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1920s
Elizabeth Annefeldt Cameron, ’29
(psychology), of Adams, Neb., May 31, at 98. She earned
a master’s degree in social work from Case Western
Reserve U. in 1931 and was a child welfare director
in Kauai and the island of Hawaii. She served as president
of the Columbus, Neb., League of Women voters and had
leadership roles in several civic organizations. Survivors:
her husband, Allen; one son, Allen E.; one daughter,
Emily; and one grandson.
Lawrence Henry Prager, ’29
(economics), of San Mateo, July 14, at 99. He worked
in municipal finance at Bank of America and served as
president of the San Francisco Bond Club. He was a docent
at Filoli, where he was a founding member of the bandana
brigade, and he was former director of the California
Heritage Council. He was a member of historical and
gardening organizations and raised prize-winning bonsai.
His wife of 68 years, Francese, predeceased him. Survivors:
three sons, Lawrence W., Allan, ’65, and Thomas;
and four grandchildren, including Alice, ’98.
1930s
Arnold Manor, ’31 (preclinical
medical sciences), MD ’35, of Carmel, Calif.,
June 2, at 96. He was the first specialist in obstetrics
and gynecology on the Monterey (Calif.) Peninsula. During
his 52-year career, he delivered more than 7,500 babies.
He served as chair of the Community Hospital building
committee and became chair of the hospital’s finance
committee in 1961. He held many other leadership positions
in the hospital, including serving as chief of staff.
He was involved with numerous community organizations,
including serving as board chair of the Monterey Urban
Renewal Agency, the MPUSD School Board, the Carmel Bach
Festival, the Carmel Music Society, the Monterey County
Symphony, the Devereux Foundation, the Gateway Center
of Monterey County and Monterey Peninsula Junior College,
which under his tenure became a four-year college. His
daughter, Marjorie, predeceased him. Survivors: his
wife, Dorothy; one daughter, Susan Blair; five grandchildren;
and 11 great-grandchildren.
Ugo Joseph Pucci, ’33 (preclinical
medical sciences), of Sacramento, July 11, at 94. He
attended medical school at UC-San Francisco. An Army
captain in World War II, he earned a Purple Heart. He
was a family doctor in Sacramento for 50 years, retiring
in 1991 to care for his wife of 54 years, Ruth Brody.
She died in 1992. Survivors: three daughters, Sandra
Wells, Susan Pucci-Walker and Katherine Schneider; eight
grandsons; and 11 great-grandchildren.
Vincent Paul Dole Jr., ’34
(mathematics), of New York, August 1, at 93. He and
his second wife, Marie Nyswander, did studies establishing
the effect of the drug methadone on the cravings of
heroin addicts. He earned his medical degree from Harvard
in 1939 and did an internship at Massachusetts General
Hospital before joining the Rockefeller Institute for
Medical Research (now Rockefeller U.) as an assistant
in kidney research. During World War II, he served as
a lieutenant commander with the Naval Medical Research
Unit at the Rockefeller Institute’s hospital.
In 1947, he was named an associate member of the institute
and in 1951, he was made a full member. When the institute
became a graduate university in 1955, he was appointed
a professor. In the mid-1960s, he began studying the
biology of addiction. He and Marie tested methadone
on heroin addicts and proved it to be an effective treatment
for many, helping them lead normal lives. According
to Rockefeller U., today more than a half-million people
are on methadone maintenance. Marie died in 1986. Survivors:
his third wife, Margaret MacMillan Cool; two sons, Vincent
and Bruce; one daughter, Susan; one stepson, John Cool;
three stepdaughters, Ellen Kwait, Mary Lee Gupta and
Adrienne Cool; 13 grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.
Jack Howe Wyatt, ’34 (chemistry),
Engr. ’35, of Sacramento, June 14, at 93. He was
a chemist for the California State Department of Agriculture
before working as a civil engineer for the State Department
of Water Resources. At age 62, he retired. Survivors:
his wife, Helen; one daughter, Mary Downton; one son,
Peter; and three granddaughters.
Clarence Herbert “Bud” Griffin,
’35 (general engineering), of St. Helena, Calif.,
April 28, at 93. He was a member of Phi Sigma Kappa
fraternity. He worked as a petroleum geologist for Shell
Oil before joining Wasatch Oil and then Phillips Petroleum.
He later worked for R.L. Manning Drilling Contractors
before establishing his own firm, C.H. Griffin Engineering
Services, providing consultation to numerous oil and
gas drilling companies. He was active in professional
and religious organizations. Survivors: his wife, Mary;
two sons, D. Michael and Robert; four grandchildren;
and one sister.
