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Donna L. (Butkowski) Boncore, died Jan. 8.

Lorraine M. (Schuster) Boylin, of South Buffalo, died Jan. 8.

Michael J. “Butch” Gallo, died Jan. 9.

Gertrude E. “Gert” (McGuire) Hoffstetter, Erie County employee for more than 37 years, died Jan. 7.

Joanne (Love) Ihle, of the Town of Tonawanda, Preston Trucking retiree, died Jan. 7.

Zygmunt Jablonski, of Cheektowaga, died Jan. 6.

Rosie L. (Sanders) James-Pope, of Buffalo, died Jan. 4.

Zaine Joseph, of Williamsville, died Jan. 7.

Edmund Kalota, member of Pvt. Leonard Post Jr. Post 6251, Veterans of Foregin Wars, died Jan. 8.

Sally M. (Burruano) Kish, of Eden, died Jan. 7.

James J. McCrohan, of Kenmore, died Jan. 9.

Elmer A. Meister, of Orchard Park, died Jan. 6.

Ann L. Miller, of Kenmore, died Jan. 8.

Kathleen B. (Byrne) Murphy, died Jan. 7.

Arthur Popiol, of East Aurora, Erie County Highway Department retiree and crossing guard at East Aurora Middle School, died Jan. 8.

Robert E. Ricketts, died Jan. 8.

Rachel R. (Veillette) Routhier, 87, of Niagara Falls, Niagara County Community College retiree, died Jan. 9.

Marian M. Rupp, of Amherst, died Jan. 8.

Mark A. Scott, 61, of North Tonawanda, served in the Niagara County Legislature for 10 years, died Jan. 8.

Joanne (Vigneri) Seaman, of Kenmore, died Jan. 8.

Ione L. (Fraley) Slocum, died Jan. 9.

Virginia Lee (Megorden) Smith, of East Amherst, died Jan. 8.

Gloria M. Watkins, died Jan. 8.

Charles E. Wenner, 89, of Amherst, died Jan. 8.

Leonard E. Amborski, 92, retired research chemist

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Aug. 23, 1921 – Jan. 8, 2014

Leonard E. Amborski, a retired research chemist and certified industrial hygienist, died Wednesday in Fox Run, Orchard Park, after a short illness. He was 92.

Born in Buffalo, Mr. Amborski graduated in 1939 from East High School. In 1943, he graduated from Canisius College with a degree in chemistry.

After graduation, he was an instructor in physics at the college.

Mr. Amborski and Irene Kazmierczak were married Oct. 3, 1944, in Holy Name of Jesus Catholic Church. They moved to Washington, D.C., where he was a research physicist for the Carnegie Institute’s Department of Terrestrial Magnetism.

In 1945, he began his 44-year career at the E.I. du Pont de Nemours plant in the Town of Tonawanda.

At night, he attended the University of Buffalo, where he earned a master’s degree in 1951 and a doctorate in 1953, both in polymer chemistry.

His work with polymetric fibers led to more than 20 patents and publications in the field.

“The one that had the most impact on people is the process I used to make high-strength Mylar film, and that turned out to be the base film for all video and audio tapes that had been used the past several years,” he told the Am-Pol Eagle in 2010 when it named him its Citizen of the Year in Science.

In 1975, Mr. Amborski began working in the field of industrial hygiene to study airborne contaminants, noise, radiation, heat stress and toxicology at DuPont and other companies.

He was active in many local Polish organizations, including the Polish Genealogical Society.

His wife died in July 2012.

Mr. Amborski is survived by a daughter, Donna Eckert; a son, David; and two sisters, Alice Brownsey and Christine Tytka.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 9:30 a.m. Monday in St. Gabriel Catholic Church, 5271 Clinton St., Elma.

Chester W. Jarosz, fire captain, Bethlehem retiree

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March 24, 1920 – Jan. 10, 2014

Chester W. Jarosz, of Lackawanna, a World War II veteran who participated in the final invasion at Okinawa, Japan, and was a longtime captain in the Lackawanna Fire Department, died Friday in Autumn View Health Care. He was 93.

Born in Lackawanna, Mr. Jarosz was a lifelong resident of the Buffalo area.

He was a U.S. Coast Guard coxswain and served during World War II in the Pacific.

He later went on to work for the Fire Department in Lackawanna from 1951 until his retirement in 1983, including the last 21 years as a fire captain. He was certified in arson training from Rutgers University.

Mr. Jarosz also worked for Bethlehem Steel Corp. in Lackawanna for 22 years.

Mr. Jarosz was a member of St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Church, where he was once named Man of the Year. He served there as a Holy Name Society member and as treasurer.

Mr. Jarosz also served as a bingo worker for four decades and helped run the spring and fall dances at the parish.

Mr. Jarosz is survived by his wife of 67 years, the former Stella Fabin; a daughter, Ann Marie Nowak; a son, David; and three grandchildren.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 10:30 a.m. Monday in Queen of Angels Church, 144 Warsaw St., Lackawanna.

The Mass will be preceded by a 10:15 prayer service in Joseph M. Litwin Funeral Home, 1629 Electric Ave., Lackawanna.

Area Deaths

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Donna L. (Butkowski) Boncore, died Jan. 8.

Lorraine M. (Schuster) Boylin, of South Buffalo, died Jan. 8.

Michael J. “Butch” Gallo, died Jan. 9.

