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| Obituaries |
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FACULTY / STAFF
Donald Baganoff, of Palo Alto, December 17, at 72,
of a stroke. He spent a year as a research fellow at
Caltech before joining Stanford’s aeronautics
and astronautics department in 1965. He retired 32 years later in 1997
and became emeritus the following year. He was the first professor voted by
students as the department’s most outstanding
teacher and went on to win the award again. Survivors: his wife, Kay; three
daughters, Kathyrn Uhlik, ’83, Michelle Baganoff-Keith
and Deborah; six grandchildren; and one brother.
William Charles Lazier, MBA ’57, of Menlo Park,
December 23, at 73. An expert in the law and practice
of accounting, he returned to the University in 1982
to lecture at the Business School, where he taught for
11 years. He started lecturing at the Law School in 1990 and was named the Nancy and
Charles Munger Professor of Business there in 1993.
He became emeritus in 2002. He began his career as a tax manager at Arthur Andersen & Co. and was the
founder and general partner of Bristol Investment Co.
Since 1986, he was a trustee of Grinnell College and for six years
served as its board chair. Survivors: his wife of 47
years, Dorothy Albers-Campbell, ’57; one son,
David; two daughters, Linda Escalera and Ann Mahowald; and
nine grandchildren.
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1920s
Joseph B. Koepfli, ’23, MA ’25 (chemistry),
of Santa Barbara, Calif., October 30, at 100. A member
of the soccer team and Alpha Tau Omega, he spent 46
years at Caltech as a chemist and researcher. During
World War II, he worked for the government devising
antimalarial drugs. He served as science adviser to
the State Department from 1951 to 1953 and chair of
the NATO task force on science and technology in 1957.
He helped launch the Los Angeles County Museum of Art
as a trustee, treasurer and benefactor. Survivors: his
wife, Ann; one daughter, Daphne Moore; two granddaughters;
and three great-grandchildren.
Timothy Ekkeles Colvin, ’24 (mechanical engineering),
of Piedmont, Calif., November 17, at 102. He was a member
of Phi Gamma Delta, played football and lettered in
baseball. He worked as a chief engineer for General
Motors before becoming president of Besler Corp., a
manufacturer of agricultural equipment. He
later started Farmers’ Tool & Equipment Co.,
which sold machinery to apply fertilizers and pesticides.
He won the Senior Olympics Golf Tournament in 1997.
Survivors: his son, Christopher; one stepson, Timothy
Layden; one daughter, Kimberley Young; six grandchildren;
and five great-grandchildren.
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1930s
Jerome Max Westheimer, ’31 (geology), of Ardmore,
Okla., September 16, at 94. He worked for Lloyd Noble
as chief geologist and was named president of the Noble Foundation in 1945. In 1951 he became an independent geologist. He belonged to the American Association of Petroleum Geologists and the Amer-ican Association
for the Advancement of Science. He was a lifetime trustee of the Oklahoma City Museum of Art and former president of the Oklahoma Arts Institute.
Survivors: his wife, Wanda; one son; two daughters;
four stepchildren; and one grandson.
Frances Jean Johnson, ’33 (English), of Los Angeles, February 4, at 91. Her career at Fruit
Growers Supply Co. spanned 38 years, during which she
progressed from billing clerk to corporate officer,
becoming the company’s first female exec-utive
secretary/treasurer.
Robert E. Dwan, ’35 (economics), of Santa Monica, Calif., January 21, at 89, of pneumonia. A member of Los Arcos eating club, he worked as an announcer and program manager
at KGO radio in San Francisco. After serving in the Merchant Marine
during World War II, he joined Groucho Marx’s
You Bet Your Life when the show debuted on the radio
in 1947 and moved with it to television in 1950. In
2000, he wrote a memoir chronicling his years with Marx,
As Long As They’re Laughing. In his later years,
he taught comedy at USC. Survivors: his wife, Lois; three sons, Alan, Rob, ’66, and James;
two daughters, Judy Hallet and Katie Huet; and seven
grandchildren.
Joan Virginia Rapp Mayhew, ’36 (political science),
of San Rafael, Calif., January
15, at 91. She served on the board of the Dunham, Carrigan
& Hayden Co. and helped found the Piedmont Recreation
Center. Her husband, Clarence, died in 1994. Survivors
include her daughter, Joan Beales, ’61, MA ’61;
and one grandson.
Octavius Weller Morgan III, ’36 (economics), of Arcadia, Calif., November 11, at 91.
