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Chicago Tribune du lieu suivant : Chicago, Illinois • Page 4-5

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Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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4-5
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123456 SECTION4CHICAGO TRIBUNE 5 OBITUARIES Whose ashes are in the urn? We personally perform the cremation so we know Cremation Society of Illinois 800-622-8358 www.cremation-society.com 9 Northern IL Locations Your loved one never leaves our care. Cemeteries, Crematories, Mausoleums ASK YOUR FUNERAL DIRECTOR QUALITY. BRAND NAME BURIAL VAULTS Cemeteries, Crematories, Mausoleums ATTENTION FUNERAL DIRECTORS: The business hours for the placement of paid death notices are: Monday through Friday 8 a.m. 6 p.m. Faxes and e-mail: 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.

Saturday and Sunday: 9 a.m. 5 p.m. Faxes and e-mail: 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. To place a paid death notice, please call: 312-222-2222 Fax: 312-222-4014 e-mail: Cemeteries, Crematories, Mausoleums CECOLA, CONNIE J. 9 years have passed, and we all love you and miss you very much.

Love, Tony and family WESTLAWN CEMETERY- (2) adjacent plots in Eastlake block 8, lot 10. Valued at $7000 obo. 847-432-8184 EDEN CEMETERY Six cemetery plots. Irving Park Schiller Park. Call 847-395-6016 or 847-815-2296 IRVING PARK CEMETERY- (2) lots in the Highland Park Area Sec.

$2600 for both. 630-595-2299 ROSEHILL CEMETERY, Chicago. Lot 328, section 5. Valued at $5195. Asking $4800.

Call 847-467-0127 SHALOM MEMORIAL PARK(2) side by side plots, Ramah III, Estate 128. 847-997-9199 CLARENDON HILLS CEMETERY Darien, IL. Cemetery lot graves. Will sell cheap pay fees. Call Steve 270-735-3753 CHAPEL HILL GARDEN SOUTH Garden of Good Shepherd, Worth, IL.

219-365-1055 CHAPEL HILL GARDENS SOUTH Section Sermon On The Mount, 6 plots. Valued at $1,595 each. Sell each. 708-474-1294 IRVING PARK CEMETERY. Moving must sell, 4 graves, side by side.

Value $5000. Asking $4000. Chapel Section. block 9, lot 2. 630-837-5413 Cemeteries, Crematories, Mausoleums Go to chicagotribune.com/obituaries SIGN GUESTBOOKS FOR TRIBUNE DEATH NOTICES ANCHOR, JUDITH ANN Judith Ann Anchor, beloved daughter ofthe late Edmond Anchor and the late Cecilia Anchor, nee Plaza; loving sister of Kenneth (Mary), Larry (June), Michael (Shari) and Alyce (Roger) Czerwinski; fond aunt of many nieces and nephews.

Visitation Monday from 9 a.m. until time of Service at 11 a.m. at ils Funeral Home, 180 S. York Bensenville, IL. Interment Elm Lawn Cemetery, Elmhurst, IL.

For funeral info call 630-766-3232 www.geilsfuneralhome.com Sign Guestbook at chicagotribune.com/obituaries Death Notices Express yourself Express yourself Delivery to Chicago all suburbs everyday without without 888-885-2000 888-885-2000 888-885-2000 www.fabflowers.com 800-291-0772 www.casketco.com Opentothepublicsince1995 Forinformationo rappointmentcal I MPRESS ESS IVE Casket Casket Vault Vault Reducethecostofafuneral. Buyacasketdirectfromthefactory. Freedeliverytoyourfuneralhome. Funeral Services Be sure those who care are informed of arrangements.To place a death (312) fax (312) 222-4014. SHARE YOUR MEMORIES ARENS, DOROTHY A.

Dorothy A. Arens, nee Doyle beloved wifeof the late Francis; devoted mother of Paulette (Leo) Governale and Victoria (Raymond) Smith; fond grandmother of Michael, Gina, Paula, Ray and Nicole; loving great-grandmother of four. Funeral Monday 8:30 a.m. from Salerno Galewood Chapels 1857 N. Harlem Chicago, to St.

