Allegheny County PA Archives Obituaries.....Guthrie, Delores Lillian Reese October 5, 2011 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Robert Reese rlreese@comcast.net October 21, 2011, 9:32 pm Pittsburgh Post Gazette GUTHRIE DELORES LILLIAN REESE 1929 - 2011. One of Pittsburgh's best-known fashion models of the 1950s and 60s, Delores Lillian Reese Guthrie, a familiar figure at Kaufmann's Department store downtown, and at the Pittsburgh Athletic Club's noon fashion shows, died peacefully October 5, at the Capital Halquist Memorial Hospice Center in Arlington, Virginia. She was 81, and had been a resident of Reston, Virginia, the past twenty-one years. Cause of death were complications from Pulmonary Hypertension, a heart-lung disorder, as announced by her former husband, and friend, Andrew Guthrie, a retired NBC News and Voice of America correspondent. She is survived by her son, Ian of Boulder, Colorado; a sister Ruth Craig, and brother Robert Reese, of Whitehall Borough, Pittsburgh; nieces Traci Ann Thompson, Alice Ann Reese and Maura Ann Reese, all of Pittsburgh, and nephews Carl Reese of Poway, California, Brian Reese of Oceanside, California, and John Reese of Butler, PA; her brothers Murray and Eugene, of Pittsburgh, and her nephew, Paul Reese, of Richmond, Virginia, predeceased her. "Dee" Guthrie, as she preferred to be called, was born December 7th, 1929 and grew up in the Knoxville neighborhood. A 1948 graduate of South Hills High School, she went to work for Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation, which became part of U.S. Steel. Within a few years, she was executive secretary to then-CEO Roger Blough's top Pittsburgh-based assistant. At the same time, she began modeling for Kaufmann's Department store and appeared frequently in Kaufmann's ads in The Pittsburgh Press and Post-Gazette, and also modeled at the Pittsburgh Athletic Club. She also volunteered to dance with pscychologically disabled World War Two veterans at the local VA hospital. Moving to New York City in 1962 to further her fashion career, she married NBC News writer Andrew Guthrie, and followed him to Hong Kong when he was assigned to cover the Viet Nam War. Later, in Cleveland, Ohio, she became chairman of the local UNICEF committee, and a congregant at Trinty Episcopal Cathedral, where she was lauded in a Cleveland Press review of the service for her meaningful reading of scripture. Later in life, she joined the international law firm of White & Case's Washington office, where she was an executive secretary to former Nixon and Ford Administration Deputy Transportation Secretary John Barnum after he returned to private practice. She was divorced in 1987. She was a founding member of the Smithsonian Institution's Museum of the American Indian, and a member of The National Cathedral, where she helped build houses for Habitat for Humanity. She was, for decades, a supporting member of the Metropolitan Opera. At her request there will be no funeral or memorial service. Memorial contributions may be made to the U.S. committee for UNICEF, Heifer.org, The Wolf Conservation Fund (www.wolf.org) the Red Wolf Coalition (redwolf@redwolves.com) and The Smithsonian Institution's Museum of the American Indian. This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/pafiles/ File size: 3.5 Kb