Gertrude E. “Gert” (McGuire) Hoffstetter, Erie County employee for more than 37 years, died Jan. 7.

Joanne (Love) Ihle, of the Town of Tonawanda, Preston Trucking retiree, died Jan. 7.

Zygmunt Jablonski, of Cheektowaga, died Jan. 6.

Rosie L. (Sanders) James-Pope, of Buffalo, died Jan. 4.

Zaine Joseph, of Williamsville, died Jan. 7.

Edmund Kalota, member of Pvt. Leonard Post Jr. Post 6251, Veterans of Foregin Wars, died Jan. 8.

Sally M. (Burruano) Kish, of Eden, died Jan. 7.

James J. McCrohan, of Kenmore, died Jan. 9.

Elmer A. Meister, of Orchard Park, died Jan. 6.

Ann L. Miller, of Kenmore, died Jan. 8.

Kathleen B. (Byrne) Murphy, died Jan. 7.

Arthur Popiol, of East Aurora, Erie County Highway Department retiree and crossing guard at East Aurora Middle School, died Jan. 8.

Robert E. Ricketts, died Jan. 8.

Rachel R. (Veillette) Routhier, 87, of Niagara Falls, Niagara County Community College retiree, died Jan. 9.

Marian M. Rupp, of Amherst, died Jan. 8.

Mark A. Scott, 61, of North Tonawanda, served in the Niagara County Legislature for 10 years, died Jan. 8.

Joanne (Vigneri) Seaman, of Kenmore, died Jan. 8.

Ione L. (Fraley) Slocum, died Jan. 9.

Virginia Lee (Megorden) Smith, of East Amherst, died Jan. 8.

Gloria M. Watkins, died Jan. 8.

Charles E. Wenner, 89, of Amherst, died Jan. 8.

Roman Zabinski Aug. 19, 1931 to Jan. 7, 2014

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Aug. 19, 1931 – Jan. 7, 2014

Roman Zabinski, longtime owner of Kolano Funeral Home and an avid photographer, died Tuesday in ElderWood at Amherst after a brief illness. He was 82.

A Buffalo native, Mr. Zabinski graduated from Albright Art School and Simmons School of Mortuary Science.

Mr. Zabinski began his career in funeral services in 1955, working for his in-laws, Frank and Josephine Pacer.

In 1977, he moved to Black Rock, where he purchased Kolano Funeral Home.

He retired partially in 1994, when his son, David, began overseeing operations at the funeral home.

An avid photographer, his works have been printed in “Photography at Mid-Century” and “The Photographer’s Eye” – both published by the Museum of Modern Art. His work also has been exhibited at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery and Artsphere Studio & Gallery.

Mr. Zabinski also was an active member of the Patterson Art Society, and a collection of his photos is in the permanent collection of the George Eastman House and Burchfield Penney Art Gallery.

In 1979, he was granted special clearance to take photos of Pope John Paul II at the Vatican.

He was a founding member and scoutmaster of Troop 259 at St. Luke’s Catholic Church and served on the Troop Committee of Assumption Church and on the board of Dom Polski. He was a volunteer for St. Vincent de Paul Society and was a member of the Assumption Holy Name Society, the Grant-Amherst Business Association, Polish Cadets and Erie-Niagara Funeral Directors Association.

Survivors include his wife of 59 years, the former Marcella Pacer; a son, David; and four daughters, Tanya, Nina Gormley, Julie Zabinski-Smith and Amy “Rio” Ross.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 9:30 a.m. Monday in Assumption Catholic Church, 435 Amherst St.

Ariel Sharon, Israel’s bulldozer in politics, dies at 85

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JERUSALEM – It was vintage Ariel Sharon: His hefty body bobbing behind a wall of security men, the ex-general led a march onto a Jerusalem holy site, staking a bold claim to a shrine that has been in contention from the dawn of the Arab-Israeli conflict.

What followed was a Palestinian uprising that put Mideast peace efforts into deep-freeze.

Five years later, Sharon, who died Saturday at 85, was again barreling headlong into controversy, bulldozing ahead with his plan to pull Israel out of the Gaza Strip and uproot all 8,500 Jewish settlers living there without regard to threats to his life from Jewish extremists.

The withdrawal and the barrier he was building between Israel and the West Bank permanently changed the face of the conflict and marked the final legacy of a man who shaped Israel as much as any other leader. He was a farmer-turned-soldier, a soldier-turned-politician, a politician-turned-statesman – a hard-charging Israeli who built Jewish settlements on war-won land, but didn’t shy away from destroying them when he deemed them no longer useful.

Sharon died eight years after a debilitating stroke put him into a coma. His body was to lie in state today at the parliament before he is laid to rest at his ranch in southern Israel on Monday, Israeli media reported. Vice President Biden will lead the U.S. delegation.

Sharon suffered his stroke in January 2006 and fell into a coma. Over the past week and a half, doctors reported a sharp decline in his condition as various bodily organs, including his kidneys, failed. On Saturday, Dr. Shlomo Noy of the Sheba Medical Center near Tel Aviv said “his heart weakened and he peacefully departed” with relatives by his bedside.

His death was greeted with the same strong feelings he evoked in life. Israelis called him a war hero. His enemies called him a war criminal.

President Obama remembered Sharon as “a leader who dedicated his life to the state of Israel.” Former President George W. Bush, who was in the White House during Sharon’s tenure, called him a “warrior for the ages and a partner in seeking security for the Holy Land and a better, peaceful Middle East.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a rival and harsh critic of Sharon, said: “His memory will be enshrined forever in the heart of the nation.” President Shimon Peres, a longtime friend and rival, said “he was an outstanding man and an exceptional commander who moved his people and loved them and the people loved him.”

