Dr Theodore Sullivan Medical Arts Building in Lansdale Pa

1927

Margaret Condon Reaves Ed'27, Reston, Va., a high-school instructor in the Philadelphia expanse for over 30 years; January. 30. A pianist and music lover, she in one case recalled that while at Penn she and a friend used to regularly walk the 15 blocks to the Academy of Music to hear the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra play. She was an amateur poet her entire life, writing her last poem, "November Sunset," at age 97. During World War II she sent clothes to a British family who had lost their domicile in the bombing of London; she remained in correspondence with them for the side by side fifty years and visited them twice, most recently in 1995. She taught Sunday school and played the piano for weeknight services at church building. In her seventies she explored the pyramids and jungles of Fundamental America, flying into remote areas in a three-seater plane.

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1928

Alexander Katzin C'28 L'31, Bala Cynwyd, Pa., a retired attorney and the former special deputy attorney full general for the state of Pennsylvania; March 14.

1929

Dr. Cyrus A. Draper Jr. C'29 D'thirty, Ramsey, Northward.J., a dentist for nearly 35 years, until his retirement in 1964; February. 1. At Penn he was a member of Delta Sigma Delta fraternity and graduated with honors.

Sadie Erkes Wurman Ed'29, Scottsdale, Ariz., Dec. 29, 2003.

1930

Pator Bruce D. Compton C'30 M'43, Litchfield Park, Ariz., the pastor of Morningside Presbyterian Church in Phoenix, until his retirement in 1975; Feb. 28. He began his religious calling as a pastor at Sherwood Presbyterian Church building in Philadelphia. In 1946 he was invited to teach in the religion and philosophy section at Macalester College. He returned to the ministry in 1953 as pastor of the showtime Presbyterian Higher in Danville, Ky., where he remained until moving to Arizona in 1960. Following his retirement he worked as a volunteer for Globe Vision and served equally caput of the Evangelical Ministers Clan.

Joseph B. Shamonsky WEF'30, Pinellas Park, Fla., Sept. 29, 2001.

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1931

Elizabeth Grand. Reilly NTS'31, Lakewood, N.J., June 2, 2004.

Theodore Chiliad. Warner Jr. C'31 L'34, Philadelphia, an attorney and president of the Canada Southern Railway until his retirement in 1970; Feb. 6. While at Penn he worked role-fourth dimension at RCA in Camden, North.J., while earning his degrees. Before in his career he was an attorney for the Pennsylvania Railroad, where he served every bit vice president for iii years. In 1993 he was named president of the Independence Foundation, an organization that supports nonprofits in the Philadelphia region, including Project HOME. He was secretarial assistant-treasurer at the time of his death. "Ted was a person of quiet forcefulness," said Sister Mary Scullion, executive director of the foundation. "He encouraged me and many others who wanted to ameliorate the quality of life in Philadelphia." He walked every day to the Independence Foundation and to the Union League, where he was a 50-year fellow member, for luncheon. And he liked to retrieve taking a ferry across the Delaware River from Camden to Philadelphia before the Benjamin Franklin Span was built in 1926. He was known for his trademark daily comment on life, "It's been fun!"

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1933

Henry G. Fischer W'iiiiii, Washington, a retired attorney and legal publisher; January. iii. He began his career working at the Securities and Exchange Committee. The following twelvemonth he co-founded Motorway & Fischer Inc., a legal publishing company; begun in a basement, it operated continuously until information technology was purchased by the Bureau of National Affairs in 1984. Information technology published Federal Rules Service, Federal Rules Digest, Federal Rules of Evidence, Administrative Law, and Radio Regulation. After serving in the U.S. Army Signal Corps during World State of war Two, he continued the publishing house and founded the law business firm of Fischer, Willis & Panzer, which specialized in communications constabulary and civil procedure. He represented Col. William F. Friedman, a leading American codebreaker who had not been properly compensated for his cryptographic inventions because of their classified nature until Congress awarded him $100,000 in 1956. From 1940 to 1956 (except during his Ground forces service), Fischer taught a graduate seminar on federal practice at Catholic University'due south Columbus Schoolhouse of Police force. During the 1960s he and his partners dissolved Fischer, Willis & Panzer in club to concentrate on legal editing and publishing. He was a co-founder and sometime president of Temple Sinai. A passionate golfer, he played several times a week until age 92.

Maurice South. Peizer C'33, Cedar Grove, N.J., the assistant artistic managing director for the McAdams Medical Advertising Agency of New York, until his retirement in 1980; Jan. 20. He was a by president of the American Medical Writers Association; and her served on the board of the Cedar Grove Historical Society.

Richard H. Rhoads Westward'33, Kennett Foursquare, Pa., retired partner, president, and chair of his family's business firm, J. E. Rhoads & Sons; Feb. 26. America's oldest company, information technology was founded in 1702; he was employed there for over l years. A Quaker, he served on committees for numerous schoolhouse, civic, and international service organizations, and in 1949-50, coordinated feeding Palestinian refugees in the Gaza Strip for the American Friends Service Committee. He was a founder of Runnemeade, an integrated housing development near Wilmington, Del., and he founded Pacem in Terris, a Wilmington peace and social-justice group. In his later years enjoyed compiling family genealogies from stories and biographies of descendants and cousins. A proud gardener, he helped grow gigantic pumpkins, including ane that weighed over 230 pounds, larger than the biggest pumpkin grown at Longwood Gardens that year.

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1934

James R. Caiola L'34, Norristown, Pa., an attorney for more than than 55 years and an advocate for police officers; Feb. 24. Out of business for police officers who had no pension, in 1944 he helped found Norristown's police wedlock and in 1947 establish its pension fund—i of the outset for police in Pennsylvania. He served as the wedlock'due south solicitor for nearly three decades and was too solicitor for the colice chiefs of Montgomery Canton from 1945 to 1990. He retired from private practice simply before his 90th birthday, co-ordinate to his son Frank. He gave lectures on constabulary procedures at seminars in Europe and Puerto Rico, and conducted a form for FBI agents on court procedure and presentation of bear witness. He was an instructor at the Kratz Bar Review Grade in Philadelphia. In the 1960s his utilise of the temporary-insanity defence in murder trials attracted attention. He was founder and past president of the Norristown Republican Club and was past president of Camp Rainbow, a nonprofit for underprivileged children. He served on the lath of the Norristown Kid Development Middle. And he established the Legal Help Project for low-income senior citizens in Norristown.

