The Washington Post - 06.04.2020

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monday, april 6 , 2020. the washington post eZ re B5


goggles it requested.
The Democrats who control
most of maryland’s d eep-blue pol-
itics have praised Hogan’s leader-
ship, particularly in contrast to
the president. They also say his
GoP ties make it incumbent on
Hogan to more aggressively moti-
vate the Trump administration.
“We don’t need Hogan’s help
moving Democrats in the House,”
said rep. Jamie B. raskin
(D-md.), the state’s most liberal
member of Congress, who sug-
gested that Hogan’s p hone calls to
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-
Calif.) were not the best use of his
time. “We need Hogan to move
the republican Trump adminis-
tration to respond.”
In his first term, Hogan avoid-
ed national media appearances to
show he was focused on mary-
land, a state where Democrats
outnumber republicans 2 to 1.
Now his sprawling reception
room at the State House has been
converted to a “war room,” with
an area dedicated for video con-
ferences and television appear-
ances.
The governor pursued more
network and cable outlets last
year while weighing a primary
challenge to Trump. He decided
not to run, but said he wants to
play a role in defining the future
of the republican Party. To that
end, he has launched a political
action committee called America
United, which is blasting out links
to all the recent media attention.
Hogan has delayed the launch of
his political memoir, which was
set to be released in June.
Although analysts have long
said there is no obvious national
perch for Hogan in Trump’s GoP,
former republican National
Committee chairman michael
Steele — a former lieutenant gov-
ernor in maryland — disagrees.
Given his performance so far in
the pandemic, Steele said, Ho-
gan’s political future could look
like “whatever he wants it to be.”
The governor swears he hasn’t
considered any potential political
benefit of his virus response.
“This is going to sound, you
know, insincere,” Hogan said.
“But I mean, honestly, I really
haven’t g iven any thought at a ll to
the politics of it at all.”
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]

of coronavirus experts his staff
put together: epidemiologists
from Johns Hopkins and the Uni-
versity of maryland medical Sys-
tem, emergency logistics special-
ists and hospital executives. Every
few days, they walk him through
the latest public health science,
and he peppers them with ques-
tions, according to people on the
calls.
from the initial task force
meeting in early february —
weeks before maryland’s first
known c oronavirus case — Hogan
was talking about the success of
social distancing in Asia, said
Thomas Inglesby, a Johns Hop-
kins expert in epidemic planning.
“ He’s been asking questions...
what can we do to reduce this
peak, how much can we can re-
duce it, what else can we do?”
Inglesby said.
Hogan said he can’t recall ex-
actly how he started paying atten-
tion to the pandemic, though he
speculates he was attuned to what
was happening in South Korea
because of his wife, Yumi, who
grew up there. He h as given up on
the possibility that the United
States could deploy widespread
testing the way South Korea has,
or even that testing capacity will
catch up with the patient surge.
The immediate past chair of
the NGA, montana Gov. Steve
Bullock (D) said his single daily
source of joy in this pandemic is
that he doesn’t have Hogan’s job,
which he described as leadership
“on steroids.”
“He takes the role very serious-
ly,” said Bullock, who credited
Hogan with pressing the adminis-
tration to invoke the National
Defense Act to force companies to
build supplies and give states fed-
eral aid to pay for National Guard
missions. “He’s done a great job of
listening to the governors
throughout the country and also
reflecting some of our concerns.”
Hogan lacks the prominence of
California Gov. Gavin Newsom
(D) or New York Gov. Andrew m.
Cuomo (D), who is overseeing the
nation’s largest outbreak. Ye t his
agitation has helped maryland
score some resources — the state
got 138 ventilators from the Stra-
tegic National Stockpile, while
other mid-Atlantic states re-
ceived zero. Still, maryland got
none of the body bags, surgical
gowns, nasal swabs and safety

