News & Reviews
WP Technology
Margaret W. Fowler, John J. Lobell, Guido Radelat, Robert S. Turkington, Barbara Whittlesey, Nina Cullen, George W. Pittarelli, Clarence M. Hammond Sr.Tech Search
Margaret W. Fowler, John J. Lobell, Guido Radelat, Robert S. Turkington, Barbara Whittlesey, Nina Cullen, George W. Pittarelli, Clarence M. Hammond Sr.
Margaret W. Fowler Editor
Margaret W. Fowler, 87, who co-edited two books about the rich and diverse lives of the elderly, died July 14 at Broadmead, a continuing-care retirement community in Cockeysville, Md. She had Parkinson's disease.
With Priscilla McCutcheon, Mrs. Fowler edited "Songs of Experience: An Anthology of Literature on Growing Old" (1991) and "Love in Full Bloom," a 1994 collection of short stories about romantic love among older people. Her aim was to dispel stereotypes of older people and show that they can be as funny, stubborn and passionate as their younger counterparts.
Margaret Williamson was born in Baltimore and graduated in 1945 from Wellesley College. In 1978 she received a master's degree in women's studies from George Washington University.
She served as a Red Cross nurse during World War II in the Philippines and Japan, where she was among the first nurses to go to the island of Kyushu after the Japanese surrender. She met her husband, then an Army lieutenant, during the U.S. occupation of France, when they served together at a rest-and-recreation hotel for Allied troops.
From 1964 to 1967, Mrs. Fowler lived in Bogota, Colombia, where her husband was chief of the U.S. Agency for International Development mission.
Her husband of 30 years, James R. Fowler, died in 1977. Survivors include three children, Pamela L. Fowler of Chevy Chase, Deborah F. Hudson of Baltimore and Michael R. Fowler of English, Ind.; and 11 grandchildren.
-- Emma Brown
John J. Lobell Episcopal Priest
John J. Lobell, 86, an ordained Episcopal priest who was a counselor with the old Pastoral Counseling and Consultation Centers of Greater Baltimore for more than a decade, died July 26 of stomach and liver cancer at his home in Columbia.
Rev. Lobell graduated from Virginia Episcopal Seminary in 1964. For several years he was a rector at small churches in the Baltimore area before joining the center, where clergymen offered counseling as well as spiritual guidance. He retired in 1990 but continued to offer counseling services from his home office in Columbia.
John James Lobell was born in Baltimore. After serving in the Army Air Forces during World War II, he graduated in 1948 from St. John's College in Annapolis and bought a farm in Leesburg, where for several years he raised cattle, goats and sheep.
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
© raidencomputers.co.uk 2003 - 2010