A member of Delta Kappa Epsilon, he played in the 1934
Rose Bowl against USC. He was a founding member and
past president of the Glendora Country Club, which established
the Morgan Cup golf tournament in his honor in 2002.
His wife, Juanita, died in 2001. Survivors: one son,
Kent; two daughters, Robin Reynolds and Debra Dooley,
’56; six grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.
George Noroian Jr., ’36, of Dinuba, Calif., December
28, at 89. He operated Fruitful Valley, a fruit ranch
and cannery, from 1938 to 2000. Survivors: three daughters, Gwennyth Trice,
’67, MA ’68, Dianne Appeldorn and Jean;
one son, George II, ’78, MS ’79, MBA ’95;
eight grandchildren including Bronwen Trice, ’99;
and one sister.
Virginia Ross Geller, ’37 (history), of Costa
Mesa, Calif., December 4, at 89. She enlisted in the
Navy and served in Korea from 1946 to 1948. She worked
as a librarian in San Mateo County for 30 years, becoming
head librarian until her retirement in 1974. She served
as president of the California Library Association.
She was predeceased by her husband, William.
Robert J. Rife, ’39 (preclinical medicine), MD
’43, of Fresno, Calif., December 25,
at 86. A member of Theta Delta Chi, he served in the
Army Medical Corps during World War II from 1943 to
1946. He worked as a general surgeon in Fresno for 45
years, retiring in 1995. He was a past president of
Fresno County Medical Society and a founding member
of the Fresno Surgical Society. Survivors: his wife,
Wilda; one son, Robert Jr.; one daughter, Susan Cort;
and four grandchildren.
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1940s
M. Carne Linder, ’40 (German studies), of Menlo Park, January 5, at 86. She owned a travel
agency in San Mateo and retired 12 years ago. She was
a member of Stanford Associates, the Founding Grant
Society and the Stanford Historical Society.
Edna Marian Smith-Langsner, ’41 (social science/social
thought), of Sacramento, December 14, at 84. She worked
as the personnel officer for the California Division
of Highways, retiring in 1978. She served on the boards of the Stanford Women’s
Club, the AAUW, and the California Transportation Foundation.
She was predeceased by her husband, George Langsner.
Survivors include two stepchildren and one brother.
Frederick Henry Weisel Jr., ’43 (general engineering),
MBA ’49, of Santa Ana, Calif., January 8, at 84,
of kidney failure. He served in the Navy during World
War II and was a member of Sigma Nu and Beta Chi. He
and his wife opened a private day school for children
with special academic needs. In 1980, he retired from
Hughes Aircraft Co. Survivors: his wife of 56 years,
Nancy; and his son, Frederick III.
Avis Gloria Winton Walton, ’44 (undergraduate
law), JD ’45, MA ’63 (education), of Atherton,
in January, at 82, of Alzheimer’s disease. She
worked in local schools for several years before practicing
law in Redwood City. Survivors: her ex-husband, Charles;
two daughters, Wendy Dickerman and Kathy Diamond; two
sons, Todd and Steve; and five grandchildren.
Douglass P. Graham, ’45, of Indian Wells, Calif.,
January 20, at 83. He was a member of Beta Theta Pi.
His first wife, Claire Lippincott, ’45, died in
1981. Survivors include his wife, Helen.
William H. Hombach Jr., ’45 (biological sciences),
MD ’48, of Dewey, Ariz., April 16, 2004, at 80.
A member of Beta Theta Pi, he served as a flight surgeon
in the Air Force during the Korean War. For 35 years,
he practiced obstetrics in Billings, Mont., before retiring
to Arizona. Survivors: his wife, Barbara Van Housen,
’46; one daughter, Gretchen; one son, William;
and four grandchildren.
Thomas Allen Hudson, ’45, of Cambria, Calif.,
December 30, at 81. He served
with the Navy during World War II and was a member of
Delta Upsilon. He worked as a civil engineer for Chevron
for 39 years, retiring in 1985. Survivors: his wife of 58 years, Lorna; four daughters, Ann, Mary,
Laurie and Jane; and two grandchildren.
Weymouth Crowell Lacy, ’45 (general engineering), of Burbank, Calif., November 11, at 81.
A member of the water polo team, he served in the Army
during World War II. He worked for the U.S Postal Service
until his retirement in 2002. Survivors include one
sister and one brother.
