TO THE CHAPTER INVISIBLE
Donald Haley 1913–2018 Seattle (WA) Judge, Civic Leader Judge Donald D. Haley. Haley, a founder and a past
Charles F. Easley Sr. 1935–2018 College Administrator, Educator Charles F. Easley, Sr. entered the Chapter Invisible
Edward H. Brown, Jr. 1932–2018 F.A.A. Executive, U.S. Air Force Edward H. Brown Jr. entered the
Chapter Invisible on August 25, 2018 at the age of 86 at his residence in Temple Hills, MD. Born in Lynchburg, VA on June 24, 1932, he was the young-
President of the Loren Miller Bar Association and a lifetime member and board member of Seattle-King County Branch of
on Wednesday, May 23, 2018 at the age of 83. He was born in Dalton, GA on May 3, 1935 After graduating from Dalton, GA’s Emery
NAACP entered the Chapter Invisible on July 30, 2018 at the age of 85. He was a 1952 initiate of the University of Washington Chapter, the Gamma Eta of Kappa Alpha Psi ® . Brother Haley was born on November 25, 1932 in Roanoke, LA, the eldest of four children to Henry and Rosa Dyas Haley. After graduating from Jefferson Davis Colored Training School in 1951 as an honor student, he earned a bach- elor’s degree in political science at the University of Washington (UW). He worked at Boeing prior to attending University of Washington School of Law at a time when few African Americans on campus in any university depart- ment. He earned his law degree from the UW School of Law in 1958. He practiced law from 1968-82 and served on the King County Superior Court bench starting in 1983. Judge Haley was a member of many bar-related activi- ties and committees, including serving as founder and president of the Loren Miller Bar Association. He served on the Board of Trustees of the Superior Court Judges’ Association of the State of Washington including as president. In July 1998, at the annual meeting of the American Bar Associa- tion (ABA), Judge Haley was installed as chair of the ABA’s National Conference of State Trial Judges. Brother Haley is survived by his wife, Margaret, his son, Byron and his wife, and two granddaughters.
Street School, he attended and gradu- ated from Knoxville (TN) College. He was a 1953 initiate of Knoxville College Chapter, the Beta Phi of Kappa Alpha Psi ® . He subsequently earned advanced degrees from Columbia University Teacher's College in New York City and Atlanta University. He served in the United States Army; honorably dis- charged in 1962. He was a high school teacher and multi- championship coach at Stephens High School located in Calhoun, GA as well worked as a college professor. He served as the Dean of Students at Morris Brown College, Dean of Students at At- lanta Junior College, and retired as Vice President of Student Affairs of Atlanta Metropolitan College. While at Mor- ris Brown College, he served as faculty advisor to the Beta Delta Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi ® . During his tenure at Atlanta Metropolitan College, he served as Interim President. He worked as a three-sport official with The Quarter- back Club for high school and played semi-pro basketball. In 2013, the Atlanta Metropolitan College named its meeting center, the Charles F. Easley Sr. Conference Pavil- ion, in honor of Easley’s years of service and leadership. Brother Easley was preceded in death by his wife, Helen, his parents, his siblings, and most in-laws. He is survived by daughter Tania, son Charles Jr., grand- daughters, Jenna Bailey, great grandson- Christopher Prothro, Jessica Bailey, sister-in-law, Madge Easley, and a host of relatives, friends, and colleagues.
est of three children born to Edward H. Brown Sr. and Mildred Garland Brown. He graduated from Lynchburg’s Dun- bar High School and attended North Carolina A&T College in Greensboro, NC graduating in 1955. While at A&T, he joined the fraternity as a 1952 initiate of the North Carolina A&T University Chapter, the Alpha Nu of Kappa Alpha Psi ® where he served as Polemarch. He received his master’s degree from the Catholic University of America in 1971. He served in the United States Air Force for four years after graduating from A&T and later worked at the VA Hospital at Ft. Campbell, KY where he met and married his wife Mattie Herring Brown. They moved to Washington, D.C., where he began his career with the federal government as an Air Traffic Controller with the Federal Aviation Ad- ministration (F.A.A.). He moved up the ranks at the F.A.A. eventually working at the F.A.A. headquarters in Washington, D.C., where he retired in 1982. Brother Brown is survived by his wife, Mattie; daughter, Jessica Brown; sons, Duron Porter (Pam) and Edward G. Brown (Fran); three grandchildren, Du- ron Jr., Zori, and Benjamin; two sisters, Edwina Beverley and Carolyn Brown; nieces, Margot Elliot (Alfred), Marla Burch, and Paula Patrom (Daniel), and a host of other relatives and friends.
Publishing achievement for 105 years
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