Austin Hurlbut “Pete” Peck Jr.,
’35 (political science), JD ’38, of Santa
Barbara, Calif., September 12, at 92. He was a member
of the soccer team and of Zeta Psi fraternity. After
graduating, he served as the deputy commissioner of
corporations for the State of California. Later, he
was one of the earliest partners at Latham and Watkins
in Los Angeles. His career there spanned more than five
decades, and he chronicled those years in a history
of the firm, Bold Beginnings. He was active in many
professional organizations, including serving on the
Internal Revenue Service Commissioner’s Advisory
Group and as chair of the State Bar of California Tax
Committee. He was involved in numerous philanthropic
efforts, including serving as board member of the Cancer
Center of Santa Barbara, Calif. He was preceded in death
by his first wife, Jean (Albertson, ’36); his
second wife, Janice Galloway; and a daughter, Julie
Peck Fleming, ’63. Survivors: his wife, Carolyn;
two daughters, Lisa Lindelef, ’72, JD ’88,
and Francesca, ’65; and one granddaughter.
Rhoda Manning Wood, ’35, MA
’37, PhD ’41 (mathematics), of Lafayette,
La., June 22, at 93. She taught mathematics at Oregon
State U. for 14 years, as well as briefly at Stanford
and the U. of Southwestern Louisiana. She authored the
textbook Trigonometry with Applications, and
wrote numerous journal articles on advanced mathematics.
Her husband of over 40 years, William, died in 1996.
Survivors: a stepson, Lincoln; and one brother, professor
emeritus Laurence Manning, ’44, MS ’47,
PhD ’49.
Margery Ann Bowen Gal, ’37
(English), of Iowa City, Iowa, July 13, at 90. During
World War II, she served as a Red Cross worker, and
later pursued graduate studies in social work in Chicago.
Upon moving to Iowa City in 1961, she was a social worker
at the U. of Iowa Hospital and then the Hospital School.
She retired in 1980. Her husband, E.M., predeceased
her. Survivors: two daughters, Helen Duer and Gladys
McKenzie; one son, Robert; and five grandchildren.
Robert Frederick Gauger, ’37
(chemistry), of Porterville, Calif., February 5, at
91. He was a member of the Band and the men’s
gymnastics team. He worked as a chemical engineer for
Standard Oil for 35 years and served as director and
president of Pioneer Water Irrigation Co. for 18 years.
After retiring, he was a citrus farmer for 20 years.
Survivors: his wife of 53 years, Mona; one son, John;
one daughter, Edith Reimers; six grandchildren; and
three great-grandchildren.
George Armand Ditz Jr., ’38
(social science/social thought), of San Francisco, June
8, at 89. He was a member of Zeta Psi fraternity and
the men’s soccer team. He earned an MBA from Harvard
in 1940 and served as a Naval officer during World War
II. In 1949, he and his brother, John, ’42, formed
Ditz Bros., which acquired the Caterpillar and John
Deere tractor distributorship in San Jose. In 1953,
they established Ditz-Crane Homes. The company grew
to be one of the largest premier homebuilding companies
in the western United States, producing more than 30,000
residences in California and Arizona. In 1970, Ditz-Crane
was sold to McKesson Corporation. He became president
of the McKesson property group and in 1975, he was named
a director of McKesson Corp and president of McKesson
Chemical Company, positions he held until his retirement
in 1982. He was active in civic organizations, including
serving as trustee of the California Historical Society,
chair of the board of trustees of the California Pacific
Presbyterian Medical Center, co-chair of the United
San Francisco Republican Finance Committee and trustee
emeritus at Menlo School and College. He received the
Distinguished Citizen Award in 1964 from the City of
San Jose. He was a member of many social organizations.
Survivors: his wife of 61 years, Lorraine; two daughters,
Diane Stauffer and Lorraine McCarthy, ’70; three
sons, George III, William and David; 12 grandchildren;
and four great-grandchildren.
Lee Spencer Sharp, ’38 (general
engineering), MBA ’40, of Peoria, Ill., July 18,
at 89. He was a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity.
From 1940 to 1971 he worked for United States Steel
in the Columbia, Consolidated Western, Columbia-Geneva
and American Bridge divisions. From 1971 to 1982 he
was employed by Keystone Steel & Wire, last serving
as chief industrial engineer. Upon retiring, he was
an industrial engineering consultant. He served as president
of the Los Angeles chapter of the Institute of Industrial
Engineers in 1963. Survivors: his wife, Gail; one son,
Douglas; one daughter, Adrienne; five grandchildren;
and two great-grandchildren.
