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Babette Ann <I>Shibelski</I> Stanton

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Babette Ann Shibelski Stanton

Birth
New York, USA
Death
11 Sep 2010 (aged 66–67)
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
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STANTON, Babette Ann (Shibelski) Of Woods Hole and Boston, died at her home in Woods Hole on Saturday, September 11, 2010 at the age of 67. She was an 11 year breast cancer survivor who suffered from scoliosis due to high dose radiation therapy. She leaves her husband, Richard L. Goldstein, a brother, two nieces and one nephew. Burial will be private. Memorial contributions may be made to Greyhound Friends Inc.(Capital Fund), 167 Saddle Hill Rd., Hopkinton, MA 01748-1192 in her name and her beloved greyhound, Cole (Gallant Cole). Arrangements by Chapman, Cole & Gleason Funeral Home in FALMOUTH. For on-line guest book and directions, please visit www.ccgfuneralhome.com Chapman, Cole & Gleason Falmouth 508-540-4172





Published in The Boston Globe on October 8, 2010



Babette Ann (Shibelski) Stanton, of Woods Hole and Boston, died at her home in Woods Hole on Saturday, September 11, 2010 at the age of 67. She was an 11 year breast cancer survivor who suffered from scoliosis due to high dose radiation therapy.
Born in New York, she attended Utica College of Syracuse University and then Heidelberg University in Germany for a Ph.D in experimental psychology. When she returned to the US she was a French-German translator for the Security Council of the United Nations for six months. Then she was chief foreign language translator for the American Psychological Association. Because of her interest in medical care, she accepted a job as a grant program administrator in health manpower at the National Center for Health Services Research and Development, where she met her husband, Richard L. Goldstein, MD.
When her husband went to Barnes Hospital in St. Louis for assistant residency, she became Deputy Commissioner of Health and Hospitals for the City of St. Louis, the highest ranking woman in the city government to up to that time. Her assignment was to cut waste, fraud and abuse; she cut the budget 50% in six months while improving medicaid and private insurance payments to the city, earning her the nickname, �White Tornado�. Her husband went to Boston to complete residency and she became assistant professor of psychiatry and medicine at Boston University School of Medicine.
Her main focus of research was quality of life and outcome after coronary artery and valve surgery. She became Director of the Department of Behavioral Epidemiology and an associate professor of psychiatry at B.U.S.M. She was a member of the American Psychosomatic Society.
She loved foreign travel, dogs, gardening, cooking, beaches, and the solitude and natural beauty of Woods Hole and the Cape.
She leaves her husband, Richard L. Goldstein, a brother, two nieces and one nephew.
Burial will be private. Memorial contributions may be made to Greyhound Friends Inc.(Capital Fund), 167 Saddle Hill Rd., Hopkinton, MA 01748-1192 in her name and her beloved greyhound, Cole (Gallant Cole).
STANTON, Babette Ann (Shibelski) Of Woods Hole and Boston, died at her home in Woods Hole on Saturday, September 11, 2010 at the age of 67. She was an 11 year breast cancer survivor who suffered from scoliosis due to high dose radiation therapy. She leaves her husband, Richard L. Goldstein, a brother, two nieces and one nephew. Burial will be private. Memorial contributions may be made to Greyhound Friends Inc.(Capital Fund), 167 Saddle Hill Rd., Hopkinton, MA 01748-1192 in her name and her beloved greyhound, Cole (Gallant Cole). Arrangements by Chapman, Cole & Gleason Funeral Home in FALMOUTH. For on-line guest book and directions, please visit www.ccgfuneralhome.com Chapman, Cole & Gleason Falmouth 508-540-4172





Published in The Boston Globe on October 8, 2010



Babette Ann (Shibelski) Stanton, of Woods Hole and Boston, died at her home in Woods Hole on Saturday, September 11, 2010 at the age of 67. She was an 11 year breast cancer survivor who suffered from scoliosis due to high dose radiation therapy.
Born in New York, she attended Utica College of Syracuse University and then Heidelberg University in Germany for a Ph.D in experimental psychology. When she returned to the US she was a French-German translator for the Security Council of the United Nations for six months. Then she was chief foreign language translator for the American Psychological Association. Because of her interest in medical care, she accepted a job as a grant program administrator in health manpower at the National Center for Health Services Research and Development, where she met her husband, Richard L. Goldstein, MD.
When her husband went to Barnes Hospital in St. Louis for assistant residency, she became Deputy Commissioner of Health and Hospitals for the City of St. Louis, the highest ranking woman in the city government to up to that time. Her assignment was to cut waste, fraud and abuse; she cut the budget 50% in six months while improving medicaid and private insurance payments to the city, earning her the nickname, �White Tornado�. Her husband went to Boston to complete residency and she became assistant professor of psychiatry and medicine at Boston University School of Medicine.
Her main focus of research was quality of life and outcome after coronary artery and valve surgery. She became Director of the Department of Behavioral Epidemiology and an associate professor of psychiatry at B.U.S.M. She was a member of the American Psychosomatic Society.
She loved foreign travel, dogs, gardening, cooking, beaches, and the solitude and natural beauty of Woods Hole and the Cape.
She leaves her husband, Richard L. Goldstein, a brother, two nieces and one nephew.
Burial will be private. Memorial contributions may be made to Greyhound Friends Inc.(Capital Fund), 167 Saddle Hill Rd., Hopkinton, MA 01748-1192 in her name and her beloved greyhound, Cole (Gallant Cole).

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