The Washington Post - USA (2020-07-31)

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B6 EZ RE THE WASHINGTON POST.FRIDAY, JULY 31 , 2020


obituaries


BY MATT SCHUDEL
AND EMILY LANGER

Drawing on his up-from-pov-
erty story, his experience as a
pizza-chain executive and even
his resonant singing voice, Her-
man Cain launched an unlikely
run for the presidency that brief-
ly landed him at the top of the
polls for the Republican nomina-
tion early in the 2012 campaign.
If nominated, he would have
been the first Black GOP presi-
dential nominee, but his candida-
cy soon ran aground amid charg-
es of sexual harassment. By the
end of 2011, Mr. Cain had
dropped out of the race, and the
GOP nomination ultimately went
to Mitt Romney.
Four years later, Mr. Cain be-
came an enthusiastic supporter
of Donald Trump’s presidential
campaign. As co-chair of Black
Voices for Trump, Mr. Cain was
one of the president’s most prom-
inent Black allies. He made one of
his final public appearances on
June 20 at a political rally for the
president in Tulsa.
Less than two weeks later, Mr.
Cain announced that he had con-
tracted covid-19, the disease
caused by the novel coronavirus.
He was not seen wearing a pro-
tective face covering at the rally.
He was hospitalized in Atlanta,
where he died July 30 at age 74.
Dan Calabrese, editor of Mr.
Cain’s website, confirmed the
death and that the cause was
covid-19.
President Trump hailed him in
a tweet as “a Powerful Voice of
Freedom and all that is good.”
Mr. Cain had many incarna-
tions — as a successful business
executive, a tax-cutting conserva-
tive and a straight-talking politi-
cal gadfly. He was a radio talk
show host, a fixture on conserva-
tive news outlets and a charis-
matic figure in Republican cir-
cles. Glib, cheerful and endlessly
quotable, he dubbed himself the
“Hermanator,” after Arnold
Schwarzenegger’s action hero,
the Terminator. He even trade-
marked the phrase “the Her-
manator Experience.”
His campaign for the 2012 GOP
nomination as a candidate who
had never held office was mocked
by political elites but caught fire
for a time among certain voters
who admired Mr. Cain’s status as
a business-savvy outsider. In
some ways, he served as a bell-
wether for Trump’s campaign in
2016.
“I’m not a professional politi-
cian,” Mr. Cain often said. “I’m a
professional problem solver.”
Mr. Cain, the grandson of a
potato farmer, worked for Coca-
Cola as a business analyst in the
1970 s before joining the Pillsbury
Co., where he began his ascent as
one of the few top-ranking Black
executives in American business.
He spent four years in Phila-
delphia with the company’s Burg-
er King division, learning the
business from the lowest job to
the top, reshaping the company’s
worst-performing stores into
some of its most profitable.
In 1986, Pillsbury bought a
company that included the strug-
gling Godfather’s pizza chain. Mr.
Cain became chief executive of
the Omaha-based Godfather’s,
which he described as having
“one foot in the grave and one on
a banana peel.”
He closed unprofitable fran-
chises, introduced companywide
automation and emphasized cus-
tomer service.
“Our No. 1 rule is the customer
is always right,” he told Parade
magazine in 1996. “Rule No. 2 is,
if he is not right, go back to rule
No. 1.”
Mr. Cain said he restored God-
father’s to profitability within 14
months, but when Pillsbury de-


cided the turnaround wasn’t hap-
pening fast enough, he put to-
gether a group that bought the
company for an estimated
$40 million. He stayed on as
CEO, even putting himself in
some of the company’s commer-
cials, before selling his owner-
ship share in 2009.
“ The more toppings a man has
on his pizza, I believe the more
manly he is,” Mr. Cain said in a
2011 interview — over pizza —
with GQ magazine.
He began his political life as a
Democrat but shifted his alle-
giance as Ronald Reagan gained
prominence in the GOP in the
1980 s.
“By that time, I had begun to
climb the corporate ladder and
make some significant money,”
Mr. Cain told the Atlanta Journal-
Constitution in 2004, when he
unsuccessfully sought the Repub-
lican nomination for a U.S. Sen-
ate seat in Georgia. “The Republi-
can principles of fewer taxes, less
government, more individual re-
sponsibility were principles that I
began to appreciate as I became
more successful.”
He also told GQ that Demo-
crats had “co-opted credit for
having passed the Civil Rights
Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights
Act of 1965.” African Americans,
he said, “are brainwashed to not
consider an alternative idea if
they perceive you as a Republi-
can.”
While working as the Godfa-
ther’s CEO, Mr. Cain began to
expand his civic engagement. He
served on corporate and academ-
ic boards, including as a director
of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Kansas City, Mo. He first stepped
into the national political spot-
light in 1994, when he challenged
President Bill Clinton’s proposed
health care plan, which would
require employers to provide in-
surance to workers.
Speaking “on behalf of all of
those business owners that are in
a situation similar to mine,” Mr.
Cain asked, “If I’m forced to do
this, what will I tell those people
whose jobs I will have to elimi-
nate?”
When Clinton said small busi-
nesses would receive a tax credit,
Mr. Cain replied, “Quite honestly,