Ysabel “Billie” Fisk Rennie,
’39, MA ’41 (history), of Rocky Hill, Conn.,
July 19, at 88. She pursued further graduate studies
at Radcliffe College. She served as an intelligence
analyst in the Office of Strategic Services during World
War II and then as a Latin American specialist at the
State Department. Along with her husband, Robert, she
authored a column on economics in the Washington Post. Also with her husband, she served as co-chair of Adlai
Stevenson’s presidential campaign in Ohio in 1956
and as state chair of John Kennedy’s campaign
in 1960. She was a recipient of the Ohio Governor’s
Award in 1972. She authored two works of nonfiction,
The Argentine Republic and The Search for
Criminal Man, as well as two novels, The Blue
Chip and Kingside. In retirement she was
active in civic organizations. Robert predeceased her.
Survivors: two sons, Eric and Mark; two daughters, Ann
and Alice; five grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
1940s
Phillip W. Zonne, ’40 (general
engineering), of Irvine, Calif., at 88. He was a member
of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity and a member of the
men’s basketball team. He worked as an engineer
at Northrop Corporation during World War II and later
founded his own firm, American Electronics. Upon retiring
at age 60, he turned full time to artwork. His largest
commissioned bronze sculpture was of basketball teammate
Hank Luisetti, ’38. The piece was installed near
Stanford’s Maples Pavilion in 1987. Survivors:
his wife, Ginny; one daughter, Chris Loker, ’72,
MBA ’78; one son, Rick; and one grandson.
John G. Pierce, ’41, MA ’42,
PhD ’44 (chemistry), of Cambria, Calif., May 15.
He served in the Navy and did postdoctoral work at Cornell
Medical College. He joined the faculty at UCLA’s
School of Medicine and was a member of the biochemistry
department from 1953 to 1984. He served as chair of
the department from 1979 until his retirement. His research
focused on the structure and function of the pituitary
gland. He received several awards, including two Guggenheim
Fellowships. After retiring, he was a docent and curator
at the Morro Bay (Calif.) State Park Museum of Natural
History. Survivors: his wife, Elizabeth; four children;
and six grandchildren.
Eugene L. “Jim” Stockwell Jr.,
’41 (social science/social thought), of Rancho
Santa Fe, Calif., June 26, at 86. He was a member of
Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. He served as an Army
lieutenant during World War II. In 1948 he began practicing
law. In 1958 he started his own firm in Los Angeles,
specializing in workmen’s compensation defense.
Today the firm is known as Stockwell, Harris, Widom,
Woolverton and Muehl and has eight offices throughout
California. During his career, he consulted with California
governors Reagan and Deukmeijian regarding workmen’s
compensations issues. He started the Wilshire Little
League and served on the Board of Directors for the
Fairbanks Ranch Country Club. Survivors: his wife of
60 years, Jane; two sons, Gene and Jim; four grandchildren;
and seven stepgrandchildren.
Robert Stewart Odell Jr., ’42,
JD ’56, of Palo Alto, July 14, at 86. He was a
member of Sigma Nu/Beta Chi fraternity and served as
an Army captain during World War II. He worked in the
hotel business, overseeing renovations to numerous hotels,
including the Clift Hotel in San Francisco. After earning
his law degree, he opened a private practice in addition
to serving as legal counsel for Wadsworth Publishing
Company from 1969 to 1983. His wife of 46 years, Ruth
(Kasch, ’48), died in 1994. Survivors: two sons,
Timothy and Joshua; one daughter, Helen Morland; and
six grandchildren.
Donald M. Jonte, ’43 (biological
sciences), MD ’46, of Orinda, Calif., February
10, at 84, of kidney cancer. He was an anesthesiologist
at Providence Hospital in Oakland before retirement.
Survivors: his wife, Doris Ann; six daughters, Diane
Jonte-Pace, Joyce Ryan, Donna, Janet, Julie and JoAnn;
and eight grandchildren.
John P. Wonder, ’43, MA ’48
(Spanish), PhD ’53 (romantic languages), of Walnut
Creek, Calif., May 5, at 84. He was a member of Alpha
Tau Omega fraternity. He served in the military during
World War II. After teaching at the U. of Arizona and
Cal State-Los Angeles, he joined the faculty of the
U. of the Pacific in Stockton, Calif. He was a Spanish
professor and served for many years as chair of the
modern languages department. He was appointed director
of the Center for International Programs in 1979 and
also served as director of the Binational Centers in
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and Port-au-Prince, Haiti. He
authored several Spanish texts and served as the linguistics
editor of the journal Hispania.