William Church, Mass 9:30 a.m. Interment Queen of Heaven Cemetery. Visitation Sunday, 3 to 9 p.m. For info, 773-889-1700 Sign Guestbook at chicagotribune.com/obitu aries ANDERSON, JOHN John Jack Anderson, 90 years, beloved husband of Eileen, nee Hare; cherished father of Dawne (the late Richard) Nelson, Brian (Diana), Keith (Mary Beth) and Noreen (Barry) Brinn; dear brother of Betty (the late John) Nabors; brother-in-law of the late John Hare (the late Dee); loving uncle of Joan Diette, Jim and Joy Nabors, John and Randall Hare; devoted grandfather of Richard (Kris), Scott (Melissa), Kimberly, Erick (Tami)Nelson, Bailey and Ryan Brinn; great-grandfather of Christopher, Brionna, Bryce and Nicklas Nelson. He was a Veteran of the NavalArmed Forces and an active participant in the communities of Oak Park, Chicago, Arlington Heights and Fairfield Glade, TN.

He owned and operated Careful Carpet Cleaning in Chicagofor many years; was a member of the OakPark Acorns, the St. James Golf League; and past President of the Harwood Heights Chapter of Kiwanis International. Memorial Service 2 p.m. Sunday, May 7 at Windsor Park Manor, 120 Windsor Park Carol Stream mile West of Gary Ave. on North In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Alzheimer 800-272-3900 or CNS Hospice, 630-665-7000.

Cremation Society ofIllinois handling arrangements, 800-622-8358. Sign Guestbook at chicagotribune.com/obitu aries ASHWELL, JAMES TRAVIS James Travis Ashwell, Capt.U.S.N. (Ret), 87, of Smith Mountain Lake, VA, died in Roanoke, VA atthe home of his daughter, on Saturday, April 22, 2006. A son of the lateSal- lie Willie Craghead and James Raymond Ashwell of Huddleston, VA, he was born July 17, 1918. Dr.

Ashwell was predeceased by his wife, Alice Lorraine Isberner three sisters, Hazel Ashwell Goode, Edna Ashwell Pollard and Gertrude Ashwell Turpin. Dr. Ashwell, who finished the Naval Graduate Dental School in Bethesda, MDin 1944, graduated from the Medical Collegeof Virginia as a Doctor of Dental Surgery in1942 after completing Milligan College. In his early years in the Navy, Dr. Ashwell spent time in Norfolk, Portsmouth and Bethesda before being assigned to the USS Randolph in 1944.

At that time he performed duty in combat, when, while under direct attack from enemy aircraft, the USS Randolph sustained a direct attack by a Kamikaze aircraft. After leaving the Pacific, Dr. Ashwell served tours of duty on a number of different bases: the Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, IL, where he met his wife; U.S. Naval Activities, United England; United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, MD and the naval base, Camp Lejeune, NC. In the last decade of his naval career, Dr.

Ashwell worked for the Naval Station in Mayport, FL and the Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery in Washington, D.C., from which he retired as Assistant Deputy Chief of the Dental Division. During his career, Dr. Ashwellearned the following meritorious medals: American Defense Service Medal; Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal with three stars; World War II Victory Medal; Navy Occupation Service Medal; National Defense Service Medal and Philippine Liberation Ribbon. Upon retirement from the Navy, Dr. Ashwell enjoyed for 17 yearspractic- ing dentistry from an office in his home at the lake.

An avid gardener, he also enjoyed growing vegetables and flowers for his many friends and large family. Survivors include adaughter and son-in-law, Tammy Lorraine and Timothy Melville MacFarland; grandsons, Daniel Patrick and Nicholas Sean MacFarland; a brother, Davis Rudolph Ashwell and his wife, Gail of Huddleston; a sister-in-law, Rose Isberner; nieces, nephews, extended family and special friends, Dennis and Norma West. Graveside Services will be held at Arlington National Cemetery on Tuesday, July 11 at 3 p.m. with Full Military Honors. Arrangements by Oake Funeral Service Roanoke, VA 540-982-2100.