your calculation is inaccurate. In
the competitive marketplace it
simply doesn’t work that way.”
The encounter raised Mr.
Cain’s profile, especially among
conservatives and business lead-
ers. In 1996, he stepped down
from Godfather’s and moved to
Washington as president and
chief executive of the National
Restaurant Association, which he
led for three years. That year, he
served as an adviser to Republi-
can presidential nominee Bob
Dole and his running mate, for-
mer U.S. Rep. Jack Kemp (R-N.Y.).
As head of the industry lobby-
ing organization, he vastly in-
creased its influence in Washing-
ton as he fought bans on ciga-
rettes in restaurants and bars, a
proposal to lower the legal blood-
alcohol limit, and increases in the
minimum wage, among other
measures opposed by many res-
taurants.
Mr. Cain moved back to his
hometown of Atlanta in 2000 and
briefly ran for president as a
Republican before becoming co-
chairman of the campaign of
publishing executive Steve
Forbes, best known for his flat-
tax proposals.
In 2004, Mr. Cain sought an
open Senate seat in Georgia, only
to lose the Republican primary to
Johnny Isakson, who ultimately
won the seat.
During these years, Mr. Cain
wrote several books on business,
self-development and politics, in-
cluding “Speak as a Leader: De-
velop the Better Speaker in You”
(1999), “CEO of Self: You’re in
Charge” (2001) and “They Think
You’re Stupid: Why Democrats
Lost Your Vote and What Repub-
licans Must Do to Keep It” (2005).
In 2006, Mr. Cain received a
diagnosis of Stage 4 colon cancer,
which had spread to his liver. He
recovered after surgery and che-
motherapy, noting that his doc-
tor’s name was Lord, and one of
his nurses was named Grace.
He considered it a providential
sign that he was meant to run,
one day, for president.
Always a dynamic speaker who
thrived before an audience, Mr.
Cain considered himself “not a
motivational speaker — an inspi-
rational speaker.”

