Obituaries

Richard (Dick) Overmyer ’56 Professor Emeritus of Communication Arts

Richard “Dick” Overmyer ’56, professor emeritus of communication arts, died on May 13, 2019. Overmyer graduated from Allegheny with a B.A. in theater and then served in the entertainment section of the U.S. Army Special Services Division. After earning his Master of Fine Arts degree, he taught at San Jose State College and was head of the drama department at Southwestern College in California. He also served as the scene designer and technical director for the Lakewood Little Theater in Lakewood, Ohio, and as director of the S.T.V. Players of the American Turnverein Association of Cleveland. Overmyer joined the Allegheny faculty in 1966 and served as managing director of the Playshop Theatre, where he also performed in and directed many productions. Overmyer was conferred emeritus status when he retired in 1998. “I try to make theater accessible; it is a mirror of society,” Overmyer told Allegheny magazine in 1993. “When students read a play in which they can identify with a character or situation, they are excited.” Following his career at Allegheny, he served as director of the Academy Theatre in Meadville. He enjoyed reading, walking, playing poker and working in his woodshop. Overmyer was preceded in death by his wife, Carol Masterson Overmyer ’55, who served as head of the College’s costume shop. He is survived by one daughter, Katherine Cooper ’89; one son, Michael Overmyer ’92; one sister, Melinda Sharrit; one brother, Ed Overmyer; and six grandchildren.

Marilyn Jean Snyder ’49, Honored With Alumni Medal

Marilyn Jean Snyder died on July 17, 2018 at Wesbury United Methodist Community in Meadville.

She married V. Lynn Snyder in 1948. He died in 1996. They had two children, Frederick Snyder and Carol Doeffinger ’72.

Mrs. Snyder, also known as “Tootie,” was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Later, she was a member of the Kappa Gamma advisory board, along with being personnel advisor to the Kappas at Allegheny.

As a student at Allegheny, she worked in various campus offices. Early on, she knew that the Alumni Affairs Office was going to be her choice for the future. After raising her two children to school age, she went back to Allegheny in 1961, working in the Alumni Office. She retired in 1987 as the assistant alumni secretary for Allegheny. She was recognized by Allegheny for her years of dedicated service to the college by receiving the Blue Citation and the Alumni Medal, the College’s oldest and most .

She was a member and director of the Meadville Business and Professional Women’s Club and also a board member and officer of the Crawford County Historical Society. She, for many years, was an advisory board member of the Hillside Home prior to Wesbury’s consolidation. She particularly enjoyed taking part in the Meadville Garden Club’s Trees of Christmas at the Baldwin Reynolds House where she was also a docent for the Baldwin Reynolds House.

Besides her two children, she is survived by three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

Glenn W. Thompson Professor Emeritus of Psychology

Glenn W. Thompson, a longtime psychology professor at Allegheny, died on March 31, 2019. He graduated from Clarion University in 1952. He then entered the U.S. Air Force serving stateside during the Korean War. He also sang in the Airman’s Chorus, called the Sampsonaires, while in the military. While serving in the Air Force, he took courses at a nearby college and before graduation was admitted to Penn State University and received a departmental assistantship. He then received a Public Health Service Fellowship and his master’s degree. He received his Ph.D. in clinical/developmental psychology from Penn State and did postdoctoral work at San Diego State University in gerontology. He joined the Allegheny faculty in 1961, was promoted to full professor in 1970, and retired in 1996, when he was accorded emeritus status. He was a part-time staff psychologist at Crawford County Mental Health Center, and in 1978, he also went into private practice with his wife, the former Margie Say, as his office manager, and continued until the fall of 2015. He was a member of the Men’s Literary Union, the Meadville Country Club, the Pennsylvania State Mental Health Board, the governing board at Warren State Hospital, was treasurer of the Crawford County Hospital Authority, and was chair of Boy Scout Troop 244. In addition to his wife, he is survived by four children, Patti Ann Shook ’80, Glenn A.W. Thompson ’81, Lisa Annette Chandler ’85 and Stuart D.F. Thompson ’87; eight grandchildren; a great-grandson, and a sister, Marlene Davis.

Edward J. Walsh Professor Emeritus of Chemistry

Edward Joseph Walsh, who served on the Allegheny chemistry faculty for 35 years, died on August 5, 2019. Walsh was a veteran of the Korean War, serving in the U.S. Army from 1954 to 1956. He received his B.S. degree from the New York State University of Education at Albany and his Ph.D. from the University of New Hampshire. He also profoundly appreciated the arts, which he both collected and created. He read literature voraciously, he studied religions faithfully, and he followed politics passionately. Walsh was a brilliant chemist who published nationally acclaimed research throughout his professional life. He taught chemistry at Allegheny from 1964 to 1999, chairing the department for 10 years. During that time, he trained dozens of professional scientists and inspired hundreds of other students, many of whom remained in touch with him for decades. “Ed was a foundational pillar that secured Allegheny’s historic position as a strong science school in the national liberal arts landscape, and he served as a catalyst to put the department in a position to be a nationally recognized undergraduate research program,” said P.J. Persichini, chair of the Chemistry Department. “Ed was a foundational pillar that secured Allegheny’s historic position as a strong science school in the national liberal arts landscape, and he served as a catalyst to put the department in a position to be a nationally recognized undergraduate research program,” said P.J. Persichini, chair of the Chemistry Department. Walsh is survived by his wife, Kirsten Peterson ’78, director of pre-professional advising at Allegheny; two daughters, Deidre Walsh and Siobhan Peterson-Walsh ’08; two grandsons and two sisters. Memorials may be made to the Ed Walsh Chemistry Department Fund at Allegheny College, Development & Alumni Affairs, 520 N. Main St., Meadville, PA 16335.

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Mary Vogan Wiese on March 31, 2019. She received her master’s degree from the University of Pittsburgh and taught at Lakeview High School. She is survived by five children, David R. Wiese, Mary Alice Whitten, Sara J. Burke, Roberta A. Welsh and Gilbert B. Wiese; her siblings, Arthur Vogan and Josephine Vogan; six grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

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Elizabeth Aldrich Ongley Jennings on April 30, 2018. She earned a doctorate of education from New Mexico State University. She was awarded membership in Delta Kappa Gamma and Phi Beta Kappa. She was instrumental in establishing the Head Start and kindergarten programs in Meadville. During her 18 years as an educator, she left her mark on hundreds of children with her enthusiasm for learning. She is survived by her sister, Nancy Aldrich Wygant; five daughters, Judith Ongley Mowris Kirby, Carol Ongley Shoemaker, Suzanne Ongley Williams, Christine Ongley Foster and Kathleen Ongley Wanninger Bourgeois, nine grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.

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Mary Allen Lamb on February 26, 2019. She studied pre-nursing at Allegheny. During the years of raising her family, she volunteered as a special education teacher at the Memphis School. She also enrolled at Baldwin Wallace College, receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree in religion and humanities in 1971. She was an advocate for people with disabilities. Her calling to Christian service inspired her to attend the Ashland Theological Seminary, where she was awarded the master of divinity degree in 1985. She was a pastoral disability specialist at the Outreach Ministry of the Catholic Dioceses of Ohio. Previous to that she was a program coordinator and director of the Task Force for Persons with Disabilities for the Lutheran Metropolitan Ministry. Among her many honors and citations, she received the Cuyahoga County Award for Advocacy and New Programs and the Governor’s Award for Outstanding Service. At the time of her death, she was director emeritus on the board of Maximum Accessible Housing of Ohio. She is survived by her daughter, Linda Hirt; sons, Doug Jr., Allen and David; and many grandchildren.

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Gladys Cousler Hirschman on September 8, 2018. She graduated from Cedar Crest College in Allentown and received a 75-year award for membership in Kappa Kappa Gamma. She is survived by her daughter, Constance H. Shorb, and numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

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Edgar Gasteiger on February 9, 2019. He earned a master’s degree from the University of Illinois, and a Ph.D. in biophysics from the University of Minnesota. In 1951, he joined the faculty at Harvard Medical School, while also serving as a research associate in surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital. He was also an assistant professor of physiology at the University of Rochester School of Medicine. He served there until 1961, when he joined Cornell University’s faculty as a professor of physical biology at the College of Veterinary Medicine. He was elected emeritus in 1987. He studied neural science and electrophysiology, with notable work on the neurophysiology of the spinal cord. He played a key role in developing the Section of Neurobiology and Behavior at Cornell in the 1960s, reorganized and improved premedical advising in the 1970s, and helped introduce the use of computing systems to the College of Veterinary Medicine. Those who knew him believe his most valuable contributions came as a teacher and member of the Cornell community. He is survived by three sons, Kirpal ’74, Kris and Eric, five grandchildren, and his partner, Anna Merson.

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David D. Beiler on June 8, 2018. He was the fifth of six children of the late Allegheny professor Irwin Beiler and Elizabeth Crates Beiler. He graduated from Harvard Medical School in 1947. He then completed a one-year internship at Geisinger Medical Center. He was a captain in the U.S. Army Medical Corps and served as the only radiologist at the U.S. Army Hospital at West Point. In September 1952, he returned to complete his residency at Geisinger, followed by a year in the radiology program of the Graduate School of Medicine of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. After passing the Board of Radiology examination, he began his career at Geisinger, where he served for 37 years. In the late 1950s, he initiated Geisinger’s nuclear medicine program. Some highlights of his long career included establishing a school at Geisinger to train new radiation therapy technicians; was part of the Geisinger Cancer Committee’s establishment of the House of Care and was elected president of four medical organizations, including the Keystone Area Society of Radiation Oncologists. In addition, he authored/co-authored 26 scientific papers and a number of exhibits. Special honors included being a Fellow of the American College of Radiology and president and an honored radiologist of the Pennsylvania Radiological Society at their annual meeting in Hershey in 1998. He also served as mayor of Riverside Borough. In his younger years, he studied violin, playing in the Meadville and Allegheny College Symphony Orchestras. He is survived by wife, Sandy Shively Konvolinka Beiler; two sons, Duncan Beiler and Ross Beiler; two stepdaughters, Amy Konvolinka and Karen Konvolinka; five grandchildren; two step-grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

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Dorothy Roland McIntyre on June 7, 2018. She earned her bachelor’s degree in biological science and history as well as a master’s degree from John Carroll University. She taught at John Carroll University, Shaker Heights High School and Orange High School, where she spearheaded the first Advanced Placement programs and the Senior Project Program, and enriched the lives of thousands of students. She retired in 1987 but remained an active leader of the Orange Board of Education and taught part time at Cuyahoga Community College. She was an advocate for the Ronald McDonald House, Meals on Wheels, a docent at the Cleveland Museum of Art and served on the boards of Orange Board of Education and the Association for Continuing Education at Case Western Reserve University.

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Grace Baldwin Davis on September 9, 2019. She is survived by her children, Peter A. and William A.; four grandchildren; one great-grandchild and a sister, Christine Lang.

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Janet Flinn Morris on May 2, 2019. She received her bachelor’s degree from Akron University and a master’s degree from Kent State University. She taught at Lakemore Elementary School for 30 years. After retirement, she did volunteer work at the Edwin Shaw Rehabilitation Hospital in Lakemore, Ohio. She is survived by her son, David Morris; a daughter, Nancy Stinson Anderson; three grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

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Erwin P. Staller on February 11, 2019. After graduating, he enlisted in the U.S. Army, where he served in the Signal Corps during World War II. After the war, he returned to Long Island and became a real estate developer and philanthropist. His company prospered and developed numerous shopping centers as well as office buildings and industrial buildings across Long Island and Connecticut. He is survived by his wife, Pearl Friedman Staller; four children and nine grandchildren.

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Mary Brownell Graves on September 1, 2018. She was a competitive golfer, an avid beach lover and enjoyed her card games with family and friends. She is survived by her son, Jeffrey B. Graves; her daughter, Katherine G. Clark; seven grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren.

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Harold L. Knappenberger on September 2, 2018. He earned a master’s of divinity from Drew University and a doctorate of divinity from Allegheny. He enjoyed 67 years of continuous service as a United Methodist minister throughout Western Pennsylvania, most recently and locally at First United Methodist Church, Washington, at First United Methodist Church, Houston Township, and John Wesley United Methodist Church, Washington.  He was an active member of the Washington Branch of the NAACP, from where he received the Human Rights Award. He was a member of Washington Lodge 164, F&AM, where he served as worshipful master in 1991. He was a member of many other local Masonic bodies and held many statewide Masonic positions. He was a 33rd Degree Mason, Honorary Member of Supreme Council. He is survived by his wife, Elsie May Easter; three daughters, Gloria Oberkehr, Angela Knappenberger and Lucinda Hughes; a son, Harold L. Knappenberger III; a brother, Lyston Knappenberger; 13 grandchildren; 15 great-grandchildren; four stepchildren; eight step-grandchildren and nine step-great-grandchildren.

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Albert C. Lammert on May 15, 2018. He graduated with honors in three years. He then attended Case Western Reserve Medical School, and after an internship at Western Pennsylvania Hospital in Pittsburgh, he completed a residency in obstetrics and gynecology at University Hospitals in Cleveland. He then served three years of active duty in the U.S. Navy as destroyer squadron medical officer. Upon discharge, he returned to Cleveland, where he joined Dr. Howard Taylor in the Department of Obstetrics at the Cleveland Clinic. After 10 years at the clinic, he went into private practice and was assistant clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Case Western Reserve Medical School. He is survived by his four children, Gary Lammert, Nancy Redfern, David Lammert and Linda Ballas; nine grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

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Janice Crittenden Baker on January 2, 2020. She attended Allegheny prior to earning a bachelor of arts in history from Western Reserve University in Cleveland. She is survived by three children, Martha E. Baker, Douglas A. Baker and Judith A. Baker, and four grandchildren.

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Marilla Burkett Fellows on March 1, 2019. She worked as a freelance writer and retired in 1986 from television station WFMJ in Youngstown, Ohio. She is survived by two sons, Tim Fellows and Mark Fellows; four grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

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I. Marie Hamilton on December 4, 2019. She received her master’s degree in teaching and her advanced graduate credit degree in social studies from Washington University in St. Louis. She retired in 1974 from the Laude County School District in Missouri where she had been employed as an elementary school teacher. She also worked on her son’s farm in Crawford County tending to the animals. She was a member of the board of directors of Women’s Services, the Center for Family Services and the United Way of Western Crawford County where she was awarded the Pennsylvania United Way Volunteer of the Year Award in 1994 and was the first recipient of the Raymond P. Shafer Award for volunteers. She also served as a member of the School Improvement Council, the Essential Services Coalition on Housing Needs, Woman’s Literary Club, Hilltop Garden Club and the Antique Study Club. She was involved with the former McKeever Environmental Learning Center where she assisted in the student programs. In 1996, at the age of 73, she was honored to be the Olympics torch bearer as it moved from Ohio into Pennsylvania. She was an active member of Emmanuel United Church of Christ in Meadville, where she served as superintendent of Sunday School for 10 years. She is survived by two sons, David Alan Hamilton and Craig Lee Hamilton, five grandchildren, four great-grandchildren, and three great-great grandchildren.

