Richard V. Iglehart Jr., 36, Baltimore police officer
Richard V. Iglehart Jr., an 11-year veteran Baltimore police officer, died Oct. 23 of cancer at Johns Hopkins Hospital. He was 36 and lived in Forest Hill.
Richard V. Iglehart Jr., 36, Baltimore police officer
Richard V. Iglehart Jr., an 11-year veteran Baltimore police officer, died Oct. 23 of cancer at Johns Hopkins Hospital. He was 36 and lived in Forest Hill.
He joined the Police Department in 1985 and served in Southeastern and Eastern districts and was assigned to Southern District when he died.
He was awarded a departmental Bronze Star in 1988 for aiding an attempted suicide victim who had taken poison.
The Baltimore native was a 1978 graduate of Mergenthaler Vocational-Technical High School, who worked as an auto mechanic and in construction before working for the Police Department.
He was a communicant of St. Ignatius Roman Catholic Church in Forest Hill and helped to coach Harford County Little League teams.
A Mass of Christian burial with a departmental honor guard was offered Saturday.
He is survived by his wife of nine years, the former Joyce Peugh; two sons, Brian A. Iglehart and Kevin V. Iglehart; a daughter, Jacqueline M. Peugh, all of Forest Hill; and several other relatives.
Justin L. Reese, 23, Penn State student
Justin L. Reese, a senior at Pennsylvania State University and former Glen Burnie resident, died Oct. 11 of injuries sustained in an automobile accident in Warren, Ohio. He was 23.
The Glen Burnie native was a 1992 graduate of Henderson High School in West Chester, Pa. He was studying parks and recreation management at Penn State.
A memorial service was held Oct. 18.
He is survived by his father, Michael D. Reese of Glen Burnie; his mother, Susan Arrington Reese of Exton, Pa.; his paternal
grandmother, Phyllis Reese of Glen Burnie; and his maternal grandmother, Betty Dale of Sebring, Fla.
Thomas F. Bryant, 82, insurance executive
Thomas F. Bryant, a longtime insurance executive, died Oct. 15 of a heart attack at his home in Elkridge Estates Apartments in Roland Park. He was 82.
The native of Andover, Mass., was an executive with Traveler's Insurance Co., which sent him to Baltimore in 1949. In the 1960s, he joined Charles Edward Herget Inc. insurance brokers as a senior vice president. He retired in 1979.
He graduated from Williams College in Massachusetts in 1937 and married Jean Sheldon the next year.
He was an original member of Hunt Valley Golf Club, a Meals on Wheels volunteer and a member of Towson Presbyterian Church.
Services were held Oct. 19.
In addition to his wife, survivors include a son, Thomas F. Bryant Jr. of Parkton; a daughter, Louise B. Pfeiffer of Woodbury, Minn.; and seven grandchildren.
Timothy M. Logue, 37, worked in film production
Timothy M. Logue, a Baltimore-area native who worked in film production in Florida, died Oct. 20 of cancer at Miami Hope Lodge Center in Florida. He was 37.
Mr. Logue grew up in Ellicott City, and graduated from Mount St. Joseph High School and magna cum laude from the University of Maryland Baltimore County, where he studied film.
In Florida, he owned lighting and production companies and worked on the 1986 television movie "Liberty" when it was filmed in Baltimore.
He is survived by his mother, Mickey Logue of West Palm Beach, Fla.; his father, William Logue of North Palm Beach, Fla.; three brothers, Brian Logue of New Freedom, Pa., Kevin Logue of Port St. Lucie, Fla., and Shawn Logue of Miami; two sisters, Diane Ganze of Lutherville and Linda Wasmund of Marietta, Ohio; and nine nieces and nephews.
Helen Marie Finger, 94, floral designer
Helen Marie Finger, an award-winning Baltimore floral designer, died Oct. 18 at Asbury Methodist Village in Gaithersburg of heart failure. She was 94.
Miss Finger was born in Baltimore and educated in public schools and at Maryland Institute, College of Art. She was the proprietor and chief floral designer for 40 years at the downtown Schuler-Thomas Florist until 1968, when she retired and the business closed.
During her career she arranged flowers for weddings and parties for many of the city's wealthy residents. She won several local and national awards for floral design, said her nephew the Rev. John Scherch.
She also is survived by a sister, Anna Elizabeth Scherch of Venice, Fla.; and two other nephews.
Harry P. Robbins, 78, music teacher
Harry P. Robbins, who taught music and was a church organist, died Saturday of an aneurysm at Johns Hopkins Hospital. He was 78 and lived in Owings Mills.
For more than 40 years, he gave private lessons in piano and organ. He retired in 1988.
He had been choir director and organist at Our Savior Lutheran Church in Baltimore, organist at Holy Spirit Lutheran Church in Eldersburg and interim organist at Trinity Lutheran Church in Reisterstown.
The Baltimore native was a 1937 graduate of Polytechnic Institute.
In 1944, he was drafted into the Army and served in Europe during World War II. He was discharged in 1946 and worked for Revere Copper and Brass Co. before he taught music.
