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| Obituaries |
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FACULTY / STAFF
Byron “Bill” Brown Jr., of Stanford, November
30, at 74, of a heart attack. Former chair of the department
of health policy and research, he spent more than
30 years at Stanford. He was also a consultant to the
National Academy of Science and authored several books
on biostatistics. He retired from Stanford in 1998 but
remained active as an emeritus faculty member at the
Medical School. Survivors: his wife, Jan; three sons,
Bill, Eric and Mark; two daughters, Madeleine and Lisa;
and three grandchildren.
Mauro Cappelletti, of Stanford, November 1, at 76. He
joined the law faculty in 1970, became a senior research
fellow at the Hoover Institution in 1985, and was named
the Lewis Talbot and Nadine Hearn Shelton Professor
of international legal studies in 1987. He became emeritus
in 1996. He started his teaching career in his native
Italy, moving to the U. of Florence in 1962, where he
founded and directed for 14 years the Florence Institute
of Comparative Law. He wrote or edited more than 30 books, including a multivolume
series on converging trends in the legal systems of
various nations in Europe. He was elected a member of
the Royal Academy of Belgium, a fellow of the British Academy, a member of the Academy of Italy and a member of the Institut
de France. Survivors: his wife, Mimma; and one daughter,
Matelda.
Paul Landry, of Carpenteria, Calif., October 30, at
82. He was an associate professor of drama from 1957
to 1975. He began consulting on theater design and construction
in the early 1960s and founded Paul Landry & Associates
in Palo Alto in 1965. The firm, renamed Landry &
Bogan in 1971, consulted on such well-known venues as
UC-Berkeley’s Zellerbach Hall. At Stanford, he
consulted on the renovations of Cubberly and Memorial
auditoriums. Survivors: his wife, Margaret; two daughters,
Elissa Rufo and Megan; and two granddaughters.
Samuel “Pete” Pond, MBA ’39, of Woodside,
October 14, at 90. A World War II veteran, he joined
the Business School as associate dean in 1961. Over the next
20 years, he served as acting dean and assumed other
administrative posts at the school. After retiring,
he ran Bricker’s International Directory of University-Based
Executive Development Programs and served as a trustee for his first alma mater, the Thacher School
in Ojai, Calif. Survivors: his wife, Kip; one son, Sam; two daughters, Elizabeth
Poolman, ’81, and Katharine; and three grandchildren.
William Frank Weber, of Menlo Park, November 4, at 77,
of lung cancer. He was
a member of the clinical faculty in the psychiatry department
from 1965 until his diagnosis in 2003. He also served
as director of the individual psychotherapy clinic at
Stanford from 1993 to 1998. He was a founding member
of the Lindemann Seminar, now in its 34th year. He and
his wife served as resident fellows for 10 years. His
wife, Sheila, died on May 21. Survivors include his
son, Marc.
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1920s
Kenneth V. Beer, ’26 (math), of Redwood City,
December 4, at 100, of pneumonia. A member of the Band and the Los Arcos eating club,
he joined Pan American Airways in 1929, retiring 34
years later as a senior captain. In retirement he focused
on competitive tennis, winning the singles Grand Slam
title for his age group three times in his 80s and being
inducted into the Northern California Tennis Hall of
Fame. His wife, Mavia, died in 1999. Survivors: one son, John; two daughters, Frances Kristofferson
and Dorothy; nine grandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren.
Mary Jean Huff Penfield, ’29 (social science/social thought), of Santa Barbara, Calif., February
1, 2004, at 96. She was a member of the women’s
rifle team. She belonged to Kappa Kappa Gamma and helped
found a new chapter at UCSB in 1978. She was also an
active member of the Assistance League and the Santa Barbara Woman’s
Club. Her husband of 40 years, Wallace, died in 1975.
Survivors: her son, William, BAR ’63; one daughter,
Mary Louise Williams; and one grandchild.
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1930s
James Adam Barr, ’30 (medicine),
MD ’34, of Rossmoor, Calif., October 26, at 95.
