Obituaries

Saturday, December 2, 2006; Page B05

Stephen Anthony RegesterArmy Colonel, Professor


Stephen Anthony Regester, 64, a retired Army colonel and Army Management Staff College professor, died Nov. 1 at his home in Oakhill. He had advanced prostate cancer.

Col. Regester served for 27 years in the Army's Adjutant General Corps, where he was a comptroller. He retired in 1992. His military decorations include the Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star, the Meritorious Service Medal, the Army Commendation Medal and the National Defense Service Medal with Bronze Star.

After retiring from active duty, Col. Regester taught at the Army Management Staff College in Fort Belvoir for five years. He then served under the secretary of the navy in the budget office from 1998 to 2003. He survived the Sept. 11, 2001, attack on the Pentagon.

Before his illness, Col. Regester worked for a short time as a consultant with SAIC.

He was a Baltimore native and a 1964 graduate of Loyola College. He received a master's degree in business administration from Syracuse University in 1970, and he graduated from the Armed Forces Staff College in 1977 and Army War College in 1987.

He was a member of St. John Neumann Catholic Church of Reston. He enjoying golfing.

Survivors include his wife of 42 years, Janice K. Regester of Oakhill; three children, Mark C. Regester of Ashburn, Jennifer A. Rivard of Leesburg and Stephanie E. Snead of Charlotte; and four grandchildren.

Barbara Lou AndrickLawyer


Barbara Lou Dougherty Mattick Andrick, 61, a lawyer who was commissioner in chancery for the Fairfax County Circuit Court from 1988 to 1992, died of cancer Nov. 25 at her home in Manassas.

Mrs. Andrick, who was born in Terre Haute, Ind., was a former office secretary and a divorced mother of three children when she decided to go to college. She graduated from George Mason University in 1974 and three years later received a law degree from George Washington University.

She opened a solo practice in Fairfax County, specializing in family, commercial and real estate law. For a time, she was a principal in Albanese and Mattick, a small law firm in Fairfax County.

Mrs. Andrick continued to practice law after she moved to Mount Jackson, in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley in 1992. She retired in 2000.

Her marriage to Robert Mattick ended in divorce. Her husband, Thomas Andrick, died in 1998.


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