He became the host of a na-
tionwide radio talk show in 2008,
just as conservative tea party
opposition to President Barack
Obama was coalescing. Early in
2011, he announced his presiden-
tial run with another memoir,
“This Is Herman Cain! My Jour-
ney to the White House.”
Dismissed as “entertainment”
by conservative commentator
Charles Krauthammer and the
GOP establishment, Mr. Cain
found early support and enthusi-
astic crowds. He sometimes sang
hymns and “The Impossible
Dream” from the podium.
When he stumbled over ques-
tions about foreign policy, he fell
back on his signature “9-9-9” tax
plan — a 9 percent corporate tax
rate, 9 percent income tax, and 9
percent national sales tax.
Many economists said the idea
was an unworkable fantasy, and
some wags derided it as “Plan
9-9-9 From Outer Space,” after a
notoriously bad 1950 s science
fiction movie.
Mr. Cain angered some Black
voters when he declared that he
had “left the Democrat planta-
tion a long time ago,” referring to
his earlier allegiance to the Dem-
ocratic Party, and with his state-
ment that he did not believe
“racism in this country holds
anybody back in a big way.”
“He’s the black man white peo-
ple would prefer over Obama,”
Georgetown University professor
Michael Eric Dyson told News-
week at the time, “and he’s the
black man that is more like them
and who thinks like them. He
makes them feel they aren’t racist
because they support him at this
level and not Obama.”
In October 2011, Mr. Cain was
leading the polls for the Republi-
can nomination, but his cam-
paign began to crumble under
greater scrutiny, particularly af-
ter four women charged him with
sexual harassment when he was
leading the National Restaurant
Association. A fifth woman said
Mr. Cain ended a long-term extra-
marital affair with her shortly
before he announced his candi-
dacy. He denied the charges, but
his poll numbers began to fall,
and in December he dropped out
of the race.
Herman Cain was born Dec. 13,
1945, in Memphis. He moved as a
child with his family to Atlanta.
His mother was a domestic
worker, and his father held three
jobs, as a barber, a janitor and a
chauffeur for Coca-Cola execu-
tive Robert W. Woodruff. Mr.
Cain’s father persuaded Woodruff
to pay him, in part, with Coca-Co-
la stock, which afforded the fami-
ly a degree of financial security.
While growing up in segregat-
ed Atlanta, Mr. Cain and his
younger brother once sneaked a
drink from a whites-only water
fountain. He was aware of dis-
crimination and the civil rights
movement, but he was not an
activist.
“The rules of the house were
simple and direct,” he told the
Atlantic. “Don’t get into trouble.
Don’t talk back to your mother.
Go to church. Study hard and
finish school.”
He and his brother were the
first in their family to finish
college. Mr. Cain received a bach-
elor’s degree in mathematics
from Atlanta’s Morehouse Col-
lege in 1967. At the historically
Black school, he honed his sing-
ing skills in the glee club and was
elected president of the presti-
gious Glee Club Quartet.
While working as a Navy De-
partment mathematician, Mr.
Cain received a master’s degree
in computer science from Purdue
University in West Lafayette, Ind.
Survivors include his wife of 52
years, the former Gloria Etchi-
son, and two children, Melanie
Gallo and Vincent Cain, all of
Atlanta; and four grandchildren.
In later years, Mr. Cain re-
mained visible as a commentator
and supporter of Trump. He was
slated to begin a new talk show
on the Newsmax network this
summer.
In 2019, Trump considered
naming Mr. Cain to the Federal
Reserve Board, but after lawmak-
ers from both parties questioned
his qualifications, he withdrew
his name from consideration.
He was comfortable with his
stance as an ABC — American
Black Conservative. He was not
bothered when others suggested
that, as a Black man who grew up
in the Jim Crow South, he should
follow a more liberal political
path.
“Do you want to know why?”
he told GQ in 2011. “Because this
is America. And here you can
think for yourself. And I’ve been
thinking for myself a long time.”
[email protected]
[email protected]

HERMAN CAIN, 74


Pizza CEO briefly topped GOP polls


MELINA MARA/THE WASHINGTON POST
Herman Cain poses at the Cosmos Club in Washington in 2011,
when he was a Republican presidential candidate.

CHIP SOMODEVILLA/GETTY IMAGES

Former House speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.), during his presidential run, is welcomed to the stage by
Mr. Cain at a rally in Tampa on Jan. 30, 2012. He had dropped out of the race the previous month.


IN MEMORIAM

DAVID ALLENMASON
October16,1981 ~July 31,2001
The love is felt evenwhenthe beingis gone.
Youcanstillhearthewordsattheend
of the song.Love is the onlythingthatis
eternal,andDavidis eternallyloved.Our
memoriesare aconstantreminderof how
muchwe lovedyou,andhowmuchyou
lovedus.Wewill alwaysmissyou and love
you.Memoriesof Davidwe will passon
to thosewe loveandtouch,carryingyou
throughthe ages.Eternallyours,for our
heartsare eternallyyours.
Love,Mom,Dad,Zach,andallthe
FamilyandFriends

