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| Obituaries |
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FACULTY / STAFF
Paul V. Roberts, MS ’71 (civil engineering), of Cupertino,
February 12, at 67, of leukemia. He was professor emeritus
of civil and environmental engineering. He earned his
bachelor’s
degree from Princeton U. in 1960 and his PhD from Cornell
in 1966. He worked for one year as a visiting professor
in Chile. From 1968 to 1971, he was a research engineer at
the Stanford Research Institute. In 1971, he joined the Swiss
Federal Institute of Water Supply and Water Pollution
Control. In 1976, he came to Stanford as a research professor
of environmental engineering. He became a full professor
in 1986 and served as associate chair of the department of
civil and environmental engineering from 1985 to 1990. He
retired in 2000. Survivors: his wife, Inge; one daughter,
Nina Marton, ’89; two
sons, Christopher, ’92, and Sebastian, ’94; and
nine grandchildren.
Oscar N. Serbein, of Fullerton,
Calif., January 21, at 86. He was a specialist in risk
management and insurance and professor emeritus at the Graduate
School of Business. He earned his bachelor’s and master’s
degrees from the U. of Iowa in 1940 and 1941. From 1942 to
1946, he served in the Army Air Corps, rising to the rank
of major. He earned his doctorate from Columbia U. in 1951
and became a professor of statistics there. In 1959, he joined
Stanford’s
Graduate School of Business as a professor of insurance.
For 30 years, he taught insurance, risk management,
operations, decision sciences and estate planning. He chaired
the university committee on faculty and staff affairs from
1978 to 1981. He authored several books, including Paying
for Medical Care in the United States, published in 1953, Educational Activities of Business, published in 1961, and
co-authored two books. From 1966 to 1981, he was editor of
a series of volumes titled Series in Risk and Insurance. Survivors: his wife of 53 years, Alice; one daughter, Mary
Parker; one son, John, ’77;
and two granddaughters.
|
| 1930s
Harold C. Enderlin, ’32 (general engineering), of
Reno, Nev., February 20, at 95. He served as an officer
in the Navy civil engineers corps and construction battalions
from 1943 to 1946 and remained in the Navy Reserves afterward.
He earned his MPA from Harvard in 1953. He spent his
career working for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Soil
Conservation Service, beginning in 1935 as a field engineer
and ending as assistant director, engineering division.
He retired in 1972. Survivors include his wife of 53 years,
Lorraine; two sons, Jay Senter and William Senter; two granddaughters;
four great-grandchildren; two sisters; and two brothers.
Charles H. Merrill Jr., ’33 (economics), of Sausalito,
February 2, at 95, of natural causes. He was a member
of Delta Kappa Epsilon and during World War II, he served
in the Coast Guard Auxiliary. He was an executive with
Holbrook Merrill Co., a family-owned manufacturing company
in San Francisco, and retired in 1976. An avid sailor, he
helped organize the Farallon Patrol and a regular ferry
service to the islands of the same name in the 1980s, when
the Point Reyes Bird Observatory took up residence there.
He was a founding member of the Richardson’s Bay Maritime
Association. Survivors: three daughters, Molly Merrill
Sterling, ’61,
Alice, ’68, and Jenefer; one son, Bruce Gunn; six
grandchildren, including Polly (Brown) Diffenbaugh, ’95,
MA ’97; five great-grandchildren; and two brothers.
Philip
Brown, ’37 (speech and drama), of Woodland
Hills, Calif., February 9, at 89, of pneumonia. He was
a member of Beta Theta Pi. An actor best known for a
small role as Luke Skywalker’s Uncle Owen in the 1977
film Star Wars, he joined the Group Theatre in New York
in 1938. Later, he and other Group Theatre members formed
the Actor’s
Laboratory, which produced critically acclaimed works
in Hollywood. He directed plays by Arthur Miller, Nikolai
Gogol and Arthur Laurent. In 1951, he directed his first
feature film, The Harlem Globetrotters. He was blacklisted
in the 1950s and moved to London where he worked on stage
and in such films as Tropic of Cancer (1970) and Twilight’s
Last Gleaming (1977). He returned to the United States
in the 1990s, where his fame as Uncle Owen led him to
became a popular figure at science fiction conventions.
Survivors: his wife of 65 years, Virginia (Sharpe, ’38);
a son, Kevin; two grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.
Jane
Northen Schumacher Mock, ’38 (political science),
of Carlisle, Pa., February 4, at 87, of a stroke. A military
wife, she lived all over the world, and often led family
and social programs in the communities where she lived.
She was an avid golfer and the women’s champion at
many military posts. She was predeceased by her husband
of 44 years, Vernon Mock, and her second husband, Caesar
Flore. Survivors: one son, Phillip; one daughter, Christopher;
two grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.
Wanda
Delle Truax Bradford, ’39 (social science/social
thought), of Fresno, Calif., March 7, at 88. A homemaker,
she assisted in her children’s swim team activities
for more than 16 years and was an active member of the
Holiday Guild of Valley Children’s Hospital. She was
predeceased by her son, Douglas. Survivors: her husband
of 65 years, Brenton, ’39; one son, David; one daughter,
Becky Lovell; five grandchildren; and one great-granddaughter.