Detested by Arabs

The Palestinians, who loathed Sharon as their most bitter enemy, distributed candy, prayed for divine punishment and said they regretted he was never held accountable for his actions, including a massacre in the Lebanese refugee camps of Sabra and Chatilla by Christian militiamen allied with Israel during the 1982 invasion that was largely his brainchild.

“He wanted to erase the Palestinian people from the map ... He wanted to kill us, but at the end of the day, Sharon is dead and the Palestinian people are alive,” said Tawfik Tirawi, who served as Palestinian intelligence chief when Sharon was prime minister.

The man Israel knew simply by his nickname “Arik” fought in most of Israel’s wars. He detested Yasser Arafat, his lifelong adversary, as an “obstacle to peace” and was in turn detested in the Arab world.

Sharon had a life of surprises, none bigger than his election as prime minister in his twilight years, when he spent his first term crushing a Palestinian uprising and his second withdrawing from Gaza. The pullout in 2005 freed 1.3 million Palestinians from Israeli military rule and left his successors the vague outline of his proposal for a final peace settlement with Israel’s Arab foes.

Sharon opted for separating Israel from the Palestinians, whose birthrate was outpacing that of his own country. He gave up Gaza, with its 21 Jewish settlements, and four West Bank settlements, the first such Israeli pullback since it captured the territories in the 1967 Mideast War.

He also began building a snaking barrier of fences, walls, razor wire and trenches to separate Israel from the West Bank. The withdrawal and the barrier, which left large West Bank settlement blocs on Israel’s side, led many to suspect his real intention was to sidestep negotiations with the Palestinians and make it easier to hold onto what really mattered to him – chunks of the West Bank, with its biblical Jewish resonance and value as a buffer against attack from the east.

Sharon was born to Russian immigrant parents on Feb. 26, 1928, in the farming community of Kfar Malal, 10 miles north of Tel Aviv. He commanded an infantry platoon during the 1948 Mideast war over the creation of the state of Israel.

Leading a ragtag band of soldiers, some Holocaust survivors, Sharon took part in the unsuccessful May 1948 assault on the Jordanian Arab Legion stronghold at Latroun, a key spot on the road to Jerusalem whose Jewish district was blockaded by Arab forces. He was badly wounded in the leg and belly, and bled for hours while surrounded by enemy soldiers.

In 1953, he commanded Unit 101, a force formed to carry out reprisals for Arab attacks. After the slaying of an Israeli woman and her two children, his troops blew up more than 40 houses in Qibya, a West Bank village then ruled by Jordan, killing 69 Arabs. Sharon later said he thought the houses were empty.

Invaded Lebanon

After Israel’s 1956 invasion of Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, Sharon was rebuked for engaging in what commanders regarded as an unnecessary battle. Some 30 Israeli soldiers died.

The accolades mounted as well. Sharon received praise for his command of an armored division during the 1967 Mideast War, in which Israel captured the West Bank, Gaza Strip and Sinai Peninsula.

His finest hour in uniform, as he described it, came in the 1973 Mideast War. Yanked out of retirement by an army desperate for leadership, he commanded 27,000 Israelis in a daring drive across Egypt’s Suez Canal that helped turn the tide of the war. A picture of a boyish-faced, 45-year-old Sharon, bloody bandage wrapped around his head, remains one of the most enduring images of the war.

In 1982 he engineered the invasion of Lebanon. It was portrayed as a quick, limited strike to drive Palestinian fighters from Israel’s northern border. Later it emerged that Sharon had a larger plan: to install a pro-Israel regime in Lebanon – a design that typified boldness to his friends and dangerous megalomania to his critics. The conflict quickly escalated, and Israel remained in Lebanon for the next 18 years.

That September, the Israeli military, controlling parts of Beirut, allowed members of the Phalanges, a Lebanese Christian militia allied with Israel, to enter the Palestinian refugee camps of Sabra and Chatilla in Beirut to root out “terrorists.” The militiamen systematically slaughtered hundreds of civilians, including women and children. The massacres sparked mass protests in Israel and abroad. An Israeli commission rejected Sharon’s contention that he didn’t know what was coming, saying: “It is impossible to justify the minister of defense’s disregard of the danger of a massacre.”

He was fired as defense minister.

In his autobiography, Sharon said he was outraged by the findings. “It was a stigmatization I rejected utterly,” he wrote.

Led withdrawal

Sharon gradually rehabilitated himself, serving in parliament and using various Cabinet posts to build dozens of settlements in the West Bank and Gaza despite international protests.

As foreign minister in 1998, Sharon called on Jewish settlers to grab as much land as possible. Sharon’s demonstrative visit to the Temple Mount, or Haram as-Sharif, soon followed. Palestinian riots escalated into a full-fledged uprising that would claim more than 3,000 Palestinian and 1,000 Israeli lives.

In February 2001, with the fighting continuing and peace talks collapsing, Israelis grew deeply disillusioned and inclined to lay all the blame on Arafat. They elected Sharon prime minister in a landslide.

Fighting continued throughout Sharon’s first term and he was re-elected in 2003 to a second term.

In late 2003, he unveiled his “unilateral disengagement” plan – withdrawing from territory he no longer deemed essential to Israel’s security – without an agreement with the Palestinians.

