|
| |
|  |
| Obituaries |
|
FACULTY/STAFF
George A. Herrmann, of Zurich, Switzerland,
January 7, at 85. He was chair of the applied mechanics
department from 1970 to 1975. Applied mechanics then
became a division of the mechanical engineering department,
and he continued as chair until retiring in 1984. His
work focused on elasticity theory and continuum mechanics,
and he served as a consultant for various corporations
and government entities, including the Army, Air Force
and Navy. Before coming to Stanford, he worked as an
associate professor at Columbia U. and a professor at
Northwestern U. Survivors: one daughter, Anne; one son,
Peter; and two grandchildren.
Tillie Lerner Olsen, of
Berkeley, January 1, at 94, of Alzheimer’s disease.
She was an author and activist whose writing depicted
the lives of working-class women. She received a Wallace
Stegner Fellowship in creative writing in 1955. Her work
at Stanford led to her first published short story, one
of four collected in Tell Me a Riddle. The title story
in the collection received the O. Henry Award for best
American short story of 1961. Between 1969 and 1974,
she taught at Stanford, MIT, the U. of Massachusetts,
Kenyon College and Amherst College. She received numerous
awards, including a Ford Foundation grant and a Guggenheim
Fellowship. Her husband, Jack, died in 1989. Survivors:
four daughters, Karla, Julie, Kathie and Laurie; eight
grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; and one sister.
Sandor
Salgo, of Stanford, January 20, at 97. He taught at the
University from 1949 to 1974, conducting its symphony
and opera program. He also led the Marin Symphony and
Carmel Bach Festival for more than 30 years and conducted
the San Jose Symphony and the Modesto Symphony from 1951
to 1970. In retirement, he wrote a book on Thomas Jefferson’s
life as an amateur violinist. Survivors: his wife, Priscilla;
one daughter, Debra Danove; and two grandsons.
Keith Breden
Taylor, of Bury, West Sussex, England, December 31, at
82. He was on the faculty of the Medical School from
1963 to 1989 as the George de Forrest Barnett Professor
of Medicine. He also served as vice chair of the department
of medicine and chief of medical service at the Palo
Alto Veterans Administration Hospital. Before coming
to Stanford, he had been a senior lecturer in medicine
at Oxford. After retiring from Stanford, he became the
vice chancellor of St. George’s U. in Grenada,
West Indies. He was published widely and considered a
leading authority on many areas of gastroenterology.
His son, Matthew, ’73, and second wife, Kym, predeceased
him. Survivors: his first wife, Ann; three sons, Sebastian,
Niicholas and Daniel, ’80; one daughter, Kate;
seven grandchildren; and his companion Patricia Staniszewski. |
| 1930s
John Hamilton Ferns, ’30 (general engineering),
Engr. ’32 (electrical engineering), of Woodland,
Calif., December 20, at 98. He was chosen to serve
as Woodland’s first city manager in 1948, a job
he held for 25 years. The city recognized his contributions
with the naming of the John H. Ferns Park. He remained
active in civic affairs, including the Woodland Lions
Club, the Salvation Army and the Boy Scouts, which
honored him with its top awards for adult leaders.
A World War II veteran, he designed bridges on coastal
Highway 1 in California before becoming Woodland city
manager. Survivors: his wife of 69 years, Lacie; one
daughter, Janice Pinney; two sons, Ronald and David;
seven grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
Rebecca
Jane Engle Walk, ’31 (psychology), of
Menlo Park, February 3, at 96. A member of Delta Delta
Delta, she was hired after graduation to administer
Stanford-Binet IQ tests to school children. She also
helped her father with his real estate business. Her
husband, Clifford, ’32, died in 1995. Survivors:
her daughter, Eleanor; three grandchildren; and three
great-grandchildren.
Louis Chas Chubb Moore, ’32
(political science), JD ’35, of Carmel, Calif.,
January 13, at 96. A past president of Alpha Sigma
Phi, he served as assistant district attorney in Salinas,
Calif., for five years. During World War II, he was
a legal officer in the Navy. After the war, he worked
in private practice in Salinas and Carmel Valley. He
also wrote plays, poetry and published a historical
novel. His first wife, Maria Somavia, MA ’33,
died in 1997. Survivors: his wife, Jeane; two sons,
Louis and Jose; three grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
Norman
Banks “Ike” Livermore Jr., ’33
(social science/social thought), MBA ’36, of
San Rafael, Calif., December 5, at 95. A member of
Alpha Delta Phi and captain of the baseball team, he
played for the U.S. exhibition baseball team at the
1936 Olympics in Berlin. He served in the Navy during
World War II. He started a mule-packing outfit in the
southern Sierra in 1929 and ran it for more than a
decade. In 1952, he was hired as treasurer of Pacific
Lumber Co., a family company logging sustainably in
Humboldt County. In 1967, Gov. Ronald Reagan appointed
him to his cabinet, and he served as secretary for
resources for eight years. Survivors: his wife of 63
years, Virginia; two daughters, Pauline Jeffers, ’68,
and Edith; three sons, Norman III, Samuel, JD ’78,
and David; six grandchildren; and two brothers, including
John, ’40.
Martin Elliott Thomas, ’33 (social
science/social thought), of Sacramento, January 1,
at 95. He earned a master’s degree from UC-Berkeley
and served in World War II. He worked for 32 years
as a librarian at UC-Berkeley, UCLA and the California
State Library.