Donald Aspinall Allan, ’44
(social science/social thought), of Woodside, Calif.,
August 2, at 83, of cancer. He was a member of Alpha
Delta Phi and wrote for the Chaparral. He served
in the Army Air Force during World War II and spent
10 months as a prisoner of war in German camps, escaping
twice. His service earned him the Distinguished Flying
Cross, two Purple Hearts and three Air Medals. He was
a reporter for the New York Times until 1952,
when he left to join the CIA. He worked part time for
the United Press International news service in Rome
while awaiting spy assignments. In 1956, he was accused
of stabbing an Italian journalist. The stabbing was
ruled a crime of passion, and he was released from prison.
Upon returning to the United States, he wrote scripts
for CBS. Later, he worked as an editor for the North
American Newspaper Alliance and served as reporter and
managing editor for the now-defunct Reporter
magazine from 1960 to 1968. He was foreign editor of
the Saturday Evening Post from 1969 to 1971
and worked part time as Gourmet magazine’s
restaurant columnist. In 1972 he was appointed director
of information for UNICEF’s Middle East region
and, later, for the European region and the East African
region. In 1983, he became director of information and
education for what is now known as the World Wildlife
Fund and the International Union for the Conservation
of Nature and Natural Resources. He retired in the mid-1990s.
Survivors: his wife, Dominika von Zahn Allan; three
daughters, Eve Baldwin, Catherine Allan Grady and Diana
Allan Brown; three sons, Scovill, David and Peter; five
grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.
Marie Ernestine “Mimi” Koefod
Berdan, ’44 (social science/social thought),
MA ’50 (Latin American studies), of Santa Barbara,
Calif., June 16, at 82. She served in the U.S. Naval
Hospital Corps during World War II. After completing
her master’s, she entered the U.S. Foreign Service
and was stationed at the U.S. consulate in Monterrey,
Mexico, for three years. She worked in broadcasting
in San Francisco for Voice of America and later was
involved in several charitable and political organizations.
Her second husband, John, died in 1986. Survivors: one
son, Patrick Lloyd-Butler Jr.; two daughters, Clare
Pelton and Mary Lloyd-Butler; nine grandchildren; and
two great-granddaughters.
Robert H. Reinhart, ’44 (biological
sciences), of Menlo Park, March 17, at 84. He graduated
from the Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point, N.Y.,
and served aboard tankers before transferring to the
Naval Submarine Service during World War II. He worked
at SRI International for 30 years, retiring in 1986
as the senior design engineer in charge of all building
design for the company’s facilities. His wife
of 52 years, Elizabeth (Kirkbride, ’48), died
May 20 (see obituary below). Survivors include two sons,
Mark and Rodger; one daughter, Ann; and seven grandchildren.
Charles Henry “Jack” Nealis,
’45 (biological sciences), MD ’49, of Los
Altos, August 2, at 82. He was a member of Kappa Alpha
fraternity and served as a medical doctor in the Air
Force during World War II. He worked as a general surgeon,
primarily at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City, retiring
in the early 1990s as chief of surgery. His wife of
48 years, Claire, died in 1998. Survivors: two sons,
Robert and Craig; one daughter, Kathryn; and four grandchildren.
Edgar A. Luce Jr., ’46 (undergraduate
law), JD ’48, of San Diego, May 8, at 81. He was
a member of Chi Psi fraternity and of the men’s
track and field team. He was a lawyer for Luce Forward
Hamilton & Scripps, the firm his grandfather started.
He became a partner in 1955 and was managing partner
from 1978 to 1983, retiring in 1996. He competed in
the Senior Olympics in the 1990s and was a member of
the San Diego Senior Olympics board. For more than 35
years, he managed or coached teams in the Presidio Little
League. A field was named for him and Little League
District 32 presented him with an award for 25 years
of service to the youth of San Diego. He served as vice
president and director of the San Diego Bar Association
and did pro bono legal work for many Southern California
organizations. He also served as an arbitrator and mediator
for several organizations. A board member of Stanford’s
Buck/Cardinal Club, he was awarded the Stanford Associates’
Governors’ Award in 1989 and presented with a
Stanford alumni 50-year service pin in 1999. Survivors:
his wife, Barbara (Remy, ’46); three daughters,
Constance Luce Jubb, ’71, MA ’73, Jennifer,
’76, and Deborah; one son, Edgar III, ’73;
seven grandchildren; one great-granddaughter; one sister,
Sylvia Heitzmann, ’51; and one brother, Gordon,
’50, MBA ’52.
Edward Charles Hall, ’48 (economics),
of Watsonville, Calif., May 24, at 80. He was a member
of Phi Delta Theta fraternity and of the baseball team.
He was a partner in the local real estate and insurance
firm Kane Hall Palmtag for 37 years. He was a member
of the Watsonville City Council from 1960 to 1971 and
served four years as vice mayor. He was chair of the
Santa Cruz County Local Agency Formation Commission
and foreman of the Santa Cruz County Grand Jury in 1977-1978.