dent Pence — a friend and former
fellow governor — who is leading
the White House’s pandemic re-
sponse. Hogan has complained
privately that it is hard to tell who
is in charge.
Those close to Hogan said his
personal and political experience
is tailor-made for a crisis. He
relishes the role of protector and
recognizes the limits of his own
knowledge. And he learned from
his public bout with cancer that
unvarnished transparency builds
trust.
“The governor loves a good
fight, and there is none bigger
than covid right now,” said Doug
mayer, a republican strategist
and former Hogan aide.
Hogan has leaned into advice
he said former New Jersey gover-
nor Chris Christie offered shortly
after Hogan’s election, when he
faced riots and unrest in Balti-
more: Be visible. Be simultane-
ously a decisive general and a
genuine “consoler-in-chief.”
“He’s being honest about what
he needs and what the shortcom-
ings have been, but he’s n ot broad-
siding and indicting the president
and the administration,” said
Christie, who said he has been
speaking with Hogan several
times a week. “He’s worried on a
human level and a supplies level,
trying to grapple every day to
ensure his systems are not over-
loaded. That’s when you start to
have preventable deaths.”
As g overnor of a state dominat-
ed by Democrats, Hogan has
mostly limited his agenda over
the past six years to populist con-
cerns such as ending gerryman-
dering, lowering tolls and making
school start after Labor Day. He
has described himself as a goalie,
playing defense against proposals
he says cost too much or go t oo far.
But with the pandemic, Hogan
is on offense. “I don’t consider
myself the brightest guy in the
world or the most talented,” he
said. “I think the one skill I really
have is I know to bring in smarter
people around me and to take
advice.”
Hogan’s chief of staff is a for-
mer corporate crisis consultant.
His communications director is a
Capitol Hill veteran who worked
for f ormer House speakers Paul D.
ryan (r-Wis.) and John A. Boeh-
ner (r-ohio).
The governor relies on a team

things.’ I just got off the phone, no
governors have these things.”
Trump aides have complained
to Hogan’s team about his public
venting, according to White
House officials who spoke on the
condition of anonymity to discuss
internal conversations. Some Ho-
gan supporters in maryland have
accused him of underestimating
the financial hardship of social
distancing. The American Civil
Liberties Union blasted him fri-
day for refusing to release prison-
ers to limit the virus’s spread.
Ye t Hogan keeps on, whether in
a black baseball c ap and sunglass-
es or an open-collared work shirt,
presenting himself as a straight-
talking executive walking a deli-
cate line between thanking the
federal government for its help
and correcting the president’s
pinballing rhetoric.
“Yes, it’s f acts, and yes, it’s i nfor-
mation, but it’s also calm leader-
ship,” s aid Lis Smith, a Democrat-
ic strategist widely credited with
elevating the presidential candi-
dacy of former South Bend, Ind.,
mayor Pete Buttigieg. “People are
sitting at home, wanting to be
comforted. There’s an endless
hunger for information, and I
don’t know why more people
aren’t s tepping into that void.”
Hogan, 63, has zero health
training — he jokes that his sci-
ence background is limited to
meteorology 101 at florida State
University — but was one of the
first governors to implement so-
cial distancing. He s ays the Wash-
ington region’s caseload is just 10
days behind the “war zone” in
New York, where patients are
close to overwhelming hospitals.
“It’s not because I have nothing
else to do and want to see my m ug
on TV,” Hogan said of his wall-to-
wall appearances — as many as
seven a day, from rural radio sta-
tions and fox morning shows to
C-SPAN specials and mSNBC
prime-time slots. “It’s because I
think it’s critically important.”
other governors call him for
advice and to swap strategies.
Hogan speaks directly with Trea-
sury Secretary Steven mnuchin
about the economic fallout; with
Anthony S. fauci, the nation’s
leading expert in infectious dis-
eases, about Hogan’s hunches on
what’s next; and with Vice Presi-