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Robert Bossler on March 30, 2019. He served in the U.S. Army, 99th Infantry Division, participating from start to finish in the Battle of the Bulge, then the Rhineland Campaign in Germany. He earned a Bronze Star. He also was a Penn State graduate, and was an aeronautical engineer at Bell, Kaman, and Lucas Western. The Kaflex Coupling is one of his 22 patents. An American Helicopter Society member, he received an AHS Honorary Fellow Award. He was a member of the Civil War Round Table, the Bloomfield Fish and Game Club and the 99th Division Association. He is survived by his children, David, Nancy and Rob; six grandchildren, and a brother, Bert.

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Florence Graham Mack on March 18, 2019. She earned her degree in economics. She worked in advertising prior to starting her family. While living in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, she served as a volunteer for the American Red Cross and other organizations, including CASA and Meals on Wheels. She is survived by her daughter, Jean Mack-Fogg; two sons, Andrew and Thomas Mack; and 10 grandchildren.

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Doris Larsen Snell on December 1, 2019. She taught at Academy High School in the Erie School District while she earned her master’s in speech communications from Edinboro University, where she became a professor of speech communications. She earned a Ph.D. from Penn State and Walden Universities. As a classroom teacher, she saw the opportunity to effect change in the Erie educational system through serving on the Erie School Board and becoming a founding member of the Citizens for Better Schools organization. While teaching at Edinboro, she established many long relationships with her students and developed the heralded performance program, “Edinboro Off the Page.” For many years she piloted school vans full of talented students to county-wide appreciative audiences. After retiring in 1989, she continued to be involved in her lifelong commitment to education through her work with the Neighborhood Art House, helping students write and illustrate a children’s book, Fierce the Frog. She is survived by her sons, David Par and Richard Harvey.

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Janet Shoff Bacon on October 8, 2019. She worked at George Washington University Hospital and eventually relocated to Norfolk, Virginia. She was active in her community, volunteering for more than 35 years at Norfolk General Hospital/Sentara and Children’s Hospital. She is survived by her husband, George Bacon; three sons, Robert, David and Alan; a daughter, Susan Gryson, and seven grandchildren.

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Emogene Gault Barnett on July 18, 2019. She was a member of the Lucinda Hinsdale Stone Chapter of the D.A.R. and Order of Eastern Star in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Surviving are two children, Beth Underwood and Brad Barnett, and three grandchildren.

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Portia Gott Simpson on December 5, 2019. She met her husband, Wayne P. Simpson ’47, at Allegheny. They were married for 46 years until his death in 1995. She worked as a schoolteacher. She is survived by her five children, Rebecca S. Jackson, James W. Simpson, William G. Simpson, W. Scott Simpson and David B. Simpson, 10 grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren.

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Jean Eisler Keck Miller on August 3, 2018. She was a member of the Allegheny Singers and Kappa Alpha Theta.  While her husband was in graduate school, she was a secretary at the University of Pennsylvania School of Fine Arts. She resided in Pennsylvania and belonged to the Wallingford Presbyterian Church and for many years sang in the church choir. From 1972 to 1992, she assisted her husband as secretary of the American Society of Church History. She is survived by her husband, William; a son, William B. Miller, Jr.; a daughter, Marjorie Miller Granat; several grandchildren and great-grandchildren; and a sister, Polly Keck Knight.

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Mary Hicks Sekerak on June 5, 2018. She attended Allegheny, Flora Stone Mather College and the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing in Cleveland. She and her then-husband, Dr. Nicholas Sekerak, successfully advocated for the right of fathers to be in delivery rooms in Cleveland-area hospitals. She earned her master’s in nursing at Case Western Reserve University later in life. She was a nurse counselor at Bellfaire JCB, staff educator at Cleveland Psychiatric Institute, and graduate instructor at Case Western Reserve School of Nursing. She is survived by her children, Christopher, Jennifer Stanko, Elizabeth Conroy, Kathryn, Joseph, Robin and Carrie; and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

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Catherine Anderson Bentkowski on October 21, 2019. She graduated with high honors in sociology. After graduation she was employed by Erie County Social Services Department in New York State, visiting clients in the steel-manufacturing suburb of Lackawanna. She met her future husband, John, in an evening school where both studied the Russian language. They lived for 61 years in Ithaca, New York. She was a stay-at-home mom, making a home for their children, James, Steven, Peter and Elizabeth, who survive. She is also survived by her two grandsons. She was employed at Cornell University in her later years in the Poultry Science School and the Law School.

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Richard H. Hughes on January 18, 2020. He served in the U.S. Army Tank Corps from 1944 to 1946 and then graduated from Allegheny. He continued his education at Northwestern University where he graduated with a master’s degree in psychology. He spent most of his career in administrative and industrial relations with American Viscose Corp,. FMC Corp. and was vice president of Avtex Fibers which produced rayon and fiber for the aerospace industry. He wrote extensive technical works in his field. He was an active volunteer and original founder of the Main Line Unitarian Church and was a local and national non-profits board member. He is survived by his two daughters, Jeanne Allyson and Barbara Kay; a grandchild and two great grandchildren.

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Bernard T. Hulse on November 11, 2019. He graduated from Allegheny after serving in the U.S. Army during World War II. During his time in the military, he served as a radioman on a Liberty ship that fixed damaged planes in the South Pacific. He also served in the Army Band in New Orleans. He worked as a high school math teacher, owned a Texaco gas station, was a chemist for Wilson & Company, an engineer for General Dynamics, and finally spent the last 25 years of his career as a quality control engineer in the aerospace industry for Aerojet General in Sacramento, California. During his time with General Dynamics, he serviced Atlas missiles in armed silos. Music was very much a part of his life. He directed church choirs along with playing in multiple community bands. He is survived by his wife, Joan; his sons, Charles, Mark, Drew and Troy; 17 grandchildren and 25-plus great-grandchildren.

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Stephen Bayard Miller on August 18, 2019. He enlisted in the Army Air Corps in World War II, training to become a bombardier. He then graduated from Allegheny where he was a member of Phi Gamma Delta, and an original participant of the Washington Semester Program. He married his high school sweetheart, the late Joan Peters ’48, in 1948. Their life together took them from Pennsylvania to Florida, back to Pennsylvania, and, one last time to Florida, where they settled in Tampa. He was active in community affairs and a banker by profession. He is survived by his three children, Allyn Perry, Stephen, Jr. and Andrew; four grandchildren, four great-granddaughters, and his brother, Edwin.

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Myron E. Cale on June 1, 2018. He enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1944 and served in the Pacific Theater of operations during WWII. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Allegheny. He then was commissioned as a second lieutenant from the U.S. Air Force Officer Candidate School. He served as a finance officer in the Air Force until his retirement as a lieutenant colonel in 1968. From 1980 to 1990, he served as the deputy superintendent for financial affairs for the Virginia Department of Education. He is survived by his wife, Dolores Ramsey Cale; three children, John R. Walton-Cale ’75, Anne E. Cale Jones and Paul P. Cale; eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. He was predeceased by two sons, Michael Sherwood McCleary Cale ’72 and Douglas James Cale.

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Miriam Geyser Bowman on December 27, 2019. She graduated Phi Beta Kappa from her beloved alma mater. Meadville remained the home of her heart, where she made lifelong friends in her active association with the Unitarian Universalist Church as well as with Allegheny. She was a founder of “People for Peace,” took part in an international peace walk in the Ukraine in 1988, and at age 80, embarked on a six-month Semester at Sea trip around the world. She was a lifelong learner. She is survived by four children, seven grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren.

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Robert H. Habich on December 21, 2019. He served as a medic in the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II. After the war, he resumed his education at Allegheny where he met the love of his life, Helen Aldrich Habich ’49, who predeceased him. He earned his master’s in education from New York University. He taught 11th Grade (New York State Regents) American History for almost 40 years. He is survived by his daughter, Carol Habich Ford, and his granddaughter.

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Deforest A. Matteson on April 3, 2019. He enlisted in the Army in 1942, and served in the 36th Field Artillery Group in North Africa and Europe. He attended Allegheny, earning an English degree, along with an engineering degree from Carnegie-Mellon University. He is survived by his wife, Lucy Horton Matteson; three children, John Matteson, Celeste Johnston and Keith Matteson; and a granddaughter.

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Robert E. Muckley on December 1, 2019. He served in the U.S. Army Air Corps. After a short service due to war’s end, he attended Allegheny where as a sophomore he was sports editor of the college newspaper; as a junior, editor of the Kaldron, and as a senior, an officer of Phi Gamma Delta, as well as the choir director. He had a 36-year career with General Electric Lamp Division in St. Louis. He was transferred to Denver for a short time and his last 10 years with GE were in Tulsa. Volunteer work continued as he gave eight years to the Pima Council on Aging in Arizona. Some of his lifetime achievements include being chairman of his local St. Louis Boy Scout Troop, and he joined every choir of every church he attended. He is survived by his children, David Muckley, Jay Muckley, Joan Peters and Marybeth Stevenson, eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

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Keith L. Smith on October 24, 2019. He served in China during World War II as a radio operator attached to the U.S. Army Air Corps 23rd Fighter Control Group, 14th Air Force, attaining the rank of staff sergeant. He went on to Allegheny, where he obtained a bachelor’s degree and later earned a master’s degree in physics at Carnegie Tech. He was a member of General Electric’s Machinist Apprentice program before the war, and returned to GE postwar, and remained with the company until he retired, as a quality control manager, in 1985. He is survived by his four children, Keith Jr., Kim, Steve and Amy, eight grandchildren and six great grandchildren.

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John O. Woods, Jr on October 18, 2019. He served in the U.S. Army in World War II and earned the rank of tech sergeant. He studied pre-med at Allegheny. He earned his M.D. degree from the University of Pittsburgh and did his internship at Pittsburgh hospitals. He served his residency in pediatrics at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh. He moved to Everett, Washington, where he was the first pediatrician employed by the Everett Clinic and retired in 1985. He is survived by his wife, Dorothy Orris; his children, Leslie, Bruce, Carol and Kathi; four grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

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Corinne R. Brownell on June 3, 2018. She graduated with an English major from Allegheny, where she met her late husband, William A. Brownell ’50.  She went on to receive her master’s in social work from Syracuse University, summa cum laude, after which she served as a drug and alcohol counselor at Crouse Medical Center, a managing supervisor for Syracuse Brick House Behavioral Healthcare and Substance Abuse Rehab Services, and a director for Crouse Chemical Dependency Inpatient Treatment Services. She is survived by two children, Elise Brownell ’75 and Matthew Brownell ’82, and four grandchildren.

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Sally Schaefer McClure on August 9, 2018. She operated a monogram business in Rochester, New York, and also worked in a middle-management job placement in Boston. She is survived by her husband, Gene McClure ’50; a son, Jeff McClure; three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

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Nancy M. Meehan on July 7, 2018. She was a loving wife, mother and grandmother. She gave up her career with Westinghouse and focused on raising the family with the arrival of her first child in 1957. She enjoyed volunteering at Ascension Catholic Church and Meals on Wheels in Melbourne, Florida. She is survived by her five children, Mary Beth Kostyk, Molly Anne Nicol, Martha Meehan-Cohen, D. Michael Meehan and John S. Meehan, as well as 14 grandchildren.

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Norman H. Baker on August 30, 2019. He was a four-year letterman in basketball and football, and was inducted into Allegheny’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 1990. He graduated from the Ohio State University Medical School and completed his surgical residency at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. He also served in the U.S. Air Force as captain and chief of medical staff at Chanute Air Force Base in Champaign County, Illinois. He was the founder and president of Ohio Heart and Thoracic Surgery Center, Inc. He is survived by his wife, Marie Bosca Baker; his children, Douglas, Annie, Daniel and Susan; several grandchildren; his stepchildren, Chris Bosca and Anthony Bosca; several step-grandchildren; a brother, Robert Baker, and a sister, Sally Murphy.

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Paul C. Berner, Sr. on March 26, 2019. He went on to earn a Master of Science in petroleum geology from Wayne State University. His career took him to 13 cities in 10 years across the United States before settling in Houston, Texas. A retired petroleum geologist, he worked for Skelly, Lion Oil, Monsanto, McCormick, and Sun Belt. He was a resident of La Porte, Texas, for 40 years. He was an active member of St. John’s Episcopal Church in La Porte, where he sang in the choir and served on the vestry. He was active at the Houston Yacht Club and served as commodore in 1985. He was a member of the Blue Gavel and the Texas Navy. He is survived by his son, Paul C. Berner, Jr., and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

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Elaine Stewart Case on April 24, 2019. She was a member of Alpha Chi Omega, a cheerleader, wrote for the literary magazine and played intramural basketball. She earned her master’s degree at Syracuse University. She was a teacher for many years in the public schools of Ohio, New York, Michigan and at the State University of New York at Plattsburgh. She is survived by her son, Daniel Case; her daughter, Deborah Lash; several grandchildren and great-grandchildren; and her sister, Betty Lepley.

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Sally Schaefer McClure on August 9, 2018. She operated a monogram business in Rochester, New York, and also worked in a middle-management job placement in Boston. She is survived by her husband, Gene McClure ’50; a son, Jeff McClure; three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

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Laurence A. Merriman on May 12, 2019. After working as a sales representative for Sherwin Williams and a sales representative and then executive vice president of sales for Arnold Corporation, he founded Graphic Business Systems Corp. in 1971. GBS grew from a small operation run out of his home to a diverse company that employs hundreds of people. He remained active in the business and served as its chairman of the board of directors. Motivated by a concern for all of his employees and a desire to ensure their financial security, he sold GBS to all of the employees 20 years ago. He supported many philanthropic organizations in Canton, Ohio, including United Way, Stark Community Foundation, Child & Adolescent Behavioral Health, and Arts in Stark, and in Sarasota, Florida, including the Ringling Museum, Asolo Theatre, and Mote Marine Laboratory. He also strongly supported educational institutions, including the University of Notre Dame and Allegheny College. He is survived by his wife, Patricia Merriman; three sons, Mark, Mike and Jeff; and six grandchildren.

