Carla Beth Howery - On March 31, 2009 at her Takoma Park, MD home with her family around her. Loving mother of Andrew Victor Fremming and Kevin Carl Fremming. Preceded in death by her sister, Marcia Howery; and her father, Victor I. Howery. She is also survived by her mother and stepfather, Garnett H. and Edwin Graf; and a host of loving friends and relatives. A memorial service will be held on Saturday, April 11 at 2 p.m. at Christ Lutheran Church, 5101 16th Street NW, Washington, DC. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests contributions to Christ Lutheran Church or to the Teaching Enhancement Fund, American Sociological Association, 1430 K Street NW #600, Washington, DC 20005.
Published in The Washington Post on 4/4/2009
Archive for the 'NASW Pioneers' Category
Carla Beth Howery
April 9th, 2009
Louise Frey
February 24th, 2009
NASW Social Work Pioneer® Louise Frey dies at 84

Louise Frey, a professor emerita at BU’s School of Social Work, died in California on February 13 of complications from Alzheimer’s disease. She was 84.
Born on April 5, 1924, Frey earned a bachelor’s degree from Queens College, City University of New York, and a master’s from Columbia University. She joined the SSW faculty in 1957 and held many roles, including professor of group work, coordinator of social work practice courses, and director of the Division of Continuing Education, the forerunner of SSW’s current Professional Education Programs, for 10 years.
Recognizing the interconnections between people’s lives and their varied cultures, Frey was instrumental in expanding SSW’s efforts in global social work practice. Along with her recruitment efforts in Southeast Asia, she was responsible for the school’s participation in the overseas program with the U.S. Army in Germany and worked in the school’s Refugee and Immigrant Training Program. She coauthored a manual on working with refugee minors for the U.S. Catholic Conference Office of Migrant and Refugee Services. She made significant contributions to the field of group work and adult learning literature, including the book Explorations in Group Work: Essays in Theory and Practice, edited with Saul Bernstein, and was honored by NASW as a Social Work Pioneer. She retired from SSW in 1991.
“She had a strong commitment to group work, and to providing excellent training to students in social work practice,” says Gail Steketee, dean of SSW.
“I know that her work here meant a great deal to her,” says Wilma Peebles-Wilkins, dean emerita of the school. “Louise often talked about group work, continuing education, and the off-campus programs at BUSSW. The School of Social Work still reaps the benefits of her legacy.”
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Dr. John B. Turner
February 5th, 2009
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Obituary
John B. Turner’s NASW Social Work Pioneer® Profile
International Council on Social Welfare Tribute to John B. Turner
NASW Tribute from Dr. James Kelly and Dr. Elizabeth J. Clark
John B. Turner, Ph.D., whose career in social work spanned more than 40 years and whose efforts and leadership helped earn national recognition for the School of Social Work at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, died on Friday, Jan. 30. He was 86.
Turner, a writer, scholar and teacher who devoted his life to community organization, social activism and social work education, had been recovering from a fall last year.
Turner joined the UNC faculty in 1974 as the William Rand Kenan Jr. Professor of Social Work. He was named school dean in 1981 — becoming the first African-American dean at the University — and remained in the position until his retirement in 1992. Turner is largely credited for mapping out the graduate program’s road to prominence, including the construction of a $10 million building in Chapel Hill. That site — the school’s current home — still bears his name today and was the first academic building on campus to be named for an African-American; it also acknowledges the services of John A. “Jack” Tate, a Charlotte businessman and longtime social justice advocate who died late last year, and the late Charles Kuralt, an award-winning TV journalist.
Turner, who developed the school’s first development office and worked diligently to broaden the minority student presence, earned national and international honors over the course of his career.
“John was a pioneer in social work education and at UNC in so many ways,” said current social work Dean Jack Richman, who was hired by Turner in 1983 as an assistant dean. “Even through his retired years, John remained connected and involved in the school. We often met for lunch, and he offered his advice and counsel concerning the development and life of the school. I will miss Dean Turner as will everyone who had the good fortune to know and work with him.”