William
Reinhold Kirsch, ’39 (general engineering),
of Concord, Calif., February 2, at 90. He was a member
of Phi Delta Theta and of the football team. He served
in the Navy from 1945 to 1946. After 18 years with US Steel
in Pittsburg, Calif., he worked for another 18 years
with Teledyne Ohio Steel, retiring as western region district
manager. He was involved with the Association of Iron
and Steel Engineers as well as several civic organizations.
Survivors: his wife of 58 years, Elayne; one daughter,
Carol; one son, Larry; and three grandchildren.
Stuart Anderson
Pettingill, ’39 (economics), of Sterling,
Va., January 22, at 88, of congestive heart failure.
He pursued graduate studies at American U. and served
in the Army during World War II. Afterward, he worked for
the Federal Communications Commission as an electronics
engineer, where he was a member of the Radio Technical Commission
for Aeronautics. That commission’s plan for the Air
Force traffic control system won the 1948 Collier Trophy,
a national award for advances in aviation. In 1950, he
joined the Bureau of Labor Statistics. He began working
for the Commerce Department in 1955 and stayed there for
25 years. He served as chief economist in the Office of
Scientific Equipment in Commerce’s
Business and Defense Services Administration and was
an economist in the Office of Business Research and Analysis
in the Bureau of Domestic Commerce when he retired in
1980. Survivors: his wife of 57 years, Margaret; two
sons, Alan and Henry; one daughter, Kathleen; and four grandchildren.
Charles
L. Prince, ’39 (social science/social thought),
of Alta, Calif., November 18, at 88. He was a member
of the water polo team, the track and field team, and Phi
Delta Theta fraternity. He served in the Army during World
War II and the Korean War, achieving the rank of major.
The owner of the Prince Ford dealership in Colfax, Calif.,
he served on the Alta/Dutch Flat School Board and was involved
with the Colfax Chamber of Commerce and several other
civic organizations. Survivors: his wife of 58 years, Marilyn
(Dey, ’48); one daughter, Susan, ’71, MA ’72;
three sons, Ben, George and Charles; and four grandchildren,
including Emily, ’03.
|
| 1940s
Robert Fielding Love, ’41 (general engineering),
of Kihei, Hawaii, February 24, at 85, in a car accident.
He was a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. He had
a career in the mining industry in Wyoming with FMC Corporation,
and served on the State Mining Board and as a mining
rescue leader. In 1971 he moved to Maui, where he worked
as a realtor with Love/Anderson Realty until 1994. He was
a member of the Maui County Planning Commission, served
on the board of directors of the Maui County Fair and Racing
Association, and was involved in many other community activities
and organizations. Survivors include his wife, Lois; one
son, Peter, ’67; one daughter, Sally Warrington; two
stepsons, John and Jeffrey Harman; 13 grandchildren; six
great-grandchildren; and a sister, Elizabeth Alltucker, ’47.
Randall
Fawcett, ’44, of Los Banos, Calif., February
10, at 84. He was a member of the football team, the
track and field team, and Phi Delta Theta fraternity.
During World War II, he served as a paratrooper and played
football for the Army’s Pacific team. He worked on
his father’s
farm and became a leader in the California agriculture
and dairy industries for more than 60 years. He served
as legislative assistant for agriculture in Washington,
D.C., from 1978 to 1979. His wife of 50 years, Harriet (Driscoll, ’44),
died in 1993. Survivors include four children; several
grandchildren; and two sisters, Virginia Bates, ’40,
and Nancy Robinson, ’41.
David E.A. Johnson, ’44
(chemistry), of Denver, December 2, at 83. He was a member
of Alpha Delta Phi and helped develop a rugby team on
campus. During World War II, he served as an Air Force B-24
pilot. He became a certified petroleum engineer, working
for Seaboard Oil Co. and later starting his own oil and
gas production company. He was active in oil and gas exploration
and production throughout his career, and retired in 2004.
His son, Tom Matthews, predeceased him. Survivors: his wife
of 42 years, Marjorie; five sons, Bruce and Dave Matthews,
George Febiger Johnson, Phil and Edward; and six grandchildren.
Patricia
Aileen Deasy Bloch-Jackson, ’46, of Bellingham,
Wash., January 30, at 81. She was co-president of Merry
Knights of St. Joseph Hospital and was active in church
organizations. Survivors: her husband, Ivan Jackson;
two daughters, Kathryn and Jessica; one son, Jim; seven
grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; and two sisters.
Lemuel
Edward Chapin, ’46 (biological sciences), of
La Jolla, Calif. He was a member of Sigma Chi fraternity.
During World War II he served as a medic in the Army.
He attended medical school at Temple U. and interned
at the U. of Colorado, Denver General Hospital before completing
his residency in internal medicine at the Mayo Clinic
in Rochester, Minn. He earned his master’s in medicine
in 1955. That year, he co-founded the Fullerton (Calif.)