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John Peffer on April 22, 2019. He worked his entire career with PPG Industries as a polymer chemist, but also showed a lifelong passion for action and helping others that left an enduring mark on the Pittsburgh community. He is survived by his wife, Margery; his children, Linda Powell, Richard Peffer and Nancy Peffer; four grandchildren and two great-grandsons.

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Virginia A. Pratt on September 11, 2019. She earned her bachelor’s degree in history, a master’s in student personnel administration from Cornell University and a Ph.D. in American Studies from the University of Minnesota. Following employment at the YWCA, the Hackensack Hospital School of Nursing, and as associate dean of students at the State University of Buffalo, she worked as a professor at Oswego State College. Retiring in 1990 as an associate professor of history, she had earned a reputation as an outstanding teacher who gave extensive attention to student advisement and curriculum development. She taught extensively in support of the American Studies Program on campus and served as its coordinator from 1972 to 1984. For many years, she was the Oswego liaison with American University for the Washington Semester Program. She volunteered with Safe Haven, Meals on Wheels, the Human Concerns Center, Oswego Public Library, American Cancer Society, and the Oswego County Humane Society. She is survived by her brother, Hayden Pratt.

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John S. Culbertson on May 21, 2018. He graduated with a degree in economics. He was the president of his fraternity, Delta Tau Delta. He served in the U.S. Army, where he attended and graduated from Officer Candidate School. He was a veteran of the Korean War. His professional career included several years as trust officer with First National Bank of Meadville, general manager of Conneaut Lake Park, owner and president of Spenzer Container Corporation in Greenville, head of the trust department of Pennbank in Titusville, and head of the trust department of Integra Bank in Pittsburgh. He also served as a trustee for Integrity Investments based in Venice, Florida. He was a member of First Presbyterian Church and was a member and past president of its board of trustees. He was a member of the Essayists and Literary Union in Meadville, member and past president of the Meadville Rotary Club, member of the Cranberry Sunrise Rotary Club, member and past president of the Meadville Public Library, the former City Hospital Board of Directors, the Iroquois Club of Conneaut Lake, and member of the American Cancer Society. He is survived by three daughters, Annette Calderwood, Connie Culbertson and Janie Lehman, and four grandchildren.

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Maurice E. Kofford Jr. on August 28, 2018. He played basketball at William & Mary for one year before transferring to Allegheny, where he finished his basketball career and earned a degree in economics with a minor in education. He joined the U.S. Navy and served during the Korean War on a destroyer, then on the Perch, a submarine. He served as the communications officer and achieved the rank of lieutenant. He worked as a general contractor in California, building and remodeling custom homes and apartments in Orange County. He is survived by his daughter, Courtney Richards; a son, Kyle; and several granddaughters.

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Robert O. Barkley on July 12, 2019. He fought in World War II and used the GI bill to attend Allegheny. He started his own insurance firm in Elkhart, Indiana. He then moved to Florida and became a trustee of the Ringling College of Art and Design. He is survived by his wife Marilyn; two daughters, Jules and Lisa, and two grandchildren.

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Nancy Smith King on May 21, 2019.

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Sylvia Thomas Mountsier on April 17, 2019. Sylvia attended college in her hometown of Meadville where she met her college sweetheart, Stevenson Mountsier ’52. She graduated with a bachelor’s of arts degree in psychology, then moved to Chicago where she continued her education. She and Steve were married in 1954 upon his return from service in Korea. Steve and Sylvia loved to travel and they also made a home and great friend in several different places, across Texas, California, Canada, and Illinois. Sylvia was always an artist at heart. Through the years, she took up oil painting, watercolor, and eventually, through her love of jewelry and impeccable eye, became a metalsmith and jewelry designer. She was known for her exquisite earrings and wrist cuffs inspired by the organic, rugged shapes of seashells she found on the shore in Ocean City, New Jersey, each summer, which was showcased across the Midwest, including in stores like at Saks 5th Avenue and Neiman Marcus. She is survived by her husband, Steve; her children, Thomas Mountsier and Amy Mountsier; four grandchildren, and her beloved guide dog, Estelle.

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Jakob A. Planinsek on June 30, 2019. He was a cancer researcher at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in Buffalo, New York. Born in the village of Dolenje Kamence in Slovenia, he was among a group of outspoken anti-fascist students at the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia who were picked up and taken by cattle car to a concentration camp in Trieste, Italy. Released after a year, he joined his father and brothers in the resistance, opposing Communists under Marshal Tito. His father and two of his three brothers were killed in the fighting. Jakob stepped on a landmine, lost his right leg and was not expected to live. After numerous surgeries in Celje Hospital in Slovenia, he was sent to a refugee camp in Graz, Austria. While a refugee, he attended the medical school at Kaiser Franz-Joseph University in Graz, leaving before graduation in 1949 to accept a World Student Scholarship offered him by Allegheny. Leaving his late first wife, Helena, behind in the refugee camp, he sailed to America on a Liberty ship and taught himself English with flashcards in his dorm room at Allegheny. He graduated in two years with a bachelor’s degree in biology. He studied for a master’s degree in biology at New York University and worked as a cancer researcher for a time at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. He then had a 33-year career at Roswell Park, first as a cancer research scientist, then as a senior cancer research scientist in cellular immunology. He was a collaborator and co-author for more than two dozen scientific articles, primarily in the Journal of Immunology and the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Survivors include his second wife, Janet A. Stevens; two daughters, Helen M. Brady and Tina A. Daucher; a son, John J.; a sister, Marija Retelj; and seven grandchildren.

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Barbara Weybrew Roark on January 15, 2020. She met the love of her life, George W. Roark, Jr. while at Allegheny and they were married in 1949, and celebrated their 70th anniversary on February 5, 2019. She and George settled in the Washington, D.C., area as George completed his postgraduate training and began to practice psychiatry. She worked for a time as a computer specialist for CONCERN, Inc., a national nonprofit environmental education organization in Washington. She is survived by her husband, Dr. George W. Roark, Jr., her children, George R. Roark, Robin Roark, Kristi Hobby and Kathryn; five grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

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Louis L. Sanders, Jr. on September 1, 2019. He was a member of Theta Chi fraternity. He graduated from the University of Arkansas in 1951 Phi Beta Kappa, with a degree in zoology.

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James R. Zuberbuhler on June 24, 2019. He was a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. After joining Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh in 1967, he became the director of its Department of Pediatric Cardiology, where he worked to establish a world-renowned pediatric cardiology training program. In addition to caring for his patients, he worked with his fellow cardiologists to train medical residents and fellows who became experts and pioneers in the diagnosis and treatment of congenital heart anomalies. During a challenging transition period at Children’s Hospital, he was appointed acting chair of pediatrics from 1987-88, and in 1994, he was called on to serve for two years as Children’s medical director. Following that, he returned to the practice of pediatric cardiology, which he did until 2003. He is survived by his wife, Janet Y. Zuberbuhler; his four children, James S. Zuberbuhler, Ann Zuberbuhler West, Mary Belohlavek and Amy Butler, and 10 grandchildren.

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Donald D. Case on July, 16 2018. At Allegheny, he met his future wife, Elaine Stewart Case ’50. After college he began his career with General Motors, serving in a variety of capacities with Chevrolet Motor Division. His work took him to several locations in the United States. He retired from the Chevrolet Central Office in Detroit in 1989 as administrator of marketing. Besides his wife, he is survived by a son, Daniel; a daughter, Deborah Lash; several grandchildren and great-grandchildren; and his brothers, Alan Case and Ralph Case.

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Carl W. Herrmann III on July 12, 2018.  He played quarterback on the Allegheny football team and he was a pitcher on the baseball team. Out of college, he was drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates, but instead chose to become the third-generation proprietor of Carl W. Herrmann Furs in Pittsburgh. He served in the U.S. Navy during the Korean War. He was a member the executive board and chairman emeritus of the Fur Information Council of America. Survivors include two daughters, Melissa Herrmann Eason and Victoria Herrmann Jenkinson; a son, Carl William Herrmann IV; several grandchildren, and his close companion, Bebe Adams.

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Catherine D. Loysen on August 26, 2018. She was a member of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. She led an active life, filled with world travel, tennis, lifelong learning, family and friends. She was a patron and avid supporter of the local arts community in Delaware that included the Rehoboth Beach Film Society and Clear Space Theatre Company. She is survived by her five children, Susan, Karen, Kristin, Christopher, and Erik, and five granddaughters.

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Noreen Werley Stein on August 23, 2018. She was the deputy clerk of courts of Crawford County and chief clerk for the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service, and she also worked at Talon Inc. and for the local Firestone store. She is survived by her twin children, Daniel E. Smith and Kathleen E. Hootman.

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Maurice A. Tucker, Jr. on March 26, 2018. He was a member of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity. After graduating from Allegheny, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy and was accepted into Officer Candidate School. Upon completion, he was commissioned as an ensign. He served aboard a destroyer and a destroyer escort based in Norfolk and Philadelphia. On his release from active duty, he studied at the Sorbonne in Paris and the University of Lausanne in Switzerland. He relocated to California after his return. After a brief period with Dun & Bradstreet as a credit reporter, he began devoting his efforts to real estate, forming several real estate investment trusts to develop income properties in the San Diego area. He is survived by his son, Mark; two grandchildren; and his brother, Richard Tucker ’62.

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Harold E. Cooley on October 9, 2019. While at Allegheny, he met his future wife, the late Marie Suzanne McCreary Cooley ’52 singing in the a capella choir at Allegheny; they enjoyed each other’s friendship during their four years in Meadville. After graduation, they were married on October 24,1953, a marriage that would last over 62 years. He served in the U.S. Air Force as a helicopter pilot, stationed in Munich and Frankfurt, Germany, where he flew rescue missions. He then worked at Crucible Steel in Pittsburgh. After 30 years, he retired from his job at Crucible and started his own business in the metal industry. He is survived by his two children, David Cooley and Suzanne Cooley; four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

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Peggy Yeaton Kruest on May 24, 2019. She dedicated her life to teaching elementary school children, with a specialty in language arts. She began her career at Washington Elementary School in Youngstown, Ohio, then on to the Lisbon and Fremont school systems, and concluded her career with 31 years at the Reilly Elementary and Southeast Schools in Salem, Ohio. She received her degree in education and her master’s from Youngstown State University. She is survived by a dear friend, Robert Mentzer; a brother, William T. Yeaton, and two sisters, Elizabeth Myers and Mary Staffrey.

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Gloria Keyes Morelli on December 6, 2019. She was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. She worked for Ohio Bell as an artist. She continued her love of art as a portrait painter, watercolorist, and supporter of the fine arts. She was a former member of the Cincinnati Woman’s Club and a past president of both the Woman’s Art Club of Cincinnati and Dale Park PTA, as well as a former volunteer at the Cincinnati Art Museum and the Contemporary Arts Center. She is survived by her husband, Arnold Morelli; two children, Michael Morelli and Lisa Mulvany, and two grandchildren.

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Loretta Massa Regan on July 21, 2019. Proud daughter of Italian immigrants, she was the first in her family to attend college. She went on to attend graduate school, studying economics at Catholic University. She became a working mother once she obtained her teacher’s certification from Glassboro State College, now Rowan University. She began a lifelong career in education, over 25 plus years as a first-grade teacher at Sacred Heart Grammar School in Vineland, New Jersey. She had a second successful career as a substitute teacher in the Vineland Public School system. She is survived by her children, Mary Frances Regan, Mary Ellen Regan-Fuller, Mary Clare Shuster and Paul J. Regan; her sister, Lois Massa Sellevold, and five grandchildren.

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Donald R. Weaver on May 6, 2019. He also attended Temple University School of Medicine. He completed his residency in clinical pathology at the Cleveland Clinic. In 1966, he was hired by the laboratory at the Robert Packer Hospital, where he served as chief of pathology until his retirement in 1991. He is survived by his children, Cynthia Weaver, Valerie Carocci, Amy Dinkelacker, Mark Weaver and Matthew Weaver; numerous grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

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Algot Eckstrom on July 2, 2018. He came to the United States from Sweden when he was 5 years old. He served in the U.S. Army, where he served with B Troop, 10th Constabulary Squadron in post-war West Germany. After serving, he attended Allegheny, earning a degree in psychology. While attending college, he participated in many intramural sports, played varsity soccer for three years and also acted in several dramas. He then worked as a psychiatric technician at Warren State Mental Hospital. He moved on to Schering Pharmaceuticals and Carpenter Steel, attaining the title of supervisor of specifications. Later, he became part of the Nuclear Materials Group handling the technical aspects of the product, which required him to have government secret clearance. He retired from CarTech in 1985. In 1988, he founded Easy Does It in Reading, Pennsylvania, as a facility devoted to drug and alcohol  rehabilitation. He is survived by his wife, Linda Sue Eckstrom; a son, Terry Eckstrom; a granddaughter and a great-granddaughter; a stepson, Clark Beck; and three step-grandchildren.

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Mary E. Clutter on December 8, 2019. She received her master’s degree and Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh. She also holds honorary doctorates from Allegheny College and Mt. Holyoke College and has received the Medal of Distinction from the University of Pittsburgh. She was the former assistant director of the National Science Foundation, where she was responsible for the Biological Sciences Directorate that supports all major areas of fundamental research in biology. She also served as the U.S. Chair of the U.S.-European Commission Task Force on Biotechnology, a member of the Board of Trustees of the international Human Frontiers Science Program, a member of the Board of Regents of the National Library of Medicine, a member of the National Agricultural Research, Extension, Education and Economics Advisory Board, chair of the Biotechnology Subcommittee of the Committee on Science of the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC), co-chair of the Subcommittee on Ecological Systems of the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources/NSTC and co-chair of the NSTC Committee on Science’s Interagency Working Group on Plant Genomes. She was a member of numerous professional societies and served on the board of directors of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

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George Van Hartogh on November 13, 2019. After serving in the U.S. Marine Corps, he graduated from the Dickinson School of Law. He practiced law in Pompton Lakes, New Jersey, for 35 years, then retired to St. Augustine, Florida, in 1998. Throughout his life and into retirement, he volunteered with many organizations, including adult legal education, “Law for the Layman,” the local food pantry and as a tax consultant with AARP. He is survived by his wife, Mary Ann Van Hartogh; his children, Gary Van Hartogh, Jean Ann Fleischfresser ’79, Nancy Tomlinson and David Van Hartogh, and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

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Rolland E. Muma on September 7, 2019. He was a member of the U.S. Army during the Korean War. He is survived by four daughters Patricia Crist, Carolyn Bennett, Eva Ketcham and Kathryn Muma; four grandchildren; six great-grandchildren, and dear friend, Neva Smith. He owned a small farm in Saegertown and retired from PPG Industries

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J. Evelyn Koston Parent on November 14, 2019. At Allegheny, due to her vibrant personality, she was given the nickname “Sparkie,” and soon met her husband F. N. “Pete” Parent, Jr. ’53, who survives her. After graduation, they married in August 1954 and moved to Philadelphia while Pete attended medical school. Ultimately settling in Charleroi, they raised five children who survive, F. Noel Parent, III, Mark G. Parent, Sr., Leslie J. Parent, Thomas E. Parent and Aimee P. Becker, and 16 grandchildren. She donated generously to the Humane Society of Westmoreland County, the Arbor Society, the Audubon Society, and UNICEF. If a single word could describe her fundamental personality trait, it would be “gratitude.”