He was a member of the Band and the El Cuadro eating
club. He served in the Navy during World War II. He
worked as a doctor in Oakland, specializing in internal
medicine and cardiology and associated with Merritt
Hospital, until his retirement at 68. He served on the
hospital’s board of directors for 13 years. He
was predeceased by his wife, Molly. Survivors: his son,
James; one daughter, Gail Lansingh; and two grandchildren.
Mary Anita Loos von Saltza, ’35, of Monterey,
Calif., October 11, at 94. She started her career as
a publicist in New York before coming to Hollywood in 1941 as a screenwriter.
She also produced several films with her first husband,
the late
Richard Sale, and wrote four novels. Her second husband,
Carl von Saltza, ’34, predeceased her.
Thomas W. Dibblee Jr., ’36 (geology), of Santa
Barbara, Calif., November 17, at 93. A member of Phi Sigma Kappa, he worked as a geologist
for the Richfield Oil Corp. and the U.S. Geological Survey, mapping one-fourth of
the entire state of California. His wife of more than
50 years, Loretta, died in 2001.
Janet Carey Clark Warren, ’37 (social science/social
thought), of Portland, Ore., October 13, at 89. Her
first husband, Edgar Clark, ’36, died in 1960.
Her second husband, Neal Warren, died in 1994. Survivors:
one son, Edgar Clark, ’64; one daughter, Mary
Clark, ’67; and two grandchildren, Brinton, ’92,
and Matthew Clark, ’94.
Frank Thomas Collins, ’38 (general engineering), Engr. ’41 (mechanical engineering),
of Portland, Ore., February 20, 2004, at 87, of congestive
heart failure. A member of Phi Delta Theta and the football, track and boxing teams, he was named Northern
California Golden Gloves heavyweight champion in 1938. He joined Douglas Aircraft as a stress engineer in 1941, leaving five years later to work independently as a civil engineer designing
industrial buildings and installations. His wife of
51 years, Priscilla Throop Hatch, ’41, died in 1992. Survivors: two
sons, Richard and John, ’67; and four grandchildren.
Donald W. Douglas Jr., ’38, of Sun City, Calif.,
October 3, at 87. A member of Phi Gamma Delta, he joined
his father’s company, Douglas Aircraft, as an
engineer and eventually became president. The company
merged with McDonnell Aircraft in 1967 and he was named
senior vice president of the firm. He retired in 1974
but remained on the board until 1989. He also founded
Capistrano Bank and Biphase Energy Systems, a geothermal
energy company. Survivors: his wife, Linda; one daughter,
Victoria Thoreson; two grandchildren; and two brothers.
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1940s
Max L. Dimick, ’40 (preclinical medicine), MD
’44, of Sacramento, October 2, at 87. He served
as an Army captain and chief of surgical services during
World War II. He ran a private practice as an obstetrician
and gynecologist for 35 years. He was also an assistant
clinical professor of medicine at UC-Davis. His wife
of more than 50 years, Nadine Vann, ’45, died
in 2003. Survivors: one son, Dan; three granddaughters,
four great-grandchildren; and two sisters.
Ruth Mathews Broy Niccolls, ’41 (preclinical medicine),
of Ross, Calif., February 15, 2004, at 82. She helped
found the Sunny Hills Auxiliary and the Marin Mental
Health Association. She served as a grief counselor
for suicide prevention, chaired the Marin chapter of
the Junior League and volunteered as a docent for the
Audubon Society. Survivors: her husband of 61 years,
William, ’41, MA ’46; one son, William,
’70; three daughters, Sara, ’72, Dorothy,
’75, and Katherine Rodler, ’84; four grandchildren;
and one sister, Dorothy Broy Brown, ’45.
Henry Stouder Thompson, ’42 (political science),
of Palm Desert, Calif., October 1, at 84. A member of
Chi Psi and the men’s soccer team, he worked for
Johnson and Higgens Insurance Co. for 25 years as senior
vice president. Survivors: his wife of 25 years, Barbara
Wessels; two sons, Henry and Christopher; one daughter, Diana; four grandchildren;
and one brother.
