San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Elaine Maloney

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Elaine Rebecca Maloney, a beloved daughter, sister, aunt, cousin and friend, passed away unexpected­ly at home on July 22, 2022, at the age of 36. She will be dearly missed and remembered for the love, courage and generosity that she brought to the world. A force of positivity, she charmed everyone she met with her bright smile, engaging conversati­on, and kind heart.

Elaine was a lifelong resident of San Francisco and a proud graduate of Scripps, the women’s college in Claremont, California. She worked for Apple Inc. for over 15 years, starting in retail and then moving over to company headquarte­rs in the recruiting department, where she was known as a dedicated and valued colleague.

Elaine loved politics,

Terry Morrison died of heart failure on July 24th at the age of 83, twentyeigh­t years after his first of three heart attacks. He was born in poverty in the coal-mining town of West Frankfort, Illinois to deaf parents who often left him and his sister with his Grandma Pannie while they searched for work in Detroit. Pannie was a hard working woman who carried a pistol when collecting the pay for her miner husband and 2 stepsons who would otherwise have drunk it away. She taught her young grandson to stand tall and dream big. Shuffled between West Frankfort and Detroit, Terry from an early age was helping put food on the table with a paper route, caddying, and setting pins in a bowling alley.

His formal education ended at the 8th grade, and at age 16 Terry moved out on his own flipping burgers in a local diner until his 17th birthday when he joined the Air Force with a buddy because, as he put it, “I needed 3 squares and thought I looked better musical theater, baseball, and a good meal shared with family, all reflecting her appreciati­on for the simple, beautiful joys of life and her desire to make the world a fairer place for all. A passionate advocate for women and minority rights, she always welcomed the opportunit­y for a spirited yet civil political discussion. She was a recurring donor for multiple organizati­ons and volunteere­d on a number of political campaigns throughout her adult life. She was equally excited to cheer on her Giants at Oracle Park as she was to attend a musical on Broadway. With her love of learning and genuine curiosity, along with a patient and determined nature, she immersed herself in a wide variety of hobbies, crafts and projects, and never hesitated to in blue.” He hoped to be assigned to the motor pool, but by a fluke ended in Informatio­n Services, was trained to shoot photograph­s and write press releases, then sent to Loring Air Force Base in northernmo­st Maine, a Strategic Air Command base of nuclear armed B-52’s. During those 4 long winters, he and two Air Force buddies dreamed of starting an ad agency in San Francisco, so on discharge in 1958 he drove across country to the City. The ad agency didn’t happen, but he did get a job as a night guard at KPIX News where he worked his way to film editor, and then, with a move to KRON, to newsreel cameraman. From 1963 to 1971 he covered the City, from the protests for equal hiring at auto dealership­s and hotels, to demonstrat­ions against the war in Vietnam and for FreeSpeech in Berkeley; from the Patty Hearst kidnapping to the Zebra and Zodiak killings, all in the uniform of the day – sport coat and tie with a light meter on one hip and undertake a research project to help answer a question or solve a problem.

Elaine drew on that same energy and quiet strength to persevere through a lifelong chronic illness and achieve anything she set out to accomplish, inspiring her family, friends and new acquaintan­ces to see possibilit­ies instead of limitation­s, find joy in the moment, and to strive to live life to the sometimes a gas mask on the other. He watched local news grow from 15 minute telecasts in black and white silent film to hour broadcasts in videotape, before leaving to freelance for the networks in 1971.

Then for the next 20 years he shot documentar­y film for ABC, CBS, NBC, the BBC, and National Geographic with his wife Donna as his camera assistant across the country and sometimes abroad. By 1994 videotape had so eclipsed film that he chose to be semi-retired when he suffered a massive heart attack at age 55. He turned completely to the hands-on restoratio­n of his fullest.

She is survived by her parents, Lourdes and George Maloney, her sister and brother-in-law, Laura and Jonathan Perry, and their children, Daniel and Ash. Elaine was a generous supporter of both the Southern Poverty Law Center and Planned Parenthood. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation in her honor to either organizati­on. many loves – his 1891 San Francisco Victorian, his 1965 Porsche, his 1969 Mainebuilt sailboat, and a string of vintage German and English motorcycle­s.

He was a talented and well respected motion picture photograph­er who captured much of our changing times and survived some of life’s crippling blows with determinat­ion and a sense of humor to the end. He is survived by a younger brother, 3 children by an early marriage, and Donna, his wife and partner of 50 years. Terry requested no memorial save for gifts to the Golden State Div. of the Salvation Army.

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