50s
presentations at professional meetings. ◆ Dr. George
Loren Edwards Jr. (’ 54 DDS), 85, of Kinston; Sept.
13, 2010. Edwards was founder and past president
of Affordable Care, a national chain of denture servic-
es. He graduated from the first class of UNC’s School
of Dentistry. In WWII, he was a pilot in the Army Air
Forces. ◆ Efrim Fruchtman (’ 51 MA, ’ 60 PhD), 88,
of Memphis, Tenn.; Oct. 27, 2010. Fruchtman retired
as a music professor at the University of Memphis,
where he taught viola de gamba, music history and
music theory, among other subjects. In 1982, he and
his wife received joint Fulbright grants as lecturers
and performers to universities in New Zealand. He
was editor of the Journal of the Viola de Gamba
Society of America. He and his wife performed one of
the first recitals of early music at the Smithsonian
Institution in the early ’60s. He was a veteran of WWII.
◆ Allen Jefferson Fuller (’ 56), 75, of Portsmouth,
Va.; Dec. 4, 2009. Following a lengthy career with
General Electric, Fuller became executive vice presi-
dent of manufacturing and engineering for Life
Fitness. He was in the Army Signal Corps in the
Korean War. ◆ Dr. William Alexander Futch (’ 50
BSMED, ’ 51 CMED), 85, of Wilmington; Oct. 17,
2010. Futch spent most of his career as a family
practice doctor in Conyers, Ga. In WWII, he was in the
Navy. ◆ Emily Jones Good (’ 50 MS), 84, of
Corvallis, Ore.; Oct. 2, 2010. Good was an applied
mathematician at New Mexico State University and
White Sands Missile Range. She also was a minia-
turist. A permanent collection of her art is at the Toy
and Miniature Museum in Kansas City, Mo. ◆ Reid
Walker Harris Sr. (’ 52 AB), 80, of St. Simons Island,
Ga.; Oct. 16, 2010. Harris, a lawyer, practiced law in
Brunswick, Ga. He was elected to the Georgia House
of Representatives, where he concentrated on con-
servation of the coastlands; he wrote a book on the
topic. He served in the Army, graduating from its
Russian language school at The Presidio in Monterey,
Calif. At UNC, he belonged to Glee Club and Phi Mu
Alpha. ◆ Lester Richard Herman Jr. (’ 51 MEd), 87,
of Savannah, Ga.; Oct. 12, 2010. Herman’s career
was in education. He retired as director of the
Cooperative Educational Services Agency in
Sandersville, Ga. Previously, he was selected to create
and head the first CESA in the state, which became
the model for a network of agencies in the public
schools of Georgia. In WWII, he was in the Army and
received five Bronze Stars. ◆ Eugene Clifton Hicks
III (’ 53 BSBA, ’ 55 LLBJD), 77, of Charlotte; Oct. 10,
2010. Hicks practiced law in Charlotte for more than
50 years. After receiving his law degree, he served
in the Navy in its 6th Naval District Law Office. At
UNC, he belonged to Sigma Nu. ◆ William H.J.
Hipple III (’ 50 AB), 88, of Chattanooga, Tenn.; Oct.
14, 2010. Hipple’s career was in the insurance
industry. At UNC, he belonged to Phi Kappa Sigma
and started the Young Republicans Club. ◆ Curtis
Avent Holland Jr. (’ 52, ’ 51 BSBA), 82, of Maitland,
Fla.; Oct. 6, 2010. Holland’s career was in the prop-
erty and casualty insurance business. He was past
president of the Maitland Rotary Club and a founder
of its Maitland Rotary Arts Festival. He served in the
Navy as naval correspondent with a submarine fleet.
◆ William M. Hudson (’ 53), 79, of Hampton, Va.;
Sept. 24, 2010. Hudson had three major careers.
He joined the Air Force in the Korean War and stayed
in the military for 20 years. He was personnel director
for the southern division of Pepsi-Cola and manager
of a production plant. He was a real estate agent
and part owner of a real estate firm. An Eagle Scout,
he was Scoutmaster of several troops. He was active
in his church and was chairman of the board of eld-
ers, among other responsibilities. At UNC, he belonged
to Phi Delta Theta. ◆ Paul David Hursh Jr. (’ 54
BSBA), 80, of Carrollton, Texas; Aug. 23, 2010. Hursh
retired as controller for Sears Roebuck & Co. At UNC,
he was on the football and lacrosse teams. ◆ Howard
Feild Jones III (’ 58, ’ 63 ABJO), 73, of Warrenton;
Oct. 26, 2010. Jones was editor of The Warren Record
and started the Butner-Creedmoor News and the
Brodie-Jones Printing Co. He was past president of
the Cherry Hill Historical Foundation and Preservation
Warrenton. He served as a town commissioner and
founded the Warren County Community Foundation. ◆
Toshinosuke Kashiwazaki (’ 58 PhD), 82, of Kawasaki,
Japan; July 30, 2010. Kashiwazaki was professor
emeritus of economics at Waseda University in Tokyo.
His administrative roles at Waseda included director
of international affairs division, dean of the School of
Political Science and Economics and vice president of
the university. He was president of Japan Economics
Policy Association, president of the International
Federation for Social Science Organizations and vice
president of the Science Council of Japan. He received
the Order of the Sacred Treasure for his public service. ◆ Caleb Jones Maddox (’ 57 AB, ’ 64 MAT), 77,
of Wilmington; Oct. 13, 2010. Maddox was president
of an educational management and consulting business. He served in the Army and, at UNC, belonged
to Kappa Sigma. ◆ Luther Arnold Marsh (’ 51 AB),
83, of Fairfax Station, Va.; Oct. 18, 2010. Marsh
retired as a patent lawyer for the Army Corps of
Engineers. Previously, he was a patent lawyer for the
Naval Surface Warfare Center and the Atomic Energy
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