Willard Southgate Webber, ’42 (political science),
of Piedmont, Calif., September 11, at 84. He was a member
of Sigma Nu and Beta Chi and served in two wars in the
Navy. He had a long career as an investment counselor,
retiring at 81 from Loomis Sayles & Co. Survivors:
his wife of 61 years, Arloine; one son, Douglas; one
daughter, Candace Webber Huston, ’73; four grandchildren;
and his sister, Carol Webber Kleyensteuber, ’55.
Bernard Edwin Olsen, ’43 (political science),
of Walnut Creek, Calif., October 22, at 81, of a stroke.
A member of Phi Delta Theta, he was a career executive
with the Kaiser Steel Corp. His wife of 51 years, Gloria,
predeceased him. Survivors: his three children, Heidi
Teichgraeber, ’72, Kimball and Jeffrey; and four
grandchildren.
James Williams Cooper, ’44 (social
science/social thought), of Sun City, Calif., December
1, at 82, of a stroke. A member of Chi Psi, he served
in the Navy during World War II. He worked as an account
executive for a Los Angeles advertising agency before
joining his father’s lumber business. He then
formed his own company, JW Cooper and Co., specializing
in advertising and public relations. Survivors: his
first wife, Carole Carpenter, ’45; his second
wife, Patricia; two daughters, Kimberley and Kathleen;
three stepchildren; 10 grandchildren; and one sister.
Miriam Leigh King, ’44 (philosophy), of Etna, Calif., November 16, at 82, of leukemia. She
was a member of Cap and Gown and played women’s
basketball. After earning a master’s degree from
UCLA, she worked as a psychiatric social worker in the
Santa Barbara area. She was a member of the Vedanta
Society.
John Lawrence Pagen Jr., ’44, of Santa Cruz, Calif.,
October 2, at 82. A member
of the soccer team and Beta Theta Pi, he interrupted
college in 1942 to join the Stanford Flying Indians
in the Marine Corps. He worked as a personnel manager
at Hiller Helicopters and FMC. Survivors: his wife of 56 years, Janet; one son, Geoffrey; one daughter,
Susan McCray; four grandchildren; and one sister, Patricia
Hebbron, ’47.
Donald David Hoytt, ’45 (biological sciences),
MD ’48, of Los Angeles, October 23, at 81. A member
of the El Toro eating club, he was a member of the teaching
staff of UCLA Medical Center before starting his own
practice. He then worked for the state as a consultant
for 11 years before retiring. Survivors: his wife, Joan;
one son, Lawrence; one daughter, Elyse Vosburg; two
stepchildren; four grandchildren; and one brother.
Nancy Elizabeth Ganahl Lewis, ’45 (education),
of Rancho Santa Fe, Calif., November 21, at 81. She
was a member of Chi Omega. Survivors: her husband of
57 years, Jack; four sons, John, Stuart, William and
Thomas; seven grandchildren; and two sisters, Mary Louise
Eimers, ’40, and Margaret Concannon, ’49.
Stanford W. Ascherman, ’47 (biological sciences), of San Francisco, November 24, at 78, of prostate cancer. A physician specializing
in abdominal surgery, he worked in Chicago and New York and as an Air Force doctor in
Taiwan, the Philippines and Morocco before settling
in San Francisco in 1959. At Stanford, he endowed three professorships
in the schools of engineering, medicine, and humanities
and science, and he established the Stanford Ascherman/Baruch
Blumberg Fund in Basic Research. Survivors include his
twin brother.
Lester Byron Briggs Jr., ’47
(industrial engineering), of Palo Alto, November 7,
at 87. He served in the Air Force during World War II
and was awarded a Purple Heart. He worked for 33 years
at Ames Research Center in the personnel division, retiring
in 1983. Survivors: his wife of 62 years, Dorothy Louise;
three sons, Gary, Don and Jim; seven grandchildren;
and one brother.
Frances H. Beardsley Dee, ’49 (education), of
Pasadena, Calif., October 31, at 76, of cancer. A member
of Cap & Gown and the women’s crew team, she
worked for many years as an elementary school teacher
in Pasadena. She was active in her PEO chapter. Her
husband, John, ’49, died in 1978. Survivors: two
daughters, Linda Barajas and Ellen McGuire; one son,
Eric; five grandchildren; and one sister, Ann McHugh,
’53.