Alfred Baker Spalding Jr., ’36
(psychology), of Mill Valley, Calif., January 14, at
92. A member of El Cuadro, he earned a law degree from
UC-Berkeley Boalt Hall and served in the Army during
World War II. He worked for the St. Paul Insurance
Co. in San Francisco for 30 years. He also taught a
class in surety claims for the Insurance Educational
Association and wrote several articles for insurance
magazines. Among his many interests, he was a member
of the International Brotherhood of Magicians, the
Ross Valley Players, and the College of Marin Community
Band. His wife of 36 years, Paula Williamson, died
in 1985. Survivors include his son, Robin; and one
daughter, Cynthia Tilden.
Frank Benjamin Tremaine, ’36
(communication), of Savannah, Ga., December 7, at 92,
of pulmonary illness. He was a member of Phi Kappa
Psi and the baseball team and served as a campus correspondent
for United Press International. He was working as the
Pacific bureau manager of United Press, a forerunner
of U.P.I., in Honolulu when Pearl Harbor was attacked.
He filed what is believed to be the first account of
the attack by a correspondent. He held various posts
with the news agency and was named a senior vice president
in 1972, retiring in 1980. Survivors: his wife of 67
years, Katherine “Kay” Newland; one daughter,
Nancy, ’65; and one son, Frank “Pancho,” ’69.
John Arthur Hooper, ’38 (political science),
of Portola Valley, January 17, at 89. A member of Chi
Psi, he earned a law degree from Harvard and served
in the Army during World War II. He practiced tax law
in San Francisco for 10 years with Pillsbury Madison & Sutro.
From 1957 to 1967, under presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy
and Johnson, he served in Paris as a U.S. Defense Department
representative and as defense adviser to the U.S. Mission
to NATO. From 1968 until his death, he devoted himself
to charitable and community organizations. He served
as president of Planned Parenthood of Northern California
and president of the Auxiliary of the U. of California
Hospital in San Francisco. He also chaired the Woodside
Planning Commission from 1979 to 1980. Survivors: his
wife of 63 years, Patricia; two sons, John and Lawrence;
two daughters, Margo Blair, ’68, and Helen McCloskey;
and five grandchildren.
Ralph E. Kuzell, ’38 (general
engineering), of Flagstaff, Ariz., August 22, 2005,
at 88. He was a member of Sigma Nu/Beta Chi. After
graduating from West Point in 1941 and serving in World
War II, he worked with the Office of Military Government
in Berlin from 1945 to 1947. He later served as assistant
army attaché in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and
held posts in France, Argentina and the Panama Canal
Zone. Following a 30-year career, he retired in 1971
as a colonel. His daughter Margaret, ’69, was
killed in a car accident in South Africa in 1969. Survivors:
his wife, Margaret; and four daughters, Mary Babbitt,
Martha Cornelius, Madeline Giovande and Melissa Bardsley.
Robert
L. Mollenhauer, ’38 (biological sciences),
MD ’42, of Santa Rosa, Calif., November 18, at
90. A member of the Band, he was elected to Phi Beta
Kappa and the Alpha Omega Alpha Honorary Medical Scholastic
Society. He served in the Medical Corps and was awarded
the Combat Medic Badge of Honor. He practiced medicine
in Sonoma County, Calif., for 35 years. His wife of
36 years, Dorothy Swanson, died in 1978. He was predeceased
by his second wife, Helen Traver. Survivors: two daughters,
Linda Mollenhauer-Meyskens and Sally Schapero; three
grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.
Sarkis A. Telfeyan, ’38
(preclinical medicine), of Great Neck, N.Y., December
14, at 91. A member of El Tigre, he earned his medical
degree from the U. of Chicago. He served in World War
II as a regimental surgeon before starting his 60-year
medical practice in 1946. For more than 40 years, he
served as president of the Telfeyan Evangelical Fund,
a charitable organization dedicated to educating students
of Armenian descent. Survivors: his wife of 66 years,
Elida; two daughters, Lael and Daphne; two sons, Bruce and Ed;
and five grandchildren.
George E. Pimentel, ’39
(biological sciences), of Oakland, February 8, at 90.
A member of El Capitan at Stanford, he started working
for Pacific Telephone in 1941 and retired 37 years
later as district manager. Active in the Oakland and
San Leandro, Calif., communities, he was a past director
of the San Leandro Chamber of Commerce. Survivors include
his wife of 65 years, Elsie. |
| 1940s
Joseph Edward Coberly Jr., ’40 (political science),
of Rancho Santa Fe, Calif., November 5, at 89. A member
of Zeta Psi and the soccer team, he served as a pilot
in the Navy during World War II. He then joined his
father in the family automobile business, Coberly Ford,
in Los Angeles. He became president of the company
in 1959 and retired in 1988. An active member of the
Rancho Santa Fe community, he was on the board of the
RSF Association and a member of the RSF Art Jury and
the Rancho Santa Fe Historical Society. Survivors:
his wife of 56 years, Jeanne; four daughters, Candace,
Micaela, Karen and Courtney; and seven grandchildren.
Gene
David Coldiron, ’40 (history), MBA ’48,
of Sonoma, Calif., December 23, at 90. A quarterback
for the football team and member of Phi Delta Theta,
he served in World War II. After earning his MBA, he
entered auto manufacturing with the Chrysler Corp.
and became a partner in McAlister Leasing Enterprises
in San Francisco. He moved to New York to serve as
president of Kinney Corp. and to Minneapolis to serve
as executive vice president for National Car Rental,
Leasing and Equipment Corp. Returning to the Bay Area
in 1972, he became general manager and partner for
a General Motors Oldsmobile dealership and retired
in 1984. He was past president of the Stanford Graduate
School of Business Alumni Board of Directors and the
Stanford Club of San Francisco. He was predeceased
by his first wife, Lucille, and second wife, Jane (Horrall, ’46).
