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William T. Bachmann, M.D., HS ’74, died on July 28 of cancer.
He was 65. Bachmann, a dermatologist, lived in Stonington, Conn., and
maintained a practice in Westerly, R.I., for more than 30 years. During
the Vietnam War Bachmann served as a physician on submarines based in
Groton, Conn. He was known in the area not only as a physician, but also
for his enthusiasm for fishing for tuna and marlin. In recent years he
began exploring area wildlife by boat and kayak. An activist and defender
of healthy sea life, he recently completed a book about his fishing experiences
and environmental insights.

Horst N. Bertram, M.D., HS ’59, a radiologist, died on March
12 in Cornwall, Pa. A native of Berlin, Germany, Bertram completed his
medical studies at the end of World War II, then began a residency in
Ohio. After serving as a battalion surgeon in the Army during the Korean
War, he came to Yale to complete his residency in radiology. In 1965 he
joined the staff of the Good Samaritan Hospital in Lebanon, Pa., where
he stayed for 30 years. He served as chair of the radiology department
and president of the Lebanon County Medical Society.

Sister Mary Anne Fitzmaurice, R.N., M.P.H. ’69, a member
of the Sisters of St. Joseph, died on May 1 in West Hartford, Conn. She
was 80. Fitzmaurice received her nursing degree from St. Francis Hospital
School of Nursing in Hartford, Conn., and in 1955 became operating room
supervisor at St. Mary’s Hospital in Waterbury, Conn. In 1967 she
began studies in hospital administration at Yale. After her graduation
in 1969 she spent a year at the Hospital of St. Raphael in New Haven as
a resident in administration. During her career she also worked at St.
Francis Hospital in Hartford, the Provincial House of the Sisters of St.
Joseph in West Hartford and the Intensive Education Academy in West Hartford.
She was honored with a Certificate of Membership in the American College
of Hospital Administrators, and in 1979 the mayor of Hartford recognized
her service with a Certificate of Award.

Frederick P. Glike, M.D. ’41, died on September 12 at his
home in Meriden, Conn. He was 89. A lifelong resident of Meriden, Glike
graduated from Harvard University before entering the medical school at
Yale. During World War II he was a captain with the Third Battalion and
participated in the Battle of the Bulge. He returned to Meriden, where
he practiced medicine for 40 years until his retirement. Glike loved music
and played the clarinet in the Meriden Symphony. He also enjoyed the outdoors
and took hiking trips with his family in the White Mountains, where he
climbed all peaks over 4,000 feet.

Victor C. Hackney, M.D. ’43, died on September 5 in Geary,
Okla. He was 88. During World War II Hackney served in the Navy. Board
certified in dermatology and pathology, he studied at the Armed Forces
Institute of Pathology. He received academic appointments at the University
of Southern California and at Stanford University before becoming founding
chair of dermatology and professor of dermatology and pathology at Indiana
State University School of Medicine. He retired in 1976.

H. David Kearing, M.D., HS ’68, died on September 9 at his
home in Brackney, Pa. He was 68. After receiving his medical degree from
Cornell in New York, Kearing completed a residency in ob/gyn at Yale.
He subsequently served in the U.S. Army at West Point for two years. From
1972 to 1991 he practiced ob/gyn in Binghamton, N.Y., with two partners,
then went into private practice until 2001, when he retired.

Carter Lee Marshall, M.D. ’62, M.P.H. ’64, died on
February 18 in Tucson, Ariz. After service in the Army, Marshall was on
the faculty at the University of Kansas School of Medicine, the Mt. Sinai
School of Medicine and the City University of New York. In the 1970s he
helped set up a medical school at Morehouse College in Atlanta. He later
served as director of medical education at the University of Medicine
and Dentistry of New Jersey, before moving to Arizona to work at the Health
Services Advisory Group, the state’s Medicare quality improvement
organization. He co-authored an introductory text for allied health workers
and published more than 70 articles.

Willys M. Monroe, M.D. ’41, a pathologist, died on March
18 in Lynchburg, Va. Monroe was a life fellow of the College of American
Pathologists, a fellow of the American Society for Clinical Pathology
and a life member of the Medical Society of Virginia. During his career
he spent five years in the U.S. Public Health Service, leaving as a lieutenant
colonel to become chair of the department of pathology at Richmond Memorial
Hospital, where he established a blood bank and trained lab technicians.
He also taught pathology at Virginia Commonwealth University and the University
of Virginia. He was the first chief of the Richmond Metropolitan Blood
Service.

Richard B. Ogrean, M.S. ’52, died on June 2 in Fort Myers,
Fla. He was 83. After serving in the U.S. Army Medical Corps in Europe
during World War II, Ogrean obtained a degree in public health administration
at Yale, then worked as an assistant administrator at Yale-New Haven Hospital.
In 1956 he became an administrator at Windham Community Memorial Hospital
in Willimantic, Conn., where he stayed for 18 years. He worked at other
hospitals until his retirement in 1983. He was also a deacon at the First
Baptist Church in Willimantic.

Howard Rasmussen, M.D., Ph.D., a former professor of medicine and
cell biology and chief of endocrinology and metabolism at the School of
Medicine, died on April 20 in North Carolina after a long illness. He
was 80. Rasmussen was one of the first scientists to recognize the importance
of calcium as a signaling molecule. During his career he was chair of
biochemistry at the University of Pennsylvania and founding director of
the Institute of Molecular Medicine and Genetics at the Medical College
of Georgia. Rasmussen was at Yale from 1976 to 1993.

Robert T. Sceery, M.D. ’50, died on February 18 of congestive
heart failure in Cohasset, Mass. He was 84. Sceery, a pediatrician, was
school physician in Cohasset for more than 40 years. Known for his quiet
manner, he made house calls and saw patients regardless of their ability
to pay. Although retired for several years, Sceery saw occasional patients
and attended weekly rounds at Massachusetts General Hospital. During World
War II he joined the Navy, piloting a tank landing ship to Normandy beach
on D-Day and participating in assaults on southern France and Japan.

Paul W. Sternlof, M.P.H. ’57, died in Sharon, Conn., on August
12. He was 73. Sternlof served as assistant administrator of Baltimore
General Hospital in Maryland from 1958 until 1962, when he became president
of Sharon Hospital. He remained in that post until 1989.

Daniel B. Stryer, M.D. ’90, director of the Center for Quality
Improvement and Patient Safety at the Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, died on May 19
in Rockville, Md., of complications from a brain tumor. The center provides
information to patients and the health care industry to improve quality
of care. Stryer took on his job in 1997, after a residency in internal
medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, and, with his
wife, pediatrician Stacy Beller Stryer, M.D. ’91, spent three years
with the Indian Health Service in Arizona.

George Tyler, M.D. ’67, died on August 28 in Bethlehem, Pa.
He was 65. Tyler, a fellow of the American College of Surgeons, was a
senior surgeon at Lehigh Valley Hospital-Muhlenberg and an instructor
for the “Advanced Trauma Life Support” course. He was a major
in the U.S. Army Seventh Cavalry and served in Vietnam, where he received
the Bronze Star.

Vernon T. “Doc” Watley, M.D. ’49, died on August
30 in Beaumont, Texas. He was 83. In March 1942 Watley enlisted in the
U.S. Air Force and served at what later became Lackland Air Force Base
in Texas. During the Korean War he was called back to duty and ran the
neurological service at Lackland. After his military service, he was the
superintendent of Abilene State Hospital for Epileptics and a psychiatrist
at Austin State Hospital. During his career he was also an emergency room
doctor and, until his retirement in 1981, a family physician.


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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