A native of Fort Valley, Ga., Turner studied engineering, played football and sang in a quartet at Atlanta’s Morehouse College, before deciding that he wanted to be a pilot. During World War II, he trained as one of the country’s first black aviation cadets at Tuskegee Army Air Field in Alabama.
According to media reports, Turner, a first pilot of a B-25 bomber crew, was never deployed overseas but still spent much of his time in the air, flying practice rounds across the country. That experience allowed him to see black communities struggling and fueled his eventual passion for social work.
Turner earned his doctoral degree in social work at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, and later became Case’s dean of applied social sciences. He also ventured into politics, becoming the first black city commissioner in East Cleveland.
Turner developed an illustrious career as an academic consultant, working over the years for the National Urban League as well as for international organizations, including the International Research Programs in Cairo, Egypt and as a visiting professor and consultant to the University of Minia in Egypt. He was a former member and chairman of the International Council on Social Welfare, was a charter member of the International Association of Applied Social Scientists and a member of the National Academy of Science’s Institute of Medicine.
Over his career, Turner established himself as a “bridge builder” between government leaders and service providers, said Dennis Orthner, a UNC social work professor and an associate director for policy development and analysis at the school’s Jordan Institute for Families.
“John was an incredible scholar of and advocate for high quality and effective human services,” Orthner said. “I learned so much from him in watching him work all sides of the debate on welfare reform, child welfare, adult services and so on.” (more…)
James M. Evans, Jr.: A Tribute from the National Association of Social Workers
December 4th, 2008
by Robert Carter Arnold, Director, NASW Foundation
Remarks at Jim Evans’s Funeral, November 14, 2008, Silver Spring, MD
Thank you for the opportunity to be here and to highlight some of Jim’s contributions and impact at the National level.
I am honored to be here today representing the National Office of the National Association of Social Workers and our 150,000 social worker members.
My name is Bob Arnold, and I am Director of the NASW Foundation.
I met Jim soon after joining NASW in 2001, through Jim’s involvement with the Whitney Young, Jr., Memorial Lecture and Tea—and the Verne Lyons Scholarship Committee.
[You’ve already heard about Jim from Dr. Charles Howard and Dr. Sheryl Brissette-Chapman.]
Jim was a member of NASW for nearly 50 years, having been a member continually since 1961.
In 1976, Jim was awarded the National Social Worker of the Year Award from NASW. At that the time, he was Executive Director of the Urban League of Nebraska.
That same year—1976—Jim joined the NASW National Office staff. For the next 7 years, Jim served as Senior Staff Associate…working with Clinical Practice, Minority Affairs, the Student Intern Program, and Chapter Services. (more…)
Ruth Knee
October 9th, 2008
Remembering Ruth Irelan Knee, - Friday, November 14, 2008, Washington, DC

NASW Social Work Pioneer® Ruth Knee passed away on October 8, 2008.
Ruth Irelan Knee, 88, a retired social worker with the U.S. Public Health Service and a prominent figure in the National Association of Social Workers (NASW), died Oct. 8 of lung cancer at her home in Fairfax County.
Mrs. Knee joined the Public Health Service in 1943 as one of its first psychiatric social workers. She later became the service’s liaison with the National Institute of Mental Health for policy development and technical assistance. Before she retired in 1973, she directed Public Health Service programs in long-term care.
A founder of NASW, she served two terms on its Board of Directors and also served on numerous committees, councils, task forces, and planning groups. She was co-founder of the association’s Social Work Pioneers® program to honor contributions to the profession. The NASW Knee/Wittman Health & Mental Health Achievement awards were named partly in her honor.
Mrs. Knee was active in other advocacy groups and was a consultant to federal agencies and private groups.
Ruth Ella Irelan was born in Sapulpa, Okla., and was a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the University of Oklahoma in 1941. She received a master’s degree in social service administration from the University of Chicago in 1945.
She was a member of the Cosmos Club, the Woman’s National Democratic Club and the Vienna Presbyterian Church.
Mrs. Knee and her husband established a fund at the University of Oklahoma to sponsor academic and community programs in public health, social work and fine arts.
Her husband of 38 years, Junior Koenig Knee, died in 1981.