Survivors: two daughters, Ashleigh and Jill; five stepchildren;
and one brother.
Edward W. Cundiff, ’41 (economics),
MBA ’42,
EdD ’52, of Austin, Texas, November 7, at 87.
A member of Theta Chi, he served in the Navy during
World War II. He taught at Syracuse U. and received
an endowed chair at the U. of Texas, where he served
as associate dean until his retirement at 77. He was
the author of seven books. His wife, Peggy, died on
January 18, 2006. Survivors include his three sons,
Rich, Greg and Geoff.
Jean Sturtevant Hamar, ’41
(speech & drama),
of Portland, Ore., November 13, at 87, of pancreatic
cancer. In the 1960s, she taught English and Russian
at Beaverton High School in Oregon. After earning a
master’s in counseling and guidance from Portland
State U., she took a job with the Oregon State Employment
Service as a vocational counselor, retiring in the
1980s. Her husband of 43 years, Cliff, MA ’43,
PhD ’51, died in 1984. Survivors: two daughters,
Virginia Hammon and Rosalind; one son, Douglas; six
grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; and two brothers.
Lincoln
E. Moses, ’41 (social science/social
thought), PhD ’50 (statistics), of Portola Valley,
December 17, at 84. His graduate work was interrupted
by service in World War II. He taught at Columbia U.
for two years before returning to Stanford in 1952.
A professor of health research and policy and of statistics,
he founded the Medical School’s division of biostatistics.
In addition, he held a variety of administrative posts,
including head of the statistics department from 1964
to 1968 and dean of graduate studies from 1969 to 1975.
Under President Jimmy Carter, he headed the Energy
Information Administration during the oil crisis of
1978. Survivors: his wife, Mary Lou; and nine children
and stepchildren.
Clare Wagstaffe, ’41 (classics),
of Redwood City, January 1, at 85. She entered the
Dominican Order in San Rafael, Calif., and then attended
the Catholic U. of America in Washington, D.C., where
she received her doctorate in philosophy. She held
various faculty positions in California, including
dean of student development and director of parent
relations at St. Mary’s College in Moraga. Survivors
include one brother.
Martha Jean Barringer Albert, ’42
(economics), of Palo Alto, December 4, at 86, of Parkinson’s
disease. She was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta. A master’s
level bridge player, she was a dedicated volunteer
at Stanford Hospital. Her husband of 60 years, Frank, ’42,
died in 2002. Survivors: three daughters, Nancy James, ’65,
Jane Willens, ’67, and Terry Levin, ’74,
MA ’81; six grandchildren, including Heather
Willens, ’93, JD ’97, and Jake Willens, ’99,
MA ’00; one great-granddaughter; and one brother,
Carl Barringer, ’44.
Barbara Elaine Heilbron Greenberg, ’42
(English), of Stockton, Calif., November 28, at 85.
She was president of both the Lawyers Wives of San
Joaquin County and the Temple Israel Sisterhood. She
volunteered at Dameron Hospital and the American Cancer
Society’s Discovery
Shop for more than 25 years. Survivors: her husband
of 63 years, Forrest; two daughters, Lori Rifkin and
Nancy; one son, Jeffrey; and four grandchildren.
Harry
G. Parsons, ’42 (preclinical medicine),
MD ’46, of Weimar, Calif., January 10, at 87.
He was a member of El Toro and the baseball team. An
assistant clinical professor of surgery in 1955, he
was sent to Weimar Joint Sanitarium to develop the
chest surgery program. He eventually became the county’s
medical director and ran tuberculosis clinics in the
surrounding area and Nevada. He retired in 1988. Survivors:
his wife of 20 years, Rubyann Kattenhom; four stepchildren;
seven grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
Harry Frederick Booth, ’43 (mechanical engineering),
MBA ’48, of San Marino, Calif., December 13,
at 84. A member of Theta Chi, he served in the Navy
during World War II. He worked for Lockheed after graduation
but switched to accounting and served as the manager
of Booth & Booth CPAs. Survivors: his wife of 61
years, Doreen (Bayley, ’46); three daughters,
Allison, Andrea and Christine; three sons, Brian, David
and Stephen; 10 grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
Raymond
O. Mackey, ’43, of Carmichael, Calif.,
February 8, at 86, of a heart attack. During World
War II, he served in the Army and earned a Bronze Star.
A lifelong Sacramentan, he helped steer the Campbell
Construction Co., which built many of the city’s
landmarks, including the Sutter hospitals, the Sacramento
County Courthouse and Sacramento High School. He retired
in the late 1990s. Survivors: his wife of 50 years,
Barbara Brand; three daughters, Sydney, Mary Alice
and Jennifer; and one son, Christopher.
Elizabeth “Betty” Barmann
Borgnino, ’44
(biological sciences), of Kensington, Calif., July
19, at 83, of Alzheimer’s disease. Her father
was one of California’s pioneer rice growers,
and she assumed the running of her family’s rice
farm in 1965. She was active in the California Rice
Growers Association and the California Cooperative
Rice Research Fund. She was predeceased by her husband,
Francis, and son Carl. Survivors: one son, Francis;
one daughter, Catherine Dusterdick; four grandchildren;
three great-grandchildren; and one sister.
Douglas Darling
Hastings, ’44 (geology), of Lafayette,
Calif., January 26, at 85. At Stanford, he was president
of the Hammer & Coffin Society, editor of the Chaparral and a member of Alpha Delta Phi. Upon graduation, he
joined the Standard Oil Co. as an exploration geologist.
