| |


|
|

Henry Bicker Bruyn, M.D. ’43, died on August 7 at his home
in Kentfield, Calif., at the age of 86. During World War II, Bruyn served
as a lieutenant commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve medical corps. Bruyn,
a pediatrician, was the director of student health services at the University
of California, Berkeley, from 1959 to 1972, and was also a clinical professor
of medicine and pediatrics at the University of California, San Francisco,
School of Medicine.

Daniel W. Elliott, M.D. ’49, of Dayton, Ohio, died at home
on August 1 at the age of 81. Elliott was a medical corpsman during World
War II and a captain in the U.S. Air Force Reserve during the Korean War.
After his surgical residency at Ohio State University in 1957, Elliott
joined the faculty there as an assistant professor and became a full professor
in 1963. He later became a professor of surgery at the University of Pittsburgh.
In 1976 he helped found the medical school at Wright State University
in Dayton, where he was chair of surgery.

Lawrence Z. Freedman, M.D., HS ’48, died from a stroke on
October 6 at his home in Chicago. He was 85. Freedman, a pioneer in forensic
psychiatry who explored the causes of assassinations, terrorism and mass
murder, held joint appointments in the Department of Psychiatry and the
Law School between 1949 and 1960 at Yale, where he co-founded and chaired
Yale’s study unit in psychiatry and law. In the 1960s he served
on the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence.

Robert C. Lange, Ph.D., associate clinical professor of diagnostic
radiology, died on October 6 in New Haven at the age of 69. Lange, an
advocate for the protection of human subjects in research studies, was
a pioneer in MRI technology. After receiving his doctorate from MIT in
1962 and working at the Monsanto Research Corp., he came to Yale in 1969.
Until his retirement in 2000 he held a variety of posts, including technical
director for the Section of Nuclear Medicine in the Department of Diagnostic
Radiology and MRI physicist and clinical technical director for the Magnetic
Resonance Imaging Research Center. He also chaired the Radiation Safety
Committee and the Radioactive Drug Research Committee for Yale-New Haven
Hospital. After his retirement he worked part time, as chair of one of
the medical school’s two Human Investigation Committees.

William Lee, M.D. ’41, of Bath, Maine, died on July 19 at
the age of 89. During World War II, Lee was a Navy doctor in the South
Pacific, where he earned a battle star and unit citation. Lee, who spent
20 years in occupational medicine, was instrumental in founding the Constructive
Workshops, a sheltered workplace for people with disabilities. For 14
years he directed the employees’ health clinic at Hartford Hospital.

Darius G. Ornston Jr., M.D., HS ’63, of Greenville, S.C.,
died on November 19, 2003, at the age of 69. Ornston came to Yale as a
psychiatry resident in 1960 and by 1982 had become an associate clinical
professor of psychiatry. In 1986 he moved to South Carolina, where he
researched and translated the works of Sigmund Freud. He also authored
a book, Translating Freud. Ornston was a longtime member of the
Associates of the Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library at Yale.

Alex Poljak, M.D., FW ’96, M.P.H. ’03, of Branford,
Conn., died on July 3, at the age of 41, while biking with his wife and
son on Block Island, R.I. Poljak was director of occupational medicine
at Greenwich Hospital and a clinical instructor of internal medicine (occupational)
at the School of Medicine. He also founded and served as chair and chief
medical officer at MedLinx Interactive, a medical software company in
New York City, and established two companies, Integrated Medical Systems
and Occupational Health Solutions.

Jeffrey S. Schechner, M.D. ’91, of Guilford, Conn., died
on September 7 at the age of 39. Schechner, an associate professor of
dermatology at the School of Medicine and director of the Dermatology
Service at the VA Connecticut Healthcare System in West Haven, focused
on vascular biology tissue engineering, and conducted research on blood
vessels in the skin and human skin grafting.

Charles D. Spangler, Ph.D. ’42, died on July 5 at Holy Cross
Hospital in Silver Spring, Md., of pneumonia after a stroke. As a commissioned
officer for the U.S. Public Health Service, Spangler traveled the world
designing water supply and sanitation systems until his retirement in
1968. He then worked as a project manager for the World Bank in the Far
East and retired a second time in 1980. Spangler invented a simple, easy-to-repair
hand water pump, and to keep it affordable, he refused to patent it. Spangler
also taught environmental health through the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.

Parker J. Staples II, M.D. ’66, died at the age of 64 on
September 23 at his home in Barrington, R.I. Staples had a private practice
in allergy and immunology and was the medical director for Medicare Services
in Rhode Island. He also did research for the National Institutes of Health
and taught at the medical schools at the University of Rochester and Brown
University.


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
|
|



|