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1950s
Richard Ervan Beekman, ’50 (physics), of Kalispell,
Mont., June 29, at 76, of a brain hemorrhage. A World
War II veteran, he worked as an electrical engineer
for General Dynamics and Lockheed Martin. Survivors:
his wife of 56 years, Elizabeth; three children; five
grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; and two sisters.
Frederick Rylands Moore, ’51 (English), of Paradise,
Calif., November 1, at 75. He served in the Navy from
1951 to 1955. He taught English at Santa Rosa Middle
School for 26 years until his retirement in 1993. Survivors:
his wife of 43 years, Harriett; two daughters, Sarah
Reid and Elizabeth; and one brother.
Patricia Jane Tyler-Larrus, ’51 (English), of Mountain View, December 21, at 75. Survivors: her
husband, Herbert Larrus; two daughters, Lynda Larrus and Lisa Walker; one son,
Marc Larrus; nine grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.
Rodney Glisan Kennedy-Minott, ’53 (English), MA
’56, PhD ’60 (history), of Pacific Grove,
Calif., December 15, at 76, of pancreatitis. He was an Army veteran who served as
a sergeant in postwar Japan. At Stanford, he was an
assistant professor, assistant director of the Western
Civilization program and, from 1960 to 1965, director
of the summer session program. In 1967, he was named
associate dean of Cal State-Hayward and later served
as a history professor and head of the humanities division.
A longtime Democratic Party activist, he served as President
Carter’s campaign chairman for Northern California
in 1976 and the following year, he was appointed ambassador
to Sweden. In the 1990s he was an instructor at the
Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, specializing
in environmental and diplomatic issues. A published
author, he was an associate fellow of the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy at
Georgetown U. and a former board member of USF’s
Pacific Basin Studies Program. Survivors: his two daughters,
Katharine and Polly, MA ’91; one son, Rodney;
two grandchildren; one brother; and two sisters.
David Richard Marriner, ’56 (economics), of Laguna
Beach, Calif., May 27, at 69,
of pancreatic cancer. A member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and the track and field team, he
started his career with Arthur Andersen in Los Angeles.
He then spent
25 years as an executive with Fleetwood Enterprises
and Burtec Waste Industries. Survivors: his wife of
51 years, Joan; three daughters, Marcia Thorne, Susan
Moore and Sherry Noble; and three grandsons.
Keith S. Fraser, ’58 (biological sciences), of Livermore, Calif., December 6, at 68. He was a member
of Phi Delta Theta and the men’s soccer team.
He worked as a deputy district attorney in Alameda County
until 1963 when he joined a private law firm. In 1971
he helped form Varni, Fraser, Hartwell & Trutner,
where he remained active until his death. He served
on the boards of Livermore National Bank and Community
First National Bank and was involved with Boosters,
which supports local high school sports. Survivors:
his wife, Marilyn; two daughters, Julie Fraser Howard
and Jennifer; four grandchildren; and one sister.
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1960s
Linda Collins Maurer, ’61 (nursing), of Turlock,
Calif., October 13, at 65, of breast cancer. She won
a number of amateur golf titles, including the California
Women’s Golf Association Championship, before
she turned professional. She taught golf
for more than 20 years and twice won the Ladies Professional
Golf Association Senior Teaching Division National Championship.
Survivors: one son, Paul; two daughters, Karry Walker
and Kathryn; two grandchildren; two brothers; and one
sister.
Kenneth G. Griffin, ’63 (undergraduate law), JD
’64, of Los Angeles, November 5, at 64. He was
a business attorney and commercial litigator who specialized
in representing Japanese companies for more than 35
years. He started Stone, Van Patten, Griffin & Arndt
in 1977, leaving five years later to start his own practice.
He wrote a series of books aimed at Japanese businessmen
to help them better understand the American legal culture.
He was a member of Delta Tau Delta. Survivors: his wife, Shirley; two
sons, Glenn and Winston; his mother; one sister; and one brother.
Scott Ewbank, ’69 (political science), of San Jose, November 6, at 57, of an apparent heart attack.
A member of El Cuadro eating club, he volunteered for
two years with International Volunteer Services helping
central Vietnam’s highland tribes develop new
agricultural practices. He began his solo criminal practice
in San Jose in 1976. He was active with the Boy Scouts
and with the Santa Clara County Juvenile Justice Commission.