Sign Guestbook at chicagotribune.com/obituaries BAWN, LOIS MARY Lois Mary Bawn, nee Winklebauer 81, beloved wife of the late William Ewart Sr. for 57 years; loving mother of William Ewart Jr. (Nancy) Bawn, Mary Susan (Michael) Sieczkowski and the late Robert Allen Bawn; cherished grandmother of Heather (David) Clark, Ian, Meghan, Lauren (Brett) Donahey, John (Olivia) and Cathlyn; and great-grandmother of Emily and David Clark Jr. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to St. Theresa School, 455 N.

Benton Palatine, IL 60067. Funeral Tuesday, 9:30 a.m., from Smith-Corcoran Funeral Home 185 E. Northwest Palatine, to St. Theresa Church for Mass at 10 a.m. Interment All Saints Cemetery.

Visitation Tuesday, 9to 9:30 a.m., at Smith-Corcoran Funeral Home. 847-359-8020 www.smithcorcoran.com Sign Guestbook at chicagotribune.com/obitu aries BARNUM, THOMAS F. Thomas F. Barnum, 66, of Lake Forest, died Thursday, April 27, 2006 in Lake Forest, husband of Sonnie; father of Deborah (Scott) Barnum Goss of Mission Vejo, CA and Greg (Dawn) Thomas Barnum of Lake Bluff; grandfather Nic and Max Barnum, Thomas, Sophia, Larissa and Shun Goss; brother of Bette Barnumo Naples, FL; brother-in-law of Dr. Lee Bishop Worcester, MA; son of the late Frank and Elizabeth Barnum.

No visitation. Interment private. Memorial Service 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 2, 2006 at the First Presbyterian Church ofLake Forest, 700 N. Sheridan Road, Lake Forest, 60045.

Memorial contributions can be made in his name, to Pancreatic Cancer Research, Northwestern University Office of Medical Development, 710 N. Lake Shore Drive, 4th Floor, Chicago, IL 60611. Info, Wenban FuneralHome LakeForest, 847-234-0022 Sign Guestbook at chicagotribune.com/obituaries BALINT, ANDREW Andrew Balint, 87, passed away at his home in Park Ridge, IL, on March 28, 2006. He was born and educated in Hungary and served in the Hungarian Diplomatic Corps in Egypt and Portugal. He emigrated to Wisconsin in 1952 and later moved to Chicago where hewas employed by Supreme Television Radio and as an electrical engineer for Webcor, Howell, Peterson Enterprises, andMotorola.

Andy was a highly intelligent man, an avid reader, and held on his own or shared with others in 14 U.S. patents in the engineering field. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge and the SRO (Society of Radio Operators). He had been a shortwave (Ham Radio)operator since age 14 and remained active in that hobby until his death. Andy sister Ilona preceded him in death.

Friends and caregivers gathered in Park Ridge for a memorial on April 29. Interment will be in Hungary. Arrangements by William C. Rantis Director For info 708-562-5900 Sign Guestbook at chicagotribune.com/obituaries An imposing presence, lanky 6 feet 8 inches tall, Mr. Galbraith was consulted frequently by national leaders.

He strived to change the very texture of the national conversation about power and its nature in the modern world by explaining how the planning of giant corporations superseded market mechanisms. Mr. Galbraith, a revered lecturer for generations of Harvard students, always commanded attention. From the 1930s to the 1990s, Mr. Galbraith helped define the terms of the national political New York Times News Service John Kenneth Galbraith, the iconoclastic economist, teacher and diplomat and an unapologetically liberal member of the political and academic establishment, died Saturday in Cambridge, Mass.

He was 97. Mr. Galbraith lived in Cambridge and at an near Newfane, Vt. His death was confirmed by his son J. Alan Galbraith.

Mr. Galbraith was one of the most widely read authors in the history of economics; among his books was Affluent Socie- (1958), one of those rare works that forces a nation to reexamine its values. debate, influencing both the direction of the Democratic Party and the thinking of its leaders. He tutored Adlai Stevenson, the Democratic nominee for president in 1952 and 1956, on Keynesian economics. He advised President John Kennedy and served as his ambassador to India.