He also confined Arafat to his West Bank headquarters in his final years before allowing the longtime Palestinian leader to fly to France in late 2004 shortly before his death.

Speaking Saturday, Olmert said Sharon’s legacy was far more complicated than critics say.

“Arik was not a warmonger. When it was necessary to fight, he stood at the forefront of the divisions in the most sensitive and painful places, but he was a smart and realistic person and understood well that there is a limit in our ability to conduct wars,” he said.

Sharon was widowed twice – he married the sister of his first wife after she died in an auto accident – and had two sons, Gilad and Omri. A third son died in 1967 in a firearms accident.

The Rev. Msgr. Anthony J. Jasinski, retired priest and Air Force chaplain

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Jan. 9, 1923 – Jan. 10, 2014

The Rev. Msgr. Anthony J. Jasinski, a retired Catholic priest and retired lieutenant colonel in the Air Force, died Friday at a priests residence in Lackawanna. He was 91.

Born in Lackawanna, he earned master’s degrees from St. Bonaventure University and Canisius College and was a graduate of Christ the King Seminary.

Father Jasinski spent 11 years on active duty as a chaplain in the U.S. Air Force and more than 10 years as a chaplain in the reserves, during which he ministered to armed forces personnel.

He was ordained in 1949 by John Francis Cardinal O’Hara, then bishop of Buffalo, and served as a chaplain on active duty from 1955 to 1965. He served at Clark Field in the Philippines, where he celebrated Masses at three different chapels on the base, as well as at the base hospital and the base stockade. He also served in Germany and on several bases in the U.S.

Father Jasinski retired from the Air Force Reserves in 1983. In 1999, he celebrated his 50th anniversary as a priest.

After his active service in the Air Force, Father Jasinski served as a parish priest in Flagstaff, Ariz. Upon his return to the Buffalo area in 1967, he founded St. Philip the Apostle Catholic Church on Losson Road in Cheektowaga. He retired from duties in 1990.

A concelebrated Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 11 a.m. Tuesday in St. Philip the Apostle Church, 950 Losson Road, Cheektowaga.

Al D’Orazio, retired Buffalo firefighter, award-winning athlete and referee

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April 19, 1938 – Jan. 11, 2014

Al D’Orazio, a retired Buffalo firefighter who was an award-winning football player and referee, died Saturday in St. John the Baptist Hospice House after a year’s battle with cancer. He was 75.

Born in Buffalo, he was a 1957 graduate of South Park High School, where he played varsity football, basketball and baseball and earned first team All High honors in football during his senior year. He was part of the inaugural class inducted into the school’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 2012.

He was a running back on the University of Buffalo football team and, while serving in the Army, played on the U.S. Army football team. Returning from service, he played semi-pro football with the Lackawanna Steelers and was a member of the team that won the state championship in 1963.

Mr. D’Orazio worked at Western Electric before he joined the Buffalo Fire Department as a firefighter in 1972 and became an alarm office dispatcher in 1983. He was the dispatcher on duty the night of the deadly propane explosion in December 1983. He retired in 1992.

He served as chairman of the Buffalo Fire Department Beneficiary Association from 1984 to 1994 and was a loan officer with the Buffalo Fire Department Federal Credit Union from 1980 to 2008. He also served 12 years as chairman of the board of directors of the Firefighters Ball.

Mr. D’Orazio was a football official from 1968 to 2008 and was a member of the board of directors of the New York State Association of Certified Football Officials from 1983 to 2008. He was Western New York Chapter rules interpreter from 1998 to 2008 and was given the Mike Perry Award in 2004 as Referee of the Year for Western New York high school sports.

He also received the John D. Burns Memorial Award, the New York State Merit Award, the Richard Leous Service Award and the Section VI Football Federation Award.

He refereed 25 Harvard Cup championship games on Thanksgiving Days and was inducted into the Harvard Cup Hall of Fame in 2007. He also officiated at the first Section VI AA championship game in Rich Stadium in 1979 and the first State A championship game in the Carrier Dome in Syracuse in 1993.

He was the longest-tenured official to serve in the JFK Touch Football League, refereeing from 1964 to 1997. He also was the league’s assigning agent from 1968 to 1997. Last year, he was inducted into the league’s 50th anniversary Hall of Fame.

A Depew resident, he was a member of the Lake Erie Italian Club and enjoyed gardening.

Surviving are his wife, the former Debbie A. Prohaska Nowakowski; two sons, Dr. Paul and Robert; a brother, Pasquale; and three grandchildren.

A Mass of Christian burial will be offered at 11 a.m. Wednesday in St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, St. Francis Drive, Athol Springs.

Former Reagan spokesman Larry Speakes dies at 74

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Sept. 13, 1939 – Jan. 10, 2014

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) – Larry Speakes, who spent six years as acting press secretary for President Ronald Reagan, died Friday in his native Mississippi. He was 74.

Speakes died at home in Cleveland, Miss., where he had lived the past several years, said Bolivar County Coroner Nate Brown. Brown said Speakes had Alzheimer’s disease.

“He died in his sleep, and it was a natural death,” Brown said.

Speakes was buried in North Cleveland Cemetery during a private service Friday morning, a few hours after dying, said Kenny Williams of Cleveland Funeral Home.

Speakes became Reagan’s acting spokesman after press secretary James Brady was wounded during an assassination attempt on Reagan in 1981.

