Richard Worthing of Minneapolis, whose day job was managing millions of dollars for institutional investors, led a literary life when off the clock.
Worthing, a retired vice president and head of equity investments for Advantus Capital Management, a part of the Minnesota Life Insurance Co., died of complications after treatment for aplastic anemia on Nov. 19 in Minneapolis. He was 67.
He graduated from the Breck School in Golden Valley in 1959 and earned a bachelor's degree in economics from Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif., in 1963 and an MBA from Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., in 1965.
After college, Worthing joined Minnesota Life Insurance Co. of St. Paul, analyzing municipal bonds and becoming a portfolio manager.
In the 1970s, he joined the St. Paul Companies, founding its venture capital division. In 1993, he returned to Minnesota Life and its Advantus investment arm, overseeing portfolio managers.
Joseph Betlej of Mendota Heights, who worked with Worthing, said his creativity "made him special."
"He was willing to shake things up," Betlej said
He enjoyed writing poetry, and wrote more seriously after retirement, Betlej said. For several years, he studied at the Loft Literary Center.