During his 42 years with the company, he worked throughout
the western United States and Alaska, retiring in 1986.
Survivors: his wife of 63 years, Doris (Dreusike, ’45);
three sons, Douglas, William and James; and four grandchildren.
Eleanore
Anne “Elie” Hyman Marcus, ’44,
of Menlo Park, December 25, at 83, of heart failure.
Her first husband, Greil Gerstley, died in World War
II. Survivors: her second husband, Gerald Marcus, ’38;
four sons, Greil, Bill, Steven and Daniel; one daughter,
Anne Vronski; and 10 grandchildren.
Janice Elizabeth
Jaques Haynes, ’45 (history),
of Prescott, Ariz., October 28, at 82. She was Phi
Beta Kappa and staff editor of the Stanford Daily.
After receiving a master’s degree and teaching
credential from Claremont Graduate School, she taught
before becoming a research assistant to the director
of the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C.
After moving to Arizona, she worked as the migrant
coordinator at the Paloma School. She also worked as
a Title II coordinator for the Humboldt School District
and the Yavapai Indian Tribe until her retirement in
1993. Survivors: her husband of 55 years, David, ’51;
one daughter, Judy; one son, David; and three grandchildren.
Fritz
Hubert Grau, ’46 (general engineering),
of Carmel, Calif., December 3, at 82. A member of the
varsity baseball team and Delta Kappa Epsilon, he served
in the Navy during World War II and built a successful
manufacturing business. Survivors: his wife, Susan
Locklin; three daughters, Tara Martin, Alice Smith
and Laura McCormick; one son, Fritz;
and five grandchildren.
Harold Hamlin Hopper, ’46
(preclinical medicine), of Millbrae, November 25, at
82. A member of Alpha Delta Phi, he enlisted in the
Navy during World War II. He earned his medical degree
from the U. of Cincinnati and completed internships
at Jefferson Hospital in Philadelphia and Stanford
Hospital. A dedicated physician for more than 50 years,
he maintained a private practice in internal medicine
and served as chief of staff at Mills Memorial Hospital
and medical director of the Peninsula Regent. Survivors:
his wife, Connie; two sons, Marshall and Charles; two
daughters, Dana Habegger and Kimberly; two stepchildren;
eight grandchildren; one brother, Emery Rogers, ’44,
PhD ’51;
and one sister.
Robert Hammond Anderson, ’47 (political
science), of Portola Valley, January 22, at 86, of
cancer. He was a World War II aviator, flying anti-submarine
patrols and piloting a seaplane under the Golden Gate
Bridge. After graduating from Stanford, he entered
the lumber and logging business on the San Mateo coast.
He sold his mill, Cascade Lumber Co., in 1958 and became
an investor and developer. Two years later, he was
ordained a deacon at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco.
He got involved in Portola Valley’s incorporation
drive in the early 1960s. He served on the first planning
commission, the second Town Council and four one-year
terms as mayor. Survivors: his wife of 59 years, Charlotte
(Anderson, ’46); two sons, Doug and Bruce; one
daughter, Sally; and one granddaughter.
Marshall Canning
Hjelte, ’47 (political science),
of Bothell, Wash., February 9, at 82. He was a member
of the Band. After earning his law degree from the
U. of Colorado in 1950, he set up a private practice
in St. Helens, Ore., where he stayed for 13 years.
He left the practice to become an administrator for
Willamette View Manor, a retirement community south
of Portland, Ore. He then worked with the Methodist
Board of Hospitals and Homes in Evanston, Ill., traveling
the country evaluating and solving problems in retirement
homes. He went on to become executive director of several
more retirement homes until he retired in 1995. Survivors:
his wife of 58 years, Alice; two sons, Richard and
Donald; one daughter, Janet; and seven grandchildren.
John
Ingram, ’48 (political science), of Washington,
D.C., February 2, at 80, of Parkinson’s disease.
After receiving a master’s degree in public administration
from UC-Berkeley in 1950, he began working in city
management in San Diego, where he was budget director.
He came to Washington, D.C., in 1967 and worked as
budget director, director of the city’s Office
of Planning and Management and as associate director
at the Department of Environmental Services. He left
in 1979 to work for Delphi International and retired
in 1991. He was president of Washington’s Temple
Sinai from 1976 to 1978 and volunteered for the United
Way, Recording for the Blind and the Library of Congress.
Survivors: his wife of 52 years, Ann (Livingston, ’53);
two daughters, Elizabeth Yaffe and Judith; one son,
David; and five grandchildren. |
| 1950s
Joseph C. Kohlbecher Jr., ’50 (economics), MBA ’52,
of Pleasant Hill, Calif., December 25, at 79, of lung
cancer. A member of Delta Chi, he was actively involved
with the Classic Car Club of America, the Singing Messengers
of Pleasant Hill and the Society of California Pioneers.
William
Harvey Sullivan, ’50 (political science),
JD ’55, of Riverside, Calif., June 17, 2006,
at 78. He was a member of Kappa Alpha and a retired
superior court judge in Riverside County. Survivors
include four daughters and nine grandchildren.