In a statement issued from Los Angeles, former first lady Nancy Reagan said that she was “saddened to learn about Larry, who served Ronnie with great loyalty in one of the toughest jobs in the White House.”

“He stepped up in very difficult circumstances and was an articulate and respected spokesman day in and day out, including some very historically significant moments,” Reagan said. “It is a source of special sadness to know he suffered from Alzheimer’s disease.” Ronald Reagan, who served as president from 1981 to 1989, died in 2004 after a 10-year battle with Alzheimer’s disease.

Republican Haley Barbour, who served as Mississippi governor from 2004 to 2012, was political director of the Reagan White House when Speakes worked there. He said Friday that it wasn’t unusual to have tension between the political office and the press office, but he and Speakes had a good working relationship.

Barbour said that within the Reagan administration, people generally admired Speakes’ handling of the press, although Speakes could be abrupt.

“Sometimes, that meant reporters didn’t get everything they wanted, and sometimes it meant they didn’t get anything,” Barbour said Friday. “But, Larry knew who he worked for.”

Peter Roussel, who worked with Speakes in the Ford and Reagan press offices, said Speakes conducted more than 2,000 press briefings. “Larry set high performance standards for himself and for those who worked for him,” Roussel said.

After leaving the White House, Speakes worked for Merrill Lynch in New York. Speakes left the Merrill Lynch job after he wrote in his memoir, “Speaking Out,” that he had fabricated quotes for President Reagan while working for him.

He returned to Washington in 1988 and worked in public relations for Northern Telecom and the U.S. Postal Service, retiring in 2008.

Speakes grew up in Merigold, Miss., and graduated from the University of Mississippi. He worked for two Mississippi newspapers, the Oxford Eagle and the Bolivar Commercial, before going to Washington in 1968 as press secretary for U.S. Sen. James O. Eastland, D-Miss.

In 1974, Speakes worked as press secretary for the special counsel to President Richard Nixon during the Watergate hearings. After Nixon resigned, Speakes became assistant press secretary for President Gerald Ford.

Speakes worked as press secretary for Ford’s vice presidential running mate, Bob Dole, during the 1976 campaign. After Democrat Jimmy Carter won the election, he moved to the Hill and Knowlton public relations firm in Washington.

Speakes is survived by a daughter, Sandy Speakes Huerta of Cleveland, Miss.; sons Scott Speakes of Cleveland, Miss., and Jeremy Speakes of Clifton, Va.; six grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.

Dr. Adrian O. Vladutiu, medical researcher, UB professor

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Aug. 5, 1940 – Jan. 9, 2014

Dr. Adrian O. Vladutiu, a medical researcher and retired University at Buffalo professor, died Thursday in his Amherst home after a lengthy illness. He was 73.

Dr. Vladutiu was director of the clinical laboratories at Buffalo General Hospital until his retirement in 2001 and was professor emeritus of pathology and anatomical sciences, microbiology and medicine at UB’s School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.

A pathology resident’s award has been established in his name at UB.

Born in Romania, he earned his medical degree from the School of Medicine in Bucharest in 1962 and his doctorate in physiopathology at the School of Medicine in Jassy, Romania.

After coming to Buffalo in 1969 to pursue research in autoimmune thyroiditis, he completed an internship in medicine and a residency in clinical pathology at Buffalo General Hospital. He wrote more than 135 papers on his clinical and research findings.

Survivors include his wife, the former Georgirene D. “Rene” Dietrich; two daughters, Christina L. Vaughan and Catherine J.; a sister, Dr. Martha Filitti; and a grandson.

Services were held Sunday in Amigone Funeral Home, 5200 Sheridan Drive, Amherst.

Area Deaths

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Marie L. (Trentadue) Christiano, 87, of Tonawanda, died Jan. 10.

Christopher Henry Dailey, died Jan. 11.

Herb Goldstein, 91, died Jan. 12.

Alice M. (Mederski) Goudy, of Cheektowaga, died Jan. 11.

Thelma G. (Hillister) Hill, died Jan. 11.

Ruth E. (Chaffee) Hodges, formerly of Sanborn, died Jan. 10.

Gerald J. Heckman Jr., died Jan. 8.

Lauretta A. (Aguglia) Long, 92, died Jan. 10 in Birmingham, Ala.

Paul L. Machlowski, died Jan. 11.

Spencer M. Maltbie, formerly of Angola and Silver Creek, died Jan. 11.

Mary K. (Johnson) McCann, of North Collins, died Jan. 10.

Lorraine F. (Mally) Mueller, of West Seneca, died Jan. 11.

Michael G. Obstarczyk, of Lackawanna, WWII Navy veteran, died Jan. 10.

Richard J. Scinta, of Hamburg, died Jan. 10.

Alice R. (Koch) Sperling, of Clarence, church organist for more than 50 years, died Jan. 9.

Charles E. Zemko, retired member of Boilermakers Local Union No. 7.

Dorothy J. (Grejszak) Zerkowski, of Cheektowaga, died Jan. 10.

Gordon L. Walker, acclaimed marathon runner

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Nov. 16, 1934 – Jan. 9, 2014

Gordon L. Walker, who took part in the Boston Marathon 10 times after he started distance running at age 47, died Thursday under Hospice care in his Town of Tonawanda home after a struggle with cancer. He was 79.

Born in Cleveland, he came to Buffalo in the late 1940s and attended School 56 and Lafayette High School. He served as a photographer in the Army from 1957 to 1960 and was stationed in the Panama Canal Zone.