Thomas Cole Sturgeon, ’47 (industrial engineering), of Santa Monica, Calif., January 8, at
82. He served in the Army Air Corps during World War II and was
a member of Alpha Tau Omega. He taught math for 29 years
and belonged to
the Santa Monica Retired Teachers Association. Survivors
include his wife
of 36 years, Eileen.
Donald H. See, ’47 (economics), of Boise, Idaho,
April 24, 2004, at 80. He served in the Navy during
World War II and was a member of Kappa Sigma. He ran his own accounting firm,
See, Hodge & Gordon in San Diego for 38 years. He and his family owned and
operated Redfish Lake Lodge in Stanley, Idaho, for 29 years. Survivors: his wife,
Correen Considine, ’47; two sons, Jack and Dan;
eight daughters, Darby Lewis, Sharon Poehling, Linda
Donald, Eileen McKenney, Sally Schollmeier, Bridget
Anderson, Denise Hann and Molly Hardy; 23 grandchildren;
and one great-granddaughter.
Lewis Lowry Fenton, ’48 (undergraduate law), JD
’50, of Monterey, Calif., February 10, at 79,
of heart failure. He served in the Army Air Corps during World War II. A renowned trial attorney, he was a founding member
of Hoge Fenton Jones & Appel. He taught at the Center
for Trial and Appellate Advocacy at UC’s Hastings
College of the Law as well as in the advocacy skills
workshop program at Stanford.
A member of Stanford Associates and of the Law School
Board of Visitors, he served as president of the Stanford
Alumni Association in 1966. He also served on the boards
of Monterey Peninsula College, the Monterey Jazz Festival
and the Monterey Bay Aquarium. He helped found the York
School in Monterey. Survivors: his wife, Gloria; two
sons, Lewis Jr., ’76, and Daniel; two daughters,
Juanita Donnelley, ’78, and Pamela; seven grandchildren, including Amanda Fenton,
’06; and one brother, Norman, ’47, JD ’49.
Harold George Peters, ’48 (biological sciences), of Orange, Calif., December 31, at 81. He
served in the Air Force during World War II. A cardiovascular
and thoracic surgeon for 40 years, he performed some
of the first heart/lung transplants in Orange County in the early 1970s. Survivors: his
wife, Betty; three sons, Bryan, Daniel and Greg; one
daughter, Dyanna; and four grandchildren.
Robert L. Warnock, ’48 (biological sciences),
of San Pedro, Calif., November 9,
at 77, of post-polio syndrome. A member of Delta Upsilon,
he enjoyed a long career in the savings and loan industry,
retiring as vice president of Glendale Federal Bank. He volunteered
for National Forest Homeowners and Rotary International.
His wife of more than 40 years, Suzanne Sargent, ’48,
predeceased him. Survivors: three sons, Bob Jr., Jim
and Gordon; seven grandchildren; three great-grandchildren;
and one brother.
Richard Moores Butler, ’49 (economics), of Lincoln,
Calif., March 31, 2004, at 78, of multiple myeloma.
He served in the Army during World War II and was a
member
of Phi Gamma Delta. A certified public accountant, he worked for Getty Oil as
director of finance and spent 14 years in Kuwait working
as a divisional controller for the company. Survivors:
his wife of 52 years, Barbara; two daughters, Judy Perez and Lisa
Drake; six grandchildren; and his sister.
Robert William Driscoll, ’49 (political science), of San Marino, Calif., November 28, at 77,
of Parkinson’s disease. He served in the Navy
during World War II and was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon. During his
45-year legal career, he was a trial attorney specializing in bankruptcy and patent litigation. Survivors: his
wife of 55 years, Gail; two daughters, Laurie Jutzi and Linda; two sons, Douglas
and Tad; five grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.
Marshall Edelson, ’49 (psychology), of Woodbridge, Conn., January 16, at 76, of congestive heart failure. He was an assistant professor of psychiatry at the U. of Oklahoma before joining the Austen Riggs Center
in Stockbridge, Mass., as a staff psychiatrist. In 1966, he went to Yale, where
he became a full professor of psychiatry in 1976. He was also director of education
and director of medical
studies for the psychiatry department. He retired in 1998. The author of several books, he
is best known for Psychoanalysis: A Theory in Crisis. Survivors: his wife of 52 years, Zelda; two sons, Dave
Tolchinsky and Jon; one daughter, Bec; six grandchildren;
and one brother.