He was also a volunteer mentor to juvenile delinquents
with Volunteers in Parole. Survivors: his wife, Susan
Hartt; one son, Jack; one daughter, Anne; his mother;
and two brothers.
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1970s
Chris Howard Peterson, ’72 (psychology),
of Mountain View, October 21, at 54. A member of the
Band and Alpha Delta Phi, he worked for HP/Agilent for
23 years as a hardware and software engineer. Survivors:
his wife, Karen Rogers; and two brothers.
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1980s
Steven Charles Murray, ’83 (physics), of Scotts
Valley, Calif., August 17, at 43, of drowning while
snorkeling. After working for Candela Corp. and Laserscope,
he co-founded Bay Glass Research and was developing
corrective filters for color-deficient vision. Survivors:
his wife, Alice; two sons, David and Michael; his parents;
his grandmother; one sister; and one brother.
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BUSINESS
Owsley Bodley “Bod” Hammond, MBA ’36,
of Oakland, October 26, at 90. He served in the Navy
during World War II. After working for 10 years as a
stockbroker and investment adviser in San Francisco,
he joined Theo H. Davies and Co. for 15 years and served
as a company vice president, treasurer and director.
He was the treasurer of the U. of California from 1963
to 1978 and a member of Stanford Associates. His wife
of 62 years, Patricia, died in 2000. Survivors include
two daughters, Katherine and Patricia.
EDUCATION
Franklin MacDonald, PhD ’50, of San Jose, November
24, at 91. He served in the Air Force during World War
II. An English professor at San Jose State U. for 34
years, he was also the author of books, magazine articles
and book reviews. His wife of nearly 64 years, Jane,
predeceased him. Survivors: his daughter, Susan Bergtholdt;
one son, Craig; and one grandson.
Joyce E. Leyland, MA ’54, of Saratoga, Calif.,
November 5, at 78. She worked
in Los Gatos, Calif., as the district music teacher
at University Avenue School,
where she was appointed vice principal in 1959. She retired in 1981.
John Alexander Michaelson, MA ’92 (education), of San Francisco, December 25, at 52. He
was the principal of Maraloma Elementary and of Marina
and Luther Burbank middle schools. Survivors: his parents;
three sisters; and three brothers.
ENGINEERING
Jared Bernard Moo, MA ’47 (electrical engineering),
of Saratoga, Calif., November 25, at 86. After serving
in the Army-Air Force during World War II, he worked
in management for Kaiser Aerospace and Electronics in
Palo Alto for 28 years. Survivors: his wife of 53 years,
Jan; one son, Jeffrey; three daughters, Jerrie Thurman, Julie
Bradley and Janet Pecsar; and eight grandchildren.
Bernard Adelbert Wambsganss, MS ’47, PhD ’55
(electrical engineering), of Sunnyvale, November 26,
at 90, of a stroke. He joined the Naval Reserves during
World War II and retired a captain after 32 years. He
spent his career at Crocker Bank. A longtime member
of the Palo Alto Elks Lodge, he volunteered at the VA
hospital in Palo Alto. His first wife, E. Wilkins, MA
’49, died in 1981. Survivors: his wife, Larene;
and five stepchildren.
Donald Oscar Pederson, MS ’49, PhD ’51 (electrical
engineering), of Walnut Creek, Calif., December 25,
at 79, of Parkinson’s disease. He was a pioneer
in semiconductor chip design who oversaw the creation
of a widely used program for circuit simulation. A World
War II veteran, he worked in Stanford’s electronics
research laboratory and Bell Telephone Laboratories.
He joined UC-Berkeley in 1955, became chairman of the
electrical engineering and computer sciences department and retired in 1991. The university
dedicated the Donald O. Pederson Center for Electronic
Systems Design in 2001, honoring the professor’s
contributions to computer-aided design. Survivors: his
wife of 27 years, Karen; three daughters, Katharine
Rookard, Margaret Stanfield and Emily Sanders; one son,
John; and four grandchildren.
