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Remi J. Cadoret, M.D. ’53, died of prostate cancer at his
home in Iowa City, Iowa, on November 12. He was 77. After graduating from
the School of Medicine, Cadoret spent two years in the U.S. Air Force,
during which time he delivered 500 babies. He did research at the Duke
University Parapsychology Laboratory in North Carolina before taking a
position at the University of Manitoba College of Medicine in Canada.
From there he went to Washington University in St. Louis and the University
of Iowa. He was director of the Iowa Consortium for Substance Abuse and
Evaluation. After his retirement in 1998 he continued his research, using
adoptee studies to study gene-environment interaction, with a focus on
antisocial behavior and substance dependence.

Ludmil A. Chotkowski, M.D. ’42, of Berlin, Conn., died on
October 6 at the age of 89. Chotkowski was an internist for more than
50 years at New Britain General Hospital, the Rocky Hill (Conn.) Veterans
Home and Hospital and Connecticut Valley Hospital. He was also a self-published
author, columnist, community activist, naturalist and farmer with a 14-acre
fruit orchard. In Berlin, where he was born and raised on a family farm,
he served as health officer, improving water quality and introducing innovative
public health measures. He established one of the first clinics to administer
polio vaccinations, and he performed kidney dialysis and recommended inhalers
to treat asthma before these practices were widely used. In another way,
however, he remained old-fashioned, continuing to make house calls.

Michael T. Cronin, D.V.M., Ph.D., M.D., HS ’67, assistant
clinical professor of pathology, died in Branford, Conn., on November
23 of Parkinson’s disease. He was 81. Cronin’s medical career
spanned 30 years at Yale, the Hospital of Saint Raphael and Memorial Hospital
in Meriden, Conn. Early in his career, Cronin, a native of Ireland, did
veterinary research at the Irish Racing Board and the Equine Research
Station in England. From 1971 to 1989 he was a consulting editor for the
magazine American Scientist.

Armin F. Funke, M.P.H. ’60, died on June 24 in Roseville,
Calif. He was 78. Born in Germany, Funke came to the United States in
1948 and worked at the state of California Department of Health for 30
years.

Joshua C. Gibson, M.D. ’01, died on November 14 in New York
of a cardiac arrhythmia. He was 34. Gibson was a fellow in infectious
diseases at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, where he co-founded the
Advancing Idealism in Medicine Curriculum to help residents get involved
in international programs that focus on improving the plight of others.
Gibson himself worked at a refugee camp in Tanzania for Rwandan refugees,
volunteered at a rural health center in India and tracked the health impact
of the World Trade Center attacks on rescue workers. At a memorial service,
Daniel S. Caplivski, M.D. ’00, an assistant professor at Mt. Sinai,
recalled his classmate, friend and colleague: “We had seen each
other as first-year medical students just learning to listen through a
stethoscope. Now I was watching his wonderful bedside manner and I saw
his deep compassion and his meticulous attention to detail. He had become
a great doctor.”

James H. Greenwald, M.D. ’58, died on November 14 in Chicago.
He was 73. Greenwald served his internship and residency at Cook County
Hospital in Chicago, then practiced nephrology and internal medicine in
the Chicago area until he retired in 2000. He was a member of national
medical societies and the author of several research papers.

Martha F. Leonard, M.D., a former professor of pediatrics long
affiliated with the Child Study Center, died on December 27 in North Branford,
Conn. She was 89. Leonard came to Yale in 1961. As an early-childhood
specialist, she provided compassionate care to children and their families.
She also worked to influence legislation affecting children. She was active
in the Center Church in New Haven, the Interfaith Cooperative Ministries
and the Community Foundation for Greater New Haven. In 1979 she received
an honorary M.A.H. degree from the Yale Divinity School and later served
as chaplain at the Evergreen Woods retirement community in North Branford,
where she lived.

Mary Ann Lillie, R.N., M.P.H. ’87, died on October 4 at the
Connecticut Hospice in Branford, Conn. She was 54. Lillie worked for many
years at Yale-New Haven Hospital and was an active member of St. Andrews
United Methodist Church in New Haven.

Patrick J. McLaughlin Jr., Med. ’48, died on September 8
in Massachusetts at the age of 82. McLaughlin was a social worker for
the city of Lowell and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. For many years
McLaughlin, who started but did not complete his medical education at
Yale, and his wife lived in Andover, Mass., but recently moved to Concord
to be near one of their daughters and her family.

Kay Tanaka, M.D., D.Sc., professor emeritus in the Department of
Genetics, died on August 21 in New Haven. He was 76. Before coming to
Yale in 1973, Tanaka held faculty positions at Baylor College of Medicine,
Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital. He founded
and, from 1977 to 1989, directed the Biochemical Disease Detection Laboratory
at Yale, and in 1987 he received a MERIT award from the National Institutes
of Health. He was a pioneer in the use of gas-liquid chromatography and
nuclear magnetic resonance in the identification of inherited metabolic
diseases.

Wilbur D. Van Buren, Med. ’78, M.D., Ph.D., died on November
6 in Kansas City, Mo., of pancreatic cancer. He was 57. Van Buren began
his medical studies at Yale, but obtained his degree at St. Louis University.
Known as “the singing doctor,” he was in private practice
and worked at hospitals and nursing homes in Kansas City. He was a major
in the U.S. Army Reserves, a Grand Knight of the Knights of Columbus and
active in the Holy Name Catholic Church.


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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