He was the Watsonville Chamber of Commerce Man of the
Year in 1981. President of several professional and
civic organizations, he served 29 years as a reserve
lieutenant with the Watsonville Fire Department. Survivors:
his wife of 54 years, Jere Ann (Smith, ’55); two
daughters, Molly Stampher and Susan Weeden; four grandchildren;
and two sisters.
Elizabeth L. “Betty” Kirkbride
Reinhart, ’48 (psychology), of Menlo
Park, May 20, at 80. She was a family property manager
and volunteer for several civic, educational and historical
organizations. Her husband, Robert, died on March 17
(see obituary above). Survivors: two sons, Mark and
Rodger; one daughter, Ann; seven grandchildren; and
one brother.
Katharine “Kitty” Knight Royal
Cate, ’49 (Latin American studies), of
Tucson, Ariz., June 6, at 78, of esophageal cancer.
She worked for the U.S. State Department as secretary-translator
at the American Embassy in Rio de Janeiro before becoming
a shortwave announcer in Spanish and Portuguese (under
the professional name Katarina Real) for KGEI’s
University of the Air, broadcasting from Redwood City
to Latin America. She later developed a lecture and
dance program called Around Brazil on the Musical Folkways,
which she presented to women’s clubs and fraternal
organizations in the Bay Area. After earning her master’s
degree in cultural anthropology and folklore at the
U. of North Carolina-Chapel Hill in 1960, she was awarded
several research grants to do field work on folk and
dance traditions in Brazil. She was chosen secretary
general of the Pernambuco State Folklore Commission
and was elected Citizen of Recife by the municipal legislature
in 1967 for her work in preserving regional cultural
traditions. She served as president of the San Diego
Bibliophile Society. In Santa Fe, N.M., she was a research
associate for the Museum of International Folk Art,
to which she donated a large portion of her personal
art collection. She authored two books under the name
Katarina Real, O Folclore no Carnaval do Recife and
Eudes, O Rei do Maracatu. Survivors include her husband,
Robert; and a sister.
James H. Crooker, ’49 (speech
and drama), of Thousand Oaks, Calif., August 7, at 80,
of cancer. He was a member of Theta Chi fraternity.
He owned Beach City Chevrolet. He played in more Bob
Hope Chrysler Classic golf tournaments than anyone,
participating every year from 1960 to 2005. In 1998,
he was inducted into a Hall of Honor reserved for those
important to the Hope tournament’s history. Survivors
include his wife, Marilyn; and two daughters, Debra
Brown and Caryn Murphy, ’74.
1950s
William Bernard Driscoll, ’50
(English), of Medford, Ore., June 11, at 81, of pancreatic
cancer. He served in the Army and was awarded the Bronze
Star. For 30 years, he owned an advertising agency,
William Driscoll and Associates, Inc., and worked on
advertising campaigns for new homes in Santa Clara (Calif.)
County. He was a marketing consultant for the housing
industry for Bank of America and the City of San Jose,
and received numerous marketing awards. After retiring
in 1990, he presented the Sunday Morning Classical Program
on Jefferson Public Radio on the Southern Oregon U.
campus and was active in several civic organizations.
Survivors: his wife of 58 years, Barbara; three sons,
Michael, Steven and Thomas; three daughters, Margaret,
Kathleen and Theresa; five grandsons; and three sisters.
Gordon C. Luce, ’50 (social
science/social thought), MBA ’52, of San Diego,
August 21, at 80, of Parkinson’s disease. He served
in the Army during World War II and received a Bronze
Star. He operated a retail ice cream outlet and then
worked in banking for Home Federal before meeting Ronald
Reagan and heading Reagan’s gubernatorial campaign
in San Diego County in 1966. He served as state secretary
of business and transportation during Reagan’s
governership. He returned to San Diego in 1969 and joined
San Diego Federal, which in 1978 was the most profitable
savings and loan in the nation. It became Great American
in 1983 and he retired in 1990. He served in 1974 as
state GOP chair. He was elected to seven Republican
national conventions. He was appointed to Ronald Reagan’s
presidential commission on housing and became a delegate
to the U.N. Assembly. During the 1980s he served as
president of the San Diego Museum of Art board of trustees
and as chair of the Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation
board of trustees. The San Diego Chamber of Commerce
acknowledged his civic commitment in 1979 with the first
Spirit of San Diego award. Survivors: his wife, Karon;
one daughter, Kelly; two sons, Randall and Andrew; five
grandchildren; and one sister.
