Obituaries
Obituaries
Friday, March 23, 2007; Page B08
Edmond J. NewbouldNavy Captain, Lawyer
Edmond J. "Jack" Newbould, 88, a Navy captain, lawyer and trade association president, died of complications of Parkinson's disease March 17 at his Alexandria home.
Capt. Newbould, a native of Brooklyn, N.Y., and graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, served in submarines in the Pacific theater during World War II. His military awards included the Silver Star and the Bronze Star, for service aboard the submarine USS Redfish.
His postwar sea commands were a submarine, a destroyer and fleet tanker. On shore, he was on the staff of the Navy's inspector general, and officer-in-charge of the Navy's first liaison office in the U.S. Senate. He also taught at the University of Illinois' Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps, served as administrative officer of naval forces in Europe and commanding officer of the Navy's security station in Washington.
While stationed in Washington, Capt. Newbould received a law degree, graduating from George Washington University's law school in 1959.
He retired from the Navy in 1965 and joined the National Clay Pipe Institute as its government affairs representative, and later became its president. He also volunteered with the Water Environment Federation, and was elected president of the organization in 1981. He resigned the institute's presidency in 1988 to become its corporate counsel, a position he held until 2003.
Capt. Newbould was secretary of the Alexandria Law Library, volunteered as a tax consultant to the elderly for 10 years and was in the choir of St. Mary's Catholic Church in Alexandria.
His wife of 52 years, Mary-Elizabeth Patrick Newbould, died in 1997.
Survivors include two sons, John Newbould of Avon, N.C., and Peter Newbould of Alexandria; and two granddaughters.
Philip BriguglioObstetrician and Gynecologist
Philip Briguglio, 74, a physician who practiced obstetrics and gynecology in Alexandria from 1964 until his retirement in 1997, died March 14 at Virginia Hospital Center in Arlington of complications following lung surgery.
Dr. Briguglio lived in McLean for 30 years and after his retirement began to spend winters in Jupiter Island, Fla.
He was born in Jamaica, N.Y. He graduated from the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass., and received a medical degree from Georgetown University in 1958.
