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Obituaries
Robert Bowman
Robert
Bowman, professor
emeritus of health
behavior and health
education, died
Jan. 15 in Racine,
Wis., at age 89.
He was born in
Racine in 1914
and graduated
from the University
of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
in 1937. He went
on to earn a master's
degree from Marquette
University and
a second master's,
as well as his
doctorate, from
U-M.
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| (Photo
courtesy SPH) |
Following an early career as a biology teacher and head of the science department at Wisconsin's Cudahy High School, and as a consultant in health education in central Michigan, Bowman joined the faculty of the School of Public Health (SPH) in 1949. He retired in 1980.
During his three decades at SPH, he served as assistant to the dean and secretary of the faculty for 10 years. He was a consultant in health education to several state and national organizations, including the Indian Health Service and the Migrant Health Branch of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, and the American Cancer Society of Michigan. He also directed research programs in health education for the Cancer Control Program and the Migrant Health Program of the U.S. Public Health Service.
Bowman played a key role in the education of more than 750 SPH students who went on to hold positions of leadership throughout the world at every level of government, in voluntary health agencies and in the World Health Organization. Students valued Bowman as a good listener and a sage counselor and mentor.
"Bob was one of the early specialists in health education media and materials, and he developed a state-of-the-art media laboratory in the school," says Scott Simonds, professor emeritus of health behavior and health education and a former colleague of Bowman. "His work had particular relevance for students abroad, who were just launching the field of health education in their respective countries."
A member of several state and national organizations, Bowman served as president of the Michigan Public Health Association (MPHA) and president of the Great Lakes Chapter of the Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE). He held various offices in the American Public Health Association, and for several years was editor of Health Education Monographs, a leading health education journal.
Among his many honors and awards, Bowman was named a distinguished fellow of SOPHE, a distinguished alumnus of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and an honorary life member of MPHA. He also was inducted into the Washington Park (Wisconsin) High School Hall of Fame.
Bowman's wife, the former Helen Elizabeth Schneider, died in 1995. He is survived by his sister-in-law, Marjorie Bowman; three nieces, seven nephews and numerous cousins.
—Submitted
by SPH
Marvin Becker
A leading scholar
of medieval, renaissance
and early modern European
history, Marvin Becker,
81, died in his sleep
from pneumonia at
University Hospital
Jan. 11. He was professor
emeritus of history
who taught for 22
years and was chairman
of the Department
of History from 1977-79.
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| (Photo
courtesy Department
of History) |
Becker was born July
20, 1922, in Philadelphia
and received his doctorate
from the University
of Pennsylvania in
1950. He was a veteran
of World War II.
During an academic
career that spanned
more than 45 years,
Becker taught at Western
Reserve University
in Cleveland and the
University of Rochester,
among other institutions.
He also was a visiting
professor at various
universities, including
the University of
Wisconsin-Madison,
Columbia University,
Johns Hopkins University
(JHU), and the universities
of Arizona (Tucson)
and Toronto.
Honors bestowed on
him include a post-doctoral
Fulbright research
grant to Florence,
Italy; a Guggenheim
Fellowship; several
American Philosophical
Society Fellowships;
and a fellowship from
the American Council
of Learned Societies,
all to Italy.
Becker was Harvard
Fellow in Renaissance
Studies at I Tatti
in Florence (1963-64);
a senior fellow at
the JHU Center for
the Humanities from
1966-67; and a fellow
at the Institute for
Advanced Studies at
Princeton University
from 1968-69. In 1992
he was awarded membership
in the Society for
Scholars at JHU for
Distinguished Research.
He was editor of
the book series “Studies
in Medieval and Early
Modern Civilization” for
U-M Press from 1988-2004.
Under his stewardship,
the press published
17 scholarly volumes.
His major publications
include: “Florence
in Transition,” Vols.
I & II (Johns
Hopkins Press, 1967,
1968); “Medieval
Italy: Constraints
and Creativity” (Indiana
University Press,
1981); “Civility
and Society in Western
Europe 1300-1600” (Indiana
University Press,
1988); and “The
Emergence of Civil
Society in the 18th
Century” (Indiana
University Press,
1994).
In November 2000,
two of his former
graduate students,
Professors Carol
Lansing and James
Banker, organized
a conference in
Becker’s
honor at the University
of California, Santa
Barbara, inviting
his former graduate
students and many
of his professional
colleagues. As an
outgrowth of the conference,
a book of his writings
was published as “Florentine
Essays: Selected Writings
of Marvin Becker” (U-M
Press, 2002).
“Marvin had
an astounding combination
of factual mastery
and philosophical
sophistication. To
talk to him was to
enter a world of intellectual
inquiry which was
passionate and open-ended,” says
Professor Victor
Lieberman, a colleague
at U-M.
Becker is survived
by his wife of 60
years, Betty Becker,
who assisted him with
his research; two
daughters, Wendy Cranfield
and Professor Dana
Becker; and three
grandsons, Oliver
Mill and Adam and
Benjamin Cranfield.
Becker has been cremated.
A memorial service
will be announced
at a later date.
—Submitted
by the Department
of History
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