maryland from B1


Both sober and hopeful, Hogan takes on pandemic


obituaries


BY BART BARNES

David C. Driskell, an artist, art
historian, art collector, art teach-
er, author and curator who be-
came a primary s ponsor and advo-
cate for the role of African Ameri-
can art in the national culture,
died April 1 at a hospital in Wash-
ington. He w as 88.
The cause was complications
from the novel coronavirus, said
rodney moore, his nephew and
arts manager.
As an artist, mr. Driskell was
best known for a 1956 painting,
“Behold T hy S on,” a g raphic repre-
sentation of the mutilated corpse
of Emmett Till, a black 14-year-old
lynched in mississippi the year
before for allegedly flirting with a
white w oman.
mr. Driskell served on the art
faculties of several historically
black c olleges but w as best known
for his affiliation with the Univer-
sity of maryland from 1977 to 1998.
The university’s Center for the
Study of the Visual Arts and Cul-
ture of African Americans and the
African Diaspora, founded in
200 1, was n amed in h is honor.
In addition, mr. Driskell wrote
several books on African Ameri-
can art and became an artistic
adviser to television star Bill Cos-
by and his wife, Camille, recom-
mending hundreds of pieces by
black artists for their private col-
lection. When Bill Cosby phoned
him, he initially thought it was a
prank. “I thought my brother-in-
law was playing a trick on me,” he
told a Smithsonian Institution in-
terviewer. “We would call back
and forth and pretend we were
celebrities, imitating different
people’s voices from t ime t o time.”
In 1 976, he c urated “Two C entu-
ries of Black American Art” at the
Los Angeles County museum of
Art — an exhibition of more than
200 works by 63 artists that Thel-
ma Golden, a New York curator,
later described t o The Washington
Post as “a watershed in both its
scholarly approach and populari-
ty.”
Ye t the exposition was not uni-
versally acclaimed when it
reached New York’s Brooklyn mu-
seum in 1977, a nd New York Times


art critic Hilton Kramer wrote
that the show was more “social
history” t han art, that some of its
art was “mediocre” and that im-
portant commissions came across
as scattershot. Defending the ex-
hibit on national television, mr.
Driskell criticized Kramer and
told NBC anchorman Tom B rokaw
that all art is a form of social
history.
mr. Driskell was said to have
amassed one of the most compre-
hensive private collections in the
country of mostly African Ameri-
can and African art. But his hold-
ings also included a rembrandt
etching that mr. Driskell said he
found in Denmark and bought for
$10 and a matisse linocut he said
he acquired at an Alexandria, Va.,
flea market f or $3.
His own paintings include
landscapes, images of chairs and
themes from the Bible. He de-
signed stained-glass windows for
Peoples Congregational United
Church of Christ in Washington,
which h e attended. for a chapel at
the historically black Ta lladega
College in Alabama, he also de-
signed stained-glass windows.
His work “Behold Thy Son” i s on
display at the Smithsonian Insti-
tution’s National museum of Afri-
can American History and Cul-
ture. It’s described in the muse-
um’s catalogue as a “modern-day

Pietà... depicting the Virgin
mary cradling the dead body of
Christ following his crucifixion.

... Driskell’s powerful tribute to
this tragic event is a t estament to a
mother’s loss of her son.”
David Clyde Driskell was born
in Eatonton, Ga., on June 7, 1931,
and grew up in the Appalachian
community of Hollis, N.C., in a
stone house that was accessible
only by a dirt road. He was the
youngest of four children and the
only boy.
His father was a blacksmith
who also made furniture and
served as pastor of two Baptist
churches. His mother wove bas-
kets from bulrushes and pine nee-
dles and made q uilts.
As a boy, he ducked household
chores and excelled in school. “I
guess I was the only kid who
showed any interest in art when I
was in grade school, which was a
one-room segregated school-
house,” he told the Baltimore Sun.
“So my teachers prevailed on me
to do everything that l ooked like it
was a rt.”
mr. Driskell was the first in his
family to go to college. But he
didn’t know that to attend, he had
to apply. He just showed up one
day at Howard University and
talked h is w ay i n.
He courted a fellow student,
Thelma Deloatch, by taking her to