Bernhardt Thou. Stabert W'34, Gladwyne, Pa., a senior officeholder for Huggins & Co., an actuarial consulting firm, until his retirement in 1978; Jan. 23. Earlier, he had worked every bit a teller at Germantown Savings Bank. During Earth War II he served in the U.Southward. Regular army in the Solomon Islands.

Olga Cohen Waldman Ed'34 G'37 GEd'60, Haverford, Pa., January. 5. Her daughter is Dr. Glenys A. Waldman Gr'75.

Evert D. Weeks Due west'34, Des Moines, Iowa, Dec. 16, 2002.

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1935

Herbert C. Schley W'35, Wintertime Garden, Fla., Dec. 12. At Penn he was a member of Delta Chi fraternity. According to his son Herbert, he "was very proud to attend the Wharton School and still had several items from the school and his fraternity."

Marietta Ash Settle Ed'35, Sonoma, Calif., Dec. iv, 2000. Her husband is Walter M. Settle Ar'35.

Mary Groom Ward Ed'35, Newtown Square, Pa., Feb. 26. She worked as a office secretary for a number of years. She volunteered at Paoli Hospital for over 25 years.

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1936

Dr. William H. Crosby C'36 M'forty, Joplin, Mo., a hematologist who invented one of the get-go devices to obtain biopsies of the bowel; January. 15. From 1951 to 1965 he was chief of the department of hematology at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Washington. He was also main of the cancer chemotherapy program at Walter Reed General Hospital, 1960-65. While there his involvement in a link between anemia and a bowel disorder led to his developing, with Heinz W. Kugler, what became the Crosby-Kugler capsule, a device that removed tiny pieces of tissue from the pocket-sized intestine in a non-surgical procedure. Dr. Ernest Beutler, chair of the section of molecular and experimental medicine at the Scripps Inquiry Institute in San Diego, described Dr. Crosby as "one of America'southward five leading hematologists in the 1950s and 1960s." Dr. Crosby studied a range of topics that included the furnishings of nutrition on anemia and other blood disorders, damage done from likewise much and besides little fe in the body, and the functions of the os marrow and spleen. He also examined means to save lives by restoring the proper amounts of claret and fluids to victims of war injuries and accidents. Following a tradition of medicine, Dr. Crosby volunteered to participate in his research projects. "Anything he did in experiments he e'er did on himself," said Dr. Lewis R. Weintraub, professor of hematology at Boston Academy. Co-ordinate to Dr. Emanuele Salvidio, a retired professor of hematology at the Academy of Genoa, in 1957 Dr. Crosby was the showtime to correctly theorize that a type of anemia known as favism resulted from a deficiency of the enzyme G6PD, among people who ingested fava, or wide, beans. During his 30-year career in the U.Due south. Army, he obtained the rank of colonel and was awarded the Bronze Star in 1944 and ii Oak Leaf Clusters, in 1945 and 1953. From 1965 to 1972 he was chief of hematology at the Tufts-New England Medical Center in Boston. He next moved to the Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation, then returned to Walter Reed. In 1985 he went into private practise in Joplin. Dr. Crosby wrote papers on the misuse of blood transfusions and the history of medicine, and translated the poesy of Baudelaire from French into English in a published work, The Flowers of Evil and Paris Spleen: Poems.

Lillian B. Gilbert CW'36, Philadelphia, an English teacher at South Philadelphia High School from the 1950s to the 1970s; February. vi. According to The Philadelphia Inquirer, she looked the other way when students such as Chubby Checker, Fabian, and other regulars on American Bandstand left class early to appear on the show. Earlier, she had studied ballet in New York with Vaslav Nijinsky. She received an alumni laurels of excellence from Temple Academy, her graduate alma mater, in 2001.

Horace Hagedorn W'36, Sands Point, N.Y., the founder and promoter of Miracle-Gro plant fertilizer; Jan. 31. He began his career selling advertisement time on radio, after which he produced a radio crime-drama series, The Big Story. While working for a modest Manhattan advertizing bureau, he was inspired past communication he received from celebrated advert homo Martin Minor, who told him how to make a million dollars: "Find a need and make full it." In the mid 1940s one of Hagedorn's clients, a High german-built-in nurseryman named Otto Stern, sold trees and plants by postal service, which oftentimes arrived in poor status. He and Stern striking upon the idea of fertilizer and hired a Rutgers University professor, O. Wesley Davidson, as a technical consultant to develop a water-soluble fertilizer. The dry out product, like shooting fish in a barrel to ship and store, was mixed with water and applied. Hagedorn's wife Peggy created the proper name Miracle-Gro, and the company was founded in 1950. When Miracle-Gro'south sales had passed $500,000 annually four years later, Hagedorn left the ad business to work full-time for the company. He bought out Stern in the mid-1980s. He did marketing and sales for the business firm and farmed-out manufacturing, packaging, and distribution to smaller organizations, thus creating what might be one of the first "virtual companies"—that is, businesses that exist essentially to be successful brands, said his son James, at present president, chair, and CEO of the company. His marketing strategies included hiring a colleague to paint folksy advertisements, using craggy-faced James Whitmore for Tv commercials, and offering a $100,000 prize for a tomato of world record size grown using Miracle-Gro. The green-and-yellow bundle he commissioned became so famous that other companies, including AT&T and Hyundai, used information technology for ads in their products. He charged them nil as long as they spelled Miracle-Gro correctly. The visitor'due south current share of the habitation-fertilizer market is estimated to exist near 85%. In 1995 the large garden-products concern, Scotts Company, merged with Miracle-Gro that left the Hagedorns, as the largest shareholders. At the time of the merger, Hagedorn had already given much of its stock to needy children. He took the $50 million he personally earned from the sale to set up a charitable trust. He gave tens of millions to children'due south charities, including supporting the educational activity of 50 million poor Brooklyn schoolchildren, with the goal of sending them to college. About 85% are currently enrolled, and he recently offered a sixth-class class in Columbus, Ohio, the aforementioned arrangement. Among his many gifts, most to children'south causes, were contributions to Hofstra University'south education school and to Adelphi Academy's business school, both of which are now named for him. Although a multimillionaire, he drove a Gremlin for many years, and said that he owned three suits and ii pairs of shoes.

Gilbert S. Levitt W'36 L'39, Philadelphia, a retired attorney; March sixteen.

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1937

Norman D. Einziger W'37, White Plains, N.Y., Feb. eighteen.