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Robert G. Shannon on October 9, 2019. He served in the U.S. Army before graduating from Allegheny. He was a veteran of the Korean War serving in the 712th Transportation Railway Operating Battalion. He was the owner and operator of the R.G. Shannon Co. in Meadville, retiring in 1995. He was a member of Phi Kappa Psi. He is survived by his wife, Marilyn.

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Frank E. Thomas on August 20, 2019. He is survived by his wife, Diane; daughter, Charlotte; two grandsons; his brother, John Thomas, and his sister, Melinda Miller.

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Joann Holliday Wildman on July 16, 2019. She was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. She received her master’s degree in merchandising from the University of Pittsburgh. She worked for the Dayton-Hudson Corporation, retiring in 1999 as a buyer in cosmetics and fragrances for the Target Corporation. She is survived by her children, Don Wildman, Jr., Susan Dammen and Mark Wildman; several grandchildren; a great-granddaughter; a brother, Jack Holliday, and a sister, Debbie Holliday.

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Stanley A. Workman on December 15, 2019. He was a U. S. Navy World War II veteran. He enjoyed a long career in retailing, supervising numerous stores and later owning Peddler’s Outlet in North Olmsted, Ohio. Survivors include his wife, Jeanne Britton Workman; a son, James Arthur Workman; three grandsons, and a sister, Barbara Workman Farmer.

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Edwin D. Dombrowski  on August 9, 2018. He was an elementary school principal for more than 20 years and before that, a teacher of English and social studies. Following retirement from the Erie School District, he also taught at St. Stanislaus Grade School. He earned degrees from Gannon University and Allegheny and did graduate work at Edinboro, Case Western Reserve and Syracuse universities. He served on the Board of Trustees of Edinboro University. He was a member of the Board of Directors of Erie Federal Credit Union (formerly Erie School Employees Federal Credit Union) and served as its chairman for a time. He was a member of the Polish Falcons, Polish Foresters, Holy Trinity Club, and formerly of East Erie Turners and the Erie Maennerchor Clubs. He was also proud of his service as a “55 Alive” driving instructor.

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George F. Forner on August 28, 2018. He was also a graduate of Princeton Seminary and was ordained a Presbyterian minister.  He served the Presbyterian Mission in Iran from 1958 to 1964. In 1966, he joined the diplomatic corps and served with the U.S. Information Agency in Brazil, Yugoslavia, the Soviet Union, Hungary, Australia and Pakistan and was a recipient of the Department of State’s Superior Honor Award. He was a member of the National Capital Presbytery. He is survived by his wife, Patricia; his daughter, Audrey McGuinness; and several grandchildren.

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Thomas D. Gladden on December 15, 2019. While at Allegheny, he was elected president of the Allegheny student body and of Phi Delta Theta. He graduated from the Dickinson School of Law. He served in the U.S. Army for two years before returning to Washington, Pennsylvania, where he joined the law firm of Bloom, Bloom, and Yard. He was appointed as a judge on the Washington County Common Pleas Court in 1971, at which time he became the youngest Common Pleas judge in Washington County history at the age of 38. He was later elected as a judge. He eventually became president judge of Washington County. At the time of his retirement in 2002, he was one of the longest-serving judges in Pennsylvania history. Thereafter, he served as a senior judge in both the Washington and Allegheny County Courts of Common Pleas for an additional seven years. He served as a deacon and elder at the Church of the Covenant, where he was also the chairman of the Pulpit Nominating Committee on many occasions. He served as a long-term board member and chairman of the board for the Washington Hospital. He served on the board of trustees for Waynesburg College. He was a long-term member and past president of the Family Service of Washington County. He was a member and past president of the Washington Rotary Club. He was a past member and president of the McDonald Lions Club. He was a past director of the Washington County Humane Society and of the Washington County Chapter of the American Red Cross. He served as the district chairman of the Boy Scouts of America, Iroquois District. He was a member of the Pennsylvania Society, the St. Andrew’s Society of Pittsburgh, the Sons of the American Revolution and the Washington County Council on Alcoholism. He was particularly fond of his alma mater, Allegheny College, and he was a proud Gator who supported and attended many alumni events. He was a recipient of the Allegheny Gold Citation Award for his contributions to his alma mater. He was especially proud to have his son, a grandson and his daughter in law, Karen Ryan Gladden ’86 as fellow Allegheny alumni. He is survived by his wife, Rachel Hughey; his children, Thomas ’86 and Laura, and six grandchildren, including William Gladden ’18.

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Carolyn Estep Graffam on July 16, 2019. She was Phi Beta Kappa at Allegheny and went on to teach second grade. She was the wife of the late Stephen W. Graffam, who was an Allegheny trustee. She is survived by her children, Stephen C. Graffam, Susan Graffam Wright and David W. Graffam; several grandchildren and a great-grandchild. Carolyn was the May Queen at Baldwin High School and Allegheny College, In 1983, Stephen Graffam established the Carolyn Estep Graffam Scholarship as a birthday gift to Carolyn. This fund is used to provide scholarship assistance to an eligible Allegheny senior who intends a career in elementary or secondary education. If you wish to honor Carolyn please consider making a gift to the Carolyn Estep Graffam Scholarship fund at Allegheny.

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Chester G. Hearn, III on June 5, 2019. After graduating, he served in the U.S. Army for two years. He began his career in industry in a management-training program with General Electric, after which he served as works manager for Snap-Tite and later as vice president of manufacturing with multi-plant responsibility for a diversified machinery manufacturer – part of Combustion Engineering and later ABB – in central Pennsylvania. While living in central Pennsylvania, he belonged to the Rotary Club, managed United Way fundraising campaigns, and for many years served as president of the Milton Area YMCA board of directors and president of the township Planning Commission. He retired in 1990 to write books, the first of which appeared on the market the year he retired. He has written more than 30 published books, several of which have been alternate selections of the History Book Club, and he has appeared on the History Channel and A&E in Civil War-related documentaries. He continued writing while consulting for Philip Crosby Associates, an international consulting firm. He also served for two years as vice president of CJ Quality Associates consultants before retiring and returning to Erie in 1998. He served as an elder for the Sarah Hearn Memorial Presbyterian Church. He is survived by his wife, Shirley Ann Hearn; a son, Chester G. Hearn IV, and two granddaughters.

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Beryl Iverson Kuntz on April 9, 2019. She was employed at the Burroughs Corporation in Malvern, Pennsylvania. She then raised her family and was enchanted with fabrics and quilting. She was a member of the Calico Cutters and the Hershey’s Mill Quilters. She put her heart into making children quilts for the Domestic Violence Center. She is survived by her three children, Anne K. Butler, Paul R. Kuntz and Clyde R. Kuntz, III, and two grandsons.

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James W. Lyons on February 9, 2019. He pursued his graduate studies at Indiana University, where he earned his master’s and doctorate degrees in the School of Education. While there, he served as assistant director of the Indiana Memorial Union. He was appointed dean of students at Haverford College in Pennsylvania and served in that post for 10 years. He then was appointed university dean of student affairs at Stanford University and served in that position for 18 years, the longest to serve in that position to date. Halfway through his tenure as dean he was appointed lecturer in Stanford’s Graduate School of Education. He continued his research, writing and teaching for seven years after becoming dean emeritus in 1990. He is survived by his son, Mark Lyons; two daughters, Amie Lyons Clarke and Alyssa Clarke; two grandchildren; and his partner, Mary Ann Green Olson.

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John C. Pickens on January 9, 2020. He met his wife, the late Ann Sherman ’54, at Allegheny. He then served in the U.S. Air Force as an intelligence officer in the Air Defense Command. He then entered the Fels Institute of Local and State Government of the Wharton Graduate School at the University of Pennsylvania, where he received a master’s of governmental administration. He served the Town of Windsor as the executive director of the Windsor Redevelopment Agency. He also worked at the State of Connecticut Development Commission as an urban renewal planner and helped manage the state’s Redevelopment Assistance Programs which included Hartford’s Constitution Plaza and New Haven’s Long Wharf. He eventually started his own planning and management consulting firm to serve Connecticut small towns and private and non-profit agencies. In 1999, he became executive director of Windsor Community Television Inc., a position he held until 2004. He was a member, then chairperson of the Windsor Interfaith Forum which drafted and secured Town Council approval of what is now the Windsor Human Relations Commission. He served as Chairperson of the Windsor Government Study Commission. He is survived by three children, Sherman S. Pickens, Pamela Jo Pickens Monroe ’81 and Stuart C.Pickens; 10 grandchildren; 12 great-grandchildren, and two brothers, Charles Pickens and David Pickens.

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Catherine Geary Riesenman on Friday, June 7, 2019. She was her class valedictorian. The college president recommended her for a year’s fellowship at Radcliffe College, where she completed requirements for a management training program. She then applied for a Rotary International Scholarship and studied for a year at a German university. She subsequently enrolled in master’s and Ph.D. programs at Indiana University in Bloomington and received a doctoral degree in German. She taught in Bloomington and teaching German at the university. She pursued a Master of Library Science degree, and was given the responsibility at the early start of her career for leading others into the then new world of computer-based scholarly information. Surviving are her siblings, Joseph Riesenman, Robert Riesenman, Marian O’Leary and Ruth Riesenman.

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Ronald R. Rumbaugh on October 5, 2019. He was a member of Phi Delta Theta. He served in the U.S. Air Force as an interceptor pilot and instructor. He served as CEO of three associations in Washington, D.C.: American Chamber of Commerce Executives, Urban Land Institute and National Beverage Wholesalers Association. Upon retirement, he started his career in real estate in Centre County, Pennsylvania. He served as the president of the Centre County Realtors Association. He was a 32nd degree Mason, having gone up the Scottish and York rites. He was also a member of the Shriners. He is survived by his wife, Shirley Rumbaugh; three children, Mark Rumbaugh, Marcey Casey and Melissa Cresswell, six grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

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Robert K. Smith on July 31, 2019. He received his master’s equivalency degree and teaching certificate from Edinboro University. He served in the U.S. Air Force during the Korean War. He taught mathematics and social studies at Penncrest School District for over 30 years. He was a member of Saegertown United Methodist Church and served as its choir director for 60 years. He loved singing, including with the barber shoppers and participated in many Charity Follies programs. Survivors include a son, Matthew Smith; a daughter, Jennifer Penoyer; four step-children, Debbie Muckinhaupt, Scott Muckinhaupt, R. Chris Muckinhaupt and Robin Davis; two grandsons; several step-grandchildren and step-great-grandchildren; two sisters, Kay Fugagli and Judith Melville, and a brother, Peter Smith.

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G. Alan Van Why was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey and spent his youth growing up in Jamestown, New York. From there he went to Allegheny where he met the love of his life, Nancy J. Budden Van Why ’57, who predeceased him. Together they built a wonderful life, filled with four children, six grandchildren, six great-grandchildren and friends and family from their journey that took them to Maine, Texas, New York, Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania. Their love and passion for each other and antiques turned into their long-standing business — Van Why’s Antiques — an interest that nourished him for the rest of his life. Along the way, he held many roles, including husband, dad, grandpa, great-grandpa, friend, ROTC cadet, Air Force pilot, Camp Dudley counselor, several years as a soccer coach for Pittsburgh-area teams and work as a leader in several different consumer goods companies.

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Thomas L. Duff on May 31, 2018. He received a degree in psychology from Allegheny and a master’s in education through New York University. Following college, he served as lay pastor at a Pennsylvania church and began work as a high school teacher. He served as a medic in the U.S. Army. He enjoyed a long career with the Ipswich Public Schools serving as school adjustment counselor. He was also a passionate advocate for mental health and spent 17 years on the  Mental Health Advisory Committee. He was a passionate singer and added a strong bass voice to any song. He sang in church choirs at a young age and, later, with the Allegheny Singers, The Helmsmen, The New A Capella Singers, The Manchester Singers, The Martha’s Vineyard Spirituals Choir, and any gathering that welcomed a voice. He is survived by his wife, Jackie; his three children, Thomas Duff, Elizabeth Duff and John Duff; and five grandchildren.

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Joseph M. Maietta on June 27, 2018. He went on to earn his master’s degree in education from the State University of New York at Fredonia.  He served in the U.S. Navy and later was a teacher for the Southwestern School District in Jamestown, New York. He was later appointed as a tax assessor in Chautauqua and Onondaga counties. He was a talented organ player. He is survived by his wife, Loraine; a brother, Anthony Maietta; a daughter, Jennifer Maietta; a son, Christopher Maietta; and a grandson.

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Brenda Bowser Stillings on May 27, 2018. She attended Allegheny before graduating from Robert Morris School of Business. She worked at McDowell National Bank in Sharon, Pennsylvania. She volunteered with the American Red Cross, Women’s Club, Lakewood Elementary PTA, Great Books Program, Cub Scouts and the Girl Scouts. She also worked in the Trust Department at Marine Bank (now PNC) on State Street in Erie, then becoming an executive secretary for senior management. She is survived by her daughter, Lisa L. Stillings ’83, and son, Keith M. Stillings.

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James A. Bailey on October 5, 2019. He attended Allegheny from 1951-53, entered the U.S. Army and then graduated from Kent State University, majoring in journalism and political science. He was a public relations executive in Ohio, Michigan and Texas for Fortune 500 companies, including Figgie International and Coastal Corp. During his career he won numerous awards for annual reports and publications including the Freedom Founders Award. He is survived by three children, Steven Bailey, Kathleen Bailey and Dan Bailey, and five grandchildren.