Ms. Knee is survived by her niece, Elizabeth Rasmussen of Edmond, OK; her nephew Robert Armstrong of Los Gatos, CA; cousins Pat Gresham of Ashburn Farms, VA, Bob Hennessy of Tecachapi, CA, Jim Hennessy of Washington, DC; grandniece Janet Rasmussen of Jacksonville, IL; and grandnephew Eric Rasmussen of Deltona, FL.
Excerpted from the Washington Post
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Click here to view Ruth’s NASW Social Work Pioneer® Profile.
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Frances Lomas Feldman
October 2nd, 2008
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NASW Social Work Pioneer® Frances Lomas Feldman, a USC professor and social work pioneer who conducted a groundbreaking study in the 1970s that showed cancer patients faced discrimination in the workplace, has died. She was 95. Feldman died at Huntington Hospital in Pasadena on Tuesday, a week after having a stroke, USC announced.
The study of more than 200 Southern California cancer survivors found that more than 50% of white-collar workers and 84% of blue-collar workers faced discrimination when they returned to work. The affronts included demotions, denial of promotions and withdrawal of health insurance coverage.
But the American Cancer Society, which funded the study, used her findings to call attention to the problem.
Researchers from around the world continue to seek out Feldman’s research, which was “an early look at a continuing problem,” according to USC. Several states also modified fair employment legislation because of the study, the National Assn. of Social Workers said on its website.
For more than 50 years, Feldman concentrated on the study of the social and psychological meanings of work and life. Her original research on the effect of financial stress on families led her to co-found a national network of nonprofit credit counseling services that continues to operate.
After joining USC as a professor of social work in 1954, Feldman was instrumental in establishing the first curriculum in the West devoted to industrial social work, which involves helping people cope in the workplace.
At USC, she also was a key founder of the California Social Welfare Archives, a volunteer organization that preserves the state’s social work history. “She almost single-handedly was responsible for the discovery and preservation of social welfare history in Southern California,” Marilyn Flynn, dean of the USC School of Social Work, said in a statement.
Among the 10 books Feldman wrote was “Human Services in the City of Angels: 1850-2000″ (2004). Her research showed that Los Angeles was a pioneer in social services, reimbursing citizens for taking care of sick strangers as early as 1850 and establishing city-run day-care centers in 1918.
The youngest of six children, she was born Dec. 3, 1912, in Philadelphia to Harry and Devora Lomas, Jewish immigrants from Ukraine. Her father was a master tailor who moved his family to Los Angeles when she was 8.
She considered medicine as a career but fainted and broke her nose while observing a brother perform surgery, so she made other plans, said Dona Munker, her only child.
“Somebody told her that by going into social work, you could help people even if you weren’t treating their bodies,” her daughter said.
At USC, Feldman ran a laundry service to pay tuition and received a bachelor’s degree in 1935. She earned a master’s degree in social work from the university in 1940.
In 1935, she married Albert G. Feldman, who was so captivated by the stories she told about her job as a social worker for the state that he left behind his work as a research chemist and followed her into the profession. He became deputy director of the USC Andrus Gerontology Center and died in 1975.
In the late 1960s, officials in Alaska asked Feldman to research the social service needs of the state’s native people, and her observations led to many improvements in basic services, according to USC.
In Alaska, Feldman — then in her 50s — rode on dog sleds and slept in igloos as she traveled to isolated Eskimo villages. The experience made the “natural optimist” want “to know how the rest of the world lived,” her daughter said. Feldman ended up traveling to more than 200 countries.
Although she retired in 1982, Feldman stayed involved with USC and drove twice a week to the school from her home in Pasadena.
For her 95th birthday, she renewed her driver’s license and received a perfect score on her test, said her daughter, her only immediate survivor.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. Monday at Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery, 6001 W. Centinela Ave., Culver City.
Memorial donations may be made to the Albert G. and Frances L. Feldman Fund for graduate scholarships at the USC School of Social Work, Montgomery Ross Fisher Building, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0411.
Source: Los Angeles Times Obituaries
Click here to view Frances’s NASW Social Work Pioneer® Profile.