Ann Sherrerd Houpt Ed'37, Nokomis, Fla., Aug. xxx, 2004.

Hazel Bergman Osborne CW'37, Devon, Pa., February. 2. At Penn she was a member of the swim team and was helm of the riding team during her senior year. "She was always a well-nigh defended Penn graduate, and told her children and grandchildren many agreeable tales of her life as an undergraduate," said i of her stepchildren, Marian Osborne McMullan CW'lx. She was agile with the American Association of University Women, Welcome Railroad vehicle, and the YMCA, and volunteered with Meals on Wheels for many years.

Dr. Nathan P. Salner C'37 K'43 GM'54, W Hartford, Conn., the chief of radiology at Jeanes Hospital in Fox Chase, Pa., for more than 20 years, and an assistant clinical professor of radiology at the University's Medical School; Feb. 8. He also maintained a radiology practice in Philadelphia, until his retirement in 1983.

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1938

Howard F. Beir West'38, Salisbury, Conn., Jan. 23.

Dr. Thomas Westward. Clark Thousand'38, Gwynedd, Pa., the retired medical director of All Saints Hospital in Chestnut Hill, Pa., and onetime head of the diagnostic dispensary at the Infirmary of the Academy of Pennsylvania; March 10. Earlier he had been a function of a family unit practice in Chestnut Hill. He joined the staff at HUP in 1960. Following his retirement Dr. Clark was actively involved in developing policies for Pennsylvania through the Center for Advancement of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly. Subsequently moving to Maine, he was active in the Southwest Harbor Episcopal Church, where he was a vestryman. He served on the board of the Mountain Desert Isle Biological Laboratory and was a volunteer for the community library and the local school. After returning to Pennsylvania, he was caput of the library board at the Foulkeways Retirement Community, and oversaw the implementation of the Dewey Decimal of cataloguing. And he assisted in the blueprint of new library space during a major building campaign. During World War Two he volunteered for the U.S. Ground forces field hospital formed past physicians of the Pennsylvania Hospital. He spent 2 years with the infirmary in the Pacific Theater, seeing service in Australia, New Caledonia, New Guinea, and the Philippines, where he was part of the Luzon invasion. 1 of his daughters is Dr. Elizabeth R. Clark V'85; his sons are Frederic Westward. Clark L'68 and Dr. Hugh R. Clark C'70 G'76 Gr'81: his two children are George P. Clark C'99 GCP'03 and William 50. Clark C'02.

Dr. Edmond F. Cohen GM'38, Colorado Springs, Colo., a retired medico; Nov. 18, 2003.

Dr. Gerald 1000. Jaffe C'38 Gr'42, Verona, North.J., Feb. 8.

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1939

Henry Hudson Barton IV Due west'39, Philadelphia, president, chair, and director of the Barton Mines Corporation, until his retirement in 1984; February. 24. During his tenure, the company's garnet abrasives business became the largest in the globe, and the visitor itself became the oldest U.S. mining company nether continuous family buying. An ecology conservationist, he centered his efforts on the protection of common salt marshes along Buzzards Bay in Massachusetts, of lakes in New York's Adirondack mountains, and of streams throughout the Delaware Valley. He was a founding trustee of Adirondack Community College and an active member of several conservation groups. A private pilot, he remained active in outdoor sports and recreation. During World War Two he served equally a captain in the U.S. Army. His son is Henry Hudson Barton Five West'76 and his daughter-in-law is Elisa Menocal Barton C'77.

Maurice P. Felton Jr. West'39, Blue Bell, Pa., Dec. 26.

Charles W. Keinath C'39, Westbrook, Maine, Dec. 22.

Dorothea H. Haydock Lewis GEd'39, Newtown Foursquare, Pa., January. 22.

Sarah Longstreth Grand'39, Wilmington, Del., a high school English teacher for 45 years; February. 8. She taught kickoff at Friends Select School in Philadelphia and then at Wilmington Friends Schoolhouse, where she served every bit head of English.

Roland Due north. Cost Jr. W'39, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Jan. 13.

Regina Shoenfelt NTS'39, Norton, Ohio, Sept. 15.

Evelyn Spencer NTS'39, Ascent Sun, Md., May 12, 2004.

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1940

Leonidas A. Allen C'40, Philadelphia, a retired attorney; Oct. 29, 2003.

Leon Hurwitz W'40, Studio City, Calif., Feb. xiv.

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1941

Dr. Paul Maier M'41 GM'47, Portland, Maine, an ophthalmologist for many years; Feb. He was a l-year member of the Woodfords Church, where he served as a deacon for several years. He served every bit a major in the U.Southward. Ground forces Medical Corps, 1943-46.

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1942

Dr. George North. Aldredge Jr. Grand'42, Dallas, an orthopedic surgeon for nearly 35 years; Feb. one. He began his medical career in Dallas in 1951 and retired in 1985. Dr. Aldredge was master of staff of St. Paul Hospital in 1959, and he taught emergency medicine at Southwestern Medical School. Later retirement he volunteered his services for Tapings for the Blind and Meals on Wheels. A devout Roman Cosmic, he and his wife hosted and participated in many years of religious discussion groups. And he was an avid ham radio operator and ballroom dancer. During World State of war Ii he was a physician in the U.S. Army Medical Corps in New Republic of guinea and the Philippines, obtaining the rank of helm.

Frank R. Donahue Jr. L'42, Haverford, Pa., a retired chaser; Oct. 27.

Mary Greene Hazelbaker Ed'42 GEd'43, Paoli, Pa., March 12.

Robert L. Jarrard C'42, Honey Brook, Pa., March 23, 2003.

Leonard Due south. Kaplan W'42, Washington, January. 23, 2004.

Dr. Herbert 50. Shore C'42, Davis, Calif., Sept. 26.