MASON

DEATH NOTICE

KENNETHR.BURCH
KennethR. Burch,87, of Lakeland,FL passed
awayon Monday,July 27, 2020at Lakeland
RegionalMedicalCenter.Hewas bornin
Muskegon,MI on February1, 1933to Percy
and Rose(Grimm)Burch.
He is survivedby his wifeof 66 years,Gloria
(Start)Burch;fourchildren,Richard,David,
William,andDianaWarfield;sevengrandchil-
dren,RichardII, Justin,Andrew,Shane,Ben,
Joseph Robert (JR) Warfield, and Dawn
Warfield;andninegreat-grandchildren.He is
alsosurvivedby his twobrothers,Don Burch
and Jack Burch.
Kenwas precededin deathby his parents;
threesisters,BeverlyFreye,GerrieAnderson,
and ShirleyKuberski;and his son,KennethAlan
Burch.
UpongraduationfromMuskegonHighSchool,
KenjoinedtheU.S. Air Forcein 1952.He
hadadedicated20-yearcareer,with duties
rangingfromcontroltoweroperator to person-
nel administrator at the Pentagonand the 89th
MilitaryAirliftWingat AndrewsAir Force Base.
Kenalso enjoyedalong careerwithGiantFood
as aDepartmentManageruntilhis retirement
in 1989.
Kenand his wife,Gloriaretiredto Lakeland
FL, wherehe enjoyedcamping,gardening,and
reading.Hewas alsoan avidwalkerand dog
lover.Summerswerespentwithfamilyand
friendsin Solomons,MD.
Amemorial serviceat ArlingtonNational
Cemeterywill be announcedat alaterdate.
In lieu of flowers,donationscan be madein
Ken’snameto the ASPCA,P. O. Box96929,
Washington,DC 20077-7127.

BURCH

When the

need arises,

letfamilies

find you in the

FuneralServices

Directory.

To be seen in the
Funeral Services
Directory,pleasecall
paid DeathNoticesat
202-334-4122.

DEATH NOTICE

Criteriaand Special StandardsDivision;
DeputyDirector,Officeof HealthResearch
and Director,Officeof ExploratoryResearch.
From 1999to 2009he headedthe Quality
Program of the Officeof Researchand Devel-
opment,earningaSpecialAchievement
Award for leadershipand guidance.
Acolleaguerecalled:“Hisleadershipreflect-
ed adeep understandingof howgovernment
organizations,systemsand peoplecan over-
comechallenges.” All toldhe spentalmost
40 yearsin the serviceof his country
His lifelongpassionfor mathand sciencewas
accompaniedby an impressivememoryfor
verseandsong.His wide-rangingcuriosity
meantthatthe entireOxfordEnglishDictio-
naryand EncyclopediaBritannicawerekept
closeat handand frequentlyconsultedin the
daysbeforeelectronicsearches.The New
York Timescrosswordpuzzlewasadaily
ritual.It rewardedhis prodigiousknowledge
and senthim divingin the dictionaryfor any
of the few wordshe did not knowalready.
Rogeralsolovedopera, sailing,NewYork
City,and the BrooklynDodgers–until they
leftBrooklyn. He learnedtennisduring
summersat the Spencerhomein Narra-
gansett,RI, and playedtennisfor the rest of
his activelife.Hetook up squashwhenhe
arrivedat Harvardin 1952.He helpedthe
squashteam’sfour-yearwinningstreakand
earnedvarsitylettersin his juniorand senior
years.Hewas MetropolitanClubSquash
Championin 1976.
Whennot playingsportshis preferredattire
wasasuit andbowtie,even whendoting
on smallgrandchildren.His manylifelong
friendsandlargeextendedfamilywill miss
him alot. His burialwill be privateat Oak Hill
Cemetery.
The familyis sharingmemoriesvia photosat
rogercortesisron Instagram.

ROGERSPENCERCORTESI
RogerSpencerCortesiof WashingtonDC
passedawayJuly7, 2020at the age of 85
afteralong periodof failinghealth.His wifeof
45 yearsDeborah Shapleywasat his side.In
additionto his wife,heleavestwo daughters
fromhis firstmarriage(to WendyMakins):
Tina(Elisabetta)Cortesi(m. MichaelJ. Cima)
andIsabellaCortesi.He is alsosurvivedby
his and Deborah’sson Roger(m. Jen Cortesi)
anddaughterKate(m. BenjaminWheeler)
and sevengrandchildren.
He is alsosurvivedby his sisterKatherine
Cortesi Armstrong of Boston, MA.His
youngerbrothersHenryCortesiand Alexan-
der Cortesi,bothof NewYork City,died in
2015 and 2020respectively.
Rogerwasraisedin NewYork Cityand
attendedMiltonAcademy.Hegraduated
fromHarvardUniversityin 1956withaBAin
Mathematics.HeearnedaPhD in Physics
fromthe Universityof Virginiain 1961.He
spentmostof his careerat the Environ-
mentalProtectionAgency(EPA) in positions
of responsibility.Theseincluded:Director,