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Dwight C. Hageman on December 4, 2019. He earned a master’s degree from Southwest Texas State Teachers College and a doctor of education from the University of North Texas. He was a pilot in the U.S. Air Force. He trained at Goodfellow Air Force Base in San Angelo, Texas, where he fell in love with his first flight in an aircraft. He also served as a professor of air science at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Upon military retirement, he wrote air crew manuals for American Airlines, served as director of curriculum for Hallmark Institute of Aeronautics, and was employed by several other companies. He is survived by his wife, Tommie Jeane Whitley Hageman; a son, Scott Conrad Hageman; two granddaughters and two great-grandchildren.

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Charles R. MacDonald on July 16, 2019. He received his bachelor’s degree in social studies and was a member of the Alpha Chapter of Delta Tau Delta and was part of the ROTC program. He served in the U.S. Air Force and attended pilot training and further trained as a weapons controller. He was discharged with the rank of captain. He was employed by Pittsburgh Group Companies, Columbia Gas System. He was also employed by ESSI, Inc., Pittsburgh, as the president of Occupational Safety and Health Division. He also served as a safety director for U.S. Steel Corporation Subsidiary Railroads. He then worked for the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA). He was a member of the Association of American Railroads Safety Section, served as Chairman of AAR Safety Section and for several years served on the AAR Committee which met with the Federal Railroad Administration enforcement branch. He was also a professional member of the American Society of Safety Engineers, where he served as president for the Western Pennsylvania Chapter and later as the president of the Philadelphia Chapter. Survivors include his wife, the former Melissa A. Reiser Gregory; a daughter, Ellen Shaffer; a son, Paul MacDonald; a stepdaughter, Alissa Gentile; a stepson, Chad Gregory; four grandchildren; six step-grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

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J. Gay Anderson McIndoe on December 8, 2019. She was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta. She married Eugene “Bud” McIndoe ’53 in 1953 and they began their life together in Cleveland, Ohio. and after a few years moved to Pittsburgh. She was an avid antique collector and creative homemaker who took pride in decorating their various homes as they moved throughout the years from Ohio to Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Illinois and finally, New Jersey. She was a Sunday school teacher at Ridgewood United Methodist Church and her dedication to PEO International and its commitment to advancing educational opportunities for women worldwide. She is survived by her children, Gene Benjamin McIndoe, Mamie Lou McIndoe, Carrie Janet McIndoe and Monte McIndoe, six grandchildren and a great-granddaughter.

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Robert N. Moyers on March 25, 2019. He served in the Korean War as a second lieutenant. His combat experiences in Korea led him to pursue a career in medicine. He met his wife, Bobbie Ford ’57, while attending Allegheny. He received his medical degree from the University of Pittsburgh in 1962. He was a physician in family practice in the Meadville area for 35 years. He cared for generations of families. He served as the first medical director of the Meadville Medical Center from 1995 to 1999. He served as president of the Crawford County Medical Society. He was chairman of the board and, in 1991, president of the Pennsylvania Medical Society. At the national level, he represented Pennsylvania physicians as a delegate to the American Medical Association for more than 20 years. He served as chairman of the Council on Medical Education. After retiring, he continued to care for his community as a volunteer physician at the Meadville Area Free Clinic until 2015. He also served as a member of the Conneaut Lake School Board, was active in the Conneaut Lake Historical Society, was a leading member of the Conneaut Lake Community Development Committee, and, along with his wife, was one of the founders of Ice House Park. He is survived by his wife, Bobbie, and five children, Christine Morian, Katherine Baum, Holly Dhaliwal McMaster ’87, Rob Moyers and Ted Moyers; 13 grandchildren, including Anna Michelle Roehrl-Dhaliwal ’09; five great-grandchildren; his sister, Nancy Helmreich and her husband Jonathan Helmreich; and his brother, Lou Moyers.

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Charlyne Faller Segmiller on November 19, 2019. She was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma, participated in synchronized swimming and cheerleading and met and married her husband, Dr. William C. Segmiller ’54 while at Allegheny. Following a short teaching career, she was kept busy raising four active daughters in Upper Arlington, Ohio, and handling secretarial responsibilities for her husband’s practice. She was preceded in death by her husband and two daughters, Lori Ballard and Julie. She is survived by daughters, Susan Sickel and Cindy Segmiller; three grandchildren, and a brother, David Faller.

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George H. Zilliac on March 9, 2019. He met his wife, the late Cynthia Burkhart ’55, at Allegheny. After graduating from Allegheny, they moved to Illinois, where he completed a Master of Divinity at the University of Chicago. He began his career as a minister at the First United Church of Christ in DePew, Illinois. Although he was intensely religious throughout his life, he felt the ministry was not his true calling and left after five years of service to the church. After moving back to the Chicago area, he began working for the Board of Education and specifically on Project Wingspread, an innovative initiative to promote racial integration of Chicago schools. He eventually became a Chicago school teacher at Stockton and McPherson Middle Schools until his retirement in 1993. Throughout his teaching tenure, he was a delegate for the Chicago Teachers Union and held a strong leadership role. He also had a passionate, lifetime interest in politics and wrote countless opinion and protest letters, many of which ended up published in newspapers and magazines. He is survived by a brother, three children and eight grandchildren.

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Carolyn Whyman Byrne on June 3, 2018. She received her Bachelor of Science degree, magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa, from Allegheny, and a Master of Science degree in chemistry from Yale University. She taught high school chemistry for many years, primarily for the Moon Area School District. Prior to moving to Pennsylvania, she was employed by the School of Public Health at Harvard University. Surviving are her two daughters, Amelia Jack Bond and Laura Jack Butler; six grandchildren; and her brother, Walden H. Whyman.

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John H. Lewis on August 2, 2018. He taught geology at Colorado College from 1958 to 1981. He earned his pilot’s license at a young age and had a lifelong fascination with flying. He was drafted into the Army in 1954 and was stationed in Germany, where he served as a medic and a member of the U.S. Army ski team. Upon his discharge, he earned a degree in geology. He moved to Boulder, Colorado, to earn a Ph.D. in geology at the University of Colorado. He was selected by the National Science Foundation to help map a section of the Fosdick Mountains in Antarctica, and a nearby series of outcrops (Lewis Rocks) was named for him, although he never saw them. When he left academia, he focused on a career in woodworking, designing and building a passive solar-heated shop in his backyard, where he spent many hours designing and crafting pieces. He is survived by his brother, Harry Lewis; a sister, Anne Creal; a daughter, Patty Lott; sons Mark, David, and Tim Lewis; and seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

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Mary Adelman Prather on May 8, 2018. She became a teacher in Meadville-area schools and also worked at the Meadville Tribune and Linesville Herald as a writer. Most recently, she was a substitute teacher at Cochranton Schools, retiring in 2016. She is survived by her children, Daniel, Jonathan, Katrina, Timothy and Rebecca; her sister, Annette Antoun; her brother, Adrien; and eight grandchildren.

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John R. Dobson on November 8, 2019. He served in the U.S. Army and joined Paxton and Vierling Steel in 1960, retiring as vice president in 2002. He is survived by four children, J.R. III, Matt, Mark and Susan; his brother, Ivan, and eight grandchildren.

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Barbara Christman Kibler on June 11, 2019. She earned her master’s in library science from Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania. She began playing the cello at 39 years old and played with the Hershey Symphony and the Central Pennsylvania Symphony. She is survived by three children, Laura Brown, Dan Kibler and Tom Kibler; six grandchildren; five great-grandchildren, and a sister, Dian Flach.

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Anthony W. Marcantonio on October 16, 2019. He earned his bachelor’s degree in business. He served in the U.S. Navy and retired as a commander after a distinguished 26-year career. After retirement, he worked at Seville Research, United Airlines Training Corporation, Flight Safety International, and TSM Corporation, all of which dealt with variations of flight training, research, safety and maintenance. He is survived by his sons, Steven Marcantonio, David Marcantonio and Michael H. Marcantonio; six grandchildren and one great-granddaughter

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Patricia A. Franz on July 1, 2018. She was a member of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority and taught elementary school in Oil City, Titusville and Baldwin, Pennsylvania. For many years, she bred and groomed dogs, particularly West Highland White Terriers. She is survived by her daughter, Krista Aline Franz Adzima; her son, Dr. Vincent Steven Franz; and several grandchildren.

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Joseph J. Smartz  on June 9, 2018. He played football and baseball at Allegheny. He retired as a lieutenant colonel from the U.S. Marine Corps after serving 23 years. He then worked for 18 years as the director of Veteran Affairs of Mercer County. He is survived by his wife, Nancy Smartz; daughters Rhoda Carmody ’87 and Jamie Butler ’89; a son, Jay Smartz ’92; six grandchildren; and a sister, Martha Zenuch.

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Bennard C. Benson on November 13, 2019. He attended Carnegie Mellon University and graduated from Allegheny where he was a member of Phi Delta Theta and Air Force ROTC. After his commission as a second lieutenant, he married his college sweetheart, Mary Braglio ’58 and they spent the first years of their marriage at Wheelus Air Force Base in Tripoli, Libya. Returning to Pittsburgh, he joined Allegheny Engineering Co. He retired after 35 years as president/owner. Survivors include his wife; a daughter, Joan McConnell; a son, Michael Benson, and five grandsons.

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Peter A. Klomp, Jr. on August 9, 2019. He began his career teaching high school history and coaching football, wrestling, and golf, eventually becoming a director of athletics. During this time, he completed his master’s degree in history at the University of Akron. From there, he went on to Penn State University in the field of continuing education. He encouraged adult learning and enjoyed teaching at that level as well. He became an educational consultant, delivering automotive technical training in Philadelphia and the United Kingdom. He returned to Widener University in adult education and development. His career moved him from the Vanguard and Crossroads Schools in Paoli, Pennsylvania, to Chestnut Hill Academy in Chestnut Hill to Valley Forge Military Academy in Wayne, Pennsylvania, to the Marvelwood School in Kent, Connecticut, and finally, to Fryeburg Academy in Fryeburg, Maine. He served in many churches over his years as a deacon, elder and trustee. He is survived by his wife, Susan Farrell Klomp; his daughters, Kristen Cain and Sarah Fedirka ’92; his stepson, Rick Condos; his stepdaughter, Kate Armenio; eight grandchildren, and his former wife, Karen Klomp.

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Robert N. Miller on March 22, 2019. He served in the U.S. Army during the Korean War. He worked as a sales executive for over 30 years at Armstrong Cork Company as well as J.M. Callahan. He was past Exalted Ruler of the Wakefield Elks Lodge, a Pop Warner football coach in Reading, Massachusetts, and an avid golfer. He is survived by his wife, Sue Miller; five children, Sharon Bolinger ’82, Jeanne Nolan, Michael Miller, Betsy Humphrey and Joseph Miller; his sister, Elaine Mattson; and 10 grandchildren.

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Herbert W. Ellis on May 23, 2018. He served in the U.S. Air Force, was a longtime supervisor at Avtex Fibers and worked as a security guard at the NSA at Fort Meade in Maryland and Bolling Air Force Base in Washington, D.C. Survivors include his daughter, Tammy Price; a son, Timothy Ellis; and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

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Dallas E. Matthews on July 26, 2018. He was recognized for his contributions to his local community as executive director of the Greater West Chester Chamber of Commerce, president and member of the board of directors of the West Chester Area Senior Center, president of the West Chester Daybreak Lions Club, president of Radley Run Country Club, chair of the West Chester Bicentennial Parade, and co-chair of the May Festival fundraiser for Chester County Hospital.

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Ralph L. Heinauer, Jr. on November 29, 2019. He graduated from the University of Pittsburgh Dental School in 1962. He practiced dentistry in Glenshaw, Pennsylvania, for 40 years. He was a veteran of the Korean War and served in the U.S. Navy as a naval corpsman. He is survived by his wife, Mary Lascheid; his children, Keith Heinauer, Maurie Burger, Laurie Hoyt and Kurt Heinauer, nine grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

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Robert A. Keenan on November 26, 2019. He served in the U.S. Air Force, and also attended Ohio State University.

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Charles S. Myers, Jr. on February 17, 2019. He enlisted in the U.S. Navy and served the majority of his time stateside in the Great Lakes region as a dental technician. He graduated from the University of Pittsburgh School of Dentistry. His first dentist job brought him to Warren County. He continued for the next 52 years practicing dentistry in Pennsylvania. He was a clown for the Shriners. He enjoyed his role as “Docco” the clown, visiting children at the Shriners hospital and riding in the parades. He was a member of the Stillwater Lodge 547, F&AM Masonic Lodge. He also belonged to the Warren Art League and the Corry Artist Guild. He is survived by his six children, Carol Rickerson, Cathy, Chris Myers, Cassandra Traut, Charmaine and Charles Myers III; a brother, Gary; his grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

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Gerald B. Stirling on October 29, 2018. At Allegheny, he lettered in track and earned his degree with a major in political science and a minor in business. He was an active member of the Alpha chapter of Delta Tau Delta and quarterbacked the fraternity’s football team his junior and senior year. He received a fellowship to the Fels Institute of Government Studies, a division of the Wharton Graduate School at the University of Pennsylvania. After a brief time with the U.S. Army, he joined the Pittsburgh firm McKelvy and Company, a predecessor firm of Parker/Hunter Inc., where he remained until his retirement in January 2000. He was appointed to Parker/Hunter’s board of directors in 1980. He formed the original Stirling Group and it continues now at Janney Montgomery Scott, managed by his son Douglas. He was a board member for both profit and non-profit organizations, including First Pennsylvania Savings and Loan, Northland Public Library and St. Barnabas Retirement Village, Gibsonia. He was president of the North Suburban Lions Club and served on the board of commissioners for the Town of McCandless. He was also a member of The Duquesne Club, Pittsburgh. He is survived by his wife, Barbara Poole Stirling; three children, Jeffrey B. Stirling, Laura Stoof and Douglas W. Stirling; three stepchildren, Robert W. Ashbaugh, James M. Ashbaugh and Allison Balis; seven grandchildren and five step-grandchildren.

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Anne Risher Berlin on September 21, 2018. She earned her degree in history. She had dedicated most of her life to her family but was also active in previous years in the League of Women Voters. She is survived by her husband, Cheston M. Berlin, M.D.; a daughter, Jean Hill Berlin; three sons, Douglas, Alex and Gordon Berlin ’95; and two granddaughters.

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Richard M. Buerger on August 4, 2018. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in geology and obtained a master of management from Northwestern University J. L. Kellogg Graduate School in 1981. He was a member of Phi Gamma Delta.  After his tour with the U.S. Air Force, he spent 17 years with Alcoa in sales and marketing. He and his wife were owners of Security MicroImaging in Milwaukee until their retirement. Survivors include his wife, Suzanne Dean Buerger; his children, Laura Buerger Rezell, William Buerger and Timothy Buerger; five grandchildren; and his brother, Dr. George F. Buerger, Jr.