Dr. Sidney Wertimer W'42, Clinton, N.Y., emeritus professor of economics at Hamilton College, where he taught for 52 years; Feb. one. At Penn he was the manager of the Mask & Wig Club, where he wrote, produced, and starred in several fully staged theater productions. According to Vige Barrie CW'74 WG'76, "he used to say he majored in Mask & Wig at Penn when they presented 30 performances a year and had their own train. He said the sense of timing and speech training Mask & Wig gave him later allowed him to concur 200 students 'in the palm of his paw' during convocation and classes." John T. Refermat, a Hamilton alumnus, said, "No one, simply no one, told a story the way Sid Wertimer did. That was only one of the ways he taught us." In addition to teaching finance, money and banking, and accounting, he served equally chair of the economics department, associate dean, provost, and higher marshal. Erstwhile student Michael H. Granof, at present the Ernst & Young professor of accounting at the University of Texas at Austin, said Wertimer "had a unique understanding of undergraduates and could bring out the best of them, both socially and intellectually … He was an exemplar of what a university professor should be. Indeed, it was largely considering of Sid that I went into academe. Even today, I find myself modeling myself later on him—using some of his pet expressions; affecting many of his mannerisms." Although Dr. Wertimer officially retired in 1991, he connected to teach basic accounting under special appointment and was responding to student eastward-mails from his hospital bed days before his decease. He was the writer of Economics and Man, a college textbook used nationally. His passion for teaching amassed a devoted post-obit, including numerous Fortune 500 business executives and financiers, some known equally "Sid's boys." He also served every bit a mentor to Delaware congressman and former governor Mike Castle and Iowa governor Tom Vilsack. In 1989 a contingent of his former students established the Sidney Wertimer Professorship, awarded to a member of the Hamilton College kinesthesia who exemplifies his devotion to teaching and mentoring. In 1969 a graduating student and his family established the Sidney Wertimer Prize Scholarships in Economics, and in 1999 another former student established a fellowship in Dr. Wertimer's name at the Harvard Concern School. Last Nov, when a beloved cucumber magnolia tree on the Hamilton campus was removed due to disuse, Sid Wertimer prepared a personal tribute to the college'southward copse. In recognition of his devoted service to Hamilton and its students, the former DKE fraternity house volition re-open this fall every bit a residence hall in honour of Sidney and Eleanor Wertimer. He remained a volunteer firefighter for the village of Clinton for 50 years, and kept a department radio crackling in his kitchen 24/vii. During World State of war II he served every bit an ensign aboard the U.South. Navy destroyer William D. Porter, where he saw action in the invasion of Luzon in the Philippines and the bombardment of the Nippon. A supply officeholder, he commanded an anti-shipping gun in the Battle of Lingayen Gulf against heavy kamikaze assail. Ii of his children are Peter Wertimer C'71 and Sheila Wertimer CW'73. His brother is Ned Wertimer Due west'49.

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1943

Gabriele D. Schiff PSW'43, New York, Aug. 31, 2002.

Dr. Melvin A. Shengold D'43, Greenport, N.Y., a retired dentist; Jan. 28, 2004.

Dr. Lester M. Silverman D'43, West Palm Beach, Fla., a retired dentist; February. 27.

Henry S. Stiegler W'43, Greenville, Del., retired director of marketing for the du Pont Co.; Dec. 29. He was an officeholder of the Class of 1943 and editor of its newsletter, which received an alumni laurels at their 50th reunion in 1993.

Dr. Robert West. Tilney Jr. 1000'43, Far Hills, N.J., a retired physician; Jan. 6.

Joseph E. Tofani C'43, Glenside, Pa., Jan. 29.

Dr. Victor South. Wojnar C'43 Chiliad'46, Champaign, Ill., a retired cardiovascular and thoracic surgeon; Feb. 15. At Penn he was a fellow member of the crew team that won the national championships in 1945 and would take gone on to the Olympics except for cancellation of the games during World State of war Ii. He served as principal of surgery at Veterans Administration Hospital in Sunmount, N.Y., and as assistant professor of surgery at the University of Vermont College of Medicine. From 1964 to 1968 he was caput of the department of cardiovascular and thoracic surgery at Christie Clinic in Champaign, and pioneered open centre surgery in the community. During the 1970s he served as chief of surgical services at Veterans Hospital in Clarksburg, Due west.V., where he also held the position of associate professor of surgery at the West Virginia Academy School of Medicine. He resumed individual practice in 1976, while also serving equally the medical manager of the Mercy Hospital emergency room. After in his life he became an avid runner who competed in the senior Olympics at the state, regional, and national levels, for which he won numerous awards. He was an advocate of community projects of a historical nature, including restoration of the Orpheum Theatre in Memphis. And he was a former president of the Torch Club, a group of retired professionals. Dr. Wojnar served as a medical officer and captain in the U.Due south. Army in Germany, 1947-49.

Elizabeth Greenfield Zeidman CW'43, Philadelpia, an arts patron and political activist; Feb. ix. Every bit daughter of the late Albert G. Greenfield, the prominent real estate developer and philanthropist, she helped establish the Albert M. Greenfield Foundation in 1952, and afterwards served as its president. The foundation directs financial grants to support Philadelphia educational and arts institutions. Foundation projects that she initiated include the Albert M. Greenfield Heart for Black Literary Studies, now part of the University'south Albert M. Greenfield Intercultural Center. At her retirement from the foundation in 2001, the board established the Elizabeth Greenfield Zeidman Lecture, an annual event at the Moore College of Art and Blueprint, which, said Happy Fernandez G'seventy, president of Moore, "gives our students and the community … the opportunity to hear from and meet with visionary women from effectually the nation." She described Zeidman as "an agog feminist, a staunch Democrat, and strong advocate for the arts and for the disadvantaged. She had a wry sense of humour, which fabricated it a joy to be in her company." Active in Democratic politics at the county level, she served for many years as a committeewoman and member of the Montgomery County Democratic Executive Commission. She was a delegate to the 1956 Democratic presidential convention. In the subsequently 1950s she served on the Pennsylvania Securities Commission. A founding board fellow member of the Philadelphia Dance Academy (now part of the University of the Arts), she formerly served on the YWCA board in Philadelphia. In her 40s she began collecting works past contemporary artists such as Milton Avery, and later donated paintings from her collection to fine art schools, including the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and Academy of the Arts. Her brothers are Gordon K. Greenfield WEv'42, who is married to Harriet C. Greenfield CW'43; and Albert M. Greenfield Jr. W'53, whose wife is Barbara Littman Greenfield CW'53. Their son, Albert M. Greenfield Due west'78, and his wife, Wendy Marcus Greenfield W'78, are the parents of Jason L. Greenfield C'04.

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1944

Dr. John Due north.B. Livingood Gr'44, Jacksonville Beach, Fla., Dec. five, 2002.

Dr. William Most C'44 One thousand'45, Collingswood, N.J., an internist and endocrinologist; February. twenty. At Due west Jersey Wellness System, at present Virtua Wellness, he was chief of general internal medicine and chair of the section of medicine. "He was agile until he died," said his married woman Winifred."He loved his patients … they were his friends." Dr. Nigh was a captain in the U.South. Air Force Medical Corps, serving stateside during the Korean State of war. His girl is Lisa Thou. Most C'92.