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1950s
James Holgate Ewert, ’50 (mechanical engineering),
of Cloverdale, Calif., December 17, at 78. He served
in the Air Force and was a member of Sigma Nu and Beta
Chi. He was part owner of Renstrom Gear, a gear-manufacturing business in San Francisco. Survivors:
his three sons, Steve, Ted and Rob; one daughter, Joan
Reynolds; and nine grandchildren.
John David “Jack” Miller, ’50 (social
science/social thought), JD ’53, of Long Beach,
Calif., December 30, at 76. He served in the Army and
was a member
of Phi Delta Theta. In 1969, former Gov. Ronald Reagan
appointed him to the Law Revision Commission, where
he served as a member and chairman. He became a partner with Miller, Bronn, Brummett & Porter, a firm that pioneered class action aviation litigation. 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.
He was predeceased by his wife, Barbara. Survivors:
two sons, Thomas and Timothy; two daughters, Jennifer
Olsson and Karen Harris; and five grandchildren.
Dickinson Reeves, ’50 (civil engineering), of
Bellevue, Wash., November 12, at 82. He served in the
Navy and was a member of the Pearl Harbor Survivors
Association. He worked as a civil engineer until his
retirement in 1988. Survivors: his wife of
60 years, Helen; two sons, Donald and John; one daughter,
Janet Bliss; 12 grandchildren; 13 great-grandchildren;
and two brothers.
Richard M. Bridgman, ’51, of Berkeley, January
27, at 77, of cancer. After serving in the Merchant
Marine, he worked as a newspaper reporter in Ohio. He
taught at Dartmouth College for two years before joining
the faculty at UC-Berkeley as an
assistant English professor in 1962. He won tenure four years later and retired in 1989. He published books on Gertrude Stein, Henry
David Thoreau and Mark Twain. Survivors: his two sons,
Roy and Joel; one daughter, Cynthia Josayma; and two
grandchildren.
Jean Katherine Maltseff McDonald, ’52 (communication), of Arlington, Va., January
24, at 74, of lung cancer. After serving as press secretary
for the late Rep. Joseph Fisher, she became the press
officer for the Office of Technology Assessment, Congress’s
research agency for science and technology issues. She worked until the agency closed
in 1995. She then volunteered for the National Museum
of Natural History, the National Zoo and the Washington Opera. Survivors: her two daughters, Colleen and Kelly; and two granddaughters.
Sanford B. Thayer, ’54, MS ’57, PhD ’65
(industrial engineering), of Fort Collins, Colo., January
5, at 72, of cancer. A member of Theta Chi, he joined
the faculty at Colorado State U. in 1966. Survivors
include his wife of 51 years, Nona Buker, ’54; two daughters, Ann and Jill; and two sons,
Eric and Troy.
Daniel Edward Willard, ’56 (biological sciences),
of Bloomington, Ind., January 21,
at 70. An ecologist and wetlands biologist, he was professor
emeritus at the Indiana U. School of Public and Environmental
Affairs. He was a teacher for 30 years and received
the IU Distinguished Teaching Award in 1986. He served
on the wetland committee of the Congressional Office
of Technology Assessment and was president of the Sycamore
Land Trust from 2001 to 2004. Survivors: his wife,
Melinda
Swenson; three daughters, Martha Diehl, Pam Becker and
Nellie Werger; and three grandchildren.
Gerald Van Bergen, ’57 (anthropology), of Fresno, Calif., December 19, at 72, of cancer. He
served in the Air Force during the Korean War and was
a member of the water polo team. He retired in 1993
after a career in retailing as a buyer, merchandise manager
and store manager. Survivors: his wife of 44 years,
Becky; two sons, Jeff and Brad; and grandchildren.
Barbara Joan Rex McIntosh Hodge, ’57, of Rancho
Cordova, Calif., November 28, at 69. She taught elementary
education for nine years in Billings, Mont. After moving
to California and retiring, she was an active school
volunteer for the past 13 years. Survivors: her two
daughters, Marcia Mote and Tara McIntosh-Lee; one son,
Scott McIntosh; one stepson; 14 grandchildren; and one
brother.
Edmond D. Butler Jr., ’58 (biological sciences),
MD ’62, of Menlo Park, December 2, at 68. A member
of the Band, he had a faculty appointment at the Medical
School while maintaining a private urology practice
at the Menlo Medical Clinic. Survivors: his wife, Anne
Lusignan, ’62; one son, Benjamin; two daughters,
Amy Paulsen, ’88, MBA ’93, and Lindsay Kolderup,
’89; and seven grandchildren.