William
Fletcher Thompson Jr., ’51, MA ’52
(history), of Madison, Wis., January 13, at 77. After
Stanford, he completed a PhD in American history at
the U. of Wisconsin-Madison. He taught at Wisconsin
State U.-Oshkosh until 1971. After, he became director
of research and then state historian at the State Historical
Society of Wisconsin. He was very active in local politics,
serving on the Landmarks Commission, the Plan Commission
and on the board of the Park Commissioners. He was
also president of the Olbrich Botanical Gardens. He
was predeceased by his second wife, Connie, and stepdaughter
Colette. Survivors: his former wife, Nancy Green, ’51;
two sons, Ross and Brian; one daughter, Susan Ligh;
one stepdaughter, Michele; 10 grandchildren, including
Scott Thompson, ’06; and one sister.
Joan Karen
Marshall Ton, ’51 (English), of Aurora,
Colo., December 27, at 77. Survivors: her husband of
55 years, Paul; three sons, Scott, Robert and John;
andone daughter, Elizabeth Collins.
Ronald Loughlin
Allen, ’52 (economics), of Winnetka,
Ill., February 11, at 77. At Stanford, he worked at
KZSU radio station, and was a member of the track and
field team and a member of Theta Xi. After completing
his service in the Navy, he worked for A.B. Dick Co.
in sales, sales management and product management.
In 1971, he founded Allen and Boehm, which later became
AllenVisual Systems Inc. in Buffalo Grove, Ill. He
was a co-founder and board member of the Skokie School
Foundation in Winnetka, a member of the schools committee
of the Winnetka Caucus and past president of the New
Trier Parents Association. In addition, he was president
of the Carnot and Luceile Allen Foundation. Survivors:
his wife of 51 years, Ruth; three daughters, Linda
Walsh, Cynthia Smith and Susan Hughes; three sons,
Stuart, Douglas and James; and 12 grandchildren.
Charles
William McKay, ’52, MS ’56 (geology),
of Lynnwood, Wash., December 4, at 76, of progressive
supranuclear palsy. He was a member of Kappa Sigma
and the football team, and he served in the Army between
earning his undergraduate and graduate degrees. He
worked for 12 years as a geologist with Standard Oil
of California. After moving to Washington, he shifted
careers and spent 22 years in labor relations, retiring
in 1990. He was active in the Boys and Girls Club of
Snohomish County and the Mukilteo YMCA. Survivors:
his wife of 48 years, Jean; three daughters, Teresa
Benito, Sandy Wollin and Tammy; one son, Scott; 10
grandchildren; and one sister.
Wilbur Richard Taylor, ’52
(social science/social thought), of Paradise, Calif.,
December 4, at 76. A member of Delta Kappa Epsilon,
he was a member of the football and track teams. After
graduating, he joined the Marines and served as an
officer in the Korean War. His first wife, Shirley
McBain, died in a car accident in 1987. Survivors:
five daughters, Patricia Kaizoji, Catherine Roach,
Sharon, Jennifer and Maura; one son, Michael; 14 grandchildren;
and two sisters.
Frederick Augustus Moller Jr., ’53
(industrial engineering), of Calistoga, Calif., February
9, at 75. A member of Sigma Chi, he served in the Marine
Corps after graduation. He then began a 41-year career
in the San Francisco offices of Dean Witter Co., retiring
in 1999. He was a longtime member of the Bohemian Club
in San Francisco. Survivors: his wife, Barbara; one
daughter, Catherine; one son, Stephen; three stepdaughters;
and one grandson.
David Lee Speyer, ’53, MS ’55
(geology), MBA ’62, of Yorba Linda, Calif., October
27, at 75. He was a member of Alpha Kappa Lambda. He
worked as a geologist and aerospace program manager
until his retirement. His wife, Gilda, died in 2003.
Survivors: two sons, Paul and John; and two grandchildren.
Patricia
Ann Meeks Linnett, ’55 (psychology),
MA ’57 (education), of Palos Verdes Estates,
Calif., January 3, at 73. She became an educational
psychologist with the Los Angeles County Office of
Education and worked with disabled children in the
special education section. Forced to retire in 1988
because of a brain tumor, she nonetheless remained
an active volunteer with the Art Museum Council of
the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Survivors: her
husband of nearly 50 years, Kim, ’56, MS ’57;
three sons, Kim, Barry, ’82, and Christopher;
six grandchildren; and one sister.
Carol Cecile Gevurtz
Meisels, ’55 (social science),
of Bellevue, Wash., December 30, at 73, of cancer.
Following graduation, she worked in the stock and bond
field in San Francisco. After her family moved to Southern
California, she worked in special education for the
Los Angeles Unified School District. In 1989, they
moved to the Northwest, where she became an active
member of the Eastside Interfaith Social Services Council
and the Temple De Hirsch Social Action Committee. Survivors:
her husband of 42 years, Stanley; one daughter, Julie;
one son, David; two grandchildren; and one brother,
John Gevurtz, ’58.
Susan Wilbur Hopper Foote, ’56
(geography), of San Bernardino, Calif., December 8,
at 73. Active in social services, she worked as a welfare
counselor for Santa Clara and Imperial, Calif., counties
and later as a research investigator for UCLA. She
also served as president of the El Centro Junior Women’s
Ten Thousand Club and was secretary of a chapter of
the American Red Cross. Survivors: one daughter, Barbaradee;
one son, Ray; two grandchildren; and many brothers
and sisters, including Nancy Hopper Franklin, ’51.
Jon
Charles Cosovich, ’57 (political science),
of San Francisco, January 24, at 71, of Amyotrophic
Lateral Sclerosis. He started working for the University
as a development officer in 1961, leaving 22 years
later to become vice president for development at the
U. of Michigan. Beginning in 1996, he served as a senior
adviser to the director of the Hoover Institution.