church services and movies. They
married in 1952. In addition to his
wife, s urvivors include two daugh-
ters, Daviryne mcNeill and Daph-
ne Cole, all of Hyattsville, md.; five
grandchildren; and four great-
grandchildren.
mr. Driskell said he was on a
pathway to becoming a history
teacher before an encounter at
Howard w ith p ainter H oward Por-
ter, who become his mentor and
persuaded mr. Driskell to switch
his major. He graduated in 1955,
taught art at Talladega College in
Alabama (where he painted “Be-
hold Thy Son”), then returned to
the Washington area and received
a master’s degree in fine arts at
Catholic University i n 1962.
He taught at Howard and then
at fisk University in Tennessee
from 196 6 to 1977, a period when
he curated and wrote catalogues
on 40 exhibits, including the work
of such artists as Aaron Douglas,
Jacob Lawrence, Palmer Hayden
and A lma Thomas.
In H yattsville, m r. D riskell lived
in an old Victorian-style house
with a historic-landmark plaque.
“Students regularly crowd into t he
house to soak up its warmth and
eat his gumbo or his wife Thelma’s
sweet potato pie,” according to a
199 8 Washington Post p rofile.
“This is a man who d oesn’t n eed
to thunder,” t he article continued.
“His speaking style combines the
cadence of a minister, t he r estraint
of a gentleman, the erudition of a
scholar and the irreverence of an
artist.... He is of that generation
of Southern black men and wom-
en who got where they were going
through gentle but persistent
nudging.”
outside his house was a yard
replete with flowers, vegetables,
vines and trees, including a leaf-
less bottle t ree surrounded by bot-
tles of s oda and m ilk o f magnesia.
Sometimes mr. Driskell would
tell guests that the tree was a
“spirit catcher” i ntended to honor
his parents.
“A rt was always functional for
African people,” he told The Post.
“If there is anything different for
us, it’s how we deal with the arts
and d eal w ith h istory.”
[email protected]

david C. driskell, 88


Collector was advocate for African American art


Lucian Perkins/the Washington Post
mr. driskell, whom the University of maryland named an arts
center after, died from complications from the novel coronavirus.

DEATHNOTICE

IANJACKGURAL(Age96)
PassedawayonSaturday,April4,2020.
Alwaysandforeverthebelovedhusbandofthe
lateBeverlyMarionGural(neeRody);devoted
fatherofJaniceWherry(thelateJohn),Kenneth
Gural(Hoa)andKarenWalant(David);loving
grandfatherofAnna,Catherine,Albert,William,
Benjamin,Genevieve,Melissa,Carl,Jessica,
VictoriaandMy-Ly;dotinggreat-grandfatherof
eight;adoreduncletoCarolShoretz(Morris)
andtheirchildren;devotedbrothertothelate
siblingsLillianFinkelstein,HerbertGuralnick,
andMaryGross;andcherisheduncle.
JackwasalongtimeresidentofSilverSpring,
MD,andrecentlyofMonroe,NJ.Hewasa
talentedandprolificartistofover 500 paint-
ings,askilledarchitectandurbanplanner,
whoworkedontheUSGovernmentSWWash-
ington,DCRedevelopmentProject.BothJack
andhiswifewerelongtimemembersofthe
WashingtonHebrewCongregation.
Amemorialservicewillbeheldatalaterdate
tobeannounced.
Inlieuofflowers,contributionsmaybemade
totheUniversityofNorthCarolinaChapelHill
andPrattInstituteSchoolofArchitecture.
Arrangementsareunderthedirectionofthe
A.S.ColeSon&Co.FuneralHome,22North
MainStreet,Cranbury,NJ.
http://www.saulfuneralhomes.com

GURAL

NATKOBITZ
OfBaltimore,MD,passedawayon
April5, 2020 attheage 92 years
old.Hehadalonganddistinguished
career in the Department of
DefenseandwiththeU.S.NavyHe
wassurvivedbyhislovingchildren,
MadelineCheers(RobertVetter),
LindaRoseKaiser(AlbertoConti),Celia(Robert)
KiblerandBennettAlan(KathleenMcKinney)
Kobitz;grandchildren,LaurenNichole(Christo-
pher)Henry,WilliamKyle (Jessica)Harris,
MatthewHenryKaiser(LaurenMay),EmilyAnn
(Stephanie)Kaiser,RhysMylesKobitz,Galen
ArcherKobitz,RossKibler,PaulKiblerandRyan
(Vicki)Kiblerandfivegreat-grandchildren.He
waspredeceasedbyhislovingwife,Cynthia
Kobitz(neeLenes)andparents,Benjaminand
AnnaKobitz.
Funeralservicesareprivate.Pleaseomitflow-
ers.Contributionsinhismemorymaybesent
toJewishWarVeteransoftheUnitedStatesof
America, 1811 RStreetNW,Washington,DC
20009 orALSAssociation, 7507 StandishPlace,
Rockville,MD20855.

