

He attended the University of Maryland, then transferred to George Washington University, where he received a law degree. He served in the Army Air Forces in Europe during World War II. In the 1930s he moved to Washington and graduated from McKinley Tech High School. Earman, who lived in Edgewater, was born in Keezletown, Va. John William Earman Jr., 76, a retired Labor Department administrative law judge, died of cardiac arrest March 7 at Anne Arundel Medical Center. Louis and Richard Spillenkothen of McLean. Survivors include his wife, Melissa Allen Spillenkothen, and their son, Tyler, both of Alexandria and two brothers, Robert Spillenkothen of St. Louis and received a master's degree in civil engineering and architecture from George Washington University. He graduated from Washington University in his native St. After working in Cincinnati, he transferred to Washington in 1971 and retired as a lieutenant two years later. Spillenkothen worked for the General Services Administration from 1974 to 1989 as a senior project manager on urban planning, historic preservation and reuse of historic properties.Įarlier, he spent four years as an environmental engineer with the Public Health Service and participated in the development of the National Environmental Policy Act.

He lived in Alexandria.īefore joining the Transportation Department, Mr. Roy Spillenkothen, 55, an architect and civil engineer who retired in 1997 after eight years with the Transportation Department, died of cirrhosis March 1 at Inova Alexandria Hospital. three brothers three sisters 18 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Farish of Woodbridge three daughters, Judith L. Farish of Woodbridge four sons, Robert F. He was a Eucharistic minister at Our Lady of Angels Catholic Church in Woodbridge and a member of the American Congress of Surveying and Mapping, the Society of American Mechanical Engineers, the Serra Club and Knights of Columbus. His military decorations included the Bronze Star and Purple Heart. He also served with the Corps of Engineers as a cartographer and established himself as an expert marksman with a rifle and pistol. Farish, a longtime Woodbridge resident, worked for the Naval Facilities Engineering Command in Alexandria from 1975 to 1989.Įarlier, the native of Storrs, Utah, served in the Army for 24 years, including as a radio operator in the Philippines and Japan during and after World War II. Farish Sr., 75, a retired Army master sergeant who analyzed maps during a civilian career with the Navy Department, died of congestive heart failure March 5 at Mary Washington Hospital in Fredericksburg, Va. a sister 14 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. three stepdaughters, Anne McKinney of Herndon, Karen Cipot of New Brunswick, N.J., and Julie Hohns of Holly Springs, N.C.

Caldwell of McLean three children from his first marriage, Sandra Lee Schlegel of Leesburg, Susan Jane Pumphrey of Alexandria and William Jr., of Anderson, S.C. Survivors include his wife of 20 years, Jo Anne C. He volunteered at the American Red Cross and the Telephone Pioneers of America service organization. He also was a member of Kent Gardens Citizens Association in McLean, Arlington Senior Golf Club and Charles Wesley United Methodist Church in McLean, where he taught Sunday school in the 1960s and 1970s. Caldwell was a member of the Masons, Lions, Falls Church Chamber of Commerce and Kiwanis Club in McLean. He was born in Lewistown, Pa., and graduated from the old Bliss Electrical School in Takoma Park.

Caldwell joined Western Electric in 1937 as an installer and two years later joined C&P, which is now known as Bell Atlantic. 15 at Arlington Hospital after a heart attack. from 1939 to 1981 and retired as manager of its Northern Virginia buildings, died Feb. William Reid Caldwell Sr., 82, who worked for what was Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Co. Survivors include his wife, Delgadina Palacios, of Fairfax and two daughters from his first marriage, Sandra Evans of Annandale and Patricia Redican of Reston. His first wife, Emi Takeuchi, died in 1990. Ryan was born in Forest Hills, N.Y., and graduated from Michigan State University. He lived in the Washington area since the late 1960s. His intelligence assignments included Saigon, where in 1963 he received the Purple Heart for injuries suffered in a bomb attack. He switched to the computer field in the mid-1970s after previously working as an intelligence agent. Edward Ryan, 70, who worked for the CIA from 1954 to 1985 and retired as a computer systems development manager, died of a bone marrow disorder Feb.