Though he eventually broke with President Lyndon Johnson over the war in South Vietnam, he helped conceive of his Great Society program and wrote a major presidential address that outlined its purposes. In 1968, pursuing his opposition to the war, he helped Sen. Eugene McCarthy seek the Democratic nomination for president. In the course of his long career, he undertook a number of government assignments, including the organization of price controls in World War II and speechwriting for presidents: Franklin Roosevelt, Kennedy and Johnson. In 1990, he took on the Harvard economics department with Tenured ridiculing, among others, a certain outspoken character who bore no small resemblance to himself.

At his death Mr. Galbraith was the Paul M. Warburg emeritus professor of economics at Harvard, where he had taught for most of his career. John Kenneth Galbraith was born Oct. 15, 1908, in Dunwich Township in southern Ontario, Canada, the only son of William Archibald and Catherine Kendall Galbraith.

In 1937, Mr. Galbraith married Catherine Merriam Atwater, the daughter of a prominent New York lawyer and a linguist. In addition to his wife, he is survived by three sons, J. Alan, a lawyer in Washington; Peter, a former U.S. ambassador to Croatia and a senior fellow at the Center for Arms Control and Nonproliferation in Washington; and James, an economist at the University of Texas; a sister, Catherine Denholm of Toronto; and six grandchildren.

Renowned economist, diplomat One of best-known liberals served presidents such as Franklin Roosevelt, John Kennedy, Bill Clinton Harvard Professor John Kenneth Galbraith was one of the most widely read authors in the history of economics. John Kenneth Galbraith 2006 By John Keilman Tribune staff reporter When salesmen called Lang Dental Manufacturing Co. and asked to speak to the president, they almost always grew perplexed upon hearing the voice of Sheilah Brenner Lang. used to rile her to no end that people would ask to speak to the man in recalled her son, David. Mrs.

Lang took charge of the family business after her husband died in 1978, and despite the occasional encounter with sexism, she continued its prosperous run until her retirement in 1991, notching another impressive achievement in a life that had been filled with them. Mrs. Lang, 79, of Elk Grove Villagedied Wednesday, April 19, after a prolonged illness. Her life was shaped by the tide of history. Born in South Africa, she came to Chicago as a child in 1939 with her mother, who was taking classes at the National College of Chiropractic in Chicago.

The family had planned to return home, but 10 days after they arrived in the United States, Germany invaded Poland, sparking World War II and making a return crossing of the Atlantic impossible. Settling inthe Near North Side, Mrs. Lang became something of a child prodigy, her son said. She once performed with her brother on a nationally broadcast radio program, and joined him on tours across the country. She graduated from Northwestern University with a degree in child psychology in 1947.

She met Edward Lang on a blind date her senior year, and the two soon married. He helped run his dental manufacturing company, and she stayed home to raise two children. In 1965, she joined the business to do clerical work but soon picked up more administrative duties. When her husband died, she took the reins of the business but still had a lot to learn. were looking at a $5,000 loan operating at that time, and the bankers wanted to know how we would repay said her son, who joined the business after his father died.

said we were waiting for insurance money, and said, how going to run your business, going to be in But Mrs. Lang got the loan, and helped steer the company into a successful future. By the time she retired, it had grown from $1million in sales to more than $3 million, her son said. was a beautiful woman who was very strong-willed, devoted to her said her brother, Claude Brenner. Other survivors include her daughter, Roberta; and three grandchildren.

A memorial will be held at 4 p.m. May 15 at Weinstein Funeral Home North Shore Chapel, 111 Skokie Wilmette. Leader of family business Sheilah Brenner Lang came to the U.S. from South Africa just before World War II began. Sheilah Brenner Lang 1926 2006 By Dave Wischnowsky Tribune staff reporter In the topsy-turvy world of county politics, DuPage County Board Vice Chairman John Noel was a steadying hand, his peers said.

could bring a calm into a complicated said County Board member Linda Kurzawa, who served alongside Mr. Noel after he was elected to office in 2000. had a quiet resolve about himself and worked well with other people. was dignified, and I really admired him very, very Mr. Noel, 59, of Glen Ellyn died of prostate cancer Friday, April 28, at his home.