Internal Medicine Clinic. He was a clinical professor
of medicine at UC-Irvine and received his internal medicine
board status in 1958. He became a founding fellow of
the American Geriatric Society in 1972 and was a fellow
in several other medical organizations. He served as
chief of staff of St. Jude Hospital, retiring in 1992. His
first wife, June (Sword, ’48), predeceased him. Survivors:
his wife, Nancy Rice Gray; two daughters, Linda and Barbara;
two sons, Edward and Stephen; three stepdaughters, Rebecca,
Cynthia and Catherine; and 15 grandchildren.
Patricia
Farrell Zelver, ’46, MA ’49 (English),
of Bozeman, Mont., March 21, at 82. She authored novels,
novellas and children’s books including The Honey
Bunch (Little, Brown), The Happy Family (Little, Brown),
A Man of Middle Age & Twelve Stories (Holt, Rinehart & Winston)
and The Wonderful Towers of Watts (Tambourine), which
was featured as a Reading Rainbow book. Her short stories
were published in the Atlantic Monthly, Esquire and numerous
literary journals and anthologies. In the 1970s, five
of her stories won the O. Henry Prize. Survivors: her
husband, Al, ’41, MA ’49; two sons, Nicholas
and Michael; and three grandsons.
John F. “Jack” Henning
Jr., ’47 (social
science/social thought), of Atherton, March 6, at 82,
of respiratory ailments. He attended Chico State College
and served as a pilot in World War II before transferring
to Stanford. He worked at the San Francisco Examiner then took a job selling advertisements for Sunset magazine.
He rose through the ranks at Sunset over the next 40 years
and was named president in 1982. He retired at age 68.
Survivors: his wife, Frances; two sons, John “Jeff” III
and Robert; two grandsons; and two brothers.
Paul Frederick
Charles Mueller, ’47, MA ’50
(psychology), of Sacramento, December 27, at 82. He joined
the Army in 1943 and studied in Paris after graduating
from Stanford. In 1959, he earned a PhD in experimental
psychology and anthropology from the U. of Washington.
He worked for the state of California for 26 years; for
the last 19 he was chief of research and statistics for
the Department of Rehabilitation. In the 1960s he was a
part of the civil rights plea for equal access to housing
in California. He was involved with many community organizations,
including the Sacramento Council for International Visitors
and the World Affairs Council. Survivors: his wife of
60 years, Virginia (Schwartz, ’44); one son, Christian;
one daughter, Lisa Turcotte; three grandchildren; one
brother; and one sister.
Joseph F. Okarski, ’47 (humanities),
of Luverne, Minn., January 11, at 92, of natural causes.
He worked at Peabody’s
Benz Kid tannery in Massachusetts and attended Pomona
Junior College before joining the Army Reserve. He worked
at Lockheed and was attending UCLA when he was called
for active duty. After completing his Stanford degree, he
enrolled in the doctoral program in clinical psychology
at Columbia U. Teachers’ College
in New York and later practiced in Rochester, N.Y., and
then Glens Falls, N.Y., until 1965. He became the first
chief psychologist of the Rock County Mental Health Center
(later named the Southwestern Mental Heath Center), serving
five Minnesota counties. In 1983 he retired, but kept
a small private practice for another 10 years. In the
1970s he created “The Trouble Spot Survey” and
for 30 years worked on the theory behind the survey, which
focused on the patient as an individual rather than by
comparing him to other people. His wife, Ruth, died in 2003.
Survivors: one son, David; and one brother.
Paula Ann Power
Wildanger, ’47 (physical therapy),
of Los Altos, March 15, at 79. After graduating, she
traveled the country with the March of Dimes, helping
polio patients. After several moves abroad with her family,
in 1974 she helped found and lead the family business, Eurodesign
Furniture, in Los Altos. She retired in 1998. She was
active in P.E.O. International, an organization providing
educational opportunities for women, and helped manage the
museum shop at the Los Altos History Museum. Survivors:
her husband, Edward; three sons, Ward, John and Richard;
one daughter, Ann Cone; 11 grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.
Joe
David Wray, ’47 (biological sciences), MD ’52,
of Medford, N.J., March 9, at 79. He was known for his
work in rural health training for medical students in
developing countries as well as for research that provided
evidence linking malnutrition to childhood mortality through
infectious diseases. He served in a Navy V-12 unit at Emory
U. during World War II. He completed his pediatric training
at the Grace-New Haven Hospital of Yale U. School of Medicine,
and in 1956 became the first chief resident at the Hacettepe
Children’s Hospital in Ankara, Turkey. In 1961 he
joined a Rockefeller Foundation program intended to improve
medical education in developing countries. For the next
five years he was visiting professor of pediatrics at
Universidad del Valle in Cali, Colombia. Later he worked
under the same title at the Ramathibodi Hospital Medical
School of Mahidol U. in Bangkok, Thailand. In 1966 he
earned an MPH at the U. of North Carolina School of Public
Health. He was a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study
in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford in 1974 and then
taught at the Harvard School of Public Health from 1975
to 1981, serving as head of the department of population
sciences and director of the Office of International Health.