Milton Hugh Williams, ’50 (psychology),
of Arden Hills, Minn., June 1, at 85, of complications
from emphysema. He served in the Navy and earned his
PhD from the U. of Nebraska. In 1954, he joined the
firm now known as RHR International as a certified consulting
psychologist. In 1963, he was put in charge of the new
RHR branch in Minneapolis. He began teaching and volunteer
counseling in the 1970s. Survivors: his wife, Mary Audrey
“Zelda” Whitmore Westgate; one son, Robert;
one daughter, Sue Anne; four stepdaughters, Maureen,
Joan, Deb and Julie; two grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
Gordon Marion Minor, ’51 (education),
of Ukiah, Calif., October 8, 2005, at 90. He completed
his education at San Francisco State U. A musician,
he played first trumpet in the big band era with the
likes of Griff Williams and Russ Morgan. He worked as
an elementary school principal in Oakland for 22 years
and owned a lodge in Homewood at Lake Tahoe. He gave
music lessons and organized music programs in retirement
and continued to play trumpet until age 89. Survivors:
his wife of 69 years, Rowena; three daughters, Charlene
Light, Carolyn Candy and Barbara; and three grandchildren.
Max Drydell Rothe, ’51 (civil
engineering), of Davis, Calif., July 7, at 80, of complications
resulting from pulmonary fibrosis. He served in the
Marines and earned a master’s degree from UC-Berkeley
and a PhD from UC-Davis. He worked for Caltrans for
33 years, focusing on traffic safety and highway design,
and was involved in legislation that created roadside
rests. He led the development of the California Department
of Transportation library and was a member of several
community and veteran organizations, including serving
as founding director of Suicide Prevention of Davis.
Survivors: his wife of 57 years, Roberta; two sons,
Mark and Deric; one daughter, Teresa Tardiff; six grandchildren;
and two brothers.
Hal L. Coskey, ’52 (undergraduate
law), JD ’54, of Beverly Hills, Calif., July 29,
at 75, of myelodysplasia. He maintained a private law
practice as well as serving as a pro bono mediator and
a judge pro tem for the local bar associations. He was
a member of several professional organizations and served
on numerous civic and religious boards of directors
and committees. Most recently, he was a member of the
Board of Overseers of the Hebrew Union College Jewish
Institution of Religion and chair of the Advisory Board
for the HUC School of Communal Service. Survivors: his
wife of 51 years, Rhea; three daughters, Laurie, Susan
and Eileen; five grandsons; and three stepgranchildren.
Helen Kessel McCrary, ’52 (communication),
of Stockton, Calif., May 14, at 75, of leukemia. She
was staff editor of the Stanford Daily and
editor of the junior class paper. For 16 years she taught
in the adult education division of the Stockton Unified
School District. She was a volunteer for many arts organizations
and was in 1980 the first recipient of the Stockton
Top Arts Recognition award. She was president of Friends
of Chamber Music of Stockton and of the Stanford Women
of San Joaquin Valley. She was a member of Stanford
Associates, a board member of Stockton Community Concerts
Association and the Stockton Symphony League, and founded
the Stockton-San Francisco Symphony Charter Bus Series.
Survivors: her husband of 37 years, Robert; one stepdaughter,
Margo; and one stepson, Byron.
Avard Wellington Brinton, ’54,
MA ’56 (political science), of Pacific Grove,
Calif., June 30, at 73. He earned a PhD in political
science from Harvard. He worked for the U.S. Treasury
Department, the U.S. State Department and the CIA before
joining the Brinton family business, Brinton’s
Home and Garden, in 1965. For 32 years, he served as
buyer manager and then secretary treasurer on the board
of directors. Survivors include one brother.
Dan Walter Heil, ’54 (civil
engineering), of La Habra Heights, Calif., May 15, at
73, of leukemia. He served in the Army. He started an
engineering firm, Willdan Associates, which later became
known as the Willdan Group of Companies. He was president
and CEO there. He was president of the Kiwanis Club
of Greater Anaheim. Survivors: his wife of 47 years,
Linda; three sons, Ron, Gary and Doug; one daughter,
Sandi Burnes; seven grandchildren; one brother; and
one sister.
Joan Ann Houghtelin Kehne, ’54
(history), of Le Castellet, France, December 4, 2005,
of cancer. Her husband, Dick, died January 27. Survivors:
one son, Jay; one daughter, Allison Russell; three grandchildren;
one sister; and one brother.