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Diana Ming Chan
August 7th, 2008
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Diana Ming Chan: Her National Legacy by Bob Arnold, Director, NASW Foundation
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Ms. Diana Ming Chan, LCSW, ACSW was a professional social worker for 54 years since receiving her Masters in Social Work from the University of Minnesota. As with many great pioneering social workers, Ms. Chan worked tirelessly in direct services during this period starting with directing youth and family programs in Richmond, Oakland and San Francisco and completing her direct service career as a school social worker in San Francisco in 2000.
Early on Ms. Chan began to share her knowledge and experience through teaching - with social work students and with the parents of the families she was serving. Ms. Chan taught at City College of San Francisco, San Francisco State University and at many community agencies and public schools. Ms. Chan also served as an educator and trainer at the Shun Tin Children and Youth Center in Hong Kong.
Ms. Chan broke the “color” barrier as the first Cantonese speaking Chinese MSW in San Francisco Chinatown. She helped bring the “cultural” in cultural competence through her work and training with many social workers in clinics, churches and other private non profit organizations. She advocated for the recruitment and training of social workers of color during the civil rights and War On Poverty eras.
During the War on Poverty in President Lyndon B. Johnson’s administration, Diana worked with a multidisciplinary team of individuals who successfully secured for the Chinatown/North Beach districts of San Francisco a designation as a “target” community. As a result, the team subsequently obtained funds to establish a broad range of agencies that did not previously exist in the Chinatown/North Beach communities. These agencies included Self-Help for the Elderly, Chinese Newcomers Service Center, Chinatown Child Development Center, Northeast Mental Health Services, and Kai Ming Head Start. Today, these agencies remain a vital and integral part of the community, providing a continuum of services to children, youth, families, and seniors.
Two other agencies began in the late 1970’s as the result of Diana’s vision. She worked with others to form North East Medical Center which made possible comprehensive, low-cost medical care to the residents of Chinatown/North Beach. Diana successfully advocated for the creation of medical and psychiatric social work positions. The other agency, the Youth Service Center (now CYC—Community Youth Center), was formed to address the needs of adolescents. Diana served on the Board of Directors of this agency and also provided training and consultation to the social work staff.
One of Ms. Chan’s greatest accomplishments was her work translating the lessons of direct service to policy. As a lifelong youth and family social worker, Ms. Chan became resolute in her conviction that prevention and early intervention were critical services to helping all students and families become or remain healthy. She saw that this was especially true for immigrant families.
In this respect, Ms. Chan personally began a monumental effort to convince policy makers to increase the number of school social workers in the San Francisco Unified School District. Unlike other states, California is a notorious latecomer to utilizing school social workers and has one of the lowest ratio of school social workers to pupils (one school social worker per 25,000 pupils). Additionally, other pupil support services personnel were underutilized in California schools including school nurses, school counselors and psychologists.
Ms. Chan committed herself to change policy by educating policy makers on the critical need for school social workers and actually increasing funding for school social workers. There is no greater social work than changing policy that results in measurable outcomes at the direct services level.
Her first task was to demonstrate the value and need for school social workers. Her request was politely declined by the San Francisco Unified School District given the dire budget situation. As usual, the threat of laying off school teachers and closing schools held higher priority than increasing pupil support personnel such as school social workers.
Undaunted, Ms. Chan reacted to this in classic professional social work fashion, “I’ll show you how important it is and I’ll give you a way to do it.” Ms. Chan organized. She formed a committee, the Learning Support Services Advocates (LSSA) to find a way to increase school social workers in the district. She teamed with the NASW California Chapter and the NASW Foundation to endow the “Learning Springboard” fund of nearly $1 million to pay for half the salary of two school social workers. Additionally these school social workers would take on social work interns from San Francisco State University and the University of California, Berkeley to provide social work services in the schools.
Fresh from this success, Ms. Chan did not stop. Her LSSA included a school nurse, which led to joint advocacy efforts by social workers and school nurses to increase pupil support services in the schools. She is well known in school support circles in San Francisco for her innovative and effective dumpling diplomacy. She invited top policy officials to her home to share a delicious Chinese dinner and to hear about her passion for school social work. With the nurses, Ms. Chan was able to effectively lobby the Board of Education $1.5 million to hire five school social workers and five school nurses. In the following year, the number was doubled for each profession.
