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SUMNER RANDALL WILLIAMS '68 died July 22, 1996, while on vacation in Beijing. He was an orthopedic surgeon in private practice in Manteca, Cal. He leaves his wife, Becki, and two daughters, Melanie and Amanda.
ROBERT LEE ALLEN '69cl, of Sayre, Pa., died January 25. He was an orthopedic surgeon on the staff of the Guthrie Clinic, in Sayre, and former president of the medical staff at Robert Packer Hospital. He leaves his wife, Mary (Huckins), four sons, William, James, Lee, and Benjamin, his mother, Elizabeth, two sisters, Ilo Schmid and Marie Heft, and four brothers, Frank '56, John '59, Herb, and Jefferson.
SCOTT DURAND VOGEL '69 died March 1 in Charlottesville, Va. He was an obstetrician-gynecologist with the Virginia Correctional Service and earlier served on the staff of Martha Jefferson Hospital. Before moving to Charlottesville, he served as a general medical officer in the Public Health Service in New Mexico. He leaves his wife, Lucie (Leavell), two daughters, Marilyn Browning and Lucie, a son, Augustus, his parents, and three brothers, Theodore, Charles, and Lindsey.
DAVID FRANK FLANAGAN '70, formerly of Wauwatosa, Wis., died August 2, 1996. He was an electronics engineer with MagneTek, in New Berlin, Wis.
MICHAEL LEWIS NORLANDER '70 died March 31 in Woburn, Mass., as the result of an accident. He leaves his wife, Joan (Donahue), his father and stepmother, John and Bunny, and a brother, John.
ANDREW BERNARD PICARELLO '74cl was found dead last December in Houston. His survivors include his wife, Jan, and a daughter, Lauren.
CATHERINE TSE '87mcl died in December 1995 in Valencia, Cal.
DIMITER V. GEORGIEV '95cl committed suicide February 12 in Los Angeles. A native of Varna, Bulgaria, he was a doctoral student in economics at the University of Southern Washington, D.C., and as director of mobilization readiness in the Business and Defense Services Administration. He was a lifelong lover of poetry and a senior life master in the game of bridge. He leaves his wife, Dorothy (Marks), a daughter, Constance Schnoll, and three sons, David '59, Jonathan, and Peter.
HERBERT IVORY LORD, M.B.A. '40, of Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich., died October 26. He was former vice president of Lee & Cady, a wholesale food company in Detroit, and later worked as a management consultant. He was a board member of the Detroit area council of the Boy Scouts of America and an avid outdoorsman. He leaves his wife, Barbara (Thomas), two daughters, Pauline and Jane Andrews '72, M.P.H. '95, and a son, Peter.
MARY THEDIECK EWALD, Ph.D. '47, died February 5 in Greenwich, Conn. She was a poet and librettist. After writing her dissertation on the scientific method of Sir Francis Bacon, she became one the first Radcliffe teaching fellows, and later also taught at Wellesley College and the universities of Maryland and Washington in 1993. In 1989 she was named Poet of the Year by the Hingham Poetry Society of Massachusetts, Boston University, and Regis College. He was a scholar of speechwriting who had worked for Vice President Albert Gore Jr., former N.Y. He was a pioneer of the mutual-fund industry whose career on Wall Street spanned eight decades. He began managing money soon after returning from World War I, where he flew Sopwith Camels on noncombat missions to the front lines in France. In 1928 he founded the Pioneer Fund, which he managed for 55 years, and in 1963 he established an investment firm, Carret & Co. He was a Harvard benefactor and a longtime member of the Committee on University Resources. The author of Buying a Bond, The Art of Speculation, and a recent anecdotal autobiography, The Money Mind at Ninety, he was also a solar eclipse enthusiast who viewed his nineteenth in Barbados in February. He leaves a son, Donald '50, and a daughter, Diane; his wife, Elizabeth (Osgood), and another son, Gerard, predeceased him.
MARTIN MULFORD '18 died January 25, 1996, in Boston. He was retired associate director of the Libraries of New York Botanical Garden. He enjoyed collecting fine English editions of the classics and books on natural history. He leaves a daughter and four sons.
HELEN SHAW VAN DER BORGHT '18cl, of Palm City, Fla., died December 7, 1997.
WILLIAM MACY CHAMBERLIN '23 died March 13 in New York City, and a collector of paintings of the Hudson River School. He leaves his wife, Irma (Morell), and two daughters, Kate Johnson and Judith Stroud.
DESRAJ MALHOTRA '23, of Ajmer, India, has died. He was a retired chemical and metallurgical engineer who served as an industrial adviser to the government of India. He also worked as chief consulting engineer at Sandur Co., in Bangalore, and Sepulchre Bros., in Bombay. A former member of the Railway Service Commission and former governor of the Engineering College at Jaipur, he held patents for the manufacture of silicon bronze, aluminum bearing alloys, and lightweight stainless steel.