

Mizell was born in Gettysburg, Pa., and grew up in the Washington area, primarily in Kensington. Mizell Sr., 80, who was a research chemist with the Gillette Research Institute in Washington for 21 years until 1967, died of congestive heart failure March 7 at a hospital in Sarasota, Fla. She joined the Legislative Research Service in 1949 and retired there in 1980.Īt her retirement, she was praised on the House and Senate floors for her service. After the war, she was a public relations specialist for the YWCA in Washington. She graduated from Western High School and American University and received a master's degree in education from Syracuse University.ĭuring World War II, she was director of personnel for the American Red Cross in Australia. Miller, a resident of Alexandria, was born in Washington. Miller, 79, retired chief of the education section of the Legislative Research Service at the Library of Congress, died of heart and lung ailments March 10 at Woodbine Rehabilitation Center in Alexandria. Gee is also survived by a sister, and Mrs. The Gees are survived by two daughters, Kathryn Bowers of Melbourne, Fla., and Jane Gee Smith of Vero Beach four grandsons and a great-granddaughter. She later was a guide at the Colonial Williamsburg complex and a hospital and DAR volunteer. After graduating from Longwood College, she taught elementary school in Wise, Va., in the early 1930s and then accompanied her husband to posts in the United States and abroad. He was a member of the Sons of the Revolution and Army-Navy County Club. He retired in 1972 as head of the Army's physical disability agency. Later posts included Europe, Korea and Turkey. He served in the Pacific during World War II and as director of the military psychology and leadership department at West Point after the war. He received a master's degree in business from the University of North Carolina and attended the Army War College. Gee was a native of Kenbridge, Va., and a 1933 graduate of the U.S. The Gees lived in the Washington area off and on from the 1940s until 1989, when they moved to Vero Beach. His wife, Gladys Clarke Gee, 86, who had been a docent for the Daughters of the American Revolution in Washington, died three days later at a Vero Beach nursing home.


Samuel Edward "Ned" Gee, 89, a retired Army major general and former Arlington resident, died of a septic infection March 8 at a hospital Vero Beach, Fla.