A longtime resident of Buffalo’s Parkside neighborhood, Mr. Walker worked for several years at Loblaws supermarkets, then became a house painter. He was particularly proud of his multi-colored work on Victorian homes.

Known as “Flash” to his running colleagues, he took part in numerous marathons and once ran the Skylon Marathon in less than 3 hours.

He was a member of the Belle Watling Running Club and the Buffalo Philharmonic Athletic Club. He was a Buffalo News Runner of the Year in his age group in 1990 and 1995.

He also was an avid long-distance bicyclist, crossed many states on his bicycle and once rode from Buffalo to Florida.

He raised enough money for the annual Ride for Roswell to be part of the Extra Mile Club.

He also enjoyed skiing and hiking the Adirondacks and the Appalachian Trail.

He was a member of Unitarian Universalist Church of Buffalo.

Survivors include his wife of 55 years, the former Elaine Haddock; and two sons, Kevin and Allen.

A celebration of his life will be at 1 p.m. Saturday in Unitarian Universalist Church of Buffalo, 695 Elmwood Ave. at West Ferry Street.

Mary L.E. Stempien, 100, retired bakery worker

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Sept. 27, 1913 – Jan. 11, 2014

NIAGARA FALLS – Mary L.E. Stempien, a retired bakery worker, died Saturday in her Niagara Falls home after a brief illness. She was 100.

Born Mary Giancarli in Oakfield, she moved to Niagara Falls in 1929 and attended Trott Vocational High School. She worked as a proofreader at Salesbook Co., then was an aircraft inspector at Bell Aircraft during World War II.

After the war, she worked in the planning office at Carborundum Corp.

After raising four children, she worked part time at DiCamillo Bakery for 19 years.

Mrs. Stempien was a 63-year member of Prince of Peace Catholic Church and was a member of the Mothers Club, Altar and Rosary Society and Legion of Mary.

She served in the Mothers Club at Madonna High School and was a chaperone for the graduating class. She also was a talented seamstress and enjoyed reading.

Her husband of 50 years, Stephen A., died in 1997.

Survivors include two daughters, Marie and Nancy; a son, Stephen Jr.; a stepdaughter, Beverly Feldhousen; two sisters, Olga Masella and Florine Michaels-Smith; six grandchildren; and three stepgrandchildren.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 11 a.m. Wednesday in St. Vincent de Paul Parish at Prince of Peace Church, 1055 N. Military Road.

Frank J. Pierowicz, 98, decorated WWII veteran

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June 5, 1915 – Jan. 12, 2014

Frank J. Pierowicz, who was awarded a Silver Star for his service with the U.S. Navy during World War II, died Sunday at his home in Depew. He was 98.

A lifelong resident of Western New York, Mr. Pierowicz was an alumnus of Transfiguration Catholic School, Burgard Vocational High School and the University of Minnesota.

During World War II, he attained the rank of chief petty officer and was a shipboard electrician in the Pacific Theater. He was awarded the Silver Star for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity for his actions in combat.

Following his military service, he worked as an electrician-leadman for Chevrolet at its East Delavan assembly plant. He retired in 1983 after 38 years.

Mr. Pierowicz was a parishioner of St. Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr Church and a member of its Holy Name Society.

He also was a member of Adam Plewacki Post 799, American Legion, and the Corpus Christi Athletic Club.

His wife, Mary Orzechowski Pierowicz, died in 2009.

Mr. Pierowicz is survived by a daughter, Diane Petryk; a son, David J.; two sisters, Dorothy D’Agostino and Teresa Sliwinski; two grandchildren; and a great-grandchild.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at noon Friday in St. John Gualbert Catholic Church, 83 Gualbert St., Cheektowaga.

Eric E. Lansing, 96, CPA WWII Army veteran

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Nov. 5, 1917 – Jan. 7, 2014

Eric E. Lansing, a certified public accountant who fled Germany to escape persecution in the 1930s and returned during World War II to help defeat the Nazis, died Jan. 7 in Millard Fillmore Suburban Hospital, Amherst. He was 96.

Born Eric Lipcowitz in Munich, Germany, he studied in Switzerland and England after Hitler closed the German schools to Jews, then came to the U.S. in 1937 and attended City College of New York. After his parents and younger brother came to America in 1940, he moved to Buffalo, where his father had found a job, and attended the University of Buffalo.

In 1943, he and his brother joined the Army and, not wanting to serve with a foreign surname, changed their names to Lansing. Since he spoke German fluently, he worked in intelligence under Gen. Omar Bradley and uncovered German troop movements leading up to the Battle of the Bulge. He attained the rank of master sergeant and was awarded the Bronze Star.

He recounted his wartime experiences in 2011 in The Buffalo News series “Saluting Our War Heroes.”

Returning from service, he earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration from UB and worked at Bufkor as comptroller. After he became a certified public accountant in 1949, he was a CPA for Lester Stone & Co., then for 20 years was a partner in the accounting firm of Daniel Joseph & Co. in Williamsville. He retired in 1984.

In retirement, he volunteered as a patient advocate at Buffalo General Hospital and was an Erie County arbitrator. He also delivered meals for Meals on Wheels and helped found the Buffalo chapter of 40 Plus, which helps middle-aged people find jobs.