In 1981 he joined the Center for Population and Family Health
of Columbia U. as a professor of clinical public health.
He participated in international operations research and
training activities of the center in family planning, maternal
and child health, and primary health care, primarily in
Mexico, Haiti, the Sudan and Nigeria, and helped establish
research programs on the prevention of maternal mortality
in West Africa. After retiring in 1991, he worked as a consultant
on children’s health
projects in many countries. Survivors: his wife, Beth;
five children; and eight grandchildren.
Ruth Roberta Richards
Young, ’47 (humanities), MA ’50
(education), of Pacific Grove, Calif., February 4, at
80. She taught school in San Juan Bautista, Calif., and
Salinas, Calif., and later became vice principal at Robert
H. Down School in Pacific Grove. Later, she returned
to teaching at Lighthouse and Forest Grove Elementary Schools
in the Pacific Grove area before becoming a counselor
at an area high school in 1963. She retired from her 28-year
career in schools in 1986. She became a volunteer guide
for the Monterey Bay Aquarium and served on the Pacific
Grove Recreation Board for 12 years. Survivors: her husband,
George; three sons, John, James and George III; one daughter,
Susan; and two grandchildren.
Mary Elizabeth Shannon Salisbury, ’48
(history), of Grants Pass, Ore., March 8, at 83. She was
a member of Cap and Gown. She was a homemaker and former
trustee of the Josephine County Library. She served on the
boards of local nonprofit organizations, including the Southern
Oregon Adolescent Study and Treatment Center. Survivors:
her husband, Raymond, JD ’50; two sons, Lee, ’73,
and John; one daughter, Jane; and six grandchildren.
|
| 1950s
Rosemary Stewart Canfield, ’50 (psychology), of Carmel,
Calif., March 2, at 76. She pursued graduate studies
at Cal State-San Francisco and San Jose State U. She worked
for Monterey County (Calif.) Social Services as a social
work supervisor and, later, for the Department of Defense
as a librarian.
Eleanor May Stewart Kelleher, ’50 (economics),
of Redlands, Calif., February 20, at 77. She was a volunteer
at Kimberly Crest House and Gardens and at the
A.K. Smiley Public Library. Her son, Patrick,
died in 1967. Survivors: two daughters, Nora and Jean;
four sons, Peter, James, John and Tim; three grandchildren;
two brothers; and her former husband, John, ’48, MBA ’49.
Thomas
Arthur Kirwan, ’50 (communication), of Fresno,
Calif., February 15, at 77, of natural causes. He was
a member of Delta Chi fraternity. He worked for the Tulare
Advance-Register in California’s Central Valley before
serving in the Army from 1951 to 1953. He returned to
the Advance-Register until 1955, and then worked for
KFRE radio, where he stayed until 1958. He next joined
the Fresno Bee, beginning as a reporter and progressing
to editorial page editor, a position he held for nearly
30 years. He retired in 1992. His wife, Wanda, and son
Kent predeceased him. Survivors: one son, Garrett; and two
grandchildren.
Howard Edwin Ruggles II, ’50, of San
Diego, December 23, at 77. He was a member of Alpha Tau
Omega and LSJUMB, and completed his bachelor’s degree
at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md. He served
in the Navy as a submariner until 1955 and continued in
the Reserve. He retired as commander in 1986. For 29 years
he worked for Hughes Aircraft, retiring as director of radar
systems. In retirement he served on numerous boards and
was president of the San Diego Chapter of the Navy League
and director of public affairs for the San Diego Chamber
of Commerce. Survivors include his wife, Genevieve; and
one brother, Robert, ’52.
Robert Charles Frojen, ’52
(economics), of Los Angeles, December 11, at 75. He was
a member of Delta Tau Delta and of the swimming and water
polo teams. He competed in the 1956 Olympics in water
polo. He served in the Navy as an aviator and worked in
advertising, marketing and business consulting. He started
three agencies during his career. Survivors: his wife, Colleen
(Baker, ’55);
two children, Jon and Robin; and three grandchildren.
Richard
Thomas Love, ’52 (social science/social thought),
MD ’58, of Santa Barbara, Calif., December 28, at
76. He served in the Navy during World War II and was
a member of Chi Psi and Stanford’s men’s gymnastics
team. He practiced radiology at the Santa Barbara Medical
Foundation Clinic until his retirement in 1998. He was
an active Humane Society volunteer. Survivors: his wife,
Susan; one daughter, Julie Love Dolan, ’81; two sons,
John and Scott; three grandchildren; and one sister.
Sara
Carrick “Sally” Cooper Borg, ’53,
of La Jolla, Calif., August 12, at 75, of cancer. With
her husband, C. Arthur “Buck” Borg, a United
States diplomat, she lived all over the world, including
Japan, Germany, Sweden, Austria and Finland. Survivors:
one son, James; one daughter, Marion “Marcy”;
two grandchildren; one brother; and one sister.
