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Phoebus was a meticulous person and thorough in whatever he did. Though gentle, he displayed courage in the face of the terrible health ordeals he faced. He remained in the department for 17 years before retiring in 2003, the same year in which he won the Benjamin Pogrund Medal for his contribution to teaching. His booming voice and infectious laugh will be missed. Settling in Paris, he was Research Professor at the Institute of Ecology and Environmental Sciences in the Department of Evolutionary Biology, Sorbonne University, and Director of Research at CNRS, the French National Scientific Research Agency. He wrote it, he told me, for his grandchildren. In the year of their marriage the first man went into Space, and Nelson Mandela was sentenced to life imprisonment on Robben Island. “There are many young people who can attribute their success to Judy’s encouragement.”. A celebrated teacher and scholar of English literature, Jacques Alexandre Berthoud (BA 1956, BA Hons 1958) died in York, England, on 29 October 2011, aged 76. That is where Annie started her professional career and she is back there in the end. He qualified as a doctor from the University of the Witwatersrand in November 1950 at the age of 20. Bothwell, TH (1991) Iron in the Soul. Dr Chipkin knew his city because he was a practising architect; he initially gained experience as a young man working on a building site and then working for the architects, first Bernard Janks and later Wayburne and Wayburne, where he connected with other architects who had a socialist take on politics and pushed (at that time without success) in challenging the growing power of the emerging apartheid state. He had an arrangement with the ambulance authorities in his home town of Benoni – where his father Morris was mayor – that when possible he would accompany them to medical emergencies. He is an honorary fellow of the College of Medicine. With the assistance of his family, InteMedica became InTUUN Systems and TUUN Health with offices in the United States and China. Her home was repeatedly invaded and searched, and she was arrested, assaulted and imprisoned several times. I pay tribute to my friend, to a man whose boy’s heart never ceased searching, never ceased affirming life, never ceased feeling things with extraordinary generosity, and with all the weight that feeling can muster, never ceased driving those muscles to say something that could be seen out there in the world, loud, clear, uncompromising, real. His academic career was launched and gathered increasing momentum taking him to Great Ormond Street and The Royal Postgraduate Medical School. Students went to dig at Sterkfontein on weekends and played poker there all night; “the only thing I ever discovered from this excavation was the ‘Sterkfontein hand’, which was a royal flush in hearts.” He went on an expedition with geologists to the Kalahari in 1947 and wrote a paper about desert cycles being correlated with glacial cycles. Dr Michael (Mickey) Symon (MBBCh 1950) died in Israel in July 2011, aged 85. The former executive director of the SA Jewish Board of Deputies (SAJBD), Aleck Goldberg (BA 1946) died in September, aged 85. He was a member of the North West Parks Board. Business Day’s obituary commented: “His remarkable courage was revealed in his meetings with the ANC in 1988, his promotion of equal opportunity during the height of the apartheid era, and his legendary ‘electricity-for-all’ electrification campaign. In 2007 he was awarded an NRF chair in Local Histories, Present Realities, finally retiring in 2012 after 41 years of service. Speaking about the graduation ceremony, she said: “The mix of the South African anthem with the Latin anthem of my alma mater was indeed a deeply moving moment.”. He rose through the ranks, primarily in power stations and engineering until he was appointed as Chief Executive in 1985. Dr Ferguson had unique skills and extensive knowledge in mineral exploration. Eskapa wrote Blood Fugue (1981), about an interracial love affair in South Africa, and her novel The Secret Keeper (1982) was a smash hit. The network’s purpose was to receive the sferics (lightning-induced radio noise) produced by the lightning stroke processes and from them to determine the position and other features of the emitting sources in three dimensions. Aside from his legal career, Alexander was a talented actor and recording artist. During more than two decades as a solicitor in Britain, he specialised in high-profile work as The Guardian’s legal adviser, and in the media industry and especially corporate take-overs and disputes. I’m glad God was willing to lend him those 30 years. In 1942, aged 15, he enrolled at Wits to study medicine – the only course for which he could get a bursary from the Germiston Town Council. In 1954 he gained his PhD from the University of Natal and was awarded the Nuffield Foundation Fellowship to study regional planning in the United Kingdom. Whatever his activity there was