A resident of Kenmore and the Town of Tonawanda for 50 years before moving to Canterbury Woods Retirement Community in Amherst, he was a founding member of the Suburban Congregation in 1955, which later became Temple Beth Am and now is Congregation Shir Shalom.

Mr. Lansing enjoyed gardening, bowling, bridge, tennis and, in his younger years, skiing.

He also enjoyed playing the piano and attending lectures, the theater and classical music concerts.

He also traveled extensively, visiting more than 50 countries on six continents.

Survivors include his wife of 64 years, the former Ruth Oberlander; a daughter, Diane; a son, Tom; and two grandchildren.

A memorial service was held Sunday in Mesnekoff Funeral Home, East Amherst.

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Maryann (Lukowski) Baehr, of Cheektowaga, died Jan. 13.

Ruth S. (Schnerle) Bennett, owner of the Needlepoint Loft in Clarence, died Jan. 12.

Carol S. Brigham, USPS mail carrier for more than 25 years, died Jan. 11.

Maureen M. (Wheatley) Burke, died Jan. 13.

Richard T. Corcoran, of Lake View, Navy veteran, member of the United Steelworkers of America, died Jan. 10.

Thelma (Grice) Daughtry, of Buffalo, died Jan. 5.

Jane T. Dean, of Amherst, died Jan. 10.

Joanne T. (Palma) Delmont, of Amherst, died Jan. 14.

Vilma (Cellini) DiCenso, 94, died Jan. 14.

Edward Joseph Duguay, 96, died Jan. 12.

Penelope Frank Hahn, 68, died Jan. 12.

Richard D. Horner, of West Seneca, WWII Navy veteran, plumbing inspector for the Town of West Seneca for 25 years, died Jan. 13.

Patricia Mason, died Jan. 12.

Ruth J. (Diehl) Miller, 89, formerly of Arcade, died Jan. 13.

Robert A. Montgomery, died Jan. 13.

Lorraine F. (Mally) Mueller, of West Seneca, died Jan. 11.

Joseph V. Nachreiner, died Jan. 11.

Norma Rose (Bevacqua) Nielsen, 81 of Niagara Falls, former secretary for Vanadium Corp. and the Alcohol Council of Niagara County, died Jan. 10.









Nellie A. Panek, 89, of Buffalo, Korean War Army veteran, former nurse at the former Deaconess Hospital, inspector for the NYS Department of Health, died Jan. 14.

Robert R. Pedley, died Jan. 12.

Gail “Homer” Prange, Navy veteran, retired claims adjuster, worked for the City of Buffalo in the City Clerk’s office, died Jan. 12.

Ruth (Hebeler) Skelly, died Jan. 12.

Joan (Vespucci) Skotnicki, 72, of the Town of Wheatfield, a licensed realtor and worked for many years in the Niagara Wheatfield cafeteria, died Jan. 13.

Brian F. Thayer, died Jan. 13.

Willie D. Thomas, died Jan. 7.

Stanley J. Tomaka,, of Lackawanna, WWII Army veteran, died Jan. 13.

Nancy (Andrews) Zobrist, 74, formerly of North Tonawanda, worked at Durez, died Dec. 22.

Lumon Ross, Black Chamber of Commerce president

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July 29, 1938 – Jan. 7, 2014

Unbossed and unbought.

That’s how people remember Lumon Ross, president of the Black Chamber of Commerce of Western New York and a fierce advocate on behalf of black businesses. Mr. Ross died Jan. 7 after collapsing in his Buffalo home. He was 75

Mr. Ross was co-founder of the Black Chamber in the early 1990s and the only president the organization has ever known. Under his leadership, the Chamber has sponsored forums and workshops to facilitate the growth of black businesses, often in cooperation with other organizations. But he was never afraid to speak out on his own when he thought black business owners were getting shut out, whether through overt measures or more subtle regulatory or contract provisions. “He really fought and advocated on behalf of African-American businesses,” said Brenda McDuffie, president and CEO of the Buffalo Urban League, who said Mr. Ross “spoke truth to power.”

For years, Mr. Ross – along with McDuffie – was a constant presence at meetings of the Joint Schools Construction Board, pressing to make sure black businesses and workers were included in the $1 million effort to reconstruct Buffalo schools. He also was a voice for black contractors who felt they weren’t getting a fair share of the business.

“He never backed down. When there were significant issues to be raised that weren’t popular,” McDuffie said, Mr. Ross was willing to raise them “based on his convictions.”

“There are probably few warriors who would come close in this community to the impact he had. He’s going to be really, really missed,” she said.

In addition to advocating on behalf of black businesses, the Chamber under Mr. Ross played a big role in giving black entrepreneurs the information and guidance they need to succeed.

It collaborated in recent years with the U.S. Small Business Administration, the Buffalo Urban League and others in sponsoring workshops on starting, running or growing a business. And last year, the Black Chamber collaborated with the local chapter of the Black MBA Association on a forum exploring the challenges facing black entrepreneurs, up to and including how to come up with a succession plan – a failure that sinks many black businesses when the founder retires.

“He was very dedicated to the improvement of the black business community and the community at large. But because of the need, he was very concerned about the black community,” said Richard Cummings, vice president of the Black Chamber and of American Rated Cable & Communications.

Mr. Ross was concerned about economic justice, and “he’s laid a path to accomplish it,” Cummings said.

“We owe it to his legacy that we will keep his spirit alive and what he fought for,” said McDuffie. “He was unbossed and unbought.”

