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James R. Brayshaw, M.D., HS ’57, a retired internist from
Deltaville, Va., died on May 15 at the age of 75. During his career, Brayshaw
was president of Alexandria Hospital; medical director of Goodwin House
East and West, a continuing care retirement community; and resident physician
at Episcopal High School.

Jonathan M. Clive, Ph.D. ’73, a biostatistician from Farmington,
Conn., died on February 27 at the age of 58. In the 1970s Clive was on
the faculty at Duke University. He later served as director of biostatistical
research at the University of Connecticut Health Center, where he helped
medical and dental researchers design studies and interpret data.

Edmund S. Crelin Jr., Ph.D. ’51, professor emeritus of surgery
(anatomy) at Yale, who was instrumental in creating the neonatal and ultrasound
units at Yale-New Haven Hospital, died on June 21 in Branford, Conn.,
at the age of 81. Crelin also pioneered the Physician Associate Program
at the school and was chair of the Human Growth and Development Study
Unit. After his retirement in 1991, he received an honorary appointment
to the Yale Society of Distinguished Teachers.

Donald J. Ferguson, M.D. ’42, of Minneapolis, died on January
9 at the age of 87. Ferguson was an Army captain in the European Theater
of Operations during World War II. A professor of surgery at the University
of Chicago until 1987 and former chief of surgery at the Minneapolis Veteran’s
Hospital, he researched and wrote papers on surgery and breast cancer.

Ann Gomez, M.P.H. ’67, of Largo, Fla., died on May 22 in
Naperville, Ill. Born in Brooklyn, N.Y., Gomez was a retired administrator
at Bridgeport Hospital in Connecticut. She was also executive director
of Presbyterian Village North, a continuing care retirement community
in Dallas.

James N. Harten, M.D. ’46, of Wareham, Mass., died on May
4 at the age of 81. Harten had a family practice for 54 years and was
a diplomate of the American Board of Family Practice. During World War
II and the Korean Conflict, he served as an officer and general surgeon
in the U.S. Army and as a major in the U.S. Air Force.

Robert D. King, M.D. ’51, HS ’53, of Indianapolis,
died on April 25 at the age of 79. King served as a surgeon for the Reserve
Corps of the U.S. Public Health Service in Seattle. He was a professor
of surgery and a cardiothoracic surgeon at the Indiana University Medical
Center until he retired in 1995.

William McBride, M.D. ’73, medical director of Merck &
Co., died on April 17 of kidney cancer at home in Radnor, Pa. He was 56.
McBride was a gastroenterologist at Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn,
N.Y., until 1983, when he started a private practice in Atlanta. He was
also a professor at the medical schools at Morehouse College and Emory
University.

Lowell E. Olson, M.D. ’54, of North Haven, Conn., died on
March 23 at the age of 75. Early in his career Olson joined the faculty
at Yale as an instructor in obstetrics and gynecology. He stayed for 41
years and at his death was an associate clinical professor. From 1965
until his retirement in 1998, he was also in private practice.

Frederick L. Richardson, M.D., of North Baltimore, Md., died on
March 5 in an automobile accident in Maryland at the age of 77. Richardson
was a lecturer in neurology on the Yale faculty from 1993 until 2003.
As a medical student he was stricken with polio but recovered after one
year. He devoted his life to helping sick children in countries all over
the world.

William B. Seaman, M.D., HS ’47, of Tequesta, Fla., died
at home on June 7 at the age of 88. Seaman was a major and flight surgeon
in the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II. He was professor of radiology
at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, and later became
chair and director of radiology at the College of Physicians and Surgeons
at Columbia University.

John M. Sherwin, M.D., HS ’65, of Manchester, N.H., died
of cancer on February 11 at the age of 74. Sherwin joined the staff at
Elliot Hospital in Manchester in 1965 and founded New Hampshire Orthopaedic
Surgery, P.A. He performed the first total hip replacement surgery at
Elliot Hospital and holds a U.S. patent for the Sherwin Knee Retractor.

A. Thomas Snoke, M.D. ’64, of Glendale, Ariz., died on February
28 at the age of 65. Snoke served in the Commissioned Corps of the U.S.
Public Health Service (PHS) from 1965 to 1989. He was the general medical
officer at the PHS Indian Hospital and was later promoted to service unit
director. He also worked as a staff physician in family practice at the
Phoenix Indian Medical Center.

Nicholas M. Stahl, M.D. ’43, of Charlestown, R.I., died on
April 13 at the Westerly Nursing Home. He was 87. Stahl had a private
practice in pediatric surgery in Syracuse, N.Y., and was an instructor
at Syracuse University Medical School. He served as a lieutenant in the
Army Medical Corps during World War II and attained the rank of major
in 1947.

Howard W. Telson, M.D. ’80, died of cancer on April 5 at
the age of 49. Telson was a clinical associate professor of psychiatry
and a faculty member for 20 years at New York University School of Medicine.
He developed innovative programs at Bellevue Hospital to improve the mental
health systems and New York’s outpatient commitment program that
was expanded by Kendra’s Law, which allows courts to order some
people with brain disorders to adhere to treatment while they live in
the community.

Herbert P. Ungricht, M.D. ’51, of Salt Lake City, died on
March 14 at the age of 86. Ungricht was a pilot with the rank of lieutenant
colonel in the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II. He practiced ophthalmology
in Salt Lake City until he was 82.


Send obituary notices to Claire M. Bessinger, Yale Medicine
Publications, P.O. Box 7612, New Haven, CT 06519-0612, or via e-mail to
claire.bessinger@yale.edu
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