Dr. Bernard Chiliad. Poritzky D'44, Boynton Beach, Fla., a retired dentist; June 25, 2004.

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1945
Berenda Weinberg Abrams Ed'45, Merion, Pa., February. 9.

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1946

Edith Muriel Sutton NTS'46, Bonita Springs, Fla., June 13, 2004.

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1947

Anna Ethel Cheyney GEd'47, Hockessin, Del., a school teacher for 45 years who, with her students, planted trees and shrubbery along One-time Lancaster Pike, One-time Wilmington Route, and at Hockessin School in Delaware, where she taught; February. 13.

John P. Connelly Jr. Westward'47, Devon, Pa., March.

Malcolm C. Newell W'47, Hingham, Mass., a retired security analyst with the Former Colony Trust Department of the Showtime National Bank of Boston and a partner in the securities house H.C. Wainwright & Co.; Feb. six. He was past president of the Boston Security Annotator Lodge, trustee of Morgan Memorial, incorporator and trustee of the Hingham Institution for Savings, and a member of the policyholders protection board of the Savings Bank Life Insurance Company of Massachusetts. And he was by president of the Hingham Heart Cemetery. During World War II he served with the U.S. Army in the 106th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron in France. He was a POW in Germany and Czechoslovakia, 1944-45.

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1948

John T. Greyness C'48, Wynnewood, Pa., a retired examiner for the Pennsylvania Country Insurance Department; Feb. 4. A permanent officer of the Form of 1948, he served on numerous committees in support of the University's mission. He was a committeeman for the Republican Party, and during the 1960s served as a town commissioner of Lower Merion. An interest in civic affairs, particularly environmental issues, led to his service on the YMCA board; he was also president of the Shortridge Civic Association. And he served as a deacon of the Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church.

Alice Terrien Henry Ed'48, Exton, Pa., Nov.

Katherine B. McClenon GEd'48, Washington, Sept. i. Her husband is Paul R. McClenon WG'47.

Henry H. Meigs C'48, Berwyn, Pa., a holding manager and conservationist; Feb. 21. After serving in U.S. Army Intelligence in Europe during Globe War Ii, he helped manage his family's properties, including a subcontract in Roxborough, Pa. Later he managed the Andorra Shopping Centre, which had been congenital on family-owned country. During the 1950s he was involved in Democratic politics and supported the campaigns of Joseph Clark and Richardson Dilworth. He too backed community projects for the underprivileged. An gorging conservationist, he was active in the preservation of the Tinicum marshland, the Holgate Beach Preserve in New Jersey, and the sea turtle sanctuary on Picayune Cumberland Island, Ga. He served on the lath of the Schuylkill Middle for Environmental Education, which was established in the 1960s past his mother and her siblings, who donated 500 acres and money to fund the center. In 1997 the center presented him with the Founders' Conservation Honour, in recognition of his more than 30 years of service.

Henry T. Reath L'48, Philadelphia, an attorney at Duane Morris for 53 years, until his retirement in 2001; Jan. 31. He worked for the rights of the disadvantaged, particularly poor prisoners without adequate legal representation. Every bit an advocate for judicial reform and Starting time Amendment rights, he was the chief organizer and co-chair of Good Judges for Philadelphia. He as well advocated a merit-organization judiciary for the land of Pennsylvania. Twice he argued before the U.Southward. Supreme Courtroom: in 1975, for the rights of parents and students to receive public funds to supplement private, nonsectarian education; and, in 1985, on behalf of students' free-speech rights. Near the end of his career he represented, pro bono, inmates serving life sentences at Graterford Prison. He was honored with the Judge William H. Hastie Award from the NAACP, the beginning Criminal Justice Award from the Pennsylvania Society, and the Champion of Justice Honour from Community Legal Services. "Henry Reath was an incredibly skilled lawyer who … was a fighter for justice, for our society's most challenged citizens," said Pennsylvania Governor Edward G. Rendell C'65 Hon'00. "The people he helped have lost a champion." During World War II he served in the U.S. Army, where he was awarded the Statuary Star as a combat officer in Europe. He commanded the High german Pow camp at Ansbach before beingness discharged as a helm in 1946. His father and grandfather were graduates of the Academy's School of Police force.

Allen O. Shafer W'48, Ridgefield, Conn., a retired financial director and realtor; Nov. six. At Penn he was a member of the Beta Gamma Sigma honor social club. He was a financial manager from 1948 to 1972, and a realtor from 1972 to 1984, when he retired. In Ridgefield he served on and chaired the board of education, the board of finance, and the library board. He was a member of the firehouse study committee and the fixed assets review committee there. And he was i of the original incorporators of the Village Bank. During Globe War II he served as a captain in the U.Southward. Regular army and U.S. Air Corps in the 167th Field Artillery stateside, and in the 397th Air Base Squadron in the Aleutian Islands.

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1949

William O. Bailey WG'49, New York, the former president, main operating officeholder, and vice chair of Aetna; Jan. 28. As a senior executive at the then Aetna Life and Casualty Co. during the 1970s, he persuaded the insurance manufacture to guarantee municipal bonds by enlisting four other firms to jointly offering state and local governments insurance that would ensure the repayment of money lent by investors. Past reducing investor risk, the Municipal Bond Insurance Association, started in 1973, allowed municipalities to borrow money from the public at lower interest rates. While at Aetna he became the outset president and later chair of MBIA Inc., a separate, publicly traded company that took over the association's concern in 1987. He served as president and chief operating officeholder of Aetna from 1976 to 1987 and as vice chair from 1987 to 1988. "Under his leadership Aetna grew to become the nation's largest shareholder-owned insurance organization," said John W. Rowe, Aetna'southward current chair and CEO. As a spokesman and leader of the industry, Bailey advocated tort reform, coordinated a bailout of the car insurer Geico in 1975, and persuaded several reluctant insurers to underwrite the makers of swine flu vaccine for widespread distribution. He served as chair of the American Insurance Clan, the Health Insurance Clan of America, and the Holding Casualty Insurance Quango.

Jerome M. Berman C'49, Colonia, Due north.J., Dec. 22, 2002.

Gerald C. Bloch Westward'49, New York, January. 9.

Ruth O. Franciscus NTS'49, Mesa, Ariz., January. 4.

