health, leisure and sports department. He helped
create the UWF Camellia Gardens. He previously
taught and coached at New Bern High School and
was a football coach at Elon University and Newark
State University. At UNC, he was a member of Phi
Epsilon Kappa.
’ 65 ■ obituaries
Eliza Ross Good (’ 65 MSLS), 89, of
Mooresville; Aug. 5, 2008. Good retired as a librarian
with Mooresville Senior High School. She served for
many years as the church librarian at First Presbyterian Church in Mooresville. At UNC, she belonged to
Delta Kappa Gamma. Dr. R. Craig Roberts (’ 65
MD), 68, of Phoenixville, Pa.; June 21, 2008. Roberts
was an orthopedic surgeon at the Phoenixville and
Pottstown hospitals. He served in the Army at Valley
Forge General Hospital in Phoenixville. In 1991, he
began to visit war-torn El Salvador and demonstrated
against the death squads. The Main Line Unitarian
Church in Devon, Pa., created the Craig Roberts
Youth Latin America Travel Fund to honor him. He
served a term on the Phoenixville Board of Health in
the 1970s. Jimmy Dayle Starnes (’ 65 AB), 64, of
Monroe; April 30, 2008. Starnes was a real estate
broker. He served in the Army Medical Corps in the
1960s.
Want to connect with a classmate?
E-mail addresses for nearly
190,000 UNC alumni are available
online to members only in the
Alumni Directory.
There’s more online. alumni.unc.edu
journalist. Anne McCampbell Simpson (’ 66 AB),
63, of Athens, Ga.; Feb. 2, 2008. Simpson was an
advisory programmer with IBM. Charles Wilson
Tesh (’ 66), 73, of Pittsboro; April 16, 2008. Tesh
retired from the state of North Carolina, was a 33rd-
degree Mason and a member of Columbus Lodge
102 in Pittsboro and the Scottish and York Rite of
Greensboro Valley.
’ 66 ■ obituaries
Keith Edwin Barnes (’ 66 MAT), 69, of
Olathe, Kan.; June 6, 2008. Barnes taught high
school science for 30 years in the Olathe school district. He worked with the family farm partnership and
was a volunteer with charitable and cultural organizations. Roger Dale Jolley (’ 66), 63, of Clemson,
S.C.; Aug. 5, 2008. Jolley retired as a newspaper
The DTH Crossword Edited by Wayne Robert Williams
ACROSS
1 Hand-holders?
5 Royal headband
10 Unscathed
14 Man from Tarsus
15 Pooped out
16 Goose’s gullet
17 500-mile race
18 Element
19 Vague state of mind
20 Billboard blurbs
21 Coastal collector
23 Scottish landowner
25 Batman and Robin, e.g.
26 Tiresome routines
28 Covers for
33 Mouths off
34 Holy terrors
35 Track circuit
36 Slight advantage
37 Stocking shade
38 Novelist Morrison
39 Draw
40 Verne of sci-fi
41 Police emblem
42 Plane flaps
44 Man from Manaus
45 Sniggler’s prey
46 Tall military hat
47 Card cheat
52 High spirits
55 Fix a draft
56 Brownish pigment
57 Gem mined in Australia
58 Tumbled
59 Stacked up
60 Cozumel cash
61 Bit of gossip
62 Dance moves
63 Small deck member
DOWN
1 Gobi Desert location
2 “Atlas Shrugged” author
3 Malicious campaigner
4 Stallone, to friends
5 Trims to a point
’ 67 Melvin Forbes Wright Jr. (’ 67 BSIR) of
Winston-Salem has been named chair of
the American Bar Association’s Standing
Committee on Professionalism. Wright is executive
director of the N.C. Chief Justice’s Commission on
Professionalism.
■ obituaries
William Terry Baugh (’ 67 AB), 63, of La Mesa, Calif.;
Aug. 11, 2008. Baugh was president of Gallium
Software. He taught in Youngstown, Ohio, and then
moved to San Diego to work in the software industry.
He worked for IBM, General Dynamics, TeleSoft and
Rational Software. Gay Capouch Kitson (’ 67 MA,
’ 72 PhD), 67, of Shaker Heights, Ohio; July 21, 2008.
Kitson retired as a professor emerita at the University
of Akron, where she taught sociology (1989-2003).
Previously, she taught at Case Western Reserve
University for 21 years. Her book, Portrait of Divorce:
Adjustment to Marital Breakdown, won the 1994
American Sociological Association Family Section’s
William J. Goode Book Award. She was president of
the National Council on Family Relations and editor
of Sociological Focus. She had a lifelong fascination
with the British royal family. In 2003, she went to
London for the 50th anniversary of the coronation of
Queen Elizabeth II. Willie Mae Gardner Pettis (’ 67
MA), 69, of Charlotte; July 15, 2008. Pettis retired as
a principal in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg school system, where she taught at several grade levels. She
was an active member of the Charlotte Alumni
Silhouettes of Kappa Alpha Psi. Helga Delitzsch
Remler (’ 67), 71, of Williamsburg, Va.; Aug. 4, 2008.
Remler was a clinical psychologist in the Tidewater
region of Virginia specializing in child psychology. As
a girl, she narrowly escaped the Russian army at the
end of WWII and came to the U.S. on Valentine’s
Day, 1956. Charles Edgar Veitch Jr. (’ 67 BSMAT),
64, of Waterford, Conn.; Aug. 11, 2008. Veitch
worked for Hydrospace Challenger and at MAR Inc.
from 1976 to 1993. Earlier in his career, he was the
field manager for the Naval Underwater Systems
Center. Most recently, he was a dealer at Foxwoods
Casino until 2007.
6 Homer classic
7 Actor Guinness
8 Full-bodied
9 Short account
10 Jerk
11 U.A.E. part
12 Disconert
13 Washstand item
21 Tenders an offer
22 Inning enders
24 Pot builder
26 Garbo of “Queen Christina”
27 Diameter halves
28 Is a busybody
29 Past of riches?
30 Clumsy bumpkin
31 Ballroom dance
32 Peeping Tom
34 Ring signal
37 Crescendos
38 Armored vehicles
40 Young kangaroo
41 Cartoon Yogi
43 State of health
44 Archaeological finds
46 Slumber
47 Adroit
48 Mental plan
49 Little streamlet
50 Discharge
51 Up to the job
53 Life of Riley
54 Gambit
57 ___ out (resign)
Solution on page 94
’ 68 Susan Brill Rosenthal (’ 68 AB, ’ 71 MEd,
’ 77 PhD) of Durham has been recognized by Barron’s as one of the Top 100
Women Financial Advisers in 2008. Rosenthal is a
first vice president with Merrill Lynch. John Robbins Wester (’ 68 AB) of Charlotte has been named
president-elect of the N.C. Bar Association. Webster
is a partner in the firm of Robinson, Bradshaw & Hin-son, where he concentrates on the trials and
appeals of business disputes, securities regulation,
ERISA and employment cases. Wester is known for
his role in the case of Hyatt v. Shalala, a landmark
class action suit against the Social Security Administration on behalf of disabled citizens that took 20
years and two reviews by the U.S. Supreme Court
before 150,000 North Carolinians won new disability
hearings. Robert Thomas Wright Jr. (’ 68 AB) of