Diana so profoundly touched many social workers on a personal, as well as a professional level, that the Asian Pacific Islander Social Worker Council, in collaboration with the NASW California Chapter and the NASW Foundation, has established a scholarship fund to honor Diana’s memory and support her legacy. If you would like to support Diana’s vision and passion for the social work profession, the Asian Pacific Islander Social Work Council invites you to make a tax-deductible donation to the Diana Ming Chan Scholarship Fund. This scholarship fund will contribute to the education of graduate social work students, especially those with bilingual skills. Checks should be payable to “NASW Foundation—Diana Ming Chan Scholarship” and sent to:
NASW Foundation
Diana Ming Chan Scholarship Fund
750 First Street, NE, Suite 700
Washington, DC 20002-4241
Click here to view Diana’s NASW Social Work Pioneer® Profile.
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James Karls
July 7th, 2008
(1927 - 2008)
James Karls passed away on Sunday, June 29, 2008.
After serving in World War II, Dr. Karls began his outstanding 59 years of social work in public mental health services at the local and state level. He started the first mental health clinics in California’s Central Valley. He was the associate director and then director of the Mental Health Training Center in Southern California, which offered seminars to anyone in the mental health field in the southern half of the state. He followed that as director of Mental Health Research for California. He was a part-time faculty member at UCSB, UCLA, University of California, Berkeley, San Francisco State and USC.
Perhaps Dr. Karls’ greatest contribution to the public appreciation of social work is his development of the “person in the environment” (PIE) assessment system that distinguishes social work from the other mental health professions. Working with Dr. Karin Wandrei, Dr. Karls used the concept underlying social work practice of person-in-environment to develop a system for social workers to record the results of their assessment that addresses the whole person. It helps the practitioner determine recommended courses of action, and to clearly follow the progress of the work. PIE has been translated into many languages, and it has been computerized. It is used as a teaching tool not only in the US but in other countries. PIE provides an alternative to the medical model that has traditionally dominated mental health practice, and encourages social work leadership in social rehabilitation, community resources, and advocacy models.
The NASW Press published Dr. Karls’ books and CDs on PIE, which have been translated into eight languages including French, Spanish, Hungarian, Japanese, Korean, Greek, and Hebrew. Dr. Karls traveled extensively around the world teaching international social workers about the PIE assessment system.
Dr. Karls was a lifelong NASW member and activist. He chaired several national committees for NASW, including one on case management, and wrote one of the early books on case management. He served as the NASW California Chapter President and the President of the Santa Barbara Mental Health Association. Dr. Karls received numerous social work awards including NASW’s Chapter and Unit Lifetime Achievement awards and the lifetime national recognition award from the National Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare. He founded the California Hall of Distinction that honors past and present great social workers in California, and he was inducted in 2008. He was also the recipient of the 2008 International Rhoda G. Sarnat Award.
Wherever social work systems theory is discussed, person in environment or PIE frequently comes up. When Dr. Karls’ name comes up, social workers throughout the country and around the world nod their heads in acknowledgement to this great social worker who has significantly advanced professional social work in theory and practice.
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David M. Austin
May 30th, 2008
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NASW Social Work Pioneer® David M. Austin Dies
1923-2008
Dr. David M. Austin, a pioneer in the field of social work education and a former faculty member at The University of Texas at Austin, died May 29 in Berea, Ky, following his battle with cancer. He was 84.
Austin was among the first social work students supported through the GI Bill following World War II. In 1963, he directed a planning team in Cleveland, which prepared the first comprehensive community-based action proposal funded under President Kennedy’s Committee on Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Crime. The program became known as Community Action for Youth.
In addition to the university, Austin taught social work at Western Reserve University, Smith College, Boston University, Brandeis University, the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, Boston College, and Rockefeller College, State University of New York at Albany.