Peter Asha Chang Jr., ’58 (history), JD ’61,
of Santa Cruz, Calif., December 11, at 67, of lung cancer.
In 1966, at 29, he was elected district attorney in
Santa Cruz County. At the time, he was the youngest
DA in the United States and the only Asian-American
to hold such a post. He went on to prosecute some of
Santa Cruz’s most notorious homicides in the 1970s
before going into private practice. He won an appointment
to the faculty of the National Association of Criminal
Defense Lawyers and was elected to the organization’s
board in 1991. For the past decade, he concentrated
on defending narcotics and white-collar cases in federal
court. Survivors: his partner, Anne Mitchell; one daughter,
Catherine Knight; two sons, Christopher and Peter III;
two granddaughters; his father; and one sister.
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1960s
Margaret Rose Roth Danzig, ’62 (history), MBA
’64, of Marietta, Ga., September 13, at 63, of
lung cancer. She worked as a TV news reporter and as
an executive for Safeway Supermarkets in San Francisco.
In the 1980s, after raising her children, she worked
in real estate. She was a devoted philanthropist for
numerous causes including CARE International, for which
she served as a fund-raiser and board member. Survivors:
her two sons, Joshua and David; two grandchildren; her
mother; and one brother.
Suzanne Kerr Duerden, ’62 (international relations),
of Stinson Beach, Calif., February 11, at 64, of cancer.
She taught high school history and Spanish before earning
a law degree in 1980. She then worked as a prosecuting
attorney in the office of the Marin County District
Attorney for 20 years. Survivors: her husband, Mark
White; two daughters, Kathleen Rogers, ’85, MS
’86, and Jennifer Nolan, ’86; three granddaughters;
and one sister.
Philip Leonard DeGuere Jr., ’66 (communication),
of San Francisco, January
24, at 60, of cancer. A television producer who wrote
for more than a dozen shows, he first worked as a screenwriter
at Universal Studios. In 1981, he launched
his first series, Simon & Simon, which aired for
seven seasons. He was among the
first Hollywood filmmakers to embrace digital technology.
Survivors: his wife, Alison; and three daughters, Adrienne,
Dulcinee and Milena.
Karen Adler Shapira, ’66 (sociology), of Pittsburgh, January 25, at 60, of breast cancer.
She directed the Israel and overseas activities of United
Jewish Communities of North America, traveling on fact-finding missions,
lobbying political leaders and distributing millions of dollars for Jewish needs around
the world. She served as president of the United Jewish
Federation of Pittsburgh from 1999 to 2001 and chaired
the $100 million UJF Foundation. She also served on
the Pennsylvania Commission for Women and on the boards
of the U. of Pittsburgh Medical Center and the Pittsburgh
Symphony. Survivors: her husband of 41 years, David,
’66; two daughters, Laura Karet and Deborah, ’92;
one son, Jeremy; three grandchildren; and one brother.
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1970s
Emily Jane Bernstein, ’79 (music & English),
of Pasadena, Calif., January 27,
at 46, of liver cancer. She was a principal clarinetist
of the Pasadena Symphony and the Los Angeles Opera orchestra.
A member of the contemporary music ensemble XTET and
a faculty member of the Henry Mancini Institute, she
also was an active Hollywood studio musician. She performed
for hundreds of film and television scores, including
Seabiscuit and Pirates of the Caribbean.
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1990s
Tina Evonne Juul-Dam, ’97 (biological sciences), of Boise, Idaho, December 22,
at 29, in a car accident. At the time of her death,
she was doing a rural medicine
rotation in Soldotna, Alaska, as part of her last year of an internal medicine residency at the
U. of Washington-Seattle. At Stanford, she participated in SEED (Students for
Environmental Education), teaching environmental education
to students in East Palo Alto. After graduation, she
worked for Planned Parenthood before attending UCSF
School of Medicine. Survivors: her parents; one brother,
Erik; two sisters, Naya, ’96, and Laila; and her
boyfriend, Bill Weppner.
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EDUCATION
Samuel B. Ziegler, MA ’40, of
Walnut Creek, Calif., January 5, at 96. He taught for
35 years at San Francisco City College and USF. After
retiring, he lectured at the Palo Alto and Contra Costa
JCCs and the Little House in Menlo Park. Survivors:
his son, Phillip; one daughter, Laura; three grandchildren;
and three great-grandchildren.
