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Claude T. Anderson, M.D. 53, HS 57, a scholar, writer, painter
and self-taught musician, died June 26 of a heart attack at his home in
Ramona, Calif. He was 80.
 Born on a farm in Chapin, Ill., Anderson developed a lifelong love for
learning as a pupil in a one-room schoolhouse. In 1941, while at Knox
College in Galesburg, Ill., he was called to active duty in the Army Air
Force as a navigator on B-17s. After the war he returned to Knox, graduating
cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa in 1947, then continued on to medical school
at Yale, where he won the Ferris Prize in Anatomy. After his second year,
he traveled to Oxford as a Rhodes scholar and in two years earned bachelors
degrees in physiology and pharmacology. Oxford awarded him an honorary
masters degree three years later. While in England, he proposed, via
telegram, to his future wife, Evelyn Hamburger, R.N., Ph.D., M.N. 50.
 Anderson returned to Yale, earning his medical degree in 1953 and serving
on the house staff until 1957. He continued his Air Force career and earned
a masters degree in radiation biology while in the military. In 1972,
he retired from the service at the rank of colonel and went on to an immunology
fellowship at the University of Texas Health Science Center. While there,
he earned a degree in philosophy. In 1979, he opened the South Texas Immunology
Lab and served as its director. He retired to Ramona in the mid-1990s.
 Anderson wrote short stories, limericks and political satire for enjoyment;
he was a voracious reader with a personal library exceeding 30,000 volumes.
He dabbled in painting and taught himself to play more than a half-dozen
musical instruments.

Joseph V. Baldwin, M.D. 40, HS 47, of Manchester, Conn., died
June 27 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. He was 88.
 Baldwin attended Clark University and earned his medical degree from
Yale. He started his residency training in pediatrics at Grace Hospital
in New Haven in 1940 and was an assistant in the Clinic of Child Development
until 1942. Baldwin then served in the Navy as lieutenant commander and
flight surgeon during World War II. He returned to the hospital in 1946
as an assistant resident in pediatrics until 1947.
 While at Yale, Baldwin was a research assistant at the Clinic of Child
Development from 1947 until 1948, working under Drs. Arnold L. Gesell
and Catherine S. Armatruda, both pioneers in child development. In 1948
he became an instructor in pediatrics and at the Child Study Center. From
1949 until 1953, when he retired, Baldwin was a clinical instructor in
pediatrics with an appointment in the Child Study Center.

Frank D. Carroll, M.D. 32, of Rye, N.Y., died July 24. He was
95.
 Carroll received his undergraduate degree from Harvard in 1929 after
three years of study; he then went on to Yale for his medical education.
He interned at the Charles V. Chaplin and Rhode Island hospitals in Providence
and completed his ophthalmology residency at the Massachusetts Eye and
Ear Infirmary in Boston. He served as a research fellow in the department
of ophthalmology at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia
University in New York. After his fellowship, Carroll was appointed to
the faculty at Columbia. Upon his retirement, he held the title of clinical
professor emeritus of ophthalmology.
 Carroll had a private practice in Rye, N.Y., from which he retired in
1990. He was also in charge of the eye department of the United Hospital
in Port Chester, N.Y., for 28 years and ran a free eye clinic there.

Anne B. Collart, M.P.H. 66, a social worker and businesswoman,
died April 18 at her home in Harwich Port, Mass. She was 61.
 Collart was raised in Plainfield, N.J., and graduated from Wheaton College
in Illinois. She earned her master of public health degree from Yale and
a masters degree in social work from Fordham University in 2000. She
worked as an epidemiologist for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. and
later as a computer trainer and consultant for various firms before founding
her own company, ABC Computers.
 Fulfilling a lifelong dream in 2000, she returned to her family home
in Harwich Port on Cape Cod. Collart was a clinical social worker with
Child and Family Service of Cape Cod and a member of the National Association
of Social Workers and the Massachusetts Society for Clinical Social Work.
She was an accomplished sailor and avid golfer.

Richard B. Helgerson, M.D. 71, died at his home in Madison, Wis.,
on April 19. He was 58.

Raised on a dairy farm near Elk Point, S.D., Helgerson completed grade
school in a one-room schoolhouse, the only member of his class. He earned
his bachelors degree from the University of Cincinnati in 1967 and
his medical degree from Yale. In 1979, after completing his internship
and residency training in general surgery and a fellowship in surgical
infectious diseases at the University of Minnesota Hospitals, he joined
the faculty at the University of Wisconsin Medical School (UW) in the
department of surgery.
 Helgerson had a 22-year career at UW, where he was director of the burn
unit at University Hospitals and director of the General Surgery Residency
Program. He was best known for his treatment of severely burned children
because of his skills in burn wound management and skin grafting. Helgerson
was a member of the Madison and Wisconsin surgical societies, the American
Association of Burn Surgeons and the International Burn Society. Progressive
illness cut short his career and forced his retirement in 2001.

