Throughout his long life, nuclear scientist Herbert Isbin reached the highest peaks of his profession.
Isbin earned a doctoral degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was a professor of chemical engineering at the University of Minnesota for 33 years, eventually earning emeritus status. He was the director of the university's gamma irradiation facility, and there's a fellowship and archive at the U dedicated to him. He penned an internationally known textbook called "Introductory Nuclear Reactor Theory," which is still used today. And he was appointed to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission by President Dwight Eisenhower.
Isbin was, by all accounts, one heck of a square dancer, too. He and his wife, Katherine, were known for hosting elaborate square dances in the basement of their St. Louis Park home, complete with costumes and a caller.
He was "the perfect balance of humility and debonair," said Rabbi Avi Olitzky of Beth El Synagogue in St. Louis Park, where the family attends.
Isbin, 98, died on May 12 of congestive heart failure.
"He had a remarkable life, it was a good run," said his son, Ira Isbin.
Born in Seattle, Isbin received bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of Washington. While studying at MIT in the late 1940s, he received a fortuitous phone call from his long-standing pen pal, Katherine. She and her mother were stranded in New York City, and Isbin was in Boston preparing to drive to Washington state for his first job. Could he give them a ride to Minneapolis?
After arriving in town, a stroll around the Lake of the Isles in Minneapolis led to a wedding proposal. The two were married for 64 years.