always classical music playing in the background. He and Selma travelled extensively. Here he made lifelong friends and in due course became a consultant and lecturer. Victor was almost 91 years old when he passed away on 14 December 2019. On 4 December that year, Motaung joined the JSA and became a member of Group One, at Sandown Village and later joined the Rivonia Group, holding chambers at 2 Pybus Road. She was involved in charities locally and in Israel. In 1969, he met and married Dorothy Evelyn (Eve) Hillhouse, who was then a librarian at Rhodes University. She graduated from Wits with a BA Honours in Social Work in 1954. At the time of his premature death in a car accident in Africa, he was president of the Society of Economic Geologists. He received many awards during his career. This resulted in her publishing a scathing open letter about her experience at JAG. Sometimes he built his own equipment – he even had to learn how to blow glass so he could make a Warburg manometer for cell physiology observations. He was a member of the Biostatistics Group of UCSF, responsible for coordinating statistics practice and also served as a consultant in statistics for several medical journals. A renowned fertility doctor and accomplished tri-athlete, Dr Hilton Kort (MBBCh 1970) died in the United States of cancer on 6 May 2011, aged 64. His wife is an education alumna. He worked closely with his wife of more than 50 years, Valerie Francis Chipkin, who was his editor and who shaped his archives. Although released the same year, Motlana was prohibited from attending meetings, refused passage to travel abroad and denied a passport for 31 years. As a schoolboy, he roamed the forests and grasslands around Illovo Beach in KwaZulu-Natal, where he grew up, and knew the fauna and flora intimately, birds especially. (Source: New York Times Obituaries), Dr Mike Bebb passed away on Friday March 21, 2014, peacefully at home after a long illness, bravely borne, and surrounded by his loving family. He recalled how fellow Witsie Sydney Brenner (BSc 1945, BSc Hons 1946, MSc 1947, MBBCh 1951, DSc honoris causa 1972) comforted him: “The next morning, while I was bathing, Sydney Brenner found me crying in the water and said ‘Lewis, pay no attention. He started Macadamia nut farming as only he would do. Victor was the first member of his extended family to earn a university degree. It increased the speed at which optical data could be transmitted 100-fold – the highest rate available at the time. The Workshop also entered the field of public history With Philip playing a major role in putting together the Apartheid Museum, first conceptualised by him. With a distinctive South African accent that had been sharpened by Anglican boarding school, and with a flair for brightly coloured clothes, Scholtz was a beguiling and beloved figure in the horticulture world. In 1959 his groundbreaking novel, Down Second Avenue, immortalised his hometown and became a literary classic. Professionally, Harrison was an astute clinician, always up to date with the latest literature and extremely well read. A small gathering of family and friends will take place Wednesday, January 2, 2013 and we hope to celebrate his life in the spring. He was a great raconteur, often telling self-deprecatory stories such as when in empathy to an Afrikaans speaking lady with haemorrhoids he explained to her in his best taal that she had “verskriklike aarbei”! Harington, Catherine Florence (1925 - 2011). In 2006, she returned part-time to teaching at the Children’s Hours School where she shared in awakening yet another generation of children to the excitement of learning. The foundation said although Mandela was treated by several medical practitioners, especially in his last 10 years, it was Dr Plit who he called on the most. His wife, Anne, died in 2002. On his return to Wits in 2007 he made an extraordinary impression and contributed so much in the three short years, said director of Wits Plus, colleague and friend, Prof. Kathy Munro, in a tribute. They are survived by children Len, Anne and Robyn and their families. He completed his BA in Education at the Rand College of Education in 1966 and spent eight years teaching at the Chris John Botha High School in Bosmont, Johannesburg. He was educated at St Andrew’s School in Bloemfontein as well as spending part of his Junior Certificate year at St Andrew’s College in Grahamstown. Commuting from Germiston by bicycle and train every day, carrying his homemade sandwiches, he also had to fit in his sideline: prayers for the dead at the synagogue, earning sixpence a session as a minyan man. Chetty was described by a family member as a total gentleman and a devoted family man who loved his wife and children. His move to the UK in 1978 saw him requalified as an English solicitor, becoming a partner at Lovell White & King in 1982. Marguerite completed her BMus at Wits in 1963, and after spending a year taking master classes in Germany she completed her Higher Diploma in Education at the