KOBITZ

DEATHNOTICE

BONITARUTHSHORTLESTINA
BornAugust4, 1937 Devil’sLake,Ramsay
County,NorthDakotaanddiedMarch30,
2020 ofAlzheimer’sdiseaseatMountVernon
HealthcareCenter,8 111 TisWell Drive,Mount
Vernon,Virginia.Sheissurvivedbyherhus-
bandDale;sonLunn;daughter-in-lawRuth;and
granddaughtersJenya,Ana,andDe.
ShegraduatedfromPelicanRapids,Minnesota
Highschoolin1955.Shehasabachelor’sof
scienceandamaster’sdegreeofartfrom
MinnesotaStateUniversityatMoorhead.Boni-
tataughtpublicschoolartandmusicatDil-
worth,MinnesotaandalsoatFargo,North
Dakota.Shealsohasamaster’sdegreeinvocal
musicperformancefromCatholicUniversity,
Washington,DCandshestudiedvocalmusic
performancewithDolfSwingofJulliardSchool
ofMusic,NewYork,NewYork.Bonitawas
averyaccomplishedmezzocontraltovocal
soloistandgavemanypublicperformances.
Thepublication“CityArtScene”labeledBonita
theCity’sRenaissanceWoman.Shesharedher
remarkablemultitalentsinavarietyofways
teachingvocalmusicandpianolessonsto
manystudentsovertheyears.Bonitareserved
partofhertimetoexpresshertalentasavisual
oilandwatercolorpaintingartist.Bonitawasa
distinguishedartcopyistattheNationalGallery
ofArt.Mrs.Lestinacreatedandenhanced
“TheBonitaLestinaOldTownHallPerformance
Series”,nowconsideredtobeoneofthe
WashingtonMetroArea’sfinest.InJuneof
1998 theFairfaxCitySchoolBoardgavehera
proclamationtohonorthegivingofherselfto
allagestoenhanceartseducationintheCity
ofFairfax.
BonitaisachartermemberoftheFairfax
CountyGenealogicalSociety.InAprilof 1973
shereceivedalifemembershipintheDaugh-
tersoftheAmericanRevolution.Inapprecia-
tionforheroutstandingcontributionstothe
culturallifeoftheFairfaxCommunityshe
receivedthe 2002 MayorJohnMasonArts
AchievementAward.Bonitawasappointedto
thepositionofVirginiaStateArtCommissioner
bythethenGovernorandnowSenatorMark
Warner.Sheservedinthatcapacityfrom 2002
through2005.
ShewasinterredattheFairfaxCityCemetery
onMainStreetonApril3,2020.
AveryspecialthankyoutotheMountVernon
HealthcareCenterstaffandthePro-Healthcare
HospiceServicestafffortheexcellentand
compassionatecaretheygavetoBonitaduring
herpastdetrimentalAlzheimer’sjourney.

LESTINA

PHILLIPLOUISSCHONBERGER
(Age77)
Beloved husband of Farideh
SchonbergerandfathertoJen-
niferSchonbergerpassedaway
on SaturdayApril4, 2020 in
Alexandria,VA.Bornandraised
inAlexandria,hewasavalued
memberofthecommunityandan
entrepreneur.Hewasakindandgenerous
manwhotouchedpeople’slives.Aprivate
gravesideservicewillbeheldatKindDavid
MemorialGardens.

SCHONBERGER

DEATHNOTICE

LITAJEANNEELY(Age90)
DiedApril1,2020.Jeanneissurvivedbyher
daughter,JoyLynneLarson;andgrandsons
MatthewLarsonandBryanCastillo.Shewas
precededindeathbyherson,Christoper
Larson;andhusband,CharlesAllanEly.Jeanne
wasborninMorrilton,ArkansasonJune7,
1929.Amemorialserviceandintermentat
ArlingtonNationalCemeterywillbeheldat
adateyettobedetermined.Donationsin
hermemorymaybegiventoGoodShepherd
LutheranChurchEndowmentFund,Gaithers-
burg,Maryland.