Patrick
Edward Henry, ’54 (geography), of Fremont,
Calif. He was a member of Phi Delta Theta and of the
football and rugby teams. He served in the Marines and
later played semi-professional football for the Petaluma
(Calif.) Leghorns. He coached Fremont football as well as
Fremont American Little League baseball. Survivors: his
wife of 49 years, Joan; one son, Michael; one daughter,
Maureen; and two grandchildren.
Norma Clare Canning Bradley, ’55,
MA ’56 (education),
of Pasadena, Calif., February 2, at 72, of a heart attack.
She spent her career in education and earned a master’s
degree in school counseling from Pepperdine U. in 1981.
She was a member of the board of the Stanford Women’s
Club of Pasadena and was involved in several civic and
cultural organizations. Survivors: one daughter, Elizabeth;
and one son, John.
James Leonard Lyons, ’55 (economics),
of Laguna Niguel, Calif., May 26, 2005, at 71. He was
advertising manager for the Stanford Daily and a member
of the Axe Committee. Before attending Stanford, he attained
the rank of Army second lieutenant. After graduating, he
was stationed at Fort Carson in Colorado. In 1958, he moved
to Santa Ana, Calif., where he worked in advertising for
the Orange County Register. He spent 20 years as publisher
of the Turlock (Calif.) Journal before joining the Porterville (Calif.) Record as its publisher. He retired in 1997. He
helped start a blood bank in Turlock as well as a foundation
to provide wheelchairs to those who could not afford them.
Survivors: his wife, Louise (Lord, ’56); two daughters,
Kate Canty and Carolyn; one son, Leonard; two grandchildren;
and one brother.
Jana Beale Morgana (Jane Beale Morginson
Clements), ’55
(economics), of Falls Church, Va., January 1, at 72,
of breast cancer. She worked for the Stanford Daily and
was an artist. Survivors: one daughter, Cait; three sons,
John, David and Andrew; 13 grandchildren; and one sister.
David
Edward Becker, ’56 (economics), of Portland,
Ore., October 22, at 71. He was a member of Sigma Chi
fraternity. After graduation he joined the family business,
the Ray F. Becker firm, which fabricated steel and metal
canopies for gasoline service stations and later made
architectural custom panels, cornices and rooftops for commercial
buildings. He became president of the company in 1972 and
was a member of several professional organizations, serving
as president of the Sheet Metal Association. He was on the
board of many community organizations. He retired in
1996. Survivors: his wife, Chita; two sons, Scott and Mark, ’86;
one daughter, Anne Miller; three grandchildren; and one
sister, Carol Woodworth, ’50.
Martin Kay “Marty” Lee, ’56
(psychology), of San Mateo, at 72, of lung cancer. He
was a member of the Chinese club and earned a master’s
degree from Chapman College in 1975. He served in the
Navy and then worked in real estate before being called
back to active duty in 1961. Later, he worked for Qantas
Airways before joining the San Mateo County probation office,
where he became supervising probation officer. He remained
active in the Navy with the Military Sealift Command, attaining
the rank of captain. Survivors: his wife, Mary; two daughters,
Summer, ’97, and Jena; one stepson, Eugene; and one
stepdaughter, Michelle.
Anne Elizabeth Wilson Neisser, ’56
(political science), of Scottsdale, Ariz., February 22,
at 70. She earned an MBA from Arizona State U. in 1980.
She worked as a stockbroker and was active in local and
state politics as a campaign manager, grassroots organizer
and spokesperson. She chaired the Northeast Phoenix Citizen
Zoning Review Board and was appointed by the mayor as
a member of the Zoning Ordinance Review Commission. During
the ’70s, she was a member
of the Governor’s Appointed Arizona Women’s
Commission. She was active in several equestrian groups.
Survivors: her husband, Peter; two daughters, Sandi Boone, ’81,
and Dawn, ’79; and three grandchildren.
Peter Cyprien
Pauly, ’56 (economics), of Helena, Mont.,
February 5, at 71, of cancer. He served in the Navy and
graduated from Denver U. Law School. He practiced law
in Montana for more than 30 years. An active member of
several community organizations, he was a former president
of the Montana Club. Survivors: his wife, Martha; one son,
Cy; one daughter, Lisa Waldner; two grandchildren; one
brother; and one sister.
William Brunner Armstrong, ’57
(music), of Palo Alto, February 2, at 71, of a heart
attack. He was a member of Chi Psi fraternity and served
in the Army. A pianist, he performed in concert and as an
accompanist for opera singers, and was a longtime member
of the Palo Alto Chamber Orchestra. He taught piano students
for more than 40 years and founded Reasonable Piano Rentals,
a rental and moving company. Survivors: his partner of 30
years, David Stritmatter; and one sister, Betty Dole.
Michael
Milani, ’59, of San Mateo, June 4, 2005, at
67 of pneumonia following kidney failure. He was a member
of Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity and of the baseball team.