Mamoru Inouye, MS ’53 (mechanical engineering),
of Los Gatos, Calif., November 14, at 74. He worked
for 40 years as a research scientist at NASA Ames Research
Center. Survivors: his wife, Yasuko; one sister; and
one brother.
Richard V. Elms Jr., MS ’60 (mechanical engineering),
of San Jose, November 25,
at 74.
HUMANITIES & SCIENCES
Mark Alfred Barmore, MA ’29, PhD ’31 (chemistry),
of Lacey, Wash., November 10, at 98. He worked in Hollywood
as a control engineer for the Fox Film Co. and as a
sound technician for Warner Brothers and First National
Studios. He then began a long career as a cereal chemist
for the U.S. Department of Agriculture. He was the founding
director of the Western Wheat Quality Laboratory until
he retired in 1969. He wife of 72 years, Elizabeth,
died in 2003. Survivors: his son, Frank; one daughter, Sarah
Davis; six grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchildren.
Suzanne Requet Fisher, Gr. ’34 (French), of San Francisco, December 10, at 100.
A retired French instructor at the Alliance Francaise
and San Francisco State, she was a member of the Women’s City Club and the Mechanics’
Institute Library. Survivors include her two sons, Philip
and William.
Reynold Cluff “RC” Merrill Jr., MA ’40,
PhD ’42 (chemistry), of Salt Lake City, February
25, 2004, at 83. He worked as a research scientist at the Western States Agricultural
Laboratory and for the Philadelphia Quartz Co., where
he was made director of research at age 27. After earning
an MD, he worked as the medical director for Squibb’s
research program. He also served as medical director for Parke Davis,
Sterling Drug and the Alza Corp., and he held more than 20 patents. His wife, Ruth Burgess,
predeceased him. Survivors: two sons, David and John;
three daughters, Helen Pfeifer, Elizabeth Culbertson
and Susan; 13 grandchildren; one brother; and two sisters.
James Haran, MA ’51 (speech and drama), of Sonoma,
Calif., December 10, at 83, of a heart attack. He served
in the Navy during World War II. After teaching at Holy
Names College in Oakland and the U. of San Francisco,
he was hired as a drama instructor at San Francisco
City College, where he spent 25 years until his retirement
in 1985. He also directed community theater groups in
San Francisco, San Mateo and Marin counties. Survivors:
his wife, Loyce; five sons, Terry, Tim, Ned, Mark and
Tom; five daughters, Bronwyn Harris, Ethne Bullick,
DeAnn Matthews, Brigid and Mary; 13 grandchildren; two
brothers; and one sister.
Walter Kenneth Waters Jr., MA ’51, PhD ’64
(speech and drama), of Nacogdoches, Texas, October 2,
at 77. During 40 years of teaching, the last 33 years at Stephen F. Austin
State U., he directed more than 150 productions. Survivors:
his wife, Irene; one daughter, Wendy McNeill; one son,
Brian; and three grandchildren.
Lawrence J. Osborne, PhD ’52 (English), of Belmont, Calif., November 21, at 96. He was a Methodist
minister, an accomplished musician and a professor of
English at the U. of the Pacific until his retirement in 1978. He was
a member of the Masonic fraternity and belonged to the
Scottish Rite Valley in Stockton, where he served as founding co-chair of
the Scottish Rite Children’s Language Center.
Survivors: his wife, Kathryn; two sons, Lawrence and
Richard; two daughters, Mary Nissen and Nancy Sclater;
10 grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.
Dennis James Doolin, MA ’60 (political science),
PhD ’64 (graduate special program), of Tokyo,
February 15, 2004, at 70. A veteran of the Korean War,
he worked for the federal government as defense department
senior China analyst, deputy assistant secretary of
defense for East Asia and deputy undersecretary of the
Air Force for international affairs. Survivors: his
wife, Eiko; two daughters, Maureen Yrigoyen and Sarah
Felice; one son, David; six grandchildren; one great-grandchild;
and one sister.
Vincent Lauricella Jr., MS ’70 (statistics), of Sunnyvale, December 5, at 69. He
owned and operated Optima Print & Copy Center in
Sunnyvale. Survivors: his wife, Kathryn; and two daughters,
Ann Bitonti and Elizabeth Kobata.
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