Johannesburg College of Education. The C&CI’s centre in Midrand displays two of his creations, while his 4.5-metre high Abstract Form sculpture is on display at the Portland Cement Institute of South Africa in Johannesburg. His brothers, Roger (BArch 1966, DipTRP 1973, MUD 1979) and Robert, and three sons - one of whom is a Wits alumnus - survive him. She retired temporarily from teaching to focus on parenting after the birth of her son in 2003. By being a superbly competent "chief", he allowed the rest of us to avoid much administration and to get on with our research and teaching." He was a highly respected economic geologist described as âthe brains, the ideas and the energy She relocated again in 2002, to the UK, aged 91. Bunce was born on 31 October 1954 and worked at Dorbyl Ltd as an industrial relations legal adviser. “I found university extremely valuable,” he said. He was the author of two editions of Low Back Pain: Clinical Diagnosis and Management published in 1983 and 1995. It’s a place which elicits loyalty and even when it behaves badly, it still manages to draw affection.”. The Department of Anatomy was based in the old Medical School on Hospital Hill. She was also a Research Officer with the Centre for Applied Legal Studies at Wits and Professional Assistant at Cheadle, Thompson and Haysom Attorneys. Rosholt retired from Barlows in January 1991, but continued to work for social change as chairman of the National Business Initiative, the Joint Education Trust and the Claude Leon Foundation, among others. She majored in English and French at Wits, where she was involved in the Wits Choir and Drama Society. He is survived by his wife Elmine, three sons, six grandchildren and six great grandchildren. Such conversations invariably ended with him giving me a book to read from his encyclopaedic library. He was Vice-President of the Institute of Directors and a member of the World Economic Forum Task Force. But although the state did not break Winnie, by her own account it did brutalise her. The Church later sent him to St John Vianney Seminary in Waterkloof, Pretoria, where he spent 35 years as a lecturer. Source: Stephanus Muller, The Conversation. In this capacity he was closely involved in the development of the South African money market, a topic on which he published several articles in the South African Journal of Economics. A former Wits University football player and member of the team that produced South Africa’s first petrol from coal, William Henry Atteridge (BSc Mech Eng 1945, BSc Elec Eng 1946) died in Witbank of cancer on 20 August 2010, aged 85. Hugh was a singular figure among evolutionary biologists and academics. Another patient wrote: “Your precious father enriched all who came in contact with him. Madikiza was born in the Transkei, Eastern Cape in August 1925. At that time, civil engineering was considered a man’s job, and not a profession for a lady. “Our homes in Mmabatho and Alexandra were not only safe houses but weapon storage facilities and transit posts for MKs coming and leaving the country. “If this is it; that’s just the way the cookie crumbles.” He had a firm and unwavering faith in the underlying goodness of the universe, and the essence of God as love. With his unique style of music he traversed cultural barriers like few others. During World War II, she and her brother were evacuated to America and fostered by a family in Ohio. Bunny did not only attend; he was integral to the fun and the fellowship. Dr John West died in Perth, Western Australia on 7 October 2012, aged 92. He also served on the Wits University Council. Manchester” and his students presented at numerous conferences of the Society and in recognition of his contribution, he was awarded honorary membership of the Society in November 1998. Henderson is survived by her husband, two daughters and grandchildren. He was appointed director of the SAIIA in 1967 where under his guidance the institute began to flourish with a growing reputation for objectivity, with an educational role and an important research programme. Professor Setzer, taught at the Wits dental school for close to 50 years. We as children loved these too and would have to wash our hands before we were allowed to read them. Professor Julien Hoffman (BSc 1945, BSc Hon 1946, MBBCh 1949, DSc 1970, DSc Med honoris causa 2015) died on 23 June 2020. After a relatively short period Gerald left Arup to start Metricomp Programmes, to develop and market engineering software on a rental basis. He worked until the time of his death and never took retirement. Dr Charles Abram Lockwood (PhD, 1997), appointed first director of the Wits Institute for Human Evolution (IHE), died tragically in a motorcycle accident in London in July 2008. Three of his five children and three children in law are Wits alumni including Daniel ( BA 1977), married to Karen Hofman (MBBCh 1978), Steven (BSc Hons 1980) married to Bridget Carragher (BSc Hons 1978) and Berenice (BA SW 1983) married to Errol Rushovich (MBBCh 1982). Mike came out