Dr. Margaret A. Friel CW'49 GM'57, Philadelphia, a retired physician; February. 4.

Virginia A. Lang CW'49, Hollidaysburg, Pa., Jan. 9.

Carter H. Lippincott Jr. W'49, Bala Cynwyd, Pa., a retired businessman; Dec. 3. He served in the U.Due south. Ground forces Air Force, 1943-45. While training as a tail gunner, he survived a plane crash in New Mexico in which 6 members of the coiffure were killed.

Dr. Byron Thousand. Rothhouse C'49, Elizabeth, North.J., a retired dentist; Jan. 7, 2004.

Dr. Philip F. D. Seitz Sr. GM'49, Washington, a retired physician; May 31, 2004.

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1950

John East. Dolan West'l, Savannah, Ga., Jan. 1.

Jacqueline Goldberg CW'50, West Palm Beach, Fla., March 14, 2003.

William Eastward. Handy W'50, Easton, Md., January. 21.

John H. Honywill L'50, New Brunswick, N.J., June 29, 2004.

Dr. Donald J. Marva C'50 G'55, Philadelphia, a retired physician; February. 28.

Ann Munnell McDonald CW'50, Langhorne, Pa., Jan. 8. Her married man is Martin J. McDonald Jr. Due west'48.

Frederic Due east. Mitchell Due west'50, Wilkes Barre, Pa., March 7, 2003.

David G. Paul Jr. C'fifty, Philadelphia, October. 6.

Elizabeth Amble Prior SW'l, Baltimore, Md., Jan. 21.

Rev. Edward West. Rettew Jr. M'fifty, York, Pa., July eleven, 2004.

Dr. Andrew Yard. Smith Gr'fifty, Ellicott City, Physician., Sept. two.

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1951

Peter W. Disston W'51, Shady Side, Doctor., Nov. vii.

Hon. James McGirr Kelly W'51, Overbrook, Pa., a federal judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania; March five. He served as a law clerk for the Hon. Edward J. Griffiths in the Court of Mutual Pleas, 1957-58. He was assistant district chaser for Philadelphia from 1958 to 1960 and assistant U.S. attorney for the eastern district of Pennsylvania, 1960-62. He served as main of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas jury selection board, 1963-64, and was the special assistant commonwealth attorney full general, 1964-65. He maintained a private legal practice in Philadelphia from 1962 to 1983. From 1977 to 1983 he served as vice president of regulator practices for the American Water Works Co. He was nominated a U.S. District Courtroom approximate in 1983 and causeless senior condition in 1996, a position he held until his decease. Judge Kelly was an adjunct professor of business concern constabulary at Drexel University from 1965 to 1989.

John H.C. King FA'51, New York, Dec. 21.

Clarence Maiden GEd'51, Baltimore, Sept. 26, 2002.

Roy E. Michie WEv'51, Reedville, Va., Dec. nineteen.

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1952

Elizabeth Burns Andringa DH'52, North Branford, Conn., May v, 2004.

Barbara Ann Duffy 50'52, Philadelphia, a retired attorney; Aug. 25, 2004.

Richard A. Huettner Fifty'52, Morristown, Due north.J., a retired partner at the New York police house of Kenyon & Kenyon; March ix. He received the Yale Medal in 1983.

Richard M. Lacy Chiliad'52, Arlington, Vt., an international personnel managing director for American Cyanamid Co. (now Wyeth) and Schering-Turn pharmaceutical companies, until his retirement; February. 24. An avid environmentalist, he spent much of his terminal 40 years serving on planning, zoning, h2o, and health boards. He and his family operated a equus caballus farm in Goshen, Northward.Y., where he was frequently sighted doing chores in his tricorn hat. During World War 2 he served in the U.S. Army Air Corps.

Kenneth A. Nelson ME'52, Santa Barbara, Calif., Jan. 20.

George M. Todd WEv'52, Secane, Pa., July 9, 2004.

Dr. Sidney Yaverbaum Gr'52, Alexandria, Va., February. 27, 2002.

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1953

Francis X. Basile W'53, Sarasota, Fla., the retired chair and CEO of CIT Group/Factoring; July ane, 2004. He had worked in the commercial-finance field for 35 years. He held several offices in the National Commercial Finance Association, including board chair. He later served on the board for Ames Department Stores and on a special advisory board for FleetBank Investment Services in Sarasota. One of his sons is John Paul Basile W'86, and his daughter is Lisa B. Basile GEd'88.

Dr. William P. Dodson GD'53, Alexandria, Va., a retired dentist; Sept. 10.

Dr. Gloria Darden Gettys SW'53, Philadelphia, professor emeritus of social work at Temple Academy; March 2. In the early 1970s she worked for Philadelphia'due south Department of Human being Services, specializing in child welfare. She began instruction at Temple in the mid-1970s and retired in 2004; she was editor of its social-work newspaper, The Advocate, from 1999 to 2003.

Dr. Richard C. Horn V'53, Santa Ana, Calif., a retired veterinarian; Jan. 28.

Robert E. McKee C'53, Exton, Pa., the Palestra's official scorekeeper for 47 years; February. 6. He began keeping score at Penn basketball games as an undergraduate. He served equally scorekeeper for Penn and other games at the Palestra until 2001. He also served as a statistician for Penn and Villanova basketball game games. In 1990 he was inducted into the Big Five Hall of Fame. He was honored with a plaque at the Palestra's scorers table when he retired in 2001. Likewise active with Penn football game, he was a printing box announcer for the 2004 season, according to his son, Gary N. McKee W'77. He worked as a sales representative for form rings manufacturer L.Chiliad. Balfour for 17 years and for Spatola Wines for x years, until his retirement in 1984. For twenty years he coached baseball for the Lionville Youth Association, and he was a former commissioner of the girls softball program. He had served on the Uwchlan Township Park and Recreation Lath.

Dr. Miriam C. Reed GM'53, Newtown, Pa., a retired physician; Aug. 12, 2004.

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1954

Dr. Alan E. Besas D'54, Norwalk, Conn., a retired orthodontist; Feb. 12. He was a diplomate of the American Board of Orthodontics and president of the Darien Rotary Guild. And he served as treasurer of the Waveny Chamber Music Society for 22 years. He served in the U.S. Navy aboard the U.s.S. Coral Sea.

Dr. Theodore R. Lammot M'54, Ventura Calif., a retired orthopaedic surgeon; Dec. 17.

