in 1978.
She became director of the bank’s social development
department, working to promote projects aimed at helping
the poor. She retired in 2000 but continued to work
part time. In 1985, she wrote “Indonesia: Forests,
Land and Water,” a report that has since been
used as a guide for setting environmental protection
priorities. Survivors: her husband, Robert Crooks;
her mother; one brother; and one sister.
Jeffrey A. Krautkraemer, MA ’78, PhD ’82
(economics), of Pullman, Wash., December 10, at 50,
of cancer. He was a professor at Washington State U.,
where he specialized in natural resource and environmental
economics. He was chair of Save Our Summers, a Spokane-based
group that advocates for clean air standards. He was
a member of the American Economic Association and the
Association of Environmental and Resource Economists.
Survivors: his wife of 19 years, Patti Gora; one son,
Tim; one daughter, Annie; his mother; and one brother.
Kristine Louise Fraser Ames, MS ’92 (geophysics),
of Santa Clara, Calif., March 26, at 46. Survivors:
her parents, two sisters; and one brother.
Stephan Ted Poulos, MA ’96 (English), of Belmont,
Calif., February 9, at 56.
LAW
George E. Paras, JD ’50, of Carmichael, Calif.,
April 16, at 80, of pulmonary fibrosis. He served as
an infantryman during World War II and as an intelligence
officer during the Korean War. As a lawyer in private
practice, he specialized in civil cases until 1969,
when Gov. Ronald Reagan named him to the Sacramento
Superior Court. He was elevated to the appellate court
in 1974. After leaving the court in 1981, he became
a partner in Greve, Clifford, Diepenbrock and Paras
in Sacramento and served on the state’s Little
Hoover Commission. Eight years later, he left the law
practice and became a private judge, handling arbitration,
mediation and trial counseling. His son, Jason, ’73,
MA ’76, died in 1982. Survivors include his daughter,
Danae.
MEDICINE
Glenn Elwin Austin, MD ’52, of Beaverton, Ore.,
April 11, at 83. He served in the Army during World
War II. He practiced pediatrics in Los Altos for 48
years. He was instrumental in establishing guidelines
for testing and treating children with ADHD. He served
a two-year term as president of the American Academy
of Pediatrics in the early 1980s. Survivors: his wife,
Olive; three daughters, Carla Thompson, Starr Clare
and Linda; one son, Glenn; and seven grandchildren.
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