Florence J. Turner, MA ’45 (education), Gr. ’57
(history), of Palo Alto, January 6,
at 87. She began her career with the Palo Alto Unified
School District in 1943 as
a teacher at Addison Elementary School. Four years later,
she accepted a position
at Palo Alto High School, teaching English and journalism.
She later transferred to the history department, where
she remained until her retirement in 1987.
Harold L. “Pete” Petersen, MA ’53,
of Graeagle, Calif., February 11, at 80, of heart failure.
He served in the Marine Corps during World War II. He
taught seventh and eighth grades at John Muir, Washington
and Haight schools in Alameda. He was a member of the
Alameda City Council from 1957 to 1961, serving as vice
mayor for two years. In 1966 he moved to Butte County,
where he taught and served as principal of an elementary school and as superintendent of the
Golden Feather Union School District until retiring
in 1981. Survivors: his wife of 49 years, Marilyn; four sons, Joe, Hal, Ted and Taft; six daughters, Anne Medved,
Margaret Huff, Mary Ludwig, Elizabeth, Katie, Bernadette;
27 grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
Loretta Ann Wade McDonnell, MA ’63, of Piedmont,
Calif., January 9, at 64, of cancer. She taught English
at James Lick High School in San Jose. She was active
in the Junior League and volunteered for the Coro Foundation.
In 1980, she began her 25-year career at PG&E. She
started as a paralegal and then, after receiving
her law degree on her 50th birthday, she worked as an
attorney. Survivors: her daughter, Elizabeth Highsmith;
two sons, John and Thomas; and five grandchildren.
ENGINEERING
Peter Doub Strum, MS ’47 (electrical engineering),
of South Lake Tahoe, Calif., February 9, at 82. He served
in World War II. In the 1950s, he founded Reconix, an
electronics manufacturing company in Palo Alto. His first wife, May, died in 1991. Survivors:
his wife of 13 years, Audra; two daughters, Margaret Zabel and Jean Gay; step-grandchildren;
and step-great-grandchildren.
John Kendrick “Jack” Buckner, MS ’60
(aeronautics and astronautics), of Fort Worth, Texas,
December 18, at 68, of pneumonia. He began his career
at General Dynamics Corp. as a senior aerodynamics engineer.
He was responsible for development of the F-16, which
first took flight at Edwards Air Force Base in 1974.
From 1977 to 1980, he was the director of advanced programs
at General Dynamics and in 1980 was promoted to vice
president of special projects. After retiring, he consulted
with Space Launch Corp., where he helped design, develop and test launch system technologies.
He was a member of the Aeronautics and Space Engineering
Board, was elected to the National Research Council/Naval
Studies Board and chaired the American Heart Association
of Fort Worth. Survivors: his two daughters, Bari Brookman
and Kendrick; one son, James; five grandchildren; and
one sister.
Ludwig Rupert “Dutch” Vreugde, MS ’64
(mechanical engineering), of Ridgefield, Conn., December
11, at 76. He worked for Lockheed Missiles and Space
Co. in Sunnyvale before joining the Perkin-Elmer Corp.
in 1979 as an associate director of space station programs.
Starting in the 1990s, he worked with Hoffmann &
Feige, a consulting metallurgical firm. Survivors: his
wife of 52 years, Nancy; three sons, Robert, William
and John; one daughter, Mary McCracken; seven grandchildren;
and one brother.
HUMANITIES & SCIENCES
Stuart R. Givens, MA ’49, PhD ’56 (history),
of Bowling Green, Ohio, August 19, at 80. He was professor
emeritus at Bowling Green State U. after 45 years on
the faculty. Survivors: his wife, Florence Porter; two
sons, Willard and Bennet; and one daughter, Martha Sears.
Constance Anne Edwards Christensen, MA ’50 (Spanish),
of Los Altos, January
15, at 80, of a brain embolism. She worked for more
than 30 years as a supervisor for the child custody
unit and for the juvenile division of the San Mateo
County probation department. She was predeceased by her former spouse, Dan Christensen, ’48, MS
’49.
Lloyd Franklin Bell, MS ’52 (mathematics), PhD
’61 (statistics), of La Jolla, Calif., October
7, at 82. He served in the Navy for 25 years, retiring
as a captain in 1970. He then worked for Tetra Tech
Inc., eventually becoming president and CEO. Survivors:
his wife of 35 years, Rita; one son, John; one daughter,
Mary Ann Taylor; and four grandchildren.
