found: Washington post WWW site, viewed Sept. 7, 2016(Morris Wessel, a pediatrician and hospice pioneer, died Aug. 20 [2016] at his home in New Haven, Conn.; he was 98; for 42 years, until his retirement in 1993, Dr. Wessel saw rich and poor families at his office near Yale New Haven Hospital; as a research fellow at Yale's medical school in the late 1940s, he was part of a team that studied the novel practice of keeping newborns with their mothers instead of placing them in a hospital nursery; several years later, at the helm of his own Yale research team, Dr. Wessel attempted to root out the cause of colic; Dr. Wessel largely moved away from medical research after his colic study, although in the 1970s he joined researcher Anthony Dominski in decrying toxic levels of lead found in children; around that same time, Dr. Wessel joined with Florence S. Wald to co-found the Connecticut Hospice in Branford, the first U.S. center to provide end-of-life care outside a hospital; Morris Arthur Wessel was born in Providence, R.I., on Nov. 1, 1917)