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Joseph A. Arminio, M.D. 46, of Montchanin, Del., the first
surgeon in his state to specialize in hand surgery, died September 3 at
the age of 79. He served as the director of the Christiana Care Health
System Hand Clinic and was founder and director of the Industrial Care
Center, co-founder and president of the Medical-Dental Bureau Answering
Service, and for 20 years was director of medical services for the city
of Wilmington.

Ronald S. Beckett, M.D. 40, former director of the pathology
department of Hartford Hospital, died November 1 in Rochester, N.Y. He
was 87. Born in Port Chester, N.Y., Beckett was a founding member of the
College of American Pathology Committee, which produced the Systematized
Nomenclature of Medicine, a dictionary of medical terminology applicable
to computers. Beckett served on the clinical faculty at Yale for 20 years.

William A. Carey Jr., M.D. 41, died of pneumonia on August
27 at the age of 86 in Framingham, Mass. Born in Quincy, Mass., Carey
was awarded the Bronze Star with six oak leaf clusters while serving as
an Army major during World War II. He was chief of radiology at St. Elizabeths
Hospital in Boston and had a private practice in Worcester.

Martin E. Devlin, PA 81, died at age 49 of a brain tumor
on September 5 at his home in Poultney, Vt. Born in New Haven, Devlin
was employed by Hudson Headwaters Primary Care in Glens Falls, N.Y. He
was an avid runner and competed three times in the New York City Marathon.
He also enjoyed activities with his three sons, including maple sugaring
at his home in Vermont.

Wolfgang A. Herbordt, M.D., of Wayland, Mass., died July 23. He
was 81. Formerly of Woodbridge, Conn., Herbordt was a pathologist at the
Hospital of St. Raphael and a clinical instructor in pathology at the
School of Medicine for 18 years.

Orvan W. Hess, M.D., of North Haven, Conn., an obstetrician and
gynecologist who pioneered the development of the fetal heart monitor
during a 58-year career at Yale, died September 6 at Yale-New Haven Hospital.
He was 96. Born in Margaretville, N.Y., Hess was also instrumental in
the first successful clinical use of penicillin. Hess received an American
Medical Association Scientific Achievement Award for his contributions
to clinical research and was director of health services for the Connecticut
Welfare Department in the early days of Medicaid and Medicare.

Sabra L. Jones, M.D. 84, an interventional and cardiovascular
radiologist, general surgeon and primary care physician, was killed in
a fall at the Grand Canyon on August 12. She was 47. Born in Berkeley,
Calif., Jones was director of S.E.E.D.S. (Social Educational Environmental
Development Services), which provides relief at the grassroots level to
some of Nepals poorest villages. She received a commendation from
the American Medical Association for her work in getting the Nepalese
government to cease their punishment of physicians who provided medical
care to rebel troops. Jones also worked with the Native American communities
in New Mexico.

Frederick E. Mott, M.D., died October 17 in New Haven. He suffered
from Alzheimers disease and died of cardiac and respiratory arrest.
Born in New Haven, Mott was an ophthalmologist in the area for many years
and was an assistant clinical professor in surgery and ophthalmology at
Yale for 11 years. He served in the Army Air Corps during World War II
and received the Soldiers Medal for heroics.

Sanford L. Palay, M.D., died on August 5 of kidney failure in Concord,
Mass. He was 83. Palay, a neuroscientist born in Cleveland, taught briefly
at the School of Medicine in the early 1950s. In 1953 he joined the faculty
at Rockefeller University, where he used electron microscopy to study
the synaptic vesicles that transmit nerve impulses. He is credited with
obtaining the first images of the synapse and the structures that release
messenger chemicals in the brain. Palay was chief of the neurocytology
section at the National Institutes of Health in the early 1960s.

Olaf J. Severud, M.D., HS 35, died March 28, 2001, at the
age of 95 in Cooperstown, N.Y. Born in Risor, Norway, Severud was a lieutenant
commander in the Navy during World War II, serving in the Pacific theater.
He was head of obstetrics and gynecology at Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital
in Cooperstown and medical director at the Mohawk Valley Nursing Home
in Ilion, N.Y.

John Q. Tilson Jr., LL.B. 36, died on November 1 at his
home in North Branford, Conn., after a long siege with Parkinsons
disease. He was 91. Tilson, a prominent New Haven attorney, was a pioneer
in the field of hospital law and lectured on the topic for many years
at the School of Public Health. He was a key figure in the establishment
of The Connecticut Hospice, for which he received the Ella T. Grasso Award.

James M.A. Weiss, M.D., M.P.H. 51, died on June 24 at his
home in Columbia, Mo. He was 80. Born in St. Paul, Minn., Weiss was the
founding chair of the department of psychiatry at the University of Missouri-Columbia
School of Medicine, a position he held for 31 years. He was known for
his research on suicide and anti-social behavior, and secured the initial
funding to build the Mid-Missouri Mental Health Center.
Send obituary notices to Claire 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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