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R. Graham Hoffman on August 20, 2018. He was a member of Phi Gamma Delta. After earning his dental degree from the University of Pittsburgh School of Dentistry, he served as a captain in the U.S. Air Force and then began his private practice of 30 years in Honeoye Falls, New York. He continued as a dentist in Canandaigua and Rochester until his retirement. He served in numerous leadership roles in community and recreational organizations. He is survived by his wife, Mary Evelyn Rice; his son, Glenn; daughter, Carol; and two granddaughters.

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Harry C. Larimer on June 1, 2018. He was a member of Phi Kappa Psi, received a degree in economics from Allegheny, and worked as a sales manager for Zellerbach Paper Co. He is survived by David Larimer, Robert Larimer, Ann Noe, Jennifer Larimer, Alyson Larimer, Shalom Larimer, Moshe Larimer, Yitzy Larimer, Eve Larimer and Erica Noe.

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Wendell E. Minnigh Jr. on May 9, 2018. He graduated from Boston University School of Theology, and earned a Doctor of Ministry from the Theological School at Drew University. He served as pastor in the Ballard Vale United Church in Massachusetts, McKeesport and Harborcreek Methodist churches in Pennsylvania, and the Rock Hill United Methodist Church parish, Centenary United Methodist Church in Bath and First United Methodist Church of Geneva, all in New York State. Over his 36-year career, the focus of his ministry was evangelism and church growth. He served on many district and conference boards and was honored to mentor new pastors in their studies. He is survived by his wife, Beverly Bell Minnigh ’60; a son, Stephen Minnigh ’87; a daughter, Cynthia Runyan; seven grandchildren; and his siblings, Diana Peterson and Joel Minnigh ’71.

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Harry C. Larimer on June 1, 2018. While at Allegheny he played baseball and football. He was a member of Phi Kappa Psi. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in economics. Prior to graduating, he served three years in the Army stationed in Germany. He was a sales manager with Zellerbach Paper and Mead Paper Company when he retired in 1996. He was an active member of his church where he was an elder and served on the mission and outreach committee. In 2002 he started a food pantry to serve needy families in the church neighborhood. The pantry is going strong today and was recently named “Harry’s Pantry” in his honor. He is survived by his wife, Sue Wolf Larimer ’59; two sons, Dave and Bob; a daughter, Ann Noe; and seven grandchildren.

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David A. Nellis on November 4, 2019. He served two years in the U.S. Army and then went on to obtain his bachelor’s degree from Allegheny and his master’s and Ph.D. from Boston University. He was a professor of geology at the University of Massachusetts at Boston. He consulted for the U.S. Geological Survey and many private companies. He also served his community of Scituate as he was elected to the Planning Board and he protected the clam flats as the clam warden for many years. He is survived by his wife, Dorothy Ann; his children Amy, Jason, Elizabeth, Jim, and his four grandchildren.

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Jeremy W. Sayles on November 12, 2019. He completed a master’s degree in library science from Simmons College. He worked for Fitchburg State College as a reference librarian. He also was head of reference at the Ina Dillard Russell Library at Georgia College. He retired from Georgia College in 1999. He was preceded in death by his first wife, Lydia Coolidge Sayles. He is survived by his wife, Mary Louise Sayles; his daughter, Jennifer Harville; his son, John Sayles; his sister, Meredith Sayles Hughes; his stepdaughters, Patricia Hornand and Cynthia Grant, and nine grandchildren

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Robert E. Williams on February 9, 2019. He earned his bachelor’s degree in psychology. He earned a master’s degree at Iowa State in experimental psychology and a doctorate at the University of Georgia in educational psychology and counseling. He joined the faculty at the University of Houston in the College of Education, where he taught many graduate students over his 35-year career. He held positions as a tenured faculty member, full professor, department chair and associate dean of graduate studies for the college. He received various awards and recognitions while at UH and retired in 2004 as an emeritus faculty member. Prior to moving to Houston, he spent three years as an assistant professor helping to establish the College of Education at the University of South Alabama in Mobile. He is survived by his wife, Virginia Hess Williams ’61; a son, David Williams; a daughter, Ann Howell; two grandsons; his brother, Guy H. Williams III; and his sister, Patricia Clouse.

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Phyllis Efimoff Young on May 10, 2019. She was homecoming queen at Allegheny and eventually graduated from Lake Erie College with a degree in English. She was an English teacher at McDowell and East High Schools in Erie. She is survived by her husband, Paul A. Young; two sons, Paul D. Young and Jason S. Young, and one sister, Patricia Hubley.

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Paul C. Kreuch Jr.  on April 12, 2018. He was also a graduate of the Advanced Executive Program at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University. It was at Allegheny where Paul met his wife of 55 years, Eleanor Goodyear Kreuch ’62. He enjoyed a career in banking for more than 35 years. He began his career at Pittsburgh National Bank and later joined Wachovia Bank & Trust Company in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. In 1982, he joined NatWest Bancorp, managing the U.S. and regional banking groups. He became head of corporate banking and was named president and CEO and a member of the board of NatWest USA. After retiring from banking, he enjoyed a 15-year second career as an executive recruiter. In 1997, he was named an independent director at VOXX International Corporation (formerly Audiovox Corp.). His affiliations include serving on the Best Practices Council of the National Association of Corporate Directors, the Citywide Advisory Board of Neighborhood Housing Services of New York City and the Bankers Roundtable. He had lived in Darien, Connecticut, and served on the Representative Town Meeting and the Darien Youth Commission. He is survived by his wife, Eleanor; three sons, Mitchell, Matthew and Steven; and seven grandchildren.

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Emily Eckman Evans on June 7, 2019. She was a member of the Kappa Kappa Gamma and honored to be Allegheny’s May Queen in 1961. She met her husband, Robert Evans ’61, at Allegheny during her senior year, and they married in June 1962. She was a third-grade school teacher in the Cleveland, Ohio. school system. After raising her family, she continued teaching as a substitute teacher in the Augusta County school system in Virginia for 15 years. She taught Sunday school for many years preparing her students for First Holy Communion. She was a Girl Scout Leader, member of the Arts Club, and the Twelve Dames craft club. In addition to her husband, she is survived by two daughters, two sons, a sister, and nine grandchildren.

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Paul A. Telfer on October 28, 2019. He excelled in sports and theater at Allegheny, then went on to receive his master’s in divinity from Andover Newton Theological School. He served as chaplain in the United States Air Force until 1976 when he joined the United Church of Christ as a minister. He served in the UCC as a minister for over 36 years. He is survived by his children, Paul, Greg and Michelle; seven grandchildren; his siblings, Ellen Greenhalgh and Elizabeth Palmer. He had two marriages of over 20 years each, the first to Adele Lidle Telfer and the second to Polly Smith-Telfer and was step-parent to Lesa and Leslea, and two granddaughters.

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William Hilliard on June 3, 2018. He graduated with a degree in history. He served in the U.S. Air Force as a captain during the Vietnam War and was stationed at the Pentagon as an intelligence officer. He is survived by his wife, Kathy Hilliard; three daughters, Sharon Hilliard Grunthaner, Liz Turner and Margaret Durham; his siblings, Dawna Faull and Robert Hilliard; and seven grandchildren.

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Joanne K. Kaiser on August 6, 2018. She earned a bachelor’s degree in education. She later earned her master’s and doctorate degrees from Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. She taught school briefly in the Cleveland area, then for the U.S. Department of Defense for five years, teaching in Okinawa, Germany and Sicily. Upon returning to the United States, she worked for the School District of Palm Beach County as a teacher, principal, area superintendent, and assistant superintendent of personnel until her retirement in 2000. She is survived by her brother, Albert Kaiser.

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Charles James Kutz on August 19, 2018. Following his graduation from Allegheny, he served as an officer in the U.S. Navy. He then attended and received his law degree from Widener University. He practiced family law with his brother, Bob Kutz ’65, for 30 years. In his 60s, Jim became an ordained minister in the United Methodist Church. He served as the minister for Smithton, Banning and Madison United Methodist churches in Pennsylvania. After the death of his wife, Marge, he relocated to St. John’s, Florida. He is survived by his daughter, Jane Kutz Immel; his brother, William C. Kutz.; two half-brothers, Harvey and John Kutz ’83; and his dear friend and companion, Harriett Minnigh.

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Karen Curtis Burt on December 11, 2019. She earned a bachelor of science degree in chemistry and moved to Cleveland, Ohio. She continued her education, earning a master’s of science degree in library science from Case Western Reserve University. Her career included positions at the Harshaw Chemical Company, Music Cataloger at the Cleveland Institute of Music, and several librarian positions at Case Western Reserve University, including her work with the school’s rare books, procurement, and medical library. She served as church librarian at Church of the Covenant. She is survived by a sister, Karlene Fryxell.

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William R. Campbell on February 13, 2019. He earned his master’s and doctorate from the University of Pittsburgh. He was an activist in the civil rights movement and worked with the Special Operations Research Office to aid U.S. counterinsurgent missions in Vietnam. He was a member of the Paris consul that negotiated the release of the American hostages in Tehran. He spent most of his academic career at Miami University (Ohio) from 1970 to 1997. He was director of graduate studies for the Department. of Political Science and directed the Model League of Arab States/Midwest. He was a professor fellow at Harvard’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies and a visiting professor at Cesare Alfieri Instituto and the universities of Shiraz and Tehran. He taught at the universities of Rhode Island, Maryland and Pittsburgh, the Joint Military Intelligence College and the College of Charleston. He presented papers and lectures all over the world. He spoke multiple languages. He and his wife founded the Gathering House in Oxford, Ohio, a center for writing and creativity. They moved to Summerville, South Carolina, in 1997 and established Joggling Board Press, an award-winning publishing company. He is survived by his wife, Susan Kammeraad-Campbell, and their daughters, Abby, Riley and Maddy.

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Wayne W. Justham on February 21, 2019. He received his bachelor’s degree in history. He later received his master’s in counseling from the University of New Hampshire. He worked as student activities director at both the University of New Hampshire and Juniata College in Pennsylvania. He later worked at the Smithfield Corrections Institution in Pennsylvania and the Department of Human Services in Maine. For the last 17 years, he worked his “retirement job” at the South Portland Home Depot in the plumbing and hardware departments. He was active with the American Red Cross and gave blood regularly. He was also active with the Maine Odyssey of the Mind program for which he was the Spontaneous head judge for more than 20 years. Survivors include his wife, Debra Justham; two sons, Daryl Justham and James Justham; three daughters, Kimberley Justham, Tanya Justham and Dana Lynn Justham; and five grandchildren.

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Ralph C. Macek on November 7, 2019. He graduated from the Temple University School of Medicine. Several months after completing his internship at Altoona Hospital in 1967, he went on to serve as a captain in the U.S. Army Medical Corps. He cared for wounded U.S. troops, as well as Vietnamese military and civilians, at the Twelfth Evacuation Hospital in Chu Chi. He also volunteered at medical clinics in the town of Chu Chi, caring for local Vietnamese civilians. His last several months of deployment were in An Khe Province as a field doctor. He received the Bronze Star for meritorious service. He then joined a private practice for over 20 years prior to joining Blair Medical Associates, from which he retired in January 2007. He was a board-certified family physician and a diplomate in the American Academy of Family Physicians. During his 38 years of practice, he served on numerous committees, including Altoona Hospital’s Board of Trustees, the Family Practice Peer Review Committee and the Ethics Committee. He served as an instructor in the Family Practice Residency program. In addition to his wife, Barbara, surviving are his daughters, Courtney Watson and Julie Tyson; two grandchildren; his sister, Barbara Kemp, and his brother, C. Richard Macek.

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Nancy Fahnestock Parsons on July 16, 2019. She graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Allegheny and completed her master’s degree in French at the Sorbonne in Paris with Middlebury.

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Ellen McKee Peck on October 12, 2019. She graduated magna cum laude from Allegheny and received her Ph.D. from Stanford. After time out for child rearing, she taught English literature and writing at Wellesley College and Mt. Holyoke College. When she retired from teaching, she worked as a docent at the Mt. Holyoke College art museum and the Springfield Museums. She was the Western Massachusetts representative at the National Docent Council. She was a member of the board of the South Hadley Chorale. She was also Council secretary and an active member of Five College Learning in Retirement. She helped develop and edit an influential small book Dick and Jane as Victims which studied gender roles portrayed in school readers. She is survived by her daughter, Ingrid Peck; her former husband, John Peck, and her sister, Ailsa Wallace.

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William H. Schory on June 9, 2019. He was a member of Phi Kappa Psi. He then graduated from medical school at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland. He served as a captain as a general medical officer in the 198th Infantry Brigade in South Vietnam and later at the Letterman General Hospital in San Francisco. He was awarded the Bronze Star. After residency and training in Minneapolis, he settled back in Ohio, first in Marion, then in Youngstown and worked at Trumbull Memorial Hospital in Warren. He retired in Columbus and later to Lake Zurich, Illinois. He is survived by his brother, Jim Schory; his children: David Schory ’92, Tim Schory, Karen Stevenson and Casey Palko, and his five grandchildren.

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Stefanie Ott O’Toole on July 19, 2018.  After earning a bachelor’s degree in political science, she went to work on Capitol Hill. She joined the staff of Senator Wayne Morse and the staff of Rep. William D. Ford of Michigan. She then earned a teaching certificate at the University of Maryland and taught civics to middle school students. She also recruited managerial candidates for Gimbels and joined Johnson & Johnson as a sales representative, where she moved up to the government affairs staff in New Brunswick, New Jersey. She later entered the fundraising field as director of development for the Michigan Opera Theater. Other fundraising positions included at Marygrove College (where she earned her master’s degree in administration), Downriver Community Conference, Northwest Family Guidance Services, the Richmond Ballet, and Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation. She concluded her working career in the Human Resources Department of McKesson Corporation in Richmond. She was an accomplished singer often performing in the Hatboro, Pennsylvania, Village Theatre. She was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma and the Allegheny College Choir. She also was a member of the Richmond Ballet, Washington, D.C., Cathedral Choir, Rackham Choir in Detroit, and Seaway Chorale in Trenton, Michigan. After retiring, she volunteered to provide literacy to adults in Michigan and also assisted teachers in the Leesburg, Florida, school system. She is survived by her husband, James O’Toole; three stepchildren, Vicki Munro, James T. O’Toole and Joan O’Toole; five step-grandchildren and three step-great-grandchildren.

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Emanuel J. Roth on January 11, 2018.