A longtime Glen Ellyn attorney, Mr. Noel, a Republican, was serving his second term as a County Board member. He had been the vice chairman since 2005. He served as chairman of the Public Transit Committee and a member of the Stormwater, Technology and Transportation Committees. Previously, Mr.

Noel had served as chief of the Illinois attorney antitrust division, during which time he drafted the first Illinois criminal statute designed to deter computer fraud and data theft, his family said. A well-known advocate for public transportation in DuPage County, Mr. Noel was an expert on a wide array of other board members said. A native of Austin neighborhood, Mr. Noel was a graduate of Fenwick High School in Oak Park and the University of Notre Dame, where he oversaw the Collegiate Jazz Fes- tival.

Jazz and golf were lifelong passions, his family said. Mr. Noel was a longtime member of the Medinah Country Club, where he served as a walking scorer for Tiger Woods during the 1999 PGA Championship, which Woods won. Mr. Noel was an active member of St.

Petronille Church in Glen Ellyn and served as an adviser to the Diocese of Joliet, his family said. In 2005, he was recognized as Intergovernmental Leader of the Year by the DuPage Mayors and Managers Conference. Survivors include his former wife, Sara; two sons, Benjamin and Matthew; and a brother, Melbourne Noel Jr. Visitation will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. Mondayat the St.

Petro- nille Parish Center, 420 Glenwood Glen Ellyn. A funeral mass will be said at 10:30 a.m. Tuesdayat the St. Pe- tronille Parish Center. DuPage County Board vice chairman Colleagues recall his talent for keeping order under trying circumstances John Noel was elected to the DuPage County Board in 2000 and began serving as its vice chairman in 2005.

John Noel 1946 2006 Robert Carleson, 75, who changed welfare system under Gov. Ronald Reagan and undertook similar initiatives in the Reagan administration; April 21, in Washington. Raul Corrales, 81, Cuban photographer who documented his political revolution of the 1950s in bold and poetic images; April 15, in Cojimar, Cuba, of a heart attack. Ed Davis, 89, former Los Angeles police chief; April 22, in San Luis Obispo, from pneumonia complications. Thomas Dombkowski, 55, co-founder of Chicago House, an HIV and AIDS hospice he had envisioned, who later worked for what now is the Howard Brown Health Center and the Chicago Department of Public Health; April 20, in Chicago, of pancreatitis.

Jane Jacobs, 89, urban theorist and community activist whose books argued for the rehabilitation of neighborhoods on traditional lines; April 25, in Toronto. Strini Moodley 60, one of the founders of the Black Consciousness Movementduring South anti-apartheid struggle; April 27, in Johannes- burg, after a brief illness. Yuval Neeman, 80, founder of space program and a key figure in the nuclear efforts; April 26, in Tel Aviv, of stroke complications. Alexander Trowbridge, 76, who briefly served as commerce secretary under President Lyndon Johnson and headed the National Association of Manufacturers; April 27, in Washington, of Lewy body disease. Phil Walden, 66, Capricorn Records founder who launched the careers of Otis Redding and the Allman Brothers Band; April 23, in Atlanta, of cancer.

DEATHS LAST WEEK Associated Press Thorne, the former wife of Sen. John Kerry who turned her experience with depression into a best-selling book, has died of cancer. Ms. Thorne, 61, died Thursday at a home in Concord, the office said. Ms.

Thorne, who struggled with depression for much of the 1980s, also founded a non-profit education foundation called The Depression Initiative. In 1993she wrote Are Not Alone: Words of Experience and Hope for the Journey through with Larry Rothstein. A second book, Change of Heart: Words of Experience and Hope for the Journey through was published in 1996. Ms. Thorne met Kerry in 1963, and they married in 1970.

They had two daughters, Vanessa and Alexandra, and divorced in 1988. She married Richard Charlesworth in 1997 and they moved to Bozeman, Mont. Julia Thorne 1944 2006 AP file photo Julia best seller detailed heryears of depression. Ex-wife of John Kerry wrote books.

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