He was predeceased by his daughters Joan Deuterman Bautzer, Kathleen Morgan and Barbara Merrett Mills. He volunteered with the Boy Scouts and was honored with the Silver Beaver Award. An accomplished woodcarver, painter and sculptor, he also raised orchids and was an avid gardener. He practiced pediatrics for more than 40 years before retiring. During World War II he served as a naval medical officer and received a Commendation Ribbon for Outstanding Performance of Duty. He played water polo at Stanford and belonged to Phi Delta Theta. William Thomas Burns III, ’40 (biological sciences), MD ’44, of Aurora, Colo., January 7, at 97. Survivors: his children, Dianne, ’65, and Dan, ’73 two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. He was predeceased by his wife of 69 years, Gloria. He served as president of the board of education and Azusa’s Chamber of Commerce. He later served in the U.S Army before returning to Azusa, where he opened a convalescent hospital, which was later converted to an alcohol rehabilitation center and then an acute psychiatric hospital. Although he was born in Azusa, Calif., and an American citizen, he was among those of Japanese ancestry who were interned during World War II. After graduation, he started work in bacteriology for the Rockefeller Institute, but his career was interrupted by Pearl Harbor. Oki, ’38 (basic medical sciences), of Apple Valley, Calif., June 16, at 97. Survivors: her children, Margaret Milledge, Sara Arnold and Lewis five grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. She was predeceased by her husband of 69 years, Wilson, ’34. After settling in Portola Valley, she served as president of the Community Committee for International Students at Stanford, “adopting” foreign students each year, many of whom remained lifelong friends. She held such diverse positions as social worker and secretary to the Turkish Ambassador to Kuwait. She was a member of Cap and Gown and the Stanford Daily. Because of her husband’s management consulting career, she lived all over the world, including the Philippines, Peru, Egypt and both coasts of the United States.
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Lee Lewis Harwood, ’38 (social sciences/social thought), of Portola Valley, March 2, at 96. Survivors: her son John nine grandchildren nine great-grandchildren and one brother.
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She was predeceased by her husband of 62 years, Ernest daughter, Lynn and son Ernest Jr. She will be remembered for her positive attitude, endless curiosity about life and delight in keeping up with the lives of her family. She served on boards and held leadership positions with, among others, the Harrisburg Symphony, Visiting Nurses Association and Junior League of Harrisburg. During World War II, she worked in USO Travelers Aid and Blood Donor Center. Survivors: her daughter, Melissa three grandsons and eight great-grandchildren.Įlsie Marian Liliard Burch, ’37 (social science/social thought), of Mechanicsburg, Pa., July 9, at 98. She was predeceased by her husband, William, ’32, Engr. She loved gardening, fine cuisine and good writing. In 1960, at the time of the Squaw Valley Olympics, she helped found People to People so athletes could meet families in Sacramento and get a glimpse of American life. She led a Girl Scout troop and was active in the League of Women Voters, serving as president in Sacramento and vice president in the state of California. Martha Jane “Marti” Hoerr Campbell, ’35 (classics), of Sacramento, June 11, at 99.
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Survivors: his wife, Marianna Rozenfeld daughter, Anna Reznikova grandson and great-granddaughter. He wrote many books and traveled often, seeking to combine the research traditions of Russia with the work of his Western colleagues. His research at the Farm, where he was a philosophy professor for more than two decades, focused on proof theory, the analysis of mathematical reasoning and its applications for fields like computer science. and the Estonian Academy of Sciences before arriving at Stanford in 1991. Petersburg, Russia, he worked as a researcher at Steklov Mathematical Institute, Leningrad U. Grigori “Grisha” Mints, of Palo Alto, May 29, at 74, of pneumonia.