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to work for Univac and also at the Navy Yard as a government employee. Hayward mar- ried Kiyoko in 1950 and the couple had four children. He became involved with the Stan- dardbred racing industry in 1979 and owned and bred many horses; the fi rst was Go Willie A in 1981. Hayward was the president of the Maryland Breeders Association since 2003 and a director of the Cloverleaf Standardbred Owners’ Association since 1994. Former member of the Maryland Rac- ing Commission Gregory Barnhill died on September 17 at the age of 59. Barnhill was a Baltimore native and also was an offi cial for the Maryland Hunt Cup and a director on the board of the Maryland Million Ltd. He was a highly successful investment banker with Alex Brown & Sons, its successor, Bankers Trust and Deutsche Bank, and later, Brown Invest- ment Advisory & Trust Company. In 2004, he was appointed to the Maryland Racing Com- mission by Governor Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. and completed his term in 2008. Barnhill owned both fl at track and steeplechase racehorses in various partnerships, including the stakes


horse Wheels Up At Noon. He fi rst learned to ride as a student at McDonogh School before graduating in 1971. Horse trainer John Conrad Friedman of


Stevenson died on August 6. He was 79. Born in Washington, DC, Friedman was a fi refi ght- er until he was forced to retire due to injuries and smoke inhalation suff ered during the 1968 DC riots. He took on a small stable and by 1971 had the Porterhouse fi lly Our Cheri Amour, owned by Andrew and Helen Vizzi, in his barn. T e fi lly went on to fi nish fourth or better in nine stakes races in 1971 with her biggest score being the $100,000-added Coaching Club American Oaks. With his wife Virginia, Friedman bred and trained horses for more than three decades. Evelyn Hacker of Laurel died on July 27, just nine days shy of her 97th birthday. Hacker was the wife of the late Beverly “Tuff y” Hack- er, one of Maryland most accomplished and respected racehorse trainers. Hacker assisted in her husband’s training business by keeping the books and taking care of the administra- tive side of the stable. She also worked for


HBPA in Maryland, Delaware and Pennsyl- vania from 1956 to 1973. From 1974 to 1982, she worked for Delaware Park and the Dela- ware Racing Commission and was in charge of licensing for owners, trainers and jockeys. Hacker grew up in Hagerstown and attended several big races with her family, including the famous match race at Pimlico in 1938 between Seabiscuit and War Admiral. Her father O.E. Show, owned racehorses during the 1940s and 1950s. Hacker herself was an owner as well for more than 50 years until her husband retired in 1990.


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