He was owner and president of Sunset Produce in South
San Francisco. Survivors: his wife, Joanne; one son, Stephen;
four daughters, Michele Sahm, Gianna Stephens, Kristen
Hansen and Maureen Ekedahl; 12 grandchildren; and one sister.
|
| 1960s
William Huston “Skip” Face, ’60 (economics), of Huntington
Beach, Calif., February 20, at 68, of congestive heart failure. He was a
member of Phi Gamma Delta and of the football team and the track and field
team. After graduation he was drafted by the Dallas Cowboys but a knee injury
ended his career. He became a salesman for Narmco Materials and spent 43
years in the advanced nonmetallic composites field. He joined the Society
for the Advancement of Materials and Process Engineering and in 1992 became
the organization’s president. He later served on the past presidents’ committee
and was an active member of the board of directors and served as tennis director
for the Mesa Verde Country Club. In 1978 he was inducted into the Stanford
Athletics Hall of Fame. Survivors: his wife, Julie; two sons, William and
Robert; two daughters, Kelly Stewart and Deborah Calkin; one stepson, Colin
Ignacio; seven grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; and two sisters.
Elaine
Marie Frank Russell, ’60 (history), of Kirkland, Wash., August
28, at 67. For 27 years she worked as an employment counselor with Adams
and Associates in Bellevue, Wash. She retired in 2001. Survivors include
her husband of 29 years, Tom; one son, John Livezey; one granddaughter; and
a sister, Carolyn Cline, ’65.
Gerald Lee Kamansky, ’61 (mechanical
engineering), of Upland, Calif., February 19, at 66. He was a member of Alpha
Sigma Phi fraternity and earned his MBA at Northwestern U. He held senior
management positions at several oil and gas firms. Later, he worked as a
realtor, most recently with Coldwell Banker. He was involved in numerous
civic organizations. Survivors: his wife, Rose Marie; three sons, Gerald
Jr., Geoff and Garry; six grandchildren; and a brother.
Talton Francis Ray, ’61
(history), of Washington, D.C., December 31, at 66, of brain cancer. He was
a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity and a member of the boxing team. He
earned a master’s degree in public
law and government at Columbia U. in 1969. He worked in community-based development
in Venezuela from 1961 to 1964 as director of field operations of ACCION.
He wrote The Politics of the Barrios of Venezuela (U. of California Press)
and went on to serve as co-manager of the Ford Foundation’s program-related
investment fund from 1968 to 1981. For five years afterward, he was director
of operations of the South Bronx Development Organization. He was president
of the Council for Community-Based Development from 1988 to 1993. He created
the National Neighborhood Indicators Project, a collaborative effort of local
researchers in seven cities to
track changing conditions in neighborhoods. In 1996 he founded and served
as publisher and editor of the Francis Press, a book publishing company.
Survivors: his wife of 42 years, Lilli (Doberstein, ’61); two daughters,
Justina, ’86, MA ’87, and Nicola; one grandson; two brothers;
and a sister.
Jon Evans Manousos, ’62 (political science), of Berkeley,
December 10, at 64. He was knowledgeable in music and was an accomplished
cook. Survivors: one son, Alexander; and one daughter, Melissa.
M. Edmonds “Ned” Hunt, ’63
(history), of Ludlow, Vt., February 25, at 64. He was a member of Phi Kappa
Sigma fraternity and of the water polo team and junior varsity swim team.
He earned an MBA from UC-Berkeley. For 23 years he worked as an investment
banker for Citibank,
U.S. Trust Co. and Travelers Asset Management International Co. He was
the owner of Southern Vermont Home Management and served on the Ludlow Development
Board and as chair of the Ludlow Planning Commission. He was a volunteer
coach for the Okemo Mountain race department. Survivors: his wife, Jacquelyn;
one son, Robert; one daughter, Tanis Hunt Meakin; two granddaughters; one
brother; and one sister.
Carol Jean Kuehn Sears Ellen, ’64 (psychology),
of Garberville, Calif., December 26, at 64, of cancer. A gardener and horticulturist,
she ran a family farm, the products of which she used to feed her family.
She experimented with deer-proof and drought-resistant plants, on which she
authored several articles. Survivors: her husband of 37 years, Stephen, MS ’71,
PhD ’71;
two sons, Bart Sears, ’84, and Jesse; one daughter, Rosie Sears Pelz;
three grandchildren; two sisters; and a brother, Douglas Kuehn, ’65.
Diane
Laraine “Dee” Hermann, ’69 (history), of San Francisco,
February
16, at 58. She was a member of the April
3 Coalition, which did campus sit-ins to oppose U.S. involvement in the Vietnam
War. She earned a law degree from the U. of Virginia in 1972. She worked
for the Arizona governor’s office and at a federal agency concerned
with poverty issues.
In 1976 she moved to San Francisco and worked as deputy city attorney. She
worked in various departments throughout her 21-year career, eventually heading
the city attorney’s code enforcement department. She later worked
as legal counsel to the San Francisco Port
and in the legal counsel’s office at San Francisco International Airport.
She retired in 1997 and served as president
of the Fort Point & Presidio Historical Association for four years. Survivors:
two brothers, Robert and Donald.
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1970s
Mark Lawrence Rathbun, ’73 (communication), of Castro
Valley, Calif., October 1, at 54, of cardiac arrest.