He was elected into membership in Stanford Associates
in 1983. Survivors: his wife of 46 years, Katharine “Timmie” (Getchell, ’57);
two sons, Charles, ’86, and Peter; one daughter,
Sarah; four grandchildren; and two brothers, including
Peter, ’54.
Robert Logan Hyde, ’57 (biological
sciences), of Kelseyville, Calif., December 18, at
70. He was president of his fraternity, Kappa Alpha,
and ran track. After Stanford, he earned an MD from
McGill U. in Montreal. He was a general practitioner
for 44 years, beginning as a physician and surgeon
in Florence, Ariz. He also ran Arizona’s state
prison hospital and plasma center. In 1995, he moved
to California, where he was the doctor for two clinics
near Kelseyville and cared for patients at Meadowood
Nursing Center in Clearlake. Survivors: his wife, Martha;
two daughters, Amy Sherman and Rebecca; two sons, Casey
and Brennan; two grandsons; two sisters, including
Nancy Hyde Anderson, ’55;
and his former wife, Joann Lohr Reedy.
Robert H. Feyerabend, ’59
(history), of Guerneville, Calif., October 7, at 69,
of AIDS. He was an accomplished classical pianist and
a student of philosophy and spirituality. He spent
many years studying and writing on the Mendocino, Calif.,
coast. Survivors include his caregivers, Neil Fox and
Sean Lyons. |
| 1960s
JoAnne Gilmer Berryhill-Slack, ’60 (political
science), of Coquille, Ore., January 16, at 67, of
cancer. After Stanford, she attended San Francisco
State College to become certified as a special education
teacher for blind and partially sighted students. She
taught in the Shasta County, Calif., schools for 17
years. Later, she joined the Slack Fish Co., a commercial
salmon fishing operation in Alaska, and became expert
in operating her own gill net and in all aspects of
the fishery. She was also an accomplished watercolorist
and was the featured artist in several shows near her
home in Oregon. Her first husband, Robert Berryhill, ’59,
died in 1981. Survivors: her second husband, Harry
Slack Jr.; one son, Robert Berryhill; one daughter,
Laura Berryhill; and two stepchildren, Joseph Slack
and Helen Miller.
Farris Clark Hignett, ’61 (psychology),
of Santa Barbara, Calif., January 23, at 67. Survivors
include her son, Christopher, and one sister.
Gregg
Ross Hopkins, ’62 (history), of Washington,
D.C., December 19, at 65, of cancer. He was on the
staff of the Stanford Daily, served as a Yell Leader
and was a member of Sigma Chi. He served two years
in the Navy before moving to Washington and working
in the Office of Management and Budget. In 1969, he
became vice president of Kraemer and Co., a real estate
brokerage. More recently, he worked as a broker at
Pardoe and Co., which was absorbed by Coldwell Banker.
A great patron of the arts, Gregg sat on the board
of the Paul Taylor Dance Co. Four days before he died,
he saw the troupe perform the Washington premiere of
two dances he had commissioned. Stanford Associates
honored him with an Award of Merit in 1977 and a Governors’ Award
in 1982. Survivors include his partner of 37 years,
Murray Nimmo, his mother and one sister. |
| 1970s
Antoinette S. “Toni” Culpepper, ’70
(communication), of Los Angeles, March 30, 2006, of
leukemia. She was an architect with the Office of Statewide
Health Planning & Development (OSHPD) in Los Angeles.
She had worked with OSHPD for more than 14 years, serving
as a regional supervisor. Prior to joining OSHPD, she
worked at William L. Pereira and Associates and was
a partner in the firm of Friedman & Culpepper Architects.
She earned her master’s of architecture degree
from UC-Berkeley.
David William Denton, ’72 (English),
of Brooklyn, N.Y., February 5, at 57, of brain cancer.
A member of Phi Gamma Delta, he earned a law degree
from the U. of Colorado-Denver in 1975. He worked as
a federal prosecutor for 15 years. In 1987, Rudolph
Giuliani, then the U.S. attorney for the Southern District
of New York, named him associate U.S. attorney. After
leaving the office in 1992, he became director of investigations
for Citibank. In 1996 he began working to promote student
internships at the U.S. attorney’s offices and
to obtain work-study funds for students. He arranged
for summer intern positions for more than 100 students
who would have been otherwise unable to afford unpaid
government service. Survivors: his wife, Reena Raggi;
one son, David Jr.; one brother; and three sisters.
Lois
Verlee Larson Williams, ’73 (German studies),
of Berkeley Heights, N.J., November 9, at 55, of Amyotrophic
Lateral Sclerosis. After Stanford, she proceeded to
graduate school, where she earned two master’s
degrees: one in German studies from Cornell and a second
in library science from the U. of
Illinois-Urbana. She worked in England as a librarian
at Sheffield U. in the late 1970s. After returning
to the States, she worked as head of technical services
at the Berkeley Heights Public Library and at the Westfield
Memorial Library. Survivors: her husband, Michael,
MS ’69, PhD ’71; two daughters, Rebecca
and Sarah; one son, Benjamin; her mother and stepfather;
two brothers; and a sister.
Thomas David Millican, ’74
(math/computational science), of Austin, Texas, in
January, at 54, after being struck by a car while bicycling
in December. Survivors include one sister.
Nancy Jane
Mootz, ’77 (economics), of Greenbrae,
Calif., December 11, 2004, at 49, of a brain tumor.
After Stanford, she earned an MBA from Harvard. She
founded Mootz and Co., a restaurant consulting firm,
as well as Kona Pacific Enterprises, a food products
marketing and distribution company. She also launched
and served as general partner in three restaurants
in the Bay Area. She was an instructor at the Culinary
Institute of America and served as guest lecturer for
courses in business and entrepreneurship at the U.
of San Francisco and UC-Berkeley Hass School of Business.