Wilbur D. Johnston, D.D.S., M.D. 37, of North Haven, Conn., died
at his home on August 27. He was 92.
 Johnston, a specialist in orthodontics, received his dental degree from
the University of Pennsylvania and his medical degree from Yale. He served
in the Army Medical Corps during World War II as a major and was awarded
the Bronze Star. Johnston was appointed an assistant clinical professor
of surgery at Yale in 1946 and was clinical professor of surgery (dental)
at the time of his death. During his career, he received a certificate
of honor from the New Haven Dental Association and numerous awards of
merit.

Dunham Kirkham, M.D. 37, of Union, Maine, died at his home on
July 1 after a long illness. He was 92.
 Kirkham graduated from Dartmouth College in 1933 and received his medical
degree from Yale. He was a member of the active Army reserve and served
in the Pacific theater during World War II as a specialist in tropical
medicine. He was recalled to active duty during the Korean War and retired
in 1969 after 27 years of service.
 His 53-year medical career as a civilian spanned much of the globe and
included private practice, public health service and years with both the
U.S. Veterans Administration and New York State. Kirkham retired in 1972
as head of the medical-surgical clinic at Sunmount State School in Tupper
Lake, N.Y. He and his wife moved in 1988 to Union, where he enjoyed gardening
and fishing.

Ruth Eiko Oda, M.D., HS 54, of Hilo, Hawaii, died November 2,
2001, at the age of 73.
 Oda was a retired pediatrician who had practiced in Hilo for 43 years.
She was a member of Piihonua Kumiai, a neighborhood assistance association,
and the American Medical Association and was a fellow of the American
Academy of Pediatrics.

Samuel D. Rowley, M.D., M.P.H. 69, of Orange Park, Fla., died
at the Baptist Medical Center in Jacksonville, Fla., on February 12, 2002,
at the age of 82.
 Born in Hartford, Conn., Rowley received a medical degree from Jefferson
Medical College in Philadelphia and a masters in public health from Yale.
He practiced pediatrics in Hartford from 1951 until 1967. Rowley served
as director of the Rentschler Pediatric Clinic from 1968 until 1972, when
he moved to Florida. He was director of the Duval County Health Department
from 1973 until 1985 and was on the board of directors of the Mental
Health Clinic in Jacksonville. Rowley co-founded the Bridge of Northeast
Florida, an agency that provides services for inner-city youth, and served
as president and a member of its board for almost 30 years.

Morton A. Schiffer, M.D., of Norwalk, Conn., died July 26 at his
home. He was 88.
 A native of New York City, Schiffer graduated from Alfred University
and earned his medical degree in 1938 from Long Island College of Medicine.
He served as a physician in the Navy during World War II. During his early
career, he was director of the obstetrics and gynecology department at
the Jewish Hospital and Medical Center in Brooklyn. He was there for 41
years. He also was an obstetrician and gynecologist-in-chief at Stamford
Hospital in Connecticut. For 10 years starting in 1972, Schiffer was chair
of the obstetric advisory committee to the New York City health commissioner.
 Schiffer joined the faculty at Yale in January 1994 and retired in 2001
as a clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology.

Horace E. Thomas, M.D., HS 36, a retired surgeon and active volunteer,
died March 5, 2002, at his home in Columbia, Mo. He was 90.
 Thomas received his medical degree from Harvard and completed his internship
at Yale. He served in the Army from 1940 to 1946 as a surgeon in military
hospitals in Georgia, California and Australia. In 1947, he moved to Columbia,
where he married Helen E. Yeager in 1949.
 During his career as a surgeon from 1947 until 1985, he practiced at
Boone Hospital Center, Columbia Regional Hospital, Ellis Fischel Cancer
Center and the Keller Memorial Hospital in Fayette, Mo. I think
he is the one surgeon in this community who really deserved the title
of complete general surgeon, said Frank Dexheimer, M.D., a colleague
who knew him since 1960. He was the recipient of the Missouri University
Alumni Service Award and the Boone County Medical Societys Physician
of the Year Award. Upon retiring, Thomas traded in his surgeons mask
for a hard hat as a volunteer for Habitat for Humanity. He gave both his
time and his money to the organization.

Thomas J. Trudell, M.P.H. 75, CEO and president of Marymount Hospital
in Garfield Heights, Ohio, died July 3 of a stroke. He was 61.
 Born in New Britain, Conn., Trudell earned his bachelors degree from
Providence College in Rhode Island. He served during the Vietnam War as
an Army captain stationed in Thailand from 1966 until 1968. He continued
with his education and received a masters degree in business administration
from Northeastern University and a master of public health degree from
Yale. Trudell joined Marymount in 1979 as vice president for planning
and development. In 1981, he became its chief executive officer and later
became president. In his more than two decades at Marymount, he was credited
with the development of new services and expansion of the hospital complex,
which included the diagnostic and treatment building and outpatient care
center. He led the hospitals 1995 merger with the Cleveland Clinic Foundation.
In December 2000, in recognition of his contributions, the hospital renamed
its Behavioral Health Center the Trudell Center.
 Trudell also served as chair of the Ohio Quality Cardiac Care Foundation
and as a member of several committees and boards of the Cleveland Clinic
system, including the Center for Health Affairs board.

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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