Dr. Edward F. Reichert GD'54, Wilmington, Del., a retired oral and maxillofacial surgeon; Feb. eighteen. Before, he was an instructor at Temple Academy's dental and oral-hygiene schools. Also an artist, he had 2 of his paintings exhibited in the Hagley Museum. During World War II he served in the U.S. Army and was awarded a Bronze Star.

William J. Stein Westward'54, Newton Heart, Mass., March 12.

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1955

Hon. Simon Chrein West'55, Roslyn, N.Y., a retired gauge; March 15.

Dr. Leslie A. Commons D'55, Shelter Island, Northward.Y., a retired dentist; Nov. 30.

William H. Dittmar W'55, San Marino, Calif., a retired chaser; Dec. 17.

Warren Higginbotham WG'55, New York, Aug. 20, 2004.

Rose Leeder Osman CCC'55, Chesterfield, Mo., April 27, 2004.

Anna Penchassoff FA'55, February. 27, 2004.

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1956
Dr. Wesley Guy Peitz V'56, Oakmont, Pa., a retired veterinary; Dec. 5.

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1957
Leo 5. Hashemite kingdom of jordan W'57, Breezy Betoken, N.Y., Jan. 20.

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1958

Robert A. Brand M'58, New York, Dec. 20.

Ralph J. Jamgochian West'58, Villanova, Pa., a retired fleet manager for Aramark Corporation; January. 31. Earlier, he and his brother ran a business rebuilding vending machine equipment. After selling their company to ARA (at present Aramark), he worked for the food service supplier. He had served on the board of the Delaware Canton Christian School. During the Korean State of war he served in the U.S. Army in Austria.

1959

Abe H. Frumkin L'59, Philadelphia, a retired chaser; February. 4.

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1960
Ramsey Demir C'threescore WG'65, North Haven, Conn., June xv, 2004.

Robert Westward. Jackson WEv'lx, Southampton, N.J., March 9.

1961

Edna Mentzer Jackson GEd'61, Woodstown, N.J., February. 19.

Dr. George A. James WG'61, Presque Island, Maine, founder and president of Lucerne Farms, the showtime producer of value-added forage products for horses in the U.South.; Jan. xix. Earlier, he had worked for the University of Maine for 10 years, where he was the driving forcefulness behind the construction of the current University Campus Heart. In 1995 he left the university to found Lucerne Farms, in an attempt to encourage farming and jobs in Aroostook County. The visitor produces bagged forage feeds under various labels, including their own. The high temperature drying process of their feed kills mold spores in hay, making the products essential for horses struggling with allergies and equine respiratory problems. Ann Dionne, marketing managing director at Lucerne, recalled customers at trade shows saying, "'This product saved my equus caballus's life!'—which simply made him so happy." A former employee admired his "ability to meet the potential in people and his desire to nurture that potential at every possible opportunity … fifty-fifty when information technology came at a toll to himself." His civic contributions included serving on the board of the Presque Island Chamber of Commerce and the Aroostook Medical Center. He was a Paul Harris Fellow of Rotary International.

Seton Shanley C'61 New York, Dec. 30, 2000.

1962

Richard Fifty. Edwards WEv'62, Lakeland, Fla., Jan. 9.

Edward W. Gordon ChE'62, Owings Mills, Md., June xvi, 2002.

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1963

Merritt W. Hallowell WG'63, Rydal, Pa., Feb. fifteen.

Dr. Frederic Yard. Hyde Gr'63, Chalfont, Pa., a former paper reporter and a retired professor of journalism at Bucks Canton Community Higher; Feb. 25. He began his journalism career as a reported for The New London Day in Connecticut. He joined the staff of The Philadelphia Inquirer in 1936, where for the next 23 years he worked as a reporter and rewrite man amidst a climate of stiff competition from the six other daily papers in the city. While at the Inquirer, he covered the 1937 Hindenburg disaster, and he won an laurels for a story about four youths killed in an automobile accident. He left journalism in 1959 and taught at the Academy while earning his doctoral degree in English language literature. In 1965 he was amid the first faculty members to be hired by the newly opened Bucks Canton Community College. He established a educatee newspaper, taught journalism, and chaired the faculty affairs commission. He served as marshal at the college's graduation ceremonies for x years, and gave the outset accost in 1975, the year he retired. Post-obit his retirement he lived in Maine for 14 years, where he grew Christmas trees and fruit trees. After returning to Chalfont in 1999, he taught English and poetry for two years at Delaware Valley College's Center for Learning in Retirement.

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1964

Ottoway Chiliad. Evans C'64, Philadelphia, Aug. 18, 2004.

Robert H. Kirby GCP'64, Richmond, Va., Aug. viii, 2004.

Dr. David M. Kozart Thou'64 GM'lxx, Philadelphia, an ophthalmologist with the Scheie Middle Institute, where a memorial fund has been established in his name; March 16. His wife is Elizabeth Lubell Kozart GCP'74 and their son is Dr. Michael F. Kozart M'93.

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1965

Anthony G. Bateman Sr. L'65, Philadelphia, a one-time district attorney and 1983 mayoral candidate; February. 14. He began his career in 1966 as an banana district attorney in the homicide sectionalisation. In 1976 he entered private practice. An 8th-generation Irish Cosmic Philadelphian, he enjoyed living in Germantown and talking about the Revolutionary War battle fought there. In recent years he seriously studied Latin, oftentimes using the phrase Sic transit gloria mundi, "thus passes the celebrity of this world."

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1966
Frederick D. Raine C'66, New Rochelle, Northward.Y., the assistant vice president of managed care at North Shore-Long Island Jewish Infirmary; Sept. 26. His career as a hospital administrator spanned thirty years. One of his sons is Evan One thousand. Raine C'96.

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1967
Virginia Brown Bird SW'67 Oaks, Pa., Feb. 17.

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1968
Leonard H. Point CGS'68, Sun City Eye, Fla., Dec. 31.

1971

Elizabeth F. Doherty Nu'71, Drexel Hill, Pa., December. 12, 2003.

Gregor P. Kudarauskas C'71, Cambridge, Mass., an attorney; Dec. 13.

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1972

Olin C. Johnson GEd'72, New York, March 10.