ELY

DEATHNOTICE

RITAIORIOFAIR
OfWashington,DC,diedonMarch22,2020.
ShewasborninWilkes-Barre,PA,thedaughter
ofthelateAnnaWojcikIorioandErnesto
Iorio.Shepassedawayattheageof83.Ms.
Fairwasprecededindeathbyherhusband,
JohnW.Fair.Sheissurvivedbyhertwosons,
KennethJ. Fair ofSanFrancisco(AnneBerkery-
Fair)andAnthonyM.Fair(JoyDavisFair),
andtwograndchildren,ColeAnthonyFair and
ReedDanielleFairofNewYorkCity.Sheis
alsosurvivedbynieces,RosalieTargonskiof
Alexandria,VA,AnnKruszewski(Donald)of
Fairfax,VA,MaryAndaluzofWinfieldPark,
NJ,andmanyniecesandnephewsinPennsyl-
vania.Shewasprecededindeathbybroth-
ers,SilvioJ.IorioofWinfieldPark,NJ,and
AnthonyE.IorioofLuzerne,PA,andsisters,
RosalieTargonskiofAlexandria,VA,andAnna
M.PetittoandMaryIorioofWilkes-Barre,PA.
RitaFair wasactiveintheHousingandFinan-
cialServicesIndustries.Shewasappointed
duringPresidentClinton’sadministrationto
serveastheChairoftheFederalHomeLoan
BankofAtlanta.ShewaspreviouslyManaging
DirectoroftheFederalHousingFinanceBoard.
Ms.FairwasaManagingDirectoroftheSecura
Group,aFinancialInstitutionsConsultingfirm
inWashington,DC;SeniorVPforRegulatory
OperationsattheU.S.LeagueofSavings(now
AmericanBankersAssociation);andChiefof
StaffoftheFederalHomeLoanBankBoard.
SheservedinanumberofpositionsatHUD,
includingExecutiveAssistanttotheSecretary
andUnderSecretary,andontheFNMAAdviso-
ryCommittee.
Ms.FairwasanactivevolunteerforManna,
Inc., anonprofithousingandcommunitydevel-
opmentorganizationintheDistrictofColumbia
workingforaffordablehomeownershipand
neighborhoodrevitalization.Sheservedas
ChairoftheirLeadershipCommittee.
Inlieuofflowers,contributionscanbemadeto
Ms.Fair’sfavoriteorganizationsbelow:
Martha’sTable of Washington, DC -
https://marthastable.org/
MannaInc.-https://www.mannadc.org/
ShrineoftheMostBlessedSacrament-
https://www.blessedsacramentdc.org/
Catholic Charities ofWashington, DC -
https://www.catholiccharitiesdc.org/

FAIR

LISAANNETTEWASHINGTON(Age52)
OnWednesday,March,18,2020,ofUpper
Marlboro,MDpeacefullydepartedthislife
inherhomesurroundedbyherfamily.She
wasprecededindeathbyhersister,Angela.
Thoselefttotreasurehermemoryareher
devotedhusbandAnthonyWashington;loving
motherMrs.MaryAnnTolbert(Charlie);loving
fatherKennethWycoff;threedaughters,Briana
Washington,NicoleWashingtonandMichelle
Washington;threeuncles,Archie,Ronaldand
LawrenceAcker;threeauntsCynthia,Tammy
andWaconzerAckerofCalifornia;mother-
in-lawCarrieWashington;twosisters-in-law
Elizabeth Washington and Anne Moore;
cousins;andahostofotherrelativesand
friends.AgraduateofUniversityofDistrictof
Columbia.andJohnsHopkinsUniversitySchool
ofNursing,Lisawasaverycompassionate
nurse,shelovedhelpingtheneedy,shewasa
devotedhomemaker,andshelovedtraveling
andhavingfunwithherfamily.Shewillbe
sorelymissedbymany.Friendsmayvisitwith
thefamilyattheJ.B.JenkinsFuneralHome,
7474 LandoverRd.,Hyattsville,MDonApril7,
2020 from9:30to10:30a.m.,Service10:30
to11:30a.m.IntermentwillbeatCheltenham
VeteransCemetery,Cheltenham,MD.Afamily
andfriendshomegoingcelebrationwillbeheld
atalaterdate.

WASHINGTON

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Noticesmustbeplacedviaphone,faxor
email.Photosmustbeemailed.Youcan
nolongerplacenotices,dropoffphotos
andmakepaymentin person.
Paymentmustbemadeviaphonewith

debit/creditcard.
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