He was a member of Theta Chi fraternity. He worked for the
Environmental Protection Agency for 26 years. Survivors include
his daughter, Zoë; his former wife, Debra Caldon; his
mother, Dorothy; one sister; and two brothers.
Roger H. Stillwell, ’75
(political science), of Novato, Calif., February 19, at 54.
He was a member of Beta Theta Pi and
a member of the football team, where
he was named a first-team All-American two years in
a row. He was drafted by
the Chicago Bears and played for that team for four
years, until a knee injury ended his career. In 1985,
he was one of the football players featured in an HBO documentary
called Disposable Heroes. He coached football at Novato High School in the late
1980s and recently
was inducted into the Stanford Athletics Hall of Fame.
He was a member of the pastoral staff for the Open
Door Christian Church in Petaluma, Calif. Survivors include
his son, Brett; his mother, Jerri; two sisters; and his fiancée, Bethany
Moellers.
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2000s
Patrick David Wood, ’05 (mathematics), of Pomfret
Center, Conn., February 3, at 23. He worked for the
Stanford Daily and studied at Stanford in Berlin. He was
awarded a Krupp internship at the BMW in Munich, Germany,
after his junior year. Since graduation, he had been employed
as an intern at Siemens, a German engineering firm.
Survivors include his father, Robert; his mother, Marie Lisette
Rimer; a twin sister, Elizabeth; and one brother, Colin.
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Alan Charles H. Root, MBA ’53, of Las Vegas, February
24, at 80. He earned his bachelor’s degree from Oxford
U. in 1943 and a master’s in economics from the U.
of Cambridge in 1951. He was retired from the American Standard
Company
in New Jersey. In 2000, he was awarded
a five-year service pin by the Stanford Associates.
James
Molony, MBA ’57, of Santa Barbara, Calif., December
22. He was a
jet fighter pilot and as a result of a parachute malfunction
following an ejection
at 15,000 feet, he spent three years in hospitals before
coming to Stanford. After graduating, he worked as senior
operations coordinator for Lockheed at Vandenberg Air
Force Base. After 30 years at Lockheed, he retired in 1990.
He was active in many local organizations. Survivors include
his wife, Katherine.
Alexis Pertuz, MBA ’68, MS ’68 (electrical engineering),
of Atlanta, December 24,
at 63. He earned his bachelor’s degree at Yale U. in
1964. His career in consulting and technology took him to
New York; Mexico City; San Francisco; Amsterdam; Caracas,
Venezuela; and London. Survivors include one son, David;
one daughter, Amy Pertuz Farnham; one brother; and his former
wife, Martha (Griffin, ’68).
Earth Sciences
Manuel George “Doc” Bonilla, MA ’60 (geology),
of Palo Alto, February 18, at 85, of cancer. He mapped
earthquake faults in the Bay Area and around the world. He
earned his bachelor’s degree from UC-Berkeley in 1943
and during World War
II served as a geologist in the Army Intelligence Division.
After working for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, he
joined the U.S. Geological Survey in 1947. He was involved
in preventing the construction
of a nuclear power plant near Bodega Bay, Calif., due
to the proximity of the proposed site to a seismic fault.
He investigated at least 19 significant earthquakes
and studied faults in California, Nevada, China, Guatemala,
West Africa and Taiwan. He received the Department of
the Interior’s
Meritorious Service Award in 1975 and retired from the
USGS in 1994. Survivors: his wife, Ruth; two daughters,
Janice and Laurie; one son, Roger; and two grandsons.
EDUCATION
John A. Dahl, MA ’50, EdD ’52, of Santa Barbara,
Calif., May 30, 2005, at 83. He earned his bachelor’s
degree at San Jose State U. He became a professor of
education at California State College (now CSU-Los Angeles)
and later joined the department of counseling and guidance,
where he often served as head of the department. Later, he
became dean of the School of Education and vice president
of the university. Survivors: his wife of 41 years, Pam;
two sons, John and Kenneth; one stepson, R. Douglas Wright;
one stepdaughter, Kimberley Fatch; and eight grandchildren.
Robert
Playfair Anderson, MA ’55, of Pacific Grove,
Calif., February 20, at 81. He worked as an educator
in Palo Alto schools for 38 years. A longtime track official
at Stanford, he officiated at the meet between the United
States and the Soviet Union on the Farm in 1962 as well
as the Olympic trials at Stanford and the 1984 Olympics in
Los Angeles. He served as a board member of the University’s
Hopkins Marine Station and was an active community volunteer.
Survivors include his wife, Esther (Summerfield, ’48);
and four children, Robin Minor, Chris, Tom and Jon.
Mary
Roberts Burns, MA ’73, of Oakland, February 22,
at 71, in her sleep. She graduated from Mills College
in 1972. For 33 years she taught English
in the San Jose Unified School District. She also advised
the Afro-American Student Union at San Jose High Academy.
She retired in 2005 but worked as a substitute teacher
until her death. Survivors: one son, Daryl; two daughters,
Cynthia Burns Hemphill and Jennifer; six grandchildren;
and two sisters.
