Monday, September 10, 2012

PASSINGS: Dorothy McGuire Williamson, Robert Morgan Fink, Gene Vollnogle - Los Angeles Times

Dorothy McGuire Williamson

Part of McGuire Sisters vocal trio

Dorothy McGuire Williamson, 84, who teamed with her sisters Christine and Phyllis for a string of pop hits in the 1950s and '60s as the McGuire Sisters singing group, died Friday at her son's home in he Phoenix suburb of Paradise Valley, daughter-in-law Karen Williamson said. She had Parkinson's disease and age-related dementia.

The McGuire Sisters, whose hits included 1954's "Sincerely" and 1957's "Sugartime," were known for their close harmonies and identical outfits and hairdos.

They began singing together as children at their mother's Ohio church. They got their big break on "Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts" program in 1952.

The group made numerous appearances on television and toured into the late 1960s, giving a last performance together on "The Ed Sullivan Show" in 1968. Dorothy and Christine stepped back to raise families while Phyllis pursued a solo career.

The trio reunited in the 1980s and performed in nightclubs and Las Vegas showrooms until the mid-2000s.

The group sang for five presidents and Britain's Queen Elizabeth II.

Christine and Phyllis live in Las Vegas.

Dorothy McGuire was born Feb. 13, 1928, in Middletown, Ohio. She was married for 53 years to Lowell Williamson, a wealthy oilman. The couple had two sons, Rex and David.

Robert Morgan Fink

Biochemist at UCLA

Robert Morgan Fink, 96, a retired UCLA biochemistry professor whose groundbreaking research with his biochemist wife included developing a new technique in the late 1940s to study the thyroid, died Wednesday of natural causes at his Pacific Palisades home, said Suzanne Coppenrath, one of his two daughters.

He was a pioneer who "is remembered as a very good scientist who did important work," said Elizabeth Neufeld, former chairwoman of the department of biological chemistry at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.

At the University of Rochester, Fink met his future wife, Kathryn, a fellow graduate student. After marrying in 1941, they worked together at Rochester on the Manhattan Project, which would produce the atom bomb.

The head of the project at Rochester was Dr. Stafford Warren, who recruited the Finks to join the UCLA faculty after he was named the first dean of its school of medicine. When the couple came to UCLA in 1947, space for experiments was limited and at first they conducted research at hospitals in the San Fernando Valley and Long Beach.

The Finks were perhaps best known for a 1948 breakthrough in thyroid biochemistry called the "paper chromatography technique." They used radioactive "tracer" chemicals on small samples of the thyroid and other body tissues, which caused them to essentially photograph themselves รข€" and expose new and previously inconceivable detail.

The technique worked so well that the Finks were able to isolate and identify a dozen new biological compounds. The approach was later adapted to determine if chemotherapy was helping cancer patients.

In 1978, Robert Fink retired from UCLA as a biochemistry professor. His wife was assistant dean for student affairs at UCLA's medical school when she died at 72 in 1989.

Born Sept. 22, 1915, in Greenville, Ill., he was one of six children of a glove salesman who eventually owned the factory.

No comments:

Post a Comment