top student in South Africa in his final exams. At Wits he met Noreen McHardy (BA 1946), who was then working in the library. He had three younger brothers: Raymond, Robin and Bernard. Tony was born in 1930 and, during the late 1940s, studied architecture at the University of the Witwatersrand where he was heavily influenced by modernism. In 2012, when severe staff shortages in Nelson Mandela Bay threatened the collapse of the public health system in the metro, Pepeta, along with veteran cardiologist Dr Basil Brown and surgeon Dr Sats Pillay, took the department on in a press conference organised in contravention of departmental regulations. In 2001, he retired from Mintek as Head of the Process Chemistry Division. He also met the geologist Alexander du Toit, who proposed the idea of continental drift, and who dressed for the Kalahari in a black suit with waistcoat, tie and hat. So here the practical romantic stepped in and he asked her to marry him, while he was still a student. The former director of the South African Mint and a Wits benefactor, Koos Groenewald (BSc Eng Elec 1941) died in November 2010, aged 91. The recipient of several honorary degrees including a Fellow of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (FRCPCH), UK, her research and writing included diverse fields such as infant growth and nutrition, school health and medical education. She was a teacher even then. There he caught the attention of Drs Horace Joules and Keith Ball. During part of his time in London Krystall lived close to Baker Street. He first came to the U.S. to teach at Princeton and then moved on to NYU, CUNY, and Rice University before rejoining CUNY at City College in 1973 as Distinguished Professor, a classification limited to 175 and is described by CUNY as an exceptional scholar with an international reputation for scholarly and/or research excellence. He moved to Ealing Hospital in the early 1980s where he started research, in addition to his full time diagnostic work, and became involved in working voluntarily with clinicians in Malawi and with his long-term collaborator, Dr Susan van Noorden. Prins became involved in the cause of heritage in the 1970s, when at the request of Selma Browde, he rallied the architecture students to protest the destruction of a JM Solomon House when the City of Johannesburg created the Pieter Roos Park on the edge of Hillbrow. He went to KES in Johannesburg for high school where he became a prefect, won the one mile race, earned athletics colours, and matriculated with a university pass. Ramquar Ramasar served the community in which he lived in many ways. Dickman was a member of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council from 1970 to 1980. He was proud of his old school and it was a strand in his embarking on understanding how the imperial culture played out in Johannesburg as the town shifted from a temporary camp that drew adventurers from all over the world to being a permanent town with its first steel-framed buildings and first lifts, like the third Corner House and Victory House or the Carlton Hotel, or indeed his very Edwardian school. In the mid-1950s Magerman was part of a group of young intellectual activists, including Dan Mokonyane, Lawrence and Ethan Mayisela and Simon Noge, who had become critical of the ANC’s politics. Professor Peter Fridjhon (BSc 1974, HDipEd 1974), former Head of the School of Statistics and Actuarial Science (2011-2016), was associated with Wits for over four decades. He participated in a concert at London’s Fitzrovia Chapel as part of the AIDS Histories and Cultural Festival. Plint was born in Cape Town in 1924. He is survived by his wife, Mary Kennedy Baumslag, Len Cohen of South Africa, his childhood partner in many misadventures; his well respected friend, Howard Siegel,M.D. The Joffe Charitable Trust gave millions every year to mainly African causes and especially to causes that were likely to find it relatively difficult to attract support, such as abortion for rape victims and raising awareness of female genital mutilation. A stalwart of South African journalism briefly imprisoned in 1991 for refusing to reveal his source, Patrick Laurence (BA 1958, BA Hons 1959) died on 30 June 2011, aged 74. In the 1970s he wrote books on a wide variety of topics, of which Supernature (1973), a worldwide bestseller exploring phenomena such as ESP, psychokinesis and telepathy in nature, Gifts of Unknown Things (1976) and Lifetide (1979) are among the best known. Dr Mankowski first travelled abroad in the early sixties, winding up in Milan, Italy where he met the cultured Cancogni family and learned Italian by ear in no time. Dr Berzen was knowledgeable, practical and thoroughly enjoyed teaching. He wrote of his experiences with great perceptiveness and sensitivity, distributing his experiences to friends around the world. Formidable protest was mounted, at home and abroad, and Philip was released pending an interview with the Minister of Home Affairs, Stoffel Botha, in Cape Town in January as to