Don married the love of his life, Sylvia, in 1947, and started his career, joining his father and brother, Harold (Buddy) Robinson, in A. Robinson & Company, a wholesale tobacco and candy business. The company transitioned to supplying health and beauty products to supermarkets. In 1961, White Cross Stores was foiunded as a pioneer in discount drugstores with Don as president. Don's younger brother Sanford, joined the others in the new venture. White Cross was at the forefront of challenging fair trade laws in Pennsylvania, winning a lawsuit brought by Gillette that opened the door to discount retailing. Under Don's leadership, the chain expanded across the eastern seaboard and was listed on the New York Stock Exchange. White Cross merged with Revco in 1972. Don continued his business career serving on the boards of other public companies and launching other ventures.
Don and Sylvia had two children, Stephen (Teresa) and Carol (Jeffrey Markel); and three grandchildren, Abigail Foster (Michael), Leslie Markel (Felix Berger), and Richard Markel. Family was all-important to Don and Sylvia, who planned many memorable vacations, most recently with their two great-grandchildren.
Don's business success enabled him to pursue a lifetime of charitable and philanthropic activities both in Pittsburgh and around the world. Nationally, he served as president and chairman of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, national chairman of the Interfaith Hunger Appeal, chairman of the United Jewish Appeal, and as a member of the board of the United Israel Appeal and the Council of Jewish Federation and Welfare Funds. In Pittsburgh, he seved as the president of the board of the United Jewish Federation as well as a member of the board of directors of the Pittsburgh Symphony Society, WQED Public Television, Montefiore Hospital, The Rehabilitation Institute of Pittsburgh, The Jewish Healthcare Foundation, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, and the Associated Artists of Pittsburgh. In 1993, his efforts as chairman of the Renaissance Campaign of the UJF raised $54 million to transform and rehabilitate the infrastructure of a dozen nonprofit organizations in the Jewish community. Don had a lifelong passion for photography, which won him international recognition. His work was featured in the Carnegie Museum of Natural History, the Cleveland Museum of Natural History and the Cornell Museum of Art, the name a few. Don's permanent collection of over 700 images is housed at the Southern Alleghenies Museum of Art, and his work is in numerous public and private collections. Don explored all seven continents to capture the natural world, often accompanied by his wife and children. He embraced digital photography as a senior, sharing prints with family and friends up until the day he passed! Sylvia was his 70-year partner and shared in his endeavors and interests.
The funeral service will be at 10 a.m. Monday, June 26, at Temple Beth El Mausoleum in Boca Raton, Fla.
(Published in Trib Total Media, online only from June 26 to June 27, 2017)
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Don married the love of his life, Sylvia, in 1947, and started his career, joining his father and brother, Harold (Buddy) Robinson, in A. Robinson & Company, a wholesale tobacco and candy business. The company transitioned to supplying health and beauty products to supermarkets. In 1961, White Cross Stores was foiunded as a pioneer in discount drugstores with Don as president. Don's younger brother Sanford, joined the others in the new venture. White Cross was at the forefront of challenging fair trade laws in Pennsylvania, winning a lawsuit brought by Gillette that opened the door to discount retailing. Under Don's leadership, the chain expanded across the eastern seaboard and was listed on the New York Stock Exchange. White Cross merged with Revco in 1972. Don continued his business career serving on the boards of other public companies and launching other ventures.
Don and Sylvia had two children, Stephen (Teresa) and Carol (Jeffrey Markel); and three grandchildren, Abigail Foster (Michael), Leslie Markel (Felix Berger), and Richard Markel. Family was all-important to Don and Sylvia, who planned many memorable vacations, most recently with their two great-grandchildren.
Don's business success enabled him to pursue a lifetime of charitable and philanthropic activities both in Pittsburgh and around the world. Nationally, he served as president and chairman of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, national chairman of the Interfaith Hunger Appeal, chairman of the United Jewish Appeal, and as a member of the board of the United Israel Appeal and the Council of Jewish Federation and Welfare Funds. In Pittsburgh, he seved as the president of the board of the United Jewish Federation as well as a member of the board of directors of the Pittsburgh Symphony Society, WQED Public Television, Montefiore Hospital, The Rehabilitation Institute of Pittsburgh, The Jewish Healthcare Foundation, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, and the Associated Artists of Pittsburgh. In 1993, his efforts as chairman of the Renaissance Campaign of the UJF raised $54 million to transform and rehabilitate the infrastructure of a dozen nonprofit organizations in the Jewish community. Don had a lifelong passion for photography, which won him international recognition. His work was featured in the Carnegie Museum of Natural History, the Cleveland Museum of Natural History and the Cornell Museum of Art, the name a few. Don's permanent collection of over 700 images is housed at the Southern Alleghenies Museum of Art, and his work is in numerous public and private collections. Don explored all seven continents to capture the natural world, often accompanied by his wife and children. He embraced digital photography as a senior, sharing prints with family and friends up until the day he passed! Sylvia was his 70-year partner and shared in his endeavors and interests.
The funeral service will be at 10 a.m. Monday, June 26, at Temple Beth El Mausoleum in Boca Raton, Fla.
(Published in Trib Total Media, online only from June 26 to June 27, 2017)
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