A Buffalo native who earned a bachelor’s degree from Buffalo State College, Mr. Ross was a social worker and a state Division of Youth supervisor before opening the Kensington Experience restaurant on Kensington Avenue in the early 1990s.

In addition to his work with the Black Chamber, Mr. Ross was a board member of Citizens Alliance and Restoring Our Community Coalition, as well as a member of the Buffalo Local Action Committee and the Kwanzaa Committee.

Survivors include his wife, Nancy A.; four daughters, Alexandra C. Eaton, Lara M. Gray, Sarah Obot and Kate I.; two sons, Lumon J. and Gabriele Olla; a brother, Ralph; eight grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.

Services were held Monday.

Richard T. Corcoran, USW office assistant director

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Oct. 6, 1934 – Jan. 10, 2014

Richard T. Corcoran, of Lake View, retired assistant director of the Buffalo office of the United Steelworkers of America, died unexpectedly Friday in Largo Medical Center, Largo, Fla. He was 79.

He was a graduate of Our Lady of Victory High School in Lackawanna and, after serving in the Navy, joined Operating Engineers Local 25 and worked in many cities in the Northeast and Canada.

Mr. Corcoran went to work at Bethlehem Steel Corp. in the early 1960s, was elected grievance man for United Steelworkers Local 2601 and held that office for many years.

In 1979, he was appointed staff representative for United Steelworkers District 4, which included New York, New Jersey and parts of New England. He was assigned to offices in Syracuse, Chicago and Buffalo, where he negotiated contracts, conducted arbitrations and oversaw elections.

When the district was enlarged and became District 14, he was named assistant director. He retired in 2002.

Mr. Corcoran helped organize and took part in long-distance runs in Washington, D.C.; Boston; and San Francisco with “Who Dares, Wins,” an organization helping Vietnam War veterans find jobs.

He was a runner in the Olympic Torch relay for the 2002 Winter Games.

In retirement, he volunteered with Roswell Park Cancer Institute and the Good Neighbor food drive.

He was a member of Hamburg Post 527, American Legion, and Father Baker Council 2243, Knights of Columbus.

An avid golfer, he participated in many local charitable tournaments.

Mr. Corcoran and his wife traveled extensively in Europe and South America.

Survivors include his wife of 51 years, the former Marilyn Milks; three daughters, Corrine Benosa; Renee and Lorraine; two sisters, Arline Killian and Helen Jewett; a brother, Robert; and four grandchildren.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 10:30 a.m. Friday in Blessed John Paul II Catholic Church, 2052 Lakeview Road, Lake View.

Gail G. ‘Homer’ Prange, insurance claims adjuster

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Feb. 1, 1934 – Jan. 12, 2014

Gail G. “Homer” Prange, of Buffalo, a retired insurance claims adjuster and City Hall employee, died Sunday in Buffalo Veterans Affairs Medical Center. He was 79.

Born in Buffalo, he was a graduate of Seneca Vocational High School and attended Buffalo State College. Enlisting in the Navy in 1954, he served in the Pacific aboard the battleship USS Wisconsin and the aircraft carrier USS Ranger.

Mr. Prange was an insurance claims adjuster for more than 20 years with Allied Claim Services, becoming vice president of property claims. Later, he began a second career in the Buffalo City Clerk’s Office, working as an archivist for more than 10 years.

A longtime resident of Black Rock, he was a fixture at Casey’s Tavern on Amherst Street for more than 40 years and was a popular bartender there.

An avid sports fan, he held season tickets for the Buffalo Bills for many years and had been a Buffalo Sabres season ticket holder since 1974.

He also was a jazz buff and had an extensive music collection.

A member of the USS Wisconsin Association, he revisited the ship, now a museum ship in Norfolk, Va., in 2011.

Survivors include a daughter, Shelly; a son, Jay; and a granddaughter.

Services will be at 12:30 p.m. Friday in Kolano Funeral Home, 396 Amherst St.

Sister Mary Francella Turajski, longtime teacher

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May 10, 1926 – Jan. 15, 2014

Sister Mary Francella Turajski, a teacher and a Felician Sister for 69 years, died Wednesday in Blessed Mary Angela Care Center after a lengthy illness. She was 87.

Born in Cleveland, she was a member of St. John the Baptist Parish in Alden and a graduate of Immaculate Heart of Mary Academy. She entered the Immaculate Heart of Mary Province of the Felician Sisters on Aug. 22, 1944, and professed perpetual vows on Aug. 6, 1952.

She earned a bachelor’s degree and a master’s degree from Mount St. Joseph Teachers College, now Medaille College.

She began her teaching career in the intermediate grades at St. Stanislaus School in Buffalo, St. Augustine School in Depew and SS. Peter & Paul School in Williamsville. After four years at Our Lady of Fatima School in St. Catharines, Ont., she returned to Buffalo in 1963 to teach English at Villa Maria Academy.

In the 1970s, she taught English for five years at Holy Name of Mary High School in Port Credit, Ont., then returned to Villa Maria Academy. She also taught English at Notre Dame High School in Batavia.

In 1982, she became director of records at Villa Maria College, a position she held for 14 years, then assisted part time for six more years, retiring in 2001. She also was a religious education teacher at her home parish in Alden. Before she became a patient in Blessed Mary Angela Care Center in 2005, she helped in the infirmary dining room.

Survivors include a niece and a cousin.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 10 a.m. Monday in the chapel of Immaculate Heart of Mary Convent, 600 Doat St.
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