why he should not be deported. He was born in Cape Town on 17 April 1936 and matriculated at Marist Brothers in Johannesburg. “Praneel's work will continue to be a light to all in this student community of interdisciplinary digital economy studies. After qualifying as a dentist in 1949 from Wits, Frikkie spent a year in London as a National Health Dentist and returned to South Africa in 1951, when he opened a private practice in Pretoria where he first became involved in dental education as a visiting lecturer at the Dental School of the University of Pretoria. Sources: MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology; Nobel Prize website; Web of Stories. Dr Meredith Jane Aldrich (MA 1978, PhD (Arts) 1989), a lifelong educator and founder of Children’s Hours School in Geneva, N.Y., and former principal of the Pelham School in western Massachusetts, died peacefully of lung cancer on August 23 at her home in West Tisbury, surrounded, as she wished, by those she loved. He remained closely involved with South Africa and, through his family trust, was among the University’s most generous individual donors. In 2015 he published the book. After graduation from Wits he joined the Johannesburg Bar. What more do you need? Despite his personal losses and resulting grief, I was never aware of it in his presence. For me, the memory symbolises the extent to which his rise to fame was never easy, and the extent to which his humility was always a defining character. He represented members of liberation movements in political trials from the 1960s through early 1990s. Elder was born in South Africa on 4 May 1967 and studied geography and environmental studies, English and education at Wits. It was a wild and crazy plan. He also began to appreciate the importance of statistics. During this time, he conducted clinics and instructed Wits medical students at the Johannesburg General Hospital (now Charlotte Maxeke Hospital). He had a great fondness for Nantucket where he spent more than 25 years during school vacations and holidays writing papers, exploring problems on his famous 500lb blackboard installed on the office wall of his his beloved old house on Darling Street. His courage to speak out against discrimination against black students. Professor Keith Manchester died on 5th December 2008. In 1993 he was invited to take up the new post of Professor of Urology at the University of Western Australia, where he established a prostate cancer centre. He also worked for the South African National Tuberculosis Association until a few years before his death. In 1969‚ Jules was appointed as a Senior Counsel. So enthusiastic was he that five PhDs on the unique metabolism of these creatures were produced by his department. Harrison, 41, completed his internship at Tygerberg Hospital in 1991, after which he worked as a mine medical officer for JCI for five years, followed by five years as a GP in Letsitele. In 2016 he married Alison Hawkes. He enjoyed writing about the subject and unearthing and understanding the background to biochemical advances and gaining insight on the scientists involved. It is with sadness that the Wits Physiotherapy Department recently heard of the passing of one of their early alumna and previous lecturer - Freda De Bruin. He became known as the "Bill McLaren of South African rugby" and also commentated on cricket. The test site was situated north of Johannesburg at Nietgedacht. Sack also collaborated on a number of projects with his younger son, Nicolas (BArch 1980) to the realization of the Sci-Bono Centre (Science and Technology Centre under construction in Newtown) and the Basketball Hall and MIAGI music centre being completed at Morris Is cson School in Soweto. Webb was a devoted family man and handled his sons, nephews and nieces with the same educationally empowering approach he adopted with his students. Architect, artist, philosopher and professor, Amâncio “Pancho” d’Alpoim Miranda Guedes (BArch 1949, honorary DArch 2003) died peacefully near Graaff Reinet on 7 November 2015, aged 90. “Science is the best way to understand the world,” he said and frequently broadcast on BBC radio and TV as well as wrote a number of popular books. Helen regularly attended the annual Founders’ Tea and she was a Wits benefactor. In 1992 she walked away from that lucrative career and devoted the rest of her life to animal welfare. In 1975, he and his family moved to Kingston, Ontario, where he became a Professor of Pathology at Queen’s University and an outstanding neuropathologist at Kingston General Hospital. He was appointed MBE in 1977 and made a freeman of the City of London in 1995. Tiisetso Moshate Nathan Moja (MSc Eng 1997, MBA 2009) died in a car accident on 12 April 2017. In Darwin’s Hunch, Christa Kuljian writes that this study was “groundbreaking in the sense that she concluded there were no distinguishing features between different cultural or tribal groups. Sadie became the Office Manager at Ove Arup until her retirement when she returned to working with