ENGINEERING
Robert A. Hemmes, PhD ’69 (economic planning), of
Menlo Park, March 21, at 81. He earned his bachelor’s
degree from the U.S. Naval Academy and his master’s
degree from MIT. He taught at George Washington U. and
Stanford before working for the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Later, he joined the Department of Transportation, where
he eventually served as the assistant administrator for research,
demonstration and development. He helped to develop dial-a-ride
transportation systems for the elderly and disabled as well
as automated “people
movers,” and researched air-cushioned vehicles that
ran on rails and high-speed rail. His federal government
career spanned two decades. Survivors: his wife, Adelaide
Gore; two daughters, Linda Griffith and Keira Alexandra;
one son, Robert; and two grandchildren.
Parvez Salim,
MS ’70 (industrial engineering), of Pebble
Beach, Calif., and Karachi, Pakistan, February 16, 2005.
He owned a business that included PS Engineering, and
was CEO of Salsons Lubricants, an oil company associated
with Pakistan State Oil. Survivors: his wife, Tranna;
and two children, Jaff and Adara.
Paul Andrew Flaherty, MS ’89,
PhD ’97 (electrical
engineering), of Belmont, Calif., March 16, at 42. He
earned his bachelor’s degree at Marquette U. He worked
for Digital Equipment Corporation’s Network Systems
Laboratory, where he proposed the idea for AltaVista, an
Internet search engine, and became the technical leader of
the project. When AltaVista spun off into a private company
in 1999, he became director for technical strategy.
In 2001, he joined Zindigo, a consulting firm. Later,
he was an associate partner
at Accenture, a management consulting firm. He next served
as vice president
for product development at TalkPlus, a telecommunications
software firm. Survivors: his wife, Natasha (Minenko, ’90);
his parents, James and Ruth; and four brothers.
HUMANITIES & SCIENCES
Edward M. Gilliland, MA ’85, PhD ’90 (sociology),
of Albuquerque, N.M., December 30, at 48, of cancer. He earned
his bachelor’s degree at St. Joseph’s U. He taught
sociology at New Mexico State U. and the U. of New Mexico,
where he specialized in research methods and statistical
analysis. Later, he worked for the New Mexico Department
of Education as director of state accountability and evaluation
systems. He was involved in the formation of the New Mexico
Lesbian and Gay Political Alliance. Survivors include his
companion of 18 years, Eduardo Rubio-Arzate; his mother,
Eileen; and six siblings.
LAW
Delbert E. Wong, JD ’48, of Los Angeles, March 10,
at 85. He was the first Chinese-American appointed to the
bench in the continental United States. He earned his bachelor’s
degree at UC-Berkeley and then served in the Army as a B-17
Flying Fortress navigator during World War II. He was awarded
the Distinguished Flying Cross and, on four occasions, the
Air Medal. He worked as a deputy legislative counsel in Sacramento
before transferring to Los Angeles. In 1952, he was appointed
a deputy state attorney general. California Gov. Pat Brown
appointed him to the Los Angeles County Municipal Court in
1959. In 1961, he was appointed to the Superior Court. He
was elected in 1962 and re-elected three times. He retired
in 1986 and conducted a probe into allegations of racial
discrimination at the Los Angeles Airport Police Bureau.
In 1989, he was appointed to a panel to draft an ethics policy
for the city of Los Angeles. He served as a special master
and testified at the O.J. Simpson trial. With his wife, he
was involved with Chinese-American community organizations
and co-founded the Asian Pacific American Friends of
the Center Theater Group. Survivors: his wife, Dolores;
one daughter, Shelley
Wong Pitts; three sons, Kent, Duane and Marshall; and
three grandchildren.
MEDICINE
Owen Ralph Tanner, MD ’40, of Palo Alto, March 13,
2005, at 89. An ophthalmologist, he established the eye
department at the Palo Alto Clinic in 1946 and was a clinical
professor at Stanford Hospital. His wives June (Phillips, ’39)
and Mary Lou predeceased him. Survivors: his wife, Edith
(Jennings, ’39); one daughter, Dorothy; five sons,
George, ’67, David, Richard, Garry and Patrick; two
stepsons, Jim and Patrick McAleney; seven grandchildren;
and a brother, Joseph, MD ’43.
Robert H. Quillinan,
MD ’42, of Sunnyvale, February
2, at 94, of complications from Parkinson’s disease.
He earned his bachelor’s degree from UC-Berkeley in
1936. During World War II, he was the chief pathologist
in the European theater. In 1950 he began his own general
surgery practice in Sacramento. He also worked for Mercy
and Sutter General hospitals. In his late 60s he became a
surgical consultant for the Department of Veterans Affairs
medical clinic, retiring in 1996. He served as president
of the Sierra Sacramento Valley Medical Society and was a
member of the state medical board. His wife, Helen Gilkey,
died in 1984. Survivors: his son, Jim; three grandchildren;
and a sister.
CORRECTION
The obituary of Randall Fawcett, ’44, listed his sister Virginia Bates, ’40, as a survivor. She died in 1977. |
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