Jean Judson Smith, Gr. ’52 (Latin American studies),
of Fresno, Calif., January 17, at 81. He served in the
Navy during World War II. In 1960, he joined the staff
of Kings View Hospital as chief psychologist. In 1975,
he took a position with the Tulare County Department
of Mental Health, where he led the counseling staff
as director of psychological services until his retirement
in 1990. He was a tutor with
the Fresno Adult Literacy Council, consulted with developmentally
disabled group homes and was a member of the Fresno
County Mental Health Board. Survivors: his wife, Mary
Rystad; four sons, G. Marshall, Matthew, Christopher
and David; two daughters, Nathalie Blum and Evelyn; two stepchildren; and 13 grandchildren.
James Burk Whitlow, Gr. ’55 (French), of New Orleans, February 8, at 87. He was a retired
professor of French at the U. of New Orleans and an advocate for the preservation
of the French language in Louisiana. He served as a
translator with Army intelligence during World War II.
After teaching French at Tulane U. and at Stanford,
he joined the Louisiana State U. faculty in 1958. Twice
he was awarded the Palmes Academiques by the French
government for his work as a teacher and
organizer of the France-Amerique Society, which is dedicated
to preserving the French language and culture in Louisiana.
Survivors: his wife, Cornelia; one son, James Jr.; one
daughter, C. Julie; and five grandchildren.
Hubert Wayne Farris, Gr. ’56 (history), of Lubbock, Texas, November 26, at 82.
He served in the Air Force during World War II. He retired
from the Los Angeles Public Defenders office in 1982.
Elsie Marianna Field-Hurd, MA ’60 (Latin American
studies), of Lodi, Calif., January 4, at 98. She taught
high school Spanish in Sacramento for most of her career. Survivors: her
son, Earl Hurd; one daughter, Carol Selleseth; nine
grandchildren; several great-grandchildren; one sister;
and one brother.
John Tiffin Patterson, MA ’72 (communication),
of Topanga, Calif., January 7, at 64, of prostate cancer.
During his 40-year career as a director, he worked on
more than a dozen television movies, but he built his
reputation on top-rated dramatic series, including Hill
Street Blues, Law & Order and Six Feet Under. He
worked on 13 episodes of The Sopranos, earning two Emmy Award nominations,
and he won the Directors Guild award for the fourth
season’s finale. Survivors: his companion, Andrea
Makshanof; one daughter, Mary; one son, Charles; two
brothers; and two sisters.
Shirley G. Stoner, MA ’77 (food research), of
Los Gatos, Calif., February 16, at 85.
She worked for the U.S. Treasury Department during World
War II and later served as an instructor in economics at San Jose
State U. for many years. She was a member of the AAUW
and served on the board of the Los Gatos Community Concerts
Association. Survivors: her husband of 58 years, Norman, JD ’40; three sons,
Robert, Martin and Douglas; and four grandchildren.
Robert Edward Lazo, MA ’90 (Latin American studies),
JD ’90, of Berkeley, December 31, at 41, of cancer.
He was a labor lawyer who often represented
victims of harassment and discrimination. He worked
for the labor firm Littler Mendelson before creating
his own firm, Employment Lawyers’ Group, in San
Francisco. Survivors: his wife, Gina; his parents; and three sisters.
LAW
Jess Port Telles Jr., JD ’47, of Los Banos, Calif.,
December 16, at 84. He served in the Army during World
War II. He joined Linneman & Burgess and specialized
in water and agricultural law. He worked with a local
congressman in the 1960s to create the San Luis Reservoir
and later became one of the founders of the San Luis
Water District, acting as their general counsel for
several decades. He and his brother also became the
world’s largest growers and shippers of cantaloupes.
He served as a regent of Santa Clara U. for the past
10 years and he served on the board of St. Agnes Medical
Center Foundation. He was predeceased by his wife, Helen.
Survivors: his three sons, Jess III, James and John;
10 grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; one brother;
and one sister.
Catherine “Kitty” Lockridge Lee, JD ’53,
of Palo Alto, February 5, at 76, of Lou Gehrig’s
disease. Editor of the Stanford Law Review, she became
an expert on trusts and estates and served as a mentor
and tutor for scores of young lawyers. Survivors: her three daughters, Dorothy, Margie and Amy; two sons,
Paul and Ted; five grandchildren; two sisters; and two
brothers.
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