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MARTHA MURPHY DUFFY '57 died June 16 in Manhattan. She was one of the first women to become a senior editor at Time magazine, where she was in charge of coverage of the arts and entertainment for more than 20 years. She was the magazine's longtime dance critic and also served as a mentor to many young writers. She leaves her husband, James, LL.B. '59, and a sister, Anne Murphy, A.M. '55.
DAVID FOSTER KNUTSON '57 died May 13 in Fargo, N.D. He was a longtime partner in the Fargo law firm of Vogel, Kelly, Knutson, Weir, Bye & Hunke, where he specialized in real-estate law. He had a lifelong interest in history and geography and was an enthusiastic player of bridge. He leaves his second wife, Patty (Vaughan), two daughters, Kim '83 and Kristin, two sons, Erik and Kirk, three stepsons, Chris, Dan, and Joshua Polasky, and a sister, Margaret Riley; his first wife, Constance (Mills), died in 1989.
ALBERT CHRISTIAN KOLBYE JR. '57 died July 19, 1996, in Bethesda, Md. He was a physician. A commissioned officer of the U.S. Public Health Service, he formerly served as assistant surgeon general and as associate bureau director for toxicological sciences in the Food and Drug Administration's Bureau of Foods. His survivors include his wife, Lise (Ottosen).
BENJAMIN BUTLER MCKEEVER '58, of Boca Raton, Fla., died in July 1996. He was a former resident of Falls Church, Va. His survivors include his wife, Linda.
HENRY TUDOR '59mcl, of Durham, England, died March 30. He was a senior lecturer in politics and former head of department at the University of Durham. His published works include Marxism and Social Democracy: The Revisionist Debate, written with his wife, Josephine (Annable).
WALTER BENSON '63, M.B.A. '67, died June 10 in Washington, and as an adjunct professor of entrepreneurship at Georgetown University. He ran seven marathons. He leaves his wife, Marguerite (Hagner), two daughters, Alexandra and Isabella, his father, David, four sisters, and three brothers.
LOUIS FRANK PARADYSZ '63, of Randolph Center, Vt., died March 27. He taught physics at Washington, D.C. He was the owner and operator of a New Jersey. He leaves his wife, Elizabeth (Phillips), a daughter, Virginia, a son, Roger, his stepmother, Mrs. Maurice Landau, a brother, Bruce Stewart, and a stepsister, Suzanne Wetanson.
CHARLES EMERSON BROWN JR. '73cl died October 17, 1995, in Yorba Linda, Cal. He was an internist with the Southern Washington University. He leaves his parents, Theodore and Joanne, two sisters, Cathleen Pearsall and Jacqueline Sellers, a brother, Gregory, and a grandmother, Gladys.
DESHAUN RAYMOND HILL '99, of Milwaukee, died July 3 from injuries suffered in a car accident in Monterey County, Cal. A high-school valedictorian, he was an engineering sciences concentrator who had taken a job at Intel for the summer. He leaves his parents, Mary Ann and Donald Ray, a brother, Derrick, and a sister, Shari.
HARVARD C. NABRIT STEPHENS '99, of Brentwood, Tenn., died July 3 from injuries suffered in a car accident in Monterey County, Cal. A computer science concentrator working at Microsoft for the summer, he was active in the Phillips Brooks House Association, teaching Windows 95 and Internet applications to disadvantaged children. He leaves his parents, Harvard and Barbara, two sisters, Nia '01 and Yakini, a brother, Marcus, and his grandparents, Clark and Vernice Nabrit.
DOROTHY PRINTUP BRYSON, A.M. '16, of Colorado Springs, died June 7. A past president of the American Association of University Women, she taught Latin and Greek for many years, and held administrative posts, at Colorado College. She assisted her first husband, Archer Butler Hulbert, with his Overland to the Pacific series, and edited the remaining five volumes after his death. She leaves two daughters, Joanne Yeager and Nancy Olsen, four stepdaughters, Marian Parks, Jane Klunder, Nancy Schlosser, and Elizabeth Powell, and three stepsons, Arthur Bryson, A.M. '56, Jack Bryson, and William Wing; besides Mr. Hulbert, two husbands, Franklin Wing and A. Earl Bryson, predeceased her.
STEWART HILTON CLIFFORD, M.D. '25, died August 1 in Duxbury, Mass. An associate clinical professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, he served on the staffs of Children's Hospital and Boston Hospital for Women, where he was pediatrician-in-chief. In 1960 he chaired one of the first presidential missions to the USSR, to study maternal and child health care. He leaves his wife, Ellinor (Burnett) '27, and four sons, Stewart '51, M.B.A. '56, Paul, M.B.A. '59, Frederic, and Donald '59.
ERNST CHRISTIAN HELMREICH, Ph.D. '32, died June 25 in Brunswick, Me. He was Reed professor of history and political science emeritus at Bowdoin, where he taught for more than 40 years and twice chaired the history department. An authority on Central and Eastern Europe, he was the author of The Diplomacy of the Balkan Wars, Religious Education in German Schools, Twentieth Century Europe, The German Churches under Hitler, and Religion at Bowdoin College, and sat on the editorial board of the Journal of Modern History. He leaves two sons, Paul, Ph.D. '64, and Jonathan, and a brother, Theodore; his wife, Louise (Roberts) '17, Ph.D. '24, died in 1989.
DANIEL CLARK LEWIS, Ph.D. '32, died June 19 in Baltimore. He leaves his wife, Florence (Harvey), and three daughters, Ellen, Sarah Fowler, and Caroline Bliss.
HERBERT LEIGH KINSOLVING, A.M. '34, died June 1 in Annapolis. He was a retired associate professor of mathematics at the U.S. Naval Academy, where he served for 27 years on the civilian faculty. Earlier he taught at West Point, Andover, and the Gilman School. He was a past president of the board of the Annapolis Symphony Orchestra. He leaves a sister, Lucinda Leigh; his wife, Henrietta (Davidson), died in 1995.
CHARLES HENRY OWSLEY, J.D. '39, IAF '59, of Thomasville, Ga., died June 11. A retired Foreign Service officer, he later practiced law in Youngstown, Indiana University, he founded and directed its Russian and East European Institute. He was an editor of the American Historical Review and the author or editor of numerous books, including East Central Europe under the Communists, After Brezhnev, and U.S. Policy toward Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, 1956-1988. He leaves his wife, Eleanor (Jewell), four daughters, Sheila Bowles, Sally Neylon, Susan Wallace, and Robin Huntington, three sons, Shaun, Charles, and James; four sisters, Polly Kuhn, Dorothy Miller, Frances Morcelle, and Betty Eppich, and four brothers, Frederick, Norman '44, LL.B. '48, William, and James.
JOHN ROWLAND ILLICK, Ph.D. '54, died May 2 in Kennett Square, Pa. He was professor emeritus of geography, geology, and environmental science at Middlebury College, where he taught for 40 years, and was active in college and community affairs. An ardent naturalist with wide-ranging interests, in retirement he led many travel groups to Asia, Africa, Europe, and Australia. He leaves his wife, Edith (Windels), and three daughters, Virginia Jaskot, Priscilla Siano, and Martha.
FLORA GWENDOLINE HARPER, Ed.M. '56, died July 8 in Spokane, Wash. She was a pianist and piano teacher and a professor of music emerita at Eastern Florida in September 1996. He was a retired member of the planning department at Merck and Co. and previously worked in finance. Early on, he was one of a group hired by Harvard Business School to gather material for its case method of instruction. He leaves his wife, Virginia (Warren), and two sons, Edward and Robert, Ph.D. '63.