![]() ![]() Johannessen, ’41 (economics), of Alamo, Calif., January 1, at 97. Survivors include her son Daniel.Įdward L. She was predeceased by her husband of 55 years, Arthur, and son Michael, ’75. After Stanford, she earned a master’s degree from Radcliffe College and married a foreign service officer they lived in Hong Kong, Ethiopia, and Taiwan. The daughter of an Army officer, she was born in Texas and lived in California, the Philippines, Oklahoma, Washington, D.C., and Hawaii, where she graduated from the Punahou School. Survivors: his wife of 75 years, Jean (Williams, ’41) sons, Kenneth, ’65, PhD ’74, and John III five grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.Ĭharleen Egan Dornheim, ’41 (political science), of Bethesda, Md., February 18. He enjoyed swimming with turtles in Hawaii, whitewater rafting on the Rogue River, reading the Wall Street Journal and attending Stanford home football games. A successful financier involved with many industries, ranging from trucking to golf courses, he was instrumental in saving Liberty Bank’s Boulder Creek branch and in the process became the controlling shareholder. He spent most of his career at Farmer Insurance, retiring as treasurer in 1965, and then joined with a colleague to form 20th Century Insurance (now 21st Century Insurance). For his service in World War II, he earned two Bronze Stars for bravery. ![]() He was a member of Kappa Alpha and earned an MBA from Harvard U. John Benjamin De Nault, ’41 (economics), of Boulder Creek, Calif., December 19, at 97. Survivors: his wife, Rachael, and two sons. An avid fisherman and birdwatcher, he traveled to many countries and enjoyed spending time in Palm Desert, Calif. He also volunteered at the Pasadena Dispensary, the Huntington Hospital and the Los Angeles County Public Guardian’s Office. Navy Medical Corps during World War II and then returned to Pasadena, Calif., where he was raised, and established a medical practice. Nichols, ’37 (basic medical sciences), MD ’43, of Bradbury, Calif., in 2017, at 102. Survivors: her sons, John, David and Philip four grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. She was predeceased by her husband, Clay. In addition, she played tennis for many years and was a lifelong bridge player. She was devoted to her family, traveled extensively and had a deep respect for nature. Learn more about Lyn in her detailed biographical post.Winifrid Manning Hollingsworth, ’37 (English), of Fresno, Calif., March 9, at 100. Lyn's work has been featured or cited on Forbes, Business Insider, CNBC, MarketWatch, Time's Money Magazine, Kiplinger, The Street, US News and World Report, the Telegraph, Fidelity Investments, Morningstar, and other financial media. She focuses strongly on valuation, and regularly employs the use of cash-secured puts, covered calls, and normal buy-and-hold positions, depending on market conditions and available opportunities. Her specialties include monitoring developments in the business cycle, analyzing various approaches to asset allocation, and covering stocks and international ETFs. She has worked for over a decade in the aviation industry in a range of roles, starting as an electronics engineer and moving into project and facility management, and engineering finance.įounder of Lyn Alden Investment Strategy and a popular contributor on Seeking Alpha, Lyn provides market research to tens of thousands of individual investors and financial professionals per month. Lyn has a Bachelor's degree in electrical & electronics engineering and a Master's degree in engineering management with a focus on financial modeling and engineering economics. With a background blending engineering and finance, Lyn uses a dispassionate long-term quantitative and qualitative approach to filter through the noise and find value in stocks and markets around the world. Lyn Alden Schwartzer provides analysis on select large, mid and small-cap stocks within our Stock Waves service.
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