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James I. Hoffman III on May 16, 2019. He earned his Ph.D. in geology at Michigan State University. He was a geology professor at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh. He became department chair and eventually dean of the College of Letters and Science at UW-Oshkosh. In 1991, he accepted the position of senior vice president for academic affairs and provost at Eastern Washington University. He was named provost emeritus and professor of geology emeritus of EWU. He is survived by his wife, Ellen, and a son, Don; his father, J. Irvie Hoffman, Jr., and his sister, Judith McCombs.

‘63

David E. Kuhnert on November 13, 2019. While at Allegheny, he met his future wife, Virginia Metz ’63, who survives, during first-year orientation. The two dated throughout college and were married the week after graduation, in 1963. They spent their first few years of marriage in Spangdahlem, Germany, where he was stationed in the Air Force. They returned to the U.S. in 1966 and lived briefly in Oklahoma and Boston before settling in HoHoKus, New Jersey, where they raised their three children, Jim, Bill, and Suzanne, who survive. Being the “people person” that he was, he made a career in executive public relations, working for a number of companies in the Tri-State area, while continuing his service in the Air Force Reserve, earning the rank of lieutenant colonel. In retirement, he and Ginny moved to Wilmington, Vermont, where he began a second career as a ski instructor at Haystack Mountain and, for many years, Mount Snow. He is also survived by six grandchildren.

‘64

Joanne Alley Frey on May 29, 2018. She graduated with a degree in teaching. She worked as a premium auditor. She achieved her CPU, ATA and ARM certifications. She is survived by her husband, John Frey Jr; her daughter, Barbara Philbrick; her son, David Card; her stepdaughter, Jenny Teeter; her stepson, Jason Frey; her sister, Susan Lenander; her brother, David Alley; and 10 grandchildren.

‘64

Michael E. Kukowski on June 11, 2019. He played football at Allegheny until he suffered an injury in his junior year. He made a career in sales and distribution of chemicals used in the printing ink industry until his retirement in 2014. Surviving is his wife, Jacklyn Billups Kukowski; a son, Scott Kukowski; a daughter, Kara, and three grandsons.

‘64

Robert D. Walker on December 29, 2019. He attended Ohio Wesleyan University and Allegheny College, where he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi. He served in the Pennsylvania National Guard. For much of his career he was president of the High Pressure Equipment Company in Erie. He is survived by his wife, Gloria; four children, Sally Coviello, Aimee Nicolia, Erik and Matthew, and 10 grandchildren.

‘65

Gayle Rickert Howard on May 21, 2018. She attended Allegheny as an art major before later completing her studies at Penn State Harrisburg. She worked as a technical librarian at Commonwealth Bank and as a technical writer for various government subcontractors. She then worked until retirement as a management analyst for the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare. She is survived by a daughter, Lynn Howard; a son, Boyd Howard; and two grandchildren.

‘65

William W. Resinger on May 21, 2019. He completed his postgraduate studies at the University of Pennsylvania, where he received his doctorate in medicine. Later in 1972, He served in the U.S. Army National Guard for six years. He completed a residency at the University of Michigan in radiology with an additional year in nuclear medicine. He moved to Alaska in 1984 and worked at Palmer Valley Hospital as a radiologist until his retirement in 2003. He served on the boards of several organizations: HeartReach Center, Wasilla, Alaska; the Alaska State Medical Board; and Simpson University in Redding, California. He is survived by his wife, Edie Boyce Resinger.

‘65

Howard R. Vanallsburg on December 17, 2019. He obtained his master’s degree from Gannon University. He was a teacher for the Erie School District until his retirement in 1992. He enjoyed playing the clarinet. He was in the North West District Band of Pennsylvania in Edinboro, and also played in the Erie Philharmonic for several years in the late ’60s. He is survived by his wife, Jean Fries Van Allsburg; a daughter, Emily Van Allsburg; three stepchildren, Alice Van Tassel, Jeremiah Van Tassel and Joshua Van Tassel, and three grandchildren.

‘66

Frances White James on September 11, 2018. She was a strong proponent of public education her entire life. She graduated cum laude from Allegheny. Her senior honors thesis, an original history of the Ku Klux Klan in Akron, Ohio, had a full-page review in The Akron Beacon Journal. She began her career as a high school history teacher. She then was an administrative assistant at the Akron Board of Education. She earned a law degree from the University of Akron School of Law. She briefly practiced law privately, later serving as an assistant prosecutor in Summit County and later as a magistrate in the Juvenile Court. She was a member of the board of the University of Akron Foundation. She volunteered at Hower House and Mustill Store. She was a member of Alpha Chi Omega. She is survived by her brother, Dr. Harold A. White, and her sister, Dr. Susan White Braunstein.

‘66

David J. Mochel on August 11, 2018. He graduated from San Jose State University with undergraduate and MBA degrees after serving in the U.S. Army. His professional career spanned years as an operational auditor with the Federal GAO, manufacturers’ representative for a variety of commercial products, jet boat designer and builder, and general contractor. Although not trained formally in technical fields, he read extensively and tinkered continuously on all things mechanical, even receiving a patent on a device he designed. He is survived by his daughters, Deirdre Mochel and Sara Mochel, two grandchildren; a  brother, Don Mochel; and sisters Diane Mochel Erkkila and Patricia McCarron.

‘66

Stephen L. Buescher on November 8, 2019. He received his degree in history from Allegheny and a Juris Doctor degree, Order of the Coif, from Case Western Reserve University Law School. He was a member of Phi Gamma Delta. Following graduation from law school, after joining Thompson Hine Law Firm in Cleveland, he enlisted in the U. S. Army’s Judge Advocate General’s Corps, serving at the JAG School in Charlottesville, Virginia. After his honorable discharge from the Army, he rejoined Thompson Hine, practicing federal, state, and local tax law. He participated in a tax case heard by the U.S. Supreme Court. His lifelong love of Civil War history was sparked by battlefield trips led by Allegheny History Professor Jay Luvaas. He is survived by his wife, Ila; his sister, Carol Santoro; his daughters, Elizabeth Herron ’92 and Susan Woodmansee, and three grandsons.

‘66

John W. Bush on December 2, 2019. He was a member of Phi Gamma Delta. He had an extensive sales background in the banking industry and was employed for more than 25 years at Fiserv in Brookfield, Wisconsin, as vice president and sales manager. He is survived by his wife, Patricia Conley Bush; three children, Donald Adam Bush II, Rebecca Bush Uitti and Molly Bush Acker, six grandchildren and two step-grandchildren.

‘66

Alonzo N. Foster III on August 14, 2019. He received a degree in pharmacy at Duquesne, then attended Los Angeles Chiropractic College. He was a pharmacist in Uniontown, Brownsville and Fairchance, Pennsylvania.. He also worked at the family shoe store, Campbell Hathaways, and owned his own shoe store in Pittsburgh, then worked as a pharmacist and sports chiropractor in the Los Angeles area. He had a passion to help people deal with their physical, emotional and mental challenges. He is survived by his sister, Ellen L. Foster Enochs.

‘66

Samuel A. Scott on January 13, 2020. He was a graduate of Dickinson Law School. He was an attorney in private practice until retiring in 2018. He is survived by his wife, M Jean Pierce Scott; his children, Liz Scott, Joey Scott, Will Scott and John Scott, and three grandchildren.

‘67

John W. Bingham on July 11, 2019. He majored in biology. He was a member of Alpha Chi Rho and served as vice president. He earned a master’s degree in healthcare administration at the University of Pittsburgh. He served for more than 40 years in health-service and information organizations in senior management roles, ending his U.S. career as chief operating officer/acting chief executive officer at University Hospital, New Jersey School of Medicine and Dentistry in Newark, New Jersey. He emigrated to Canada with his family in 1987, and worked in healthcare planning and operations, beginning with Quorum Health as senior consultant, then Spectrum Health Resources as owner and executive director. For the last seven years of his career, he was with Canadian Institute for Health Information as director of research and analysis, and executive director, Ontario. He is survived by his wife, Gretchen; a daughter, Katherine; his son, Noah, and two grandsons.

‘67

Karen Berg Gallagher on October 14, 2019. She graduated with a degree in speech and English from Allegheny and earned her master’s in communication from West Virginia University. She was a teacher for more than 30 years, teaching English at Shady Spring High School, communications at the West Virginia Police Academy, quality management at the U.S. Department of Labor-Mine Safety and Health Academy, and public speaking at the College of West Virginia, Keiser College, and University of South Florida. She was a certified Myers-Briggs Type Indicator administrator and consulted with many organizations along the East Coast. She and her late husband, Robert Carter Gallagher, established Rent-A-Space Corporation, a self-storage business. Her volunteer responsibilities were numerous. She is survived by her daughters, Elizabeth Stewart, Susan Bell and Anne Tobar; six grandchildren; a brother, Dr. William Berg, and a special friend, David Pearah.

‘67

Rita McAdams Kennedy on April 8, 2019. She was a retired public-school teacher at Durand-Eastman Elementary School in East Irondequoit, New York, who dedicated her life to helping hundreds of children mature, learn, grow and believe in themselves. She earned a master’s degree in education from Brockport State College. She is survived by her sons, Ryan Whirty and Nathan Whirty.

‘68

Daniel Lynn Redmond on April 17, 2018. While at Allegheny, he met Anne Watson ’68, and one year following graduation they married at Heinz Chapel in Pittsburgh, her hometown. Over the years, they lived in New York, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Massachusetts and Minnesota. He was a career educator who served in various teaching and administrative roles. He held a graduate degree in counseling. He touched many lives, making lasting impacts on innumerable people with whom he came into professional and personal contact.  He and his wife enjoyed traveling the world. Besides his wife, he is survived by two sons, Mark and Ryan, and two grandchildren.

‘68

David J. Davenport on July 26, 2019. He earned his Juris Doctor degree from the University of Minnesota, after which, he practiced corporate law, specializing in mergers and acquisitions. He was a partner at Lindquist and Vennum for over 20 years. He was commissioned into the U.S. Army and later transferred to the National Guard from which he retired in 1993 as a full bird colonel. He spent four years on the Plymouth City Council and served as Mayor of the City of Plymouth in Minnesota. Service drove his spirit, and he devoted much of his time serving others. He was an avid supporter of Hammer Residences in Wayzata and was a member of the Wayzata Rotary Club. He suffered a closed head brain injury in a car accident in 1993 that rendered him a quadriplegic, but this never stopped his active involvement with people. For 26 years he volunteered weekly at Caring and Sharing Hands, serving lunch on Tuesdays. He is survived by his wife, Belle Cadwallader Davenport; his seven children, Sarah Sorenson, Rebecca Anderson, Kristina Woodburn, Krismar Waage, Karen Kastan, Dawn Rischmiller and Eric Hansen; 16 grandchildren, seven great-grandchildren, and his brother, Harry Jr.

‘68

Gary M. Mead on March 18, 2019. He majored in biology at Allegheny and went on to the University of Pittsburgh to obtain his doctorate in dental medicine before moving to Virginia, where he practiced dentistry for more than 30 years. He dedicated his life to public-service dentistry, retiring from the Virginia Health Department in 2012. He is survived by two sons, Bryan Mead and Christopher Mead; a stepdaughter, Emily Tsang; three grandchildren; three step-grandchildren and his brother, Dennis Mead.

‘69

Charles A. Henderson on May 6, 2018. He received his graduate degree in chemistry from Allegheny where he was a member of Phi Delta Theta and went on to earn his medical degree from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. He completed an internship and residency at Presbyterian University Hospital in Pittsburgh and a two-year fellowship in hematology and oncology at the Ohio State University Hospital before moving to Atlanta in 1978. He served as a hematologist and oncologist for 38 years. He approached his work with passion, enthusiasm and dedication, and as a cancer survivor himself, his patients valued his friendship, kindness and compassion. He co-founded Peachtree Hematology Oncology Associates in 1987 and served as president of the practice for many years. He was honored as a Top Doctor in the Atlanta area many times, and he served as chairman of Piedmont Hospital’s Cancer Committee, chief of its Hematology-Oncology Section and chairman of the Institutional Review Board. He also served as president of the Georgia Society of Clinical Oncology, was a member of the American Society of Clinical Oncology Clinical Practice Committee and served on the board of the Georgia Center for Oncology Research and Education. He is survived by his sons, Brian and Patrick; their mother, Debra Henderson; four grandchildren; and his sister, Nancy Greenwood.

‘69

Lawrence C. Arndt on May 19, 2019. He was stationed in Fort Lewis, Washington, during his time in the U.S. Army. Larry worked for Cramer Industrial Supplies and in real estate before becoming a landlord. He volunteered his time with Cancer Wellness Center in Massachusetts. He is survived by his daughter, Melissa Roddie; his brother, Richard Arndt, and three grandchildren.

‘69

Ray P. Eisenbies on July 17, 2019. He received his degree in psychology. He then went on to earn his MBA from the University of Pittsburgh. He was employed by Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh working in its Commercial Lending Department. He proceeded to have a lengthy career with U.S. Trust before working shorter periods for Citizens Bank and Commerce Bank. For the last seven years of his career he took on a new role as chief operating officer of an insurance company, what is now Gallagher Student Health. He is survived by his wife, Bonnie, and three children, Charlie, Joe and Carra Eisenbies.

‘70

Melvin V. Cratsley on July 24, 2019. He retired from the Marines in 2000 after 28 years of service. He was a Christian school teacher and principal, and continued his ministry as pastor of Grace Fellowship in Temecula, California. He is survived by his wife, Ernestine Cratsley; his two sons, Michael Cratsley and Jonathan Cratsley; his two daughters, Miriam Cratsley and Hope Jones, his four grandchildren; two sisters, Karen Meyers and Marion Stawartz; and two brothers, Herbert Cratsley and James Cratsley.

‘71

Larry R. Albright on July 21, 2018. He was honored as a Small College All-American in both football and wrestling. He was a member of Phi Delta Theta. He retired in 2007 as the owner of Moyer’s Sew ’n’ Vac in State College, Pennsylvania. He served as the Tyrone Church of the Brethren financial secretary on the board of administration, and was the church’s chair of the finance and trustee commission. He is survived by his wife, Cynthia A. Grazier, and his siblings, Susan Helsel, Soni Miller, David and Sally.

‘71

Guy B. Beacom on October 7, 2018. He graduated with a degree in philosophy. He attended law school at Western New England College. He practiced law in the Springfield, Massachusetts, area for 40 years. He is survived by his wife, the former Martha Macdonald; five children, Jesse Beacom, Rebecca Lloyd, Amy DeNucci, Jennifer Ruble and Kristina Beacom, and 13 grandchildren.