CORTESI

Bethesda,MD to be closerto family.Heloved
everythingthe metropolitanlife had to offer
him:internationalcuisine,live music,hobby
storesaplenty.Later,hebecamearesident
of the JewishFoundationfor GroupHomes
(JFGH)andamemberof SeekingEquality,
EmpowermentandCommunityfor People
withDevelopmentalDisabilities(SEEC).These
organizations gave him support,cama-
raderie,greaterindependencein his living
environment,and communityparticipation.
Kip is precededin deathby his parentsand
his nephew,AdamMarshallJarrett.He is
survivedby his siblings,H.MarshallJarrett
(Bunny)of Falls Church,VA;Dr. Keith Jarrett
(Meg)of Gloucester,MA; BethJarrett(Achille
Tedesco)of Potomac,MD; and CathyJarrett
(Jay Amerson)of Greensboro,NC. Leftto
rememberhim are his niecesand nephews,
JoshJarrett,TreeveCurrie,CaitlinCurrie,
AnthonyTedesco,Dr. ZacharyLampert,Beth
GreyLampert,KelseyJarrett,Ben Jarrettand
JayJarrett,as wellas sevengreatnephews
and agreat niece.
The familywouldlike to thankthe MICUBlue
Team at JohnsHopkinsfor the excellentcare
andcompassiontheyshowedKip the two
monthshe wasin theircare.Weare forever
gratefulto thestaffat theJFGHfor the
emotionalsupporttheyprovidedin-personto
Kip duringhis illness.Wewouldalsolike to
thankthe healthcareworkersandmedical
teamsat the differenthospitalsand medical
centerswhoworkedto saveKip’slife these
last threeand ahalf months.
Dueto the currentcrisis,therewillbe a
privategravesideinterment.Acelebration
of Kip’slife will be heldnextyearon July
20, 2020,in his hometownof Bluefield,WV.
To honorKip’slife,donationscan be made
in his nameto JFGH(ww.jfgh.org)or SEEC
(www.seeconline.org).

CHRISTOPHERLEE JARRETT
ChristopherLee “Kip”Jarrettwasabeautiful
riddle.Hehad bothabrassy wit andan
intellectualdisability.Heflashedan impish
grinbut wouldnot meetyoureyes.Hehad
an insatiableappetitefor newtoysanda
completedisinterestin evergiftingone.On
July 20, 2020,our Kip diedat the age of 69
afteralong and valiantfightwiththe novel
coronavirus.Our familyis forevergratefulfor
the timewe had withhim.
Kip (or “KippyHoney”as he wasknown
to his family)grewup in Bluefield,WV,the
middlechildof five.The son of the late Judge
HowardMarshallJarrettandthe lateDoris
FranquizJarrett,he hadaspecialplacein
the WashingtonStreetneighborhood.Always
includedby his siblingsand theirfriendswho
cameto play,noone lookedat Kip and saw
thethingshe couldnotdo,insteadthey
lookedat him and sawinspiration.Kip taught
themtolerance,acceptance,and to meethim
wherehe was.
In 1992,Kip relocatedwithhis motherto

JARRETT

DEATH NOTICE

ROBERTSTEPHENBURTON "Bob"
BornNovember6, 1934in NewYork City,
passedawayon July28, 2020at the Res-
idencesat ThomasCircle,fromadvanced
Parkinson’sdisease.Bob livedin the DC area
for 40 years,and in Boulder,CO, andNew
York beforethat. He wasfor manyyearsa
statisticianat the NationalCenterfor Education
Statisticsat the Departmentof Education.In
the 1970s,hewas one of the earlycomputer
programmersat the Institutefor Behavioral
Scienceat the Universityof Colorado,aswell
as astatisticalconsultantfor publichealth
systemswithinNativeAmericanreservations.
His passionfor numbersand puremathematics
infusedhis life at workand outsideof work.
Bobwasalifelongloverof nature,birdwatch-
ing,urbanwalking,andhiking,aswellas
an avidreader,moviegoer,and cataloguerof
manythings.Hecollectedart pottery,maps,
World’sFair memorabilia,blueglassbottles,
baseballcards,and t-shirts;createdwittyarts
andcrafts;wasaself-taughtwoodworker;
andlovedmusic,especiallyfolkmusic.He
wasoftenwhistlingor singing,especiallyin
the car.HelovedBen&Jerry’sice cream,
beachboardwalks,“CurbYour Enthusiasm,”
and beingcontrarian.He wasdevotedto his
childhoodfriendsfromhis Bronxneighborhood
and to chroniclingBronxand NewYork City his-
tory.Heissurvivedby his wife,PhyllisRichman,
his daughter,AvivaGoode,his son,Jonathan
Goode,his daughter,LouiseBurton,his grand-
daughters,SophiaGoodeandLenaGoode;
his stepchildren,LibbyRichman,Joe Richman,
and MattRichman;and his stepgrandchildren,
Mayim,Adi, Zeke,Asa, Kirk,and Ivy.Therewill
be an onlineservice.Tolearnmoreor be in
touch,[email protected].

