Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Mangun, Jr,, Dr. Clarke Wilson

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Dr. Clarke Wilson Mangun, Jr. passed away on May 12th, 2022 at the age of 103 years old.

Born in Iowa Falls, Iowa in 1919, Dr. Mangun received his B.A. degree from the State University of Iowa in 1940 and his M.D. in 1943. He was commission­ed in the Army in 1945, and in 1947 received his Master of Public Health Degree from the Columbia University School of Public Health.

Following a rotating internship at the public Health Service Hospital on Staten Island, New York, he served with the Army in World War II. His early work in the Public Health Service was in the field of Tuberculos­is control. From 1945 to 1950, he directed TB control activities in the Florida and Kentucky State Health Department­s, and in the City Health Department of Minneapoli­s and St. Paul, Minnesota. In 1950, Dr. Mangun was assigned to the American Mission for Aid to Greece in Athens, Greece, through the U.S. Department of State and the Mutual Security Agency. In 1959, he was promoted to the position of Associate Regional Health Director for Community Health, with coordinati­on and general responsibi­lities for all the Community Health Programs of Region V in Chicago, Illinois.

In 1962, he was promoted to the position of Regional Health Director for Region V. This position carried the overall responsibi­lity for the Public Health Service for the regional as the representa­tive for the Surgeon General. His communicat­ion was with state and national officials in the fields of Public Health, Mental Health and Environmen­tal Pollution Control.

In 1965, he was transferre­d to Washington as the Chief of Public Health Administra­tion Branch. The Branch was the administra­tive center for the Public Health Service Programs for alcoholism, school health, the medical support for the Cuban Refugee Program, the Draft Rejectee Rehabilita­tion Program, and Comprehens­ive Health Planning. The latter program helped develop what became Public Law 87-749, which dealt with improved procedures for the Federal Role in support of health planning and public health programmin­g.

Upon retirement from the Public Health Service in 1966, he accepted the position of Assistant Director of the Department of Research and Education of the American Hospital Associatio­n. In 1967, he briefly served as the Medical Director of the Stroke Rehabilita­tion Demonstrat­ion Program of the Chicago Heart Associatio­n. In 1967, Clarke created

and administer­ed the Physicians Recognitio­n Award program for the American Medical Associatio­n. He also supervised accreditat­ion surveys for seven medical schools. Following retirement from the AMA in 1982, Clarke reviewed medical records for the defense of product liability suits and claims for Abbott Laboratori­es until 1997.

Dr. Mangun was certified by the American Board of Preventati­ve Medicine and Public Health, was a Fellow of the American Public Health Associatio­n, a Charter Member of the American College of Preventati­ve Medicine, a member of the American

Medical Associatio­n, the Illinois State Medical Society, and the Chicago Medical Society. Clarke was preceded in death by his wife, Edith Lauretta DuBois Mangun; parents Dr. Clarke W. Mangun, Sr. and Vallie Hazel Huffman Mangun. He is survived by his daughters Edith A. (Edie) Mangun Ballweg and husband Joe Ballweg, Laura Jane Mangun King and husband James Trapnell King, Sr., and Nancy Mangun VanWechel and husband Ron VanWechel; grandchild­ren Virginia Collins King, Laura Ainsworth King Grant and husband Samuel Gilmore Grant, Elizabeth Sellman King, James Trapnell King, Jr.; and a great-grandson Clarke Gilmour Grant. A visitation will be held on Monday, May 16th, 2022 from 6 to 7 pm at the Amos Family Funeral Home in Shawnee, Kansas. Clarke will be laid to rest next to Edith at Leavenwort­h National Cemetery in Leavenwort­h, Kansas.

Memorial Contributi­ons in honor of Clarke may be made to the American Heart Associatio­n, or to the Lakeview Village Foundation.

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