Survivors include her parents and two siblings.
John
Calhoun Zajac, ’79, MS ’84 (biological
sciences), of Tucson, Ariz., February 6, at 49. A member
of Alpha Sigma Phi, he completed course work in film
at the U. of Arizona and founded his own production
company. He is a former secretary of the Arizona Libertarian
party and was a Libertarian candidate for both the
U.S. Congress and the U.S. Senate and for Arizona Superintendent
of Public Instruction. He drafted gun rights legislation
that became Arizona law. He was active in the Tucson
Amateur Astronomy Association. Survivors: his father,
Edward, PhD ’54; his mother; and one sister.
1980s
This corrects an
obituary that appeared in the March/April issue.
Michele Dana Bee, ’83 (Spanish), of Los Angeles,
November 7, at 45, of cancer. She taught elementary
school and earned a law degree from UCLA and was a
member of the California bar. An accomplished singer
and guitarist, she composed songs about love and survival.
She was a talented painter and ceramicist. Survivors:
her mother, Lenore Lashley; her father; John Bee; two
sisters, Donna Bee-Gates, PhD ’99, and Maria
Bee; a niece and nephew, Sarafina and Anthony Bee-Martinelli,
and her fiancé, Frederic Baker, PhD ’87.
David
William Blackburn, ’88 (engineering), of
Laguna Beach, Calif., November 9, at 40, of esophageal
cancer. He was a member of Phi Delta Theta and earned
an MBA and a master’s of management in manufacturing
from Northwestern U. He was selected as a fellow for
the Kauffman Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership
and worked in the field of health care technology.
Survivors: his wife, Tiffany; two daughters, Lauren
and Evie; one son, Danny; his father, William, ’64;
and his mother.
John Gund Farr, ’88 (anthropology
and mechanical engineering), of Lexington, Mass., January
8, at 40. A graduate of the John F. Kennedy School
of Government at Harvard, he worked as a consultant
in the electric utility industry and was committed
to developing efficient electricity markets that minimize
environmental impact. Survivors: his wife, Usha Thakrar;
one son, Kavi; his parents; and two brothers.
Jack Edward
Ottaway III, ’89 (American studies),
of Miami, December 25, at 39. At Stanford, he was a
four-year member of the Band. Survivors include his
father; and one brother. |
| BUSINESS
Ronald Frank Wippern, PhD ’65,
of Napa, Calif., January 31, at 73. He worked as a
consultant who lectured widely on valuation, corporate
finance, strategy and derivatives. He was a tenured
professor of finance at Yale’s School of Management
and served on the business school faculties at Harvard
and Dartmouth. He received both bachelor’s and
master’s degrees from the U. of Colorado, serving
as an officer in the Navy before earning his graduate
degrees. At Stanford, he was a Sloane Fellow. Survivors:
two sons, Chris and Mitch; and two daughters, Stacy
Pak and Joscelyn.
education
Robert John Hughes, MA ’41, of
El Cerrito, Calif., July 10, 2004, at 97. His father,
Charles, worked for Leland Stanford as an engineer
on campus. He earned his bachelor’s degree in
education from the California State Teacher’s
College, now UC-Santa Barbara. After graduating from
Stanford, he taught at Albany, (Calif.) High School
until his retirement in 1972 as chair of the industrial
arts department. His wife of more than 70 years, Mildred,
died on January 20. Survivors: his son, Robert; one
grandson; and two great-grandchildren.
Stanley D. McDougall, MA ’50, EdD ’57,
of Sacramento, December 26, at 87. After serving with
the Navy Seabees during World War II, he worked for
16 years with the California State Department of Education,
retiring in 1982. He served as Los Altos School District
superintendent and as a high school principal. His
wife of 57 years, Elsie (Rose, MA ’53), predeceased
him. Survivors include his son, Christopher, and his
daughter, Pamela.
Marion Margaret Schrum, EdD ’58,
of Prescott, Ariz., February 3, at 83. She received
her bachelor’s
degree from St. Louis U. and began teaching at Mercy
Hospital in Burlington, Iowa. She continued her education
with a master’s in nursing school administration
from Catholic U. of America in Washington, D.C., before
matriculating at Stanford. Before retiring as the academic
dean of nursing from the U. of Nevada-Reno, she worked
at Villanova College of Nursing and San Francisco State
U. In addition, she served as department chair and
dean of nursing at the U. of Wyoming.
ENGINEERING
Keith H. Hurlbut, MS ’54 (electrical engineering),
of Palo Verdes Estates, Calif., January 19, at 83.
A World War II veteran, he served with the Air Force’s
70th bomb squadron in the South Pacific. He earned
his bachelor’s degree from UC-Berkeley in 1950.
He spent his career with Aerospace Corp. as a satellite
specialist. He was an active supporter of the Hoover
Institution, where he endowed the Keith and Jan Hurlbut
Chair. Stanford Associates elected him into membership
in 2001. Survivors include his wife, Jan (Ellis, MA ’51).
Tatsuzo
Koga, PhD ’68 (aeronautics and astronautics),
of Moriya, Japan, December 16, at 71. He studied engineering
at Tokyo U. before enrolling at Stanford. He worked
for Tsukuba U. in Japan as a teacher and an administrator
and eventually became vice president of the university.
