Zenas Block

SALISBURY — Zenas Block died peacefully at home on Nov. 21, 2008.  

He was born on Dec. 7, 1916, in New York City.  During his 75-year career, he was a food chemist, research director, senior corporate manager, entrepreneur, academic, investor and consultant. To send himself through college, he worked as a typist and posed as an artist’s model. During World War II, he was instrumental in the development of instant coffee and other K-rations for the troops.

While CEO of DCA Food Industries (originally the Doughnut Corporation of America), he founded Nisshin DCA in Japan and DCA Industries in the United Kingdom.

He founded, built and sold Haystack Cable Vision in the Northwest Corner of Connecticut.

Starting in 1980, he founded the Center for Entrepreneurial Studies at the Stern School of Business at New York University, developed and taught entrepreneurship courses for the MBA program and served as clinical professor until he retired in 2001. He was the recipient of the Citibank Excellence in Teaching Award at Stern and a scholarship was established in his name.

He wrote “It’s All on the Label: Understanding Food, Additives and Nutritionâ€� and “Corporate Venturing – Creating New Businesses Within the Firm,â€� with Ian Macmillan, published by the Harvard Business School Press and translated into Japanese and Korean.  

 Wherever he lived, he was a passionate and active citizen from the time he was an adolescent. In the last few years of his life, he was a member of the Salisbury Board of Finance, a member of the Investment Committee of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, served on the Governing Board of Sharon Hospital, and was the founder of the Salisbury Central School Educational Enrichment Fund.

He was the son of Russian Jewish immigrants, Celia Kaplow and Joe Block. He was raised by his mother, a dressmaker, in the East Bronx. His summers as a camper and counselor at Camp Kinderland in upstate New York fostered his love of the outdoors. He attended the City College of New York and was expelled in 1934 for protesting the college’s invitation to a delegation of Italian fascist students. He then enrolled at New York University, where he met his wife-to-be, Lillian Bialek, a painter and weaver. He returned to City College and graduated in 1938.  He and Lil, who predeceased him in 1985, raised their family in Larchmont, N.Y., and later, Manhattan. In 1988 he married Janet Andre, whom he also met at NYU, a colleague at work, who was his loving wife for 20 years.

He was a cyclist, a swimmer, a runner, a sculler and an avid cross-country skier. He exercised almost until the day he died. For much of his life, he read a book a day. He loved to be outdoors, working in the woods. In his 80s, he took up sculpting in stone.

In addition to his wife, Janet (Andre) Block, he is survived by his children, Richard Block, Karen Chase-Graubard and Margaret Walker; his daughter-in-law Freya Block and sons-in-law Paul Graubard and Knute Walker; his grandchildren, David Chase, Matthew Chase-Daniel and Adam Block and their spouses, Phoebe Shaw, Julie Chase-Daniel and Paula Block; his grandchildren, Nadia Block, Jason Block, Leo Walker and Sam Walker; his great-grandchildren, Aquila, Solomon, Ruby, Ian, Livia and Amelia; numerous beloved nieces and nephews from both of his marriages; and a half-brother, Norman Block of Houston, Texas.  

Although we had him for so long, he will be dreadfully missed.

In lieu of flowers, contributions in his memory can be sent to SCS Educational Enrichment Fund at the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, 271 Main St., Great Barrington, MA  01230-1972.

Arrangements are being handled by Kenny Funeral Home of Sharon.  

A memorial will be held Monday, Dec. 1, at 11 a.m. in the chapel at the Salisbury School.

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