Donald Dale Jackson, ’57 (social
science/social thought), of Newtown, Conn., February
23, at 70. He graduated from Columbia U.’s Graduate
School of Journalism in 1958, and after serving in the
military, worked for United Press International. He
later worked for Life magazine, where he wrote
the Lee Harvey Oswald cover story after the assassination
of John F. Kennedy. He was a contract writer for Smithsonian
magazine and freelanced for a variety of magazines,
including Reader’s Digest and Sports
Illustrated. He wrote Judges in 1974 and
Gold Dust in 1980, the latter of which won
him the Western Heritage Wrangler Award for best non-fiction
book. He won several awards for coverage of civil rights,
environmental studies, parole board and prison stories,
and in 1965 was a Nieman Fellow. Survivors: his wife
of 47 years, Darlene; one son, Dale; one daughter, Amy
Ayala; five grandchildren; and one brother.
Johanna Boyle Kingrey Leh, ’57
(history), of Palos Verdes Estates, Calif. She was a
member of the women’s tennis team. She served
as a volunteer at the Greater Los Angeles Zoo for 20
years. Survivors: her husband of 47 years, Marc Leh,
’53; one son, Marc; one daughter, Jennifer; three
grandchildren; and one brother, Jim Boyle Jr., ’52,
JD ’54.
Robert Fulton Carmody Jr., ’58,
MA ’59 (political science), JD ’62, of Washington,
D.C., June 10, at 69, of cancer. He worked for the Department
of Defense and then as assistant director for program
development for the Peace Corps. At the Department of
Health, Education and Welfare, he spent 12 years in
guaranteed student loans and grant compliance. He taught
at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Georgia
and for two years at American U. In 1985 he retired
from the federal government and worked for several law
firms as well as teaching at the U. of Delaware, George
Washington U.’s continuing education program,
the U. of the District of Columbia and the General Services
Administration. He published several texts for the Department
of Defense and the GSA, retiring in 1994. He was a member
of several social organizations. Survivors: two daughters,
Joan Sharp Gupta and Susan Culman; one son, Michael;
four grandchildren; and one sister.
1960s
Bill Borchert Larson, ’60 (mechanical
engineering), of Dallas, Texas, July 28, at 67. He graduated
from Lawrence U. and had a career in aviation, retiring
as an airline captain. He was a member of many affinity
organizations.
Jeanette Karen Fong Long, ’65
(biological sciences), of New Orleans, December 5, 2005,
at 61, of cancer. She was a docent at Audubon Canyon
Ranch and participated in environmental and affinity
organizations. Survivors: her husband, C.E., ’65;
two sons, Michael and David; one grandson; one brother;
and one sister.
Walter Frank Massey, ’66 (humanities),
of Granite Bay, Calif., May 27, at 62. He was a member
of the men’s soccer team and attended medical
school at UC-San Francisco. Upon completing his residency,
he started a private psychiatric practice in San Francisco.
The practice continued in Granite Bay. Survivors: his
wife, Gina; one daughter, Justine, ’10; one son,
Carter; and two brothers, Gerald and Doug.
Jerome Dorn Peters, ’66 (history),
of Magalia, Calif., March 11, at 61. Survivors include
a sister, Polly.
Carole Lynn Koda, ’69 (psychology),
of Nevada City, Calif., June 29, at 58, of cancer. She
was a schoolteacher in Livingston, Calif., before joining
the Livingston Community Clinic. She attended the UC-Davis
Medical School certification program and became a physician’s
assistant at the clinic while managing a working almond
orchard. She was active in community and environmental
affairs and published her family history, Homegrown:
Thirteen Brothers and Sisters, A Century in America.
Survivors: her husband, Gary Snyder; two daughters,
Mika Reynolds and Robin Koda-Steffensen; her mother,
Jean Koda; and one sister.
1970s
George Everett Brinkerhoff III, ’72
(humanities), of Pinehurst, N.C., May 9, at 55. He was
a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity and earned an MBA
at NYU. He worked for Paine Webber in New York and then
Long Island, and later switched from brokerage to real
estate. Survivors: his father, George II; and two brothers.
Richard Keith Petty, ’72 (biological
sciences), of Palo Alto, June 16, at 55, of mantle cell
lymphoma. He was a member of Sigma Nu/Beta Chi fraternity
and attended medical school at Northwestern U. He began
his family medicine practice in Hayward, Calif., and
was a doctor for more than 28 years, serving as chief
of staff at Eden Hospital and as president of the Eden
medical staff. He was active in numerous religious organizations.
Survivors: his wife, Christine, ’71; two daughters,
Emma Addams, ’97, and Alice; one son, Samuel;
two grandsons; two sisters, including Kaye Paugh, ’65;
and one brother.
Alexander Tseng Jr., ’73 (human
biology), of Palo Alto, July 10, at 54, of brain cancer.