He then served as director of Tsukuba Gigabit Laboratory
for the Telecommunication Advancement Organization
of Japan until 2004. Not ready to retire, he became
director of Tsukuba JGN2 Research Center of the National
Institute of Information and Communications Technology.
Survivors: his wife, Tamiko; his son, Kei; and his
daughter, Jun.
Dan Eric Miller, MS ’69 (industrial
engineering), of Mountain View, January 2, at 65, of
Alzheimer’s
disease. After earning his undergraduate degree in
electrical engineering from Syracuse U., he moved to
California and began working at Lockheed. He enrolled
at Stanford and then began his career at Hewlett-Packard,
where he worked until his retirement in 1999. He was
active in the Sierra Club and often led their trips.
He was also an amateur radio enthusiast: in 1957, he
made the New York newspapers as the first amateur radio
operator to hear signals from the Sputnik satellite.
Survivors: his wife of 36 years, Micki; and two sons,
Jeremy and Joshua.
Humanities & Sciences
Nathan Wendell Riser, MA ’47,
PhD ’49 (biological
sciences), of Swampscott, Mass., July 26, at 86. He served
in the Navy Medical Corps during World War II before
completing his PhD on tapeworms at the Hopkins Marine
Station. He then held various teaching and research positions
at the U. of Pennsylvania, Fisk U., Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution, the Marine Biological Lab and the U. of
New Hampshire before assuming a faculty position at Northeastern
U., where he served as chair of biology. In 1967, he
was appointed founding director of Northeastern’s
Marine Science Institute (now the Marine Science Center),
a position he held until he retired in 1985. He also
served as an adviser to the Stratton Commission on Marine
Science, Engineering and Resources during President Johnson’s
administration. Survivors include his wife, Jean.
Charlotte
Olmsted Gill Kursh, MA ’61, PhD ’65
(anthropology), of San Francisco, December 27, at 94.
The granddaughter of Frederick Law Olmsted, who designed
the Stanford campus plan, she attended Sweet Briar
College in Virginia. After her children were grown,
she earned her graduate degrees and turned to writing,
publishing many articles and books, including her study
of gambling, Heads I Win, Tails You Lose. Her first
husband, Robert Gill, predeceased her. She was married
to her second husband, Maurice Kursh, for 27 years.
He died in 1987. Survivors: three daughters, Sarah
Gill, Jane Gill-Shaler, ’62,
and Mary Gill Jordan; one son, Stephen Gill; two stepchildren,
Paula Kursh and Stephen Kursh; eight grandchildren,
including Janet Olmsted Cross, ’84; and 10 great-grandchildren.
Janet R. Berkenfield, MA ’65 (Latin American
studies), of Jamaica Plain, Mass., February 1, at 64,
of a stroke. She earned her bachelor’s degree
in political science from Brandeis U. before enrolling
at Stanford, and earned her MBA from Boston U. She
joined the Peace Corps and worked to develop health
programs in Chile. Returning to Massachusetts, she
worked for the Department of Public Health Migrant
Health Project. In 1975, she became the statewide director
of the Special Supplemental Food Program for Women,
Infants and Children, leaving in 1982 to direct the
Southern Jamaica Plain Health Center. She rejoined
state government in 1990, becoming the first director
of the Emergency Medical Services for Children project
in 1993. She worked there until her death. Survivors
include a sister.
Scott McMillin, PhD ’65 (English),
of Ithaca, N.Y., March 29, 2006, at 71, of a stroke.
He attended Princeton and served in the Navy before
earning a master’s
from George Washington U. With a doctorate from Stanford,
he accepted a position on the English department faculty
at Cornell and received tenure in 1972, the same year
he won the university’s Clark Distinguished Teaching
Award. He published four books and dozens of articles
on Elizabethan drama. He was also committed to social
justice and to fighting racism and co-founded the Harlem
Literacy Project in 1990. Survivors include his wife
and three sons.
Howard Leslie Garrison, MA ’66
(Latin American studies), of San Angelo, Texas, October
5, at 90. In addition to his master’s degree
from Stanford, he held degrees from Two Rivers Bible
Institute in Saskatchewan, Canada, a bachelor’s
degree from Pan American College in Edinburg, Texas,
and a PhD from the U. of New Mexico. He was an ordained
minister in the Evangelical Free Church of America
and served as a missionary in Colombia and Guatemala.
His teaching ministry included Rio Grande Bible Institute
in Texas and Trinity Junior College in Canada. Survivors:
his wife of 28 years, Pauline; two daughters, Gail
Pybus and Arensha; one grandson; and two sisters.
Pershing
Tousley, MA ’68 (communication), of Independence,
Mo., August 3, at 87. A retired Army colonel, he served
on active duty for 31 years and was a veteran of World
War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War. He was
also a professor of military science at Texas A&I
(now Texas A&M). Highly decorated during his military
career, he received the Legion of Merit for his Vietnam
War service. He was serving in the Pentagon in the
Office of the Chief of Information, Department of the
Army when he retired in 1973. He was a graduate of
the U. of Maryland and the Naval War College in Newport,
R.I. Following retirement, he served as assistant to
the First Presidency of the Community of Christ, supervising
the church’s
program of ministry to the armed forces from 1974 to
1984. His first wife, Eva, predeceased him. Survivors:
his second wife, Doris; two daughters, Jacquelyn and
Sherry; two grandchildren; and one sister.
Timothy James
Wiles, MA ’71, PhD ’75 (English),
of Bloomington, Ind., July 17, 2003, at 56. He was
an associate professor of English at Indiana U. Survivors:
his wife, Mary McGann; and one son, David. |
RETURN
TO TOP |
|  | | |
| |