‘71

Kirk J. Eidenmuller on December 21, 2019. He earned a master’s in education from Clarion University of Pennsylvania. He was an audiologist in Ear, Nose and Throat Associates of Northwestern, Pennsylvania. Survivors include his wife, Barbara J. Eidenmuller, and two brothers, Henry Eidenmuller and Thomas Eidenmuller.

‘71

Leland M. Jones on February 15, 2019. He earned his Allegheny degree in political science, graduating cum laude and met his future wife Susan Drake Jones ’70. He earned his law degree at the University of Chicago School of Law, graduating magna cum laude. He began his legal career in Phoenix at Fennemore Craig von Ammon and Udall. He next moved to Jennings Strouss and Salmon, pursuing work with a focus on technology and venture capital. He was also involved with the Arizona Technology Incubator, helping new tech businesses get off the ground. He retired from Jennings Strouss in 2004. He is survived by his life partner and husband, Maury Montoya; Susan Drake Jones; his son, Aaron; a granddaughter; and his sister, Muriel Jones Cashdollar.

‘71

Alyce Bradwell Williams on August 31, 2019. She attended Kent State University. At Allegheny, she was a member of Kappa Gamma and served as alumni advisor. She earned her bachelor’s degree in speech pathology and audiology and earned her master’s degree in special education from Edinboro University. She was employed by Northwest Tri-County Intermediate Unit. She began her career as a speech therapist where she worked with local elementary schools and the former Race Street School for 11 years before becoming a special education teacher at Bethesda Lutheran Services for the next 28 years. She deeply cared for each and every student with which she worked. Over the years she volunteered countless hours tutoring and reading to children. She is survived by her husband, Edward Williams; her daughter, Reagan S. Williams, and a brother, Carl Bradwell.

‘73

John C. Clements on September 10, 2018. He took over the family business, Clements Jewelers, with his father in 1988. He served on the Downtown Meriden, Connecticut, Advisory Board and was the chair of the Westbrook Inland Wetlands Commission for more than 20 years, spending many hours studying zoning maps and planning town meetings. He is survived by his lifelong partner, Micky Komara; a daughter, Katherine Clements; and his sisters, Lynn Clements and Janet Dickey.

‘73

Lewis E. Leidwinger on June 8, 2018. He was a member of the Ridgway, Pennsylvania, Moose, the Audubon Society, and the Sierra Club. He had been employed in Australia as an audiologist. He is survived by his wife, Maria Leidwinger.

‘74

Nicolas Kulibaba on May 7, 2018. He served as a National Defense Foreign Language Fellow at the University of Chicago and at Andhra University in India. He received his master’s degree in social anthropology from the University of Oxford. He then joined the Peace Corps and spent three years in Togo and enjoyed working with the people of West Africa. His career in international trade and development took him to more than 60 countries in Africa, Europe, the Middle East, Latin America, and the former Soviet Union. At the time of his death, he was employed by Management System International, Inc. as the anti-corruption team leader of a USAID project in Bamako, Mali.  He is survived by his wife, Lily Kulibaba, and his sister, Susan Goedkoop.

‘75

Jean L. Harchelroad on August 30, 2018. After Allegheny, she continued her education at the University of Pittsburgh, where she received her doctorate in the School of Education. She is survived by her brother, Fred Harchelroad Jr.

‘75

Wrenda Wheeler Davis on June 16, 2019. She also attended Drake University, graduating magna cum laude with a degree in social psychology. She was well-respected for her involvement in several religious ministries in Newport News, Virginia. She played the piano and was recognized for her gifted musical talent. She is survived by her son, Jerritt W. Davis; daughter, Pysa N. Davis; mother, Annie M. Wheeler; sister, Jeanne S. Wheeler; brother, James A Wheeler; and best friend, William D. Davis.

‘76

Barbara Barrett Wiegand on August 28, 2018. She received a bachelor’s degree in Spanish. In 1979, she received a master’s degree in Spanish from Penn State University and in 2000, a master’s degree in education from Shippensburg University. She was initially employed by AMP Incorporated as a Spanish translator/correspondent and then had a 20-year career as a high school Spanish teacher for the Lower Dauphin School District. She is survived by her husband, Richard G. Wiegand ’75; two children, Jessica M. Guelcher and Allison L. Kudrak; and five grandchildren.

‘77

Neil Capretto on June 9, 2018. At Allegheny, he excelled in football and track, and he graduated from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine. He served his residency in psychiatry at St. Francis Medical Center, Pittsburgh. In 1985, he became a full-time staff psychiatrist at the Community Mental Health Center, Beaver County, and joined the staff of the Medical Center in Beaver. He joined the Gateway Rehabilitation staff in 1986 and became medical director in 1996. He was named the first medical director of psychiatry in 1989 to the Medical Center in Beaver, when they opened the psychiatric unit. He was board certified in both general psychiatry and addiction psychiatry by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, and board certified in addiction medicine by the American Society of Addiction Medicine. He was active in numerous professional committees, including both the Allegheny and Beaver Counties of Overdose Prevention Coalition, and he was a proud member of the American Society of Addiction Medicine. A supporter of Allegheny College, he served as vice president of Friends of Allegheny Football. He is survived by his wife, Amy Friel Capretto; two sons, Andrew Capretto and Peter Capretto ’10; his twin sister, Audrey Miller Vandergrift; two granddaughters and his godson.

‘77

William S. Bender on September 30, 2019. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in physics and English. He found a passion for flying with the JROTC Air Force program, further honed during a period of service as a Helicopter Rescue Pilot with the Chautauqua County’s Sheriff’s Department in New York State. He was a man of many trades and skills. Throughout his long career he was the head of many successful companies and enterprises. Surviving are his wife, Natalya; his first wife, Elizabeth; two sons, Nathaniel and Philipp; two daughters, Kimberly and Elise; two grandchildren; a brother, Clifford, and two sisters, Jennifer and Amy.

‘77

Patrick K. Daugherty on June 14, 2019. He spent most of life in Meadville. However, he spent a year in Europe traveling and working at a brewery in Munich, Germany. He also worked as a fishing guide for three summers in Yellowstone National Park. He was a member of the Meadville Club, Taylor Hose, the Meadville Elks and West Mead II.

‘77

Ronald C. Pezzino on September 24, 2019. He played football and wrestled at Allegheny. He retired after 35 years working as a state employee in Pennsylvania. He is survived by his wife, Jill Gardner; his daughter, Lauren Kinser, and three grandchildren.

‘78

Frank A. Reid on August 15, 2019. He majored in political science. He worked for many years as an assistant in the legal field for various law firms around Pittsburgh. He is survived by his sister, Carolyn Kickhofel and his brother, William Reid.

‘80

John M. Messinger II on October 14, 2018. He and his wife, Susan, owned Main Street Dental which they opened in Plymouth, New Hampshire, in 2002. He received his Ph.D. in organic chemistry from the University of Buffalo. He was a tenured professor in chemistry at Buffalo State College before making a career change to become a dentist. He received his doctor of dental surgery from the University of Buffalo. He completed his residency in general dentistry at Buffalo General Hospital. Besides his wife, he is survived by a son, Adam Messinger; a brother, Peter Messinger, and a sister, Martha Messinger.

‘81

Catherine Brown Abrams on August 14, 2018. She received her bachelor’s degree in Russian and German languages and received two master’s degrees, one from The Citadel and the other from Lesley University. She spent many years visiting schools to set up book fairs for teachers before going back to school to become a teacher herself. She taught for several years, most recently at Prestige Preparatory Academy in South Carolina. She was an active participant in the Jewish Choral Society and sang with Koleinu at Kahal Kadosh Beth Elohim Synagogue. She is survived by a daughter, Sara Elizabeth Abrams; a son, Alexander J. Abrams; two brothers, Marshall Loren Brown, Jr. and Richard Alan Brown, and a  grandson.

‘82

Michael J. Monaghan on June 10, 2019. He earned his master’s degree at the University of Arizona. He was an innovative businessman who made an impact on the software industry. He is survived by two children, Madeline and Thomas, and his ex-wife, Tracy Monaghan.

‘82

Lyn Fairchild Sala on September 7, 2019. She earned a bachelor’s degree in economics. She had a successful career in mortgage banking, including 25 years at Freddie Mac, retiring as senior contracting director, and living in the Washington, D.C. area. She enjoyed exploring art museums, traveling to England and a safari in South Africa. She is survived by her parents, Peter and Susan Fairchild Sala, and her siblings, Christopher Sala, Jennifer Smith and Katherine Sala.

‘83

Alison Speer Simpson on November 17, 2019. She worked in several different fields, including banking, retail and customer service. She then found her calling as the manager of the Children’s Corner Learning Center in Havertown, Pennsylvania, where she worked for 12 years. She is survived by her husband, Raymond Simpson; her sons, Ryan Speer and Jonathan Newcomer; a daughter, Caitlin Simpson, and a brother, Gregory Speer.

‘84

Timothy J. Clark on October 30, 2017. He majored in economics and was employed initially by Frigidaire, working his way up from sales manager to corporate training specialist. His second career began with K. Hovnanian real estate and builders from 1998 to 2017 as manager of FMS user support. He is survived by his wife, Cecile A. Ellis; three children, Jason, Tabitha and Sabrina; and one grandchild.

‘84

Melissa Griese Lamont on September 7, 2019. After graduation she moved to New Hampshire with her late husband, Robert Lamont. She was a believer in the magic of childhood and spent many hours volunteering with a local children’s theater company. As a natural caregiver and Reiki master, she used the power of energy and touch to heal. She is survived by her mother, Celia Griese; a sister, Nicole Reinholt; a brother, John Griese III; her sons, Samuel D. and Jack R.; her daughters, Mary G. and Phoebe A., and two grandchildren.

‘85

Rhonda Parks Chappel on February 17, 2019. She obtained a bachelor’s degree in political science with high honors. She worked at Y-Teens, the Titusville Senior Center and the Titusville Herald in the advertising department. She is survived by her mother, Gayle Baily; her husband, Jonas Chappel; a son, Hayden Chappel; a brother, Terry Parks; and her mother-in-law, Sarah Chappel.

‘88

Geraldine S. Hogan on May 23, 2019. She was a graduate of Edinboro University and received her master’s in education with a concentration in painting and communication from Allegheny. She worked as an art teacher at the Reynolds School District for 38 years. Survivors include two daughters, Christina Hogan ’84 and Melissa Gubbe; two grandchildren; three brothers, Emory Holbrook, Paul Holbrook and Mark Holbrook, and two sisters, Sharon Lavely and Kristi McGarvey.

‘90

Julie M. Kopfer on October 14, 2019. She received her degree in communication and political science. She earned her master’s degree at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University. Both degrees were earned with high honors. She worked for the Western New York Kidney Foundation and then spent the last nine years working for the University at Buffalo School of Pharmacy, writing grants, running educational programming and participating in the admissions process. She donated her time to March of Dimes and the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. She is survived by her mother, Judy Klay Kopfer, and two sisters, Kimberly Augustine and Laura Kahlfeldt.

‘00

Kathleen Donahue Price on October 24, 2019. She was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta and graduated with a degree in economics and math. She was united in marriage to the love of her life, Randy Price ’00 in August of 2002. She was a dedicated wife and mother first and foremost. She was active in her community. When she wasn’t working at St. John’s Preschool, she was volunteering at McKnight Elementary School in Pittsburgh. She is survived by her husband, Randy Price; their children, Brennan, Delaney and Owen (John Hunter Price predeceased her); her parents, Brion and Joan Donahue; her parents-in-law, Doug and Betsy Price, and her sister, Leah Penwell.

‘01

Christopher A. Hallam on July 16, 2019. He earned a bachelor’s degree in psychology. He was the associate director of housing at the University of Cincinnati and previously was the business manager of residence life, fiscal officer, and assistant director of academic initiatives at the Ohio State University. He was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Sigma Alpha Epsilon Chapter Advisor. He was the son of Paul and Debra Winters Hallam and the brother of Scott Hallam and Shane Hallam.

‘09

Kyle Shenandoah on August 21, 2019. He was awarded the College’s Gold Citation for his extensive community service in Philadelphia in 2019. He enjoyed dancing, learning different styles such as Salsa, Fusion, and Swing Dancing then later became an instructor. He was passionate and devoted much of his time by improving his community and helping others. He became very active in the political world and held many leadership roles on community boards. He volunteered with various organizations, including senior centers, churches, and youth centers. He received multiple awards and commendations because of his positive impact in the community. He was a senior tax specialist. He is survived by his mother, Gaychell; one brother, Keenan Shenandoah; one sister, Asa Shenandoah, and a special friend, Veronique Fields.

‘17

Jacob A. Peters on June 25, 2019. He attained the rank of Eagle Scout. He was a member of Phi Gamma Delta and graduated with a degree in chemistry. He worked in Pittsburgh in research and development for Vesuvius Corporation. He enjoyed hunting, traveling, cooking and beekeeping. He is survived by his parents, James R. and Elaine Garwood Peters.

Friends

Eleanor Schumann Jamison on May 20, 2018. She served at Allegheny as assistant dean of women.

Mary L. Rossi on September 7, 2018. She had worked in the food service department at Allegheny.

Carrie D. Szermeta on July 6, 2018. She participated in the Allegheny band camps for adult musicians.

Barbara A. Tan on July 29, 2018. She was an instructor at Allegheny.

Joyce Smallenberger on Oct. 30, 2018. She worked in the Allegheny Bookstore from 1980 to 2005.

Friends

Carol A Barnard on October 29, 2019. She was a supervisor in Brooks Dining Hall.

Joyce Cortes on May 7, 2019. She worked as a nurse at Allegheny for 29 years.

Margaret W. Freeman on December 24, 2019. She taught English literature.

Nancy B. Hankey on September 14, 2019. She was a student-teacher supervisor at Allegheny.

Stella Labonowski on May 17, 2019. She worked at Allegheny College.

Patricia A. Leonheart on January 14, 2020. She worked in housekeeping.

Dominic Orlando on November 10, 2019. He worked in the maintenance department.

Grace Ott on November 12, 2019. She worked in the College’s Health Center.

James R. Reese on June 28, 2019. He worked as an assistant coach in the Athletics Department at Allegheny.

Roger C. Smith on September 30, 2019. He was a plumber at Allegheny for 24 years.

Ethel Pasvolsky Timer on April 13, 2019. She worked as the registrar at Allegheny while her husband, Sam Timer, was the football coach.

Stanley P. Wagner on May 8, 2019. He taught at Allegheny from 1954 to 1962.