BURTON

JOHNANDREWCANNON,JR.
On July 27, 2020,JohnAndrewCannon,Jr.,79,
of MyrtleBeach,SouthCarolinapassedaway
peacefullyafterstrugglingwithDementia.
Johnwasbornon January19, 1941in Wash-
ington,DCtohisparentsJohnA.Cannon
Sr., andOnaHelenReagan.He wasraisedin
SilverSpring,Marylandandgraduatedfrom
MontgomeryBlairHighSchoolin 1959.John
enlistedin the U.S. Navyin 1961andserved
untilJuneof 1967.
He marriedPatriciaE. Farran in 1964and had
two childrenTara Lee Cannonin 1968and John
A. Cannon,III in 1971.In 1980Johnmarried
PamelaE. Turner.Hebecameastepfatherto
Herald W. Hirst,III and AliciaK. Divens.
Johnhad along 32 yearcareerwithP. E.P.C.O.
andretiredin 1997.JohnandPamretiredto
MyrtleBeach,SouthCarolinain 1997.
Johnis survivedby sister,MargaretCannon
Schwartz and brother-in-law,Phillips M.
Schwartz;Christopher,Richard,Alexandraand
five great-nephews;daughterTara Lee Cannon
Whiteand her partnerChristopherA. Cary;son
JohnAndrewCannon,III; stepdaughterAlicia
TurnerDivensandson-in-law,Brad Divens;
stepson,Herald; grandchildren,Jacob Anthony
White,JessicaLee White,Sofia R. Divens,and
EmilyD. Cary;BestFriend,RobertT. Jonesand
WifeVickie;GoodFriendDonnaRosenberry
and HusbandDallasand all of his wonderful
friendsand neighbors.
He wasprecededin deathby his parents,
wife,and otherbelovedmembersof his family.
In lieu of flowers,pleasemakeany contribu-
tionsin memoryof JohnA. CannonJr.to:
The DementiaSocietyof Americaby mailto:
P. O. Box 600,Doylestown,PA 18901or online
to:WWW.DementiaSociety.Org/donate.
Serviceswill be announcedat alater date.

CANNON

MYRASHOFERCOLMAN
MyraShoferColman,formerlyof
ChevyChase,MDand mostrecent-
ly residingin Pikesville,MD, died
peacefullyon Monday,July27,
2020.She was94. Myragrew up in
Baltimoreand graduatedfromTufts
Universityin one of the first classes
thatadmittedwomen.Whileemployedas a
socialworkerat BaltimoreGeneral, she met
herfuturehusband,Dr.RichardS. Colman.
Theyweremarriedfor 66 yearsuntilhis death
in 2015.Myrabecameastay-at-homemother
andlateratravel agent.Shevolunteeredfor
manyorganizationsincludingthe Montgomery
CountyJewishCommunityCenter,the Amer-
ican Field Service Intercultural Exchange,
PlannedParenthoodand the KreegerMuseum
of Art. Sheis survivedby her threechildren:
EricaRubinsteinof Lutherville,MD, Fredric
Colman(JulieColmanPearl)of Palo Alto,CA
andSteven Colman(SuzanneColman) of
ChapelHill, NC.Myraissurvivedby her eight
grandchildren: Spencer Rubinstein, Brian
Rubinstein,JacquelineBabbstein(AlishaBabb-
stein),BrandonColman,Eli Colman(JulieCol-
man),CarolineColman,SamColmanand Dani
Colman.Sheis alsosurvivedby threegreat
grandchildren.Privateservices.Donationscan
be madein Myra’snameto the Alzheimer’s
Association(https://www.alz.org/[alz.org])or
to PlannedParenthood,
(https://www.plannedparenthood.org/.

COLMAN
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