

interests at the United Nations and at the World Court in The Hague in 1980 during the Iran hostage crisis. Goldklang, who worked at the Justice Department from the early 1960s until 1986, spent much of his career as an adviser in the office of the legal counsel. Goldklang, 64, a Justice Department lawyer who specialized in international law, died of a blood disorder April 21 at D.C. Survivors include a daughter, Margaret Ann Bright of Chevy Chase, and a sister. Her husband, Theodore Daniel Bright, died in 1966. She also did volunteer work with the Greentree Shelter for Women in Bethesda. She was a member of North Bethesda United Methodist Church and in that capacity did volunteer work with Friends in Action. From 1952 to 1956, she taught typing and shorthand at Richard Montgomery High School in Rockville. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, she taught typing and shorthand at Georgetown Visitation Preparatory School in Washington. She received a master's degree in education from George Washington University.

She moved to Washington during World War II and was a secretary with the American Red Cross. Bright, who lived in Chevy Chase, was born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and graduated from Coe College there. In addition to her husband of 58 years, of Leesburg, survivors include five children, 14 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.Įlsie Margaret Bright, 84, a former schoolteacher and volunteer worker, died March 29 at Suburban Hospital after a heart attack. She lived in Bethesda for about five years in the 1960s and then 10 years until 1981, when she and her husband, Edwin, moved to Snow Hill, Md. Goodridge, who first moved to the Washington area in 1961, was a native of Leroy, N.Y., and a 1942 graduate of Cornell University. Goodridge, 80, a former member of Bradley Hills Presbyterian Church in Bethesda, died of respiratory failure April 17 at her home in Leesburg, Fla.