Gerald, until she died in 2003. After graduating, he joined the Johannesburg City Council as a Technical Assistant in the Electricity Department. We might spend the better part of a day driving through miles of uncharted bog-land to wait, playing in the heather, being eaten by midges and enjoying beef stew mixed with crisps for supper, while he spent hours photographing a circle of knee-high boulders. He completed his Royal College Fellowship in Edinburgh in 1958 and Royal College of Surgeons Fellowship in England in 1961 and proceeded to McGill University in Montreal, Canada, where he completed a Master of Science degree. She was a committed partner to Michael and a dedicated mother who raised their three sons as menschen, compassionate human beings who give back to society. She said: “He was like a gentle Viking, tall, with blond hair falling over his eyes and a guitar slung over his back.”. Although trained in Zoology and having worked in the Zoology Department at the University of the Witwatersrand, in 1953 Ann transferred to the Wits Faculty of Medicine where she was appointed as a Graduate Assistant in the Department of Anatomy. In 1956 Henderson moved into the corporate world, joining the Anglo American Corporation as private secretary to Harry Oppenheimer. The long-term commitment of Professor Saunders benefited research, teaching and postgraduate studies at Wits. It was Heather who drove me to the airport. June loved ballet having studied it in her youth. In 1976 the university created the Archaeological Research Unit and appointed him as Director, a post he held until his rather early retirement in 1989. Conrad married Vera Stott, his niece by marriage, something disallowed by the law in Natal at the time. (Submitted by Kay Robinson, PA to the Head Master, St Andrew’s College). I knew no-one in London. All these years later, and still just finding a way to accept that Heather is no longer here, I can see even more clearly how my sister helped me be myself. In 2017 the University of Queensland in Australia published the Guidelines on Caving Mining Methods, co-authored by Dr Laubscher, Alan Guest, and Jarek Jakubec. She curated the Seeking Refuge exhibition in association with the Goethe Institute focusing on German-Jewish refugees who settled in Johannesburg in the thirties, and was involved in the establishment of the Johannesburg Holocaust Centre. In 1990 Kris was elected Emeritus Consultant to the Royal Perth Hospital. This after serving a total of 30 years of employment at Wits Law School. He enjoyed traveling with Esther, feeding and watching the birds, and working on various woodworking projects. Even at school, it would seem, Allan’s sights were set on becoming a doctor. He immigrated to South Africa in 1921 and so excelled at school that Wits awarded him a bursary to study medicine. In 1953, following a stint as a private consulting geologist, he returned to Wits. With a keen interest in environment economics, he was a pioneering authority in environmental impact assessment and resource management in South Africa. I suppose that meant he wasn’t just my uncle any more, but was also my friend. It is with sadness that the death of Professor John Barlow (MBBCh 1951, Master of Surgery 1968, honorary DSc Med 1991) on 10 December 2008 is recorded. She completed her schooling at Benoni High School and described her years at Wits as some of the best of her life. Joffe agreed to help manage Kantor’s affairs before leaving, but was approached to defend Nelson Mandela and other ANC members in the 1963-4 Rivonia Trial. Curtis was born in Johannesburg on 16 October 1947, he attended Jeppe Boys High School before going to Wits University to do a BA degree in political studies. He obtained a PhD from Wits in 1974. After his Wits BSc and University of Cape Town MSc, he lectured at UCT and developed a strong interest in the structure of matter and how it was organised. MBBCh (Univ Witwatersrand)-1947, DCH (RCP&S, Eng)-1952, MRCP(Edinburgh)-1955, FRCP (Edinburgh)-1972. In 1949 the family relocated to England where Mynhardt specialised in surgery at Oxford. His numerous accolades include human rights awards from Switzerland’s Foundation for Freedom and Human Rights, the Nelson Mandela Award for Human Rights and Health (jointly) and National Honorary Supreme Counsellor of Baobab (Gold) honours in 2002. Berman studied for her Honours degree in Psychology at the same time as her BA in Fine Arts. She equipped those of us who were fortunate to be her mentees, with enquiring minds, and supported the research efforts of dozens of other would-be epidemiologists, worldwide. Her mother Charlotte Machol (at the time she would have been Charlotte Kohn) was head housekeeper at Women s Res. His squadron was on its way to Japan when the war ended. She was the first female Rotary chair in South Africa and a Rotarian of 23 years. He was born on November 1, 1921, in Paradise Location, a son of the late James and Celina (Chaput) Parolini.
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