He earned his medical degree at the U. of Chicago Pritzer
School of Medicine in 1977 and completed his residency
at UC-San Francisco. He worked in the General Medical
Clinic at the Oakland Kaiser Permanente Medical Center
until 1981 and completed a fellowship in medical oncology
at Stanford before joining the research fellowship at
the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at UCSF. He was
an instructor of medicine and then an assistant professor
of medicine at UCSF Medical Center, later serving as
assistant research biochemist/research associate in
the Cardiovascular Research Institute until 1991. He
became an adjunct assistant professor of medicine at
the UCSF Medical Center in 1990. He later worked at
UCSF’s Head and Neck Oncology Clinic, where he
was named clinic head. He was a staff physician at the
Palo Alto Veterans Administration Hospital before establishing
a private practice. He then joined the Southbay Oncology
Hematology Partners in 1993, where he worked until he
retired due to illness in 2004. He was named director
of hospice of the Home Health Plus Agency of Santa Clara,
chair of the Institutional Review Board and chair of
the division of oncology of the Good Samaritan Hospital
in San Jose, and was a member of the board of directors
for the Santa Clara County and the California Division
of the American Cancer Society. The author of more than
20 manuscripts, he received numerous awards, including
the Ambroglia Research Award, the American Cancer Society
Career Development Award, and the Schaper and Brummer
Award for Excellence in Medical Research. Survivors:
his wife, Cynthia; two sons, Michael and Peter; one
daughter, Jocelyn, ’08; his father, Alexander;
his mother, Martha; one brother, Gregory, ’77;
and one sister, Teresa, ’83.
Michael Arthur Dornheim, ’75
(mathematics), of Los Angeles, June 3, at 51, in a car
accident. He wrote for the Chaparral humor
magazine. He worked as an engineer for Boeing on the
767 program analyzing wind shear. In 1984, he joined
Aviation Week, writing about a broad range
of subjects including experimental planes and space
projects. He was well known at NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory for his coverage of Mars, Saturn and other
space explorations. He served there as Los Angeles bureau
chief and senior engineering editor. He was a three-time
recipient of the Royal Aeronautical Society’s
aerospace journalist of the year award and was a finalist
for this year’s award at the time of his death.
Survivors: his parents, Arthur and Charleen (Egan, ’41)
Dornheim; and a brother.
1980s
Jane Vanneman Higdon, ’80 (human
biology), of Eugene, Ore., May 31, at 47, of a bicycle
collision with a logging truck. She earned a master’s
degree in nursing at Pace U. in New York and worked
as a nurse practitioner in New York and Oregon for several
years. She earned a master’s degree in human performance
and a PhD in nutrition at Oregon State U. and since
2000 has been a faculty research associate at the Linus
Pauling Institute at OSU in Corvallis, Ore. She authored
more than 50 articles and two texts on health benefits
and intake recommendations of vitamins, minerals, foods
and phytochemicals, and authored the Linus Pauling Institute’s
Macronutrient Information Center website. She competed
in seven Ironman competitions. She qualified for the
Ironman championships in Hawaii twice, finishing in
the top 10 in her age group internationally on her second
attempt. Survivors include her husband, Tom Jefferson;
her mother, Nancy; her father, Donald, ’54, PhD ’64; four sisters; and two brothers.
David Scott Morze, ’82 (political
science), of Reno, Nev., July 4, at 45. He was a member
of Delta Tau Delta and of the football team. In his
senior season he was named by Sports Illustrated
as the College Defensive Player of the Week after logging
12 tackles, making an interception and recovering a
fumble, leading Stanford to a victory over higher-ranked
UCLA. After graduating, he played briefly for the Dallas
Cowboys before pursuing business. He was a partner with
the Northern California office of Cabot, Cabot and Forbes,
where he was responsible for the development of office,
industrial and research and development projects. He
joined ProLogis as vice president in 1995. He later
became senior vice president responsible for the market
services group in the mid-Atlantic region and then was
senior vice president of the ProLogis global services
group. Survivors: his wife, Heather; his mother, Nancy;
one sister; and one brother.
1990s
Shika Abui Addo, ’99 (history),
of Minneapolis, Minn., April 18, at 29. She worked as
a financial adviser at Ameriprise Financial and was
a Red Cross volunteer. Survivors: her parents, Ferdinand
and Kate; one sister; and one brother.
2000s
Guy William Grazier G’Sell,
’06 (physics), of Saline, Mich., July 13, at 22,
of brain cancer. He graduated from Saline High School
and at Stanford was a member of the Sixth Man Club.
In 2005, he conducted marine research in the Pacific.
Survivors: his father, William G’Sell; his mother,
Kyle Grazier; two brothers; and one sister.
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