Austin joined the university’s School of Social Work in 1973 and held the Bert Kruger Smith Centennial Professorship. During his 24 years at the university, he served as acting dean of the School of Social Work (1991-93) and was director of the school’s Center for Social Work Research from 1974-79. He received numerous teaching awards including UT-Austin’s Lora Lee Pederson Teaching Excellence Award and University Outstanding Graduate Teach ing Award and was honored nationally for his research, particularly in the area of human service management. His scholarship, especially his 1988 book, “The Political Economy of Human Service Programs,” has provided the seminal statement on the distinguishing characteristics of human service organizations.
From 1988 to 1991, Austin served as chairman of the National Institute of Mental Health Task Force on Social Work Research, which produced an extensive report with far-reaching recommendations for changes in the organization of research within the profession of social work.
The report remains one of the most important and long-lasting projects in professional social work, according to Dr. Barbara W. White, dean of the university School of Social Work. It was this initiative, she said, that led the National Institute on Drug Abuse to establish the research grant program that has supported research activities of many faculty in social work programs around the country, among them UT-Austin.
“In his brilliant career, David has left a magnificent legacy in the students whom he mentored, taught and inspired,” said White. “He was a leading scholar in the field of social work and his profound contributions have been recognized through numerous awards.
“It was David’s work, in fact, that led to the strengthening of the doctoral program and research center at the university School of Social Work.”
The National Association of Social Workers named Austin a Social Work Pioneer® in 1997.
He is survived by his wife, Zuria Farmer Austin, and two sons, Clayton Austin and Paul Austin, a daughter, Dr. Judith Austin, and eight grandchildren.
A memorial service to be held on The University of Texas at Austin campus later this summer or early in the fall is being planned.
Click here to view David’s NASW Social Work Pioneer® Profile.
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Warren Clark Lamson
May 30th, 2008
August 20, 1914 -May 5, 2008
Mr. Warren Clark Lamson, 93, of Solomons Island, MD died May 5, 2008 at his residence in Solomons, MD. He was born in Neligh, Nebraska, August 20, 1914 to the late John Wesley and Laura Alice Lamson. Mr. Lamson graduated from Wayne State College with a Bachelors Degree in Education in 1938, and from the University Of Nebraska Graduate School Of Social Work in 1942 with a Masters Degree in Social Work. He taught in the public schools of Nebraska for several years prior to attending graduate school.
Mr. Lamson was a World War II veteran and served from 1942-1946, in the Adjutant Generals Department of the Army as a First Lieutenant. He specialized in clinical psychology and psychiatric social work during this time. After discharge from the Army, he was employed as a Chief, Social Work Branch, Denver Regional Office of the Veterans Administration from 1946-1949. In 1949, he became a Mental Health Consultant in the United States Public Health Service Regional Office in Dallas, Texas. In 1950, he became the Chief Psychiatric Social Worker in the Community Services Branch of the National Institute of Mental Health, in Bethesda, MD. He served in several other administrative and consultative capacities in the Agency before retiring in 1974 as Chief of the Continuing Education Branch. After retirement he was employed as Chief Social Worker in the Maryland State Department of Mental Hygiene. He retired from this position in 1978.
Mr. Lamson was active at the national level in several social work organizations. He was charter member of the National Association of Social Workers and served on several commissions and committees of that organization and the Council on Social Work Education. He was a charter member of the Academy of Certified Social Workers and was a Licensed Certified Social Worker in Maryland. In 1974, he was honored by the University of Nebraska as an outstanding alumnus. In 1994, he was honored as a pioneer in social work by the National Association of Social Work. Mr. Lamson had numerous articles in mental health published in professional publications.
Mr. Lamson was a lifelong member of the United Methodist Church, and a member of DeWitt Lodge #111 AF&AM, DeWitt, Nebraska.
He is survived by his loving wife Julia L. “Judy” Lamson, three children, Gary W. and his wife Joan Lamson of Warren, NJ, Larry D. and his wife Francine Lamson of St. Leonard, MD and Gayle L. and her husband Richard Lloyd of St. Leonard, MD, and six grandchildren Brandon, Shawn, Justin, Jeffrey, Marshall and Kristin.
Click here for Memorial Service information
Click here for Warren Clark Lamson’s NASW Social Work Pioneer® Profile
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