Dr. Arthur E. Wolf WG'72 GrD'80, Jenkintown, Pa., a sometime comptroller and the retired vice president of operations at Delaware Valley College; Feb 13. For 24 years he worked for Rohm & Haas, rising to the position of comptroller for its Philadelphia operations. Later on his 3 children graduated from college, he decided to go likewise, and did so while working total-time, co-ordinate to his married woman Betsy. He became dean of the business division of Jump Garden Higher and assistant superintendent of business diplomacy at the Colonial and Central Bucks schoolhouse districts earlier coming to Delaware Valley College. He was the author of a volume on computer information systems. He was active in the local Rotary Club and had served on the schoolhouse board. He served in the U.South. Army in occupied Japan and Panama. 1 of his sons is A. Edwin Wolf WG'84.

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1974

Dr. Arden M. Hayden, D'74, Sudbury, Vt., a dentist; Nov. 13.

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1977

Kenwyn M. Dougherty CW'77 G'77, Drexel Hill, Pa., a retired co-managing partner at the Philadelphia law business firm of Post & Schell; Feb. 28. In 1980 she was the first adult female acquaintance hired by the firm. She was named partner in 1985. Her sister is Patricia D. Duncan CW'74, whose husband is Robert Charles Duncan Yard'81.

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1980

Dr. John W. Grelis GrEd'80, Springfield, Pa., a main and instructor in the Philadelphia school commune for 33 years, until his retirement in 1996; Feb. 14. He was principal of Comegys and Key uncomplicated schools and, about recently, of Lea Elementary School. "At one fourth dimension he taught day, night, and summertime school," said his wife Ruth.

Julia F. Jones WG'80, Greenwich, Conn., Feb. 11. She pursued a career in international banking in San Francisco, Boston, Philadelphia, and New York. And she was interested in educational activities for children.

Jean E. Owens GNu'lxxx, Lansdale, Pa., Oct. 29.

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1983

Dr. Kathryn J. Engebretson WG'83 GrW'96, Philadelphia, president of the William Penn Foundation and old vice president for finance and primary financial officer at the Academy; Feb. x. She was vice president of Lehman Brothers from 1984 to 1991 and then served equally city treasurer of Philadelphia, where she turned effectually the city's financial ratings and refinanced its debt. She joined Miller Anderson & Shepherd, an institutional assets arm of Morgan Stanley, in 1994, and became a principal there. Dr. Engebretson served every bit vice president for finance and chief financial officer at Penn from 1997 to 1999, when she became the CFO of BET.com. In 2001 she was named president of the William Penn Foundation, where she worked extensively to advance the competitiveness of Pennsylvania through the Campaign to Renew Pennsylvania program.

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1990

Marvin P. Lyon Jr. C'90, Springfield, Mass., Oct. 4.

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2004

Michael P. Murray CGS'04, Philadelphia, banana director of classes and reunions in the Development and Alumni Relations office of the University; Feb. 7. He had previously worked on Wall Street, beginning in the mail room and working his way to a position in international finance. While at Penn he founded the College of General Studies pupil advisory board in 2003 because he believed that non-traditional students were lacking a phonation and clear presence on campus. He also had been an administrative assistant in Wharton's MBA career management role. He joined the alumni relations staff as an alumni officer in 2004. Bob Alig C'84 WG'87, assistant vice president of alumni relations, spoke of his "deft affect with the variety of Penn's alumni," which included engaging both the Old Guard and young alumni in alumni activities, including reunions and Alumni Weekend programming.

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Faculty & Staff

Dr. Thomas W. Clark. See Class of 1938.

Dr. Kathryn J. Engebretson. See Class of 1983.

Richard Greenfield, Boston, a former research coordinator for the Philadelphia Social History Project; Feb. 19. He joined the University as a didactics fellow in 1975 and was a research coordinator when he left in 1982. The Philadelphia Social History Projection was directed by Dr. Theodore Hershberg, professor of public policy and history and director of the Centre for Greater Philadelphia. From the mid 1970s through the early on 1980s Greenfield made major contributions to the project in selecting the appropriate social science inquiry methodologies to clarify a computerized database of nineteenth-century population and infrastructure information on Philadelphia. He went on to work in the city'southward Records Department, and spent several years in Kingdom of saudi arabia, where he was a GIS consultant. More recently he was a volunteer for Friends of the Boston Harbor Islands.

Britton B. Harris, Philadelphia, emeritus professor of city and regional planning; February. 8. Before coming to Penn in 1954, he worked with the Chicago Housing Potency and the government of Puerto Rico. He became UPS Professor of Planning, Transportation, and Public Policy in 1972. He served Penn in many capacities, including chair of the department of city and regional planning, 1970-73, and of the graduate group, 1972-75; dean of the at present-defunct School of Public and Urban Policy, 1977-81; and through joint appointments in several other departments and graduate groups. He became professor emeritus in 1984. Following his retirement he continued to write and lecture and taught in the appropriate engineering and liberal studies programs. He spent the year 1986-87 as a visiting professor at Stanford University. He felt that his most productive contributions came from his work on the Penn Bailiwick of jersey Transportation Study, which led to a special issue in May 1965 of The Journal of the American Institute of Planning and to a conference on transportation planning, published in the book Special Report no. 97, past the Washington-based Highway Research Board. An early on and consequent advocate of the use of computers and models in urban planning, Professor Harris continued to pursue the use of computer technology, especially geographic information systems, in planning support applications to explore urban class. His writings in this surface area include an essay co-written with Michael Batty, "Locational Models, Geographic Information and Planning Support Systems" in Planning Support Systems (2001) and an article, "Accessibility: Concepts and Applications," in Journal of Transportation and Statistics (2001). Dr. Eugenie Ladner Birch, professor and chair of the department of city and regional planning at the University, said that Professor Harris "was an intellectual giant whose students were not only Penn graduates but all who were interested in advancing the art and science of the field through rigorous and thoughtful analysis of the dynamic processes of spatial interaction that shape urban places." In 1991 the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning awarded him its Distinguished Educator Honor. And in 2000 he was inducted into the American Establish of Certified Planners Higher of Fellows. He was a fellow member of the Ford Foundation Delhi Master Planning Squad in Puerto Rico and a past president of the Regional Scientific discipline Association. His married woman is Ruth B. Harris GLA'73.

Dr. Frederic G. Hyde. See Form of 1963.

Robert E. McKee. See Grade of 1953.

Michael P. Murray. Run across Class of 2004.

Virgil F. Puskarich. See Class of 1976.

Dr. Nathan P. Salner. See Course of 1937


© 2005 The Pennsylvania Gazette
Last modified 07/02/05

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Source: https://www.upenn.edu/gazette/////////////////////0705/0705obits.html

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