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Franklin C. Behrle, M.D. ’46, of Grantham, N.H., died October
6 of renal failure due to diabetes. He was 80. Behrle, professor emeritus
and chair of pediatrics at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of
New Jersey, was co-founder and executive chair of the Statewide Perinatal
Services and Research Center.

Ronald C. Brown, M.D. ’74, of South Orange, N.J., died August
14. Brown, whose practice was in internal medicine, was a former vice
president of medical affairs at Oxford Health Plans in Edison, N.J.

Joseph Budnitz, M.D. ’34, former chief of cardiology at the
Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield, Mass., died on October 7 of cardiac
arrest at the age of 93. In 1941, he was among the first physicians certified
by the newly formed American Board of Cardiovascular Disease.

Harrison Dunn, M.D., HS ’63, of Visalia, Calif., died on
October 15 in Pixley, Calif., at the age of 73. For most of his career
Dunn was an emergency room physician at the Veterans Memorial Medical
Center in Meriden, Conn. He retired in 1993 and moved to California, where
he was employed by the state as a physician at the Corcoran Prison.

Stephen Fleck, M.D., professor emeritus of psychiatry and public
health at Yale, died on December 19 at the age of 90. Fleck served as
psychiatrist-in-chief of both the Yale Psychiatric Institute and the Connecticut
Mental Health Center and was known for his influential research work on
schizophrenia and the family. During World War II he helped to evacuate
and treat concentration camp prisoners and to interrogate German prisoners.

William W. Glenn, M.D., former chief of cardiothoracic surgery
at the medical school, died on March 10 at Monadnock Community Hospital
in Peterborough, N.H. He was 88.

In 1950, using a pump made from parts of a child’s Erector set,
Glenn and colleague William H. Sewell, M.D., created a mechanical heart
pump, the forerunner of heart-lung bypass machines. Four years later Glenn
became the first to use a vena cava-pulmonary artery shunt to bypass malformed
hearts in the treatment of blue babies. And in 1959, Glenn and colleagues
introduced the concept of electrical stimulation by radio frequency induction
into medical practice, first used to pace the heart and later the diaphragm.
Glenn’s textbook, Glenn’s Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
now in its sixth edition, has become the international standard text for
vascular surgeons.

Elizabeth R. Harrison, M.D. ’26, one of the first women to
graduate from the School of Medicine and pediatrician to three generations
of New Haven children, died in her sleep on January 5 at the age of 103.

Charles A. Janeway Jr., M.D., professor of immunobiology at the
School of Medicine and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator,
died on April 12 at age 60 in New Haven after a long illness. One of the
leading immunologists of his generation, he developed many of the concepts
that are the basis of immunology today. He is renowned for his recent
work on innate immunity, the body’s first line of defense against
infection.

Janeway predicted in 1989 that pattern recognition receptors would mediate
the body’s ability to recognize invasion by microorganisms. This
prediction was made first on theoretical grounds, and subsequent experimental
work established the underlying mechanisms.

Janeway published more than 300 scientific papers and was the principal
author of the acclaimed textbook Immunobiology: The Immune System in
Health and Disease, now in its fifth edition.

Ernest R. Kimball, M.D. ’36, of Jacksonville, Fla., died
December 27 at the age of 93. A pediatrician dedicated to the benefits
of breastfeeding, Kimball helped found the Evanston (Ill.) Hospital Breast
Milk Bank. Kimball and his wife, Alicia, co-founded a not-for-profit ranch
in Zion, Ariz., providing physical and recreational therapy for children
with mental and physical disabilities.

Samuel Reback, M.D. ’25, a retired neurologist and psychiatrist,
died November 22 in New Smyrna Beach, Fla., He was 101. Reback, a former
resident of Staten Island, N.Y., was an expert in mental illness and neurological
disorders and testified at trials. He wrote many papers on neuropsychiatry
and was the first to describe the disorder known as Familial Paroxysmal
Choroeoathetosis.

Priscilla Taft, M.D. ’44, of Lenox, Mass., died November
23 at the age of 85. Taft was a pathologist at Massachusetts General Hospital.
She graduated from Radcliffe College but was turned down for admission
by the Harvard Medical School because they would not accept women. While
at Yale she contracted tuberculosis, an occupational hazard for medical
students, and met her husband, Edgar B. Taft, M.D. ’42, while both
were in treatment.

Arnold D. Welch, Ph.D., M.D., former chair of pharmacology at Yale,
died at home in San Diego on October 11 at the age of 94. Welch also served
as department chair at Western Reserve University and was president of
the Squibb Institute for Medical Research. At age 75, Welch joined the
National Cancer Institute to coordinate the National Cooperative Drug
Discovery Groups and served as acting deputy director of the division
of cancer treatment.

C. Bruce Wenger, M.D. ’70, Ph.D. ’73, of Natick, Mass.,
died November 22 after a long illness. He was 60. A pharmacologist, Wenger
had been a medical researcher for the Army, specializing in heat-related
illnesses. He loved to sing and belonged to the Stambandet Swedish Singing
Group and the Norumbega Harmony Singers. Wenger was a long-standing member
of Gideons International, the oldest Christian business and professional
men’s association in the United States, and the Park Street Church
Missions Committee.

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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