twice, first as a player, in 1976, and then as a coach, in 2004, a feat achieved only by John Wooden and Lenny Wilkens. Died Oct. 25 following a stroke. Kimberly Mounts, 48. She founded MAP Alternative Asset Management Co. in Newport Beach, California, in 2006, following jobs at Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. Died Oct. 25 of cardiac arrest. Gilbert Beebower, 79. A co-author of a 1986 article demonstrating the superiority of asset allocation compared with market timing and stock picking, who worked at SEI Investments Co. in Oaks, Pennsylvania, from 1975 until his death. Died Oct. 25. Lou Reed, 71. The New York-based rock musician, who co-founded the Velvet Underground and became one of rock music’s most influential artists. Died Oct. 27 of complications from a liver transplant. Leonard M. Leiman, 82. He led the securities-law practice at New York-based Reavis & McGrath when it merged in 1988 with Houston- based Fulbright & Jaworski, creating the seventh-largest U.S. law firm at the time. Died Oct. 30. November Walt Bellamy, 74. A member of the NBA Hall of Fame, he was one of only seven players to score more than 20,000 points and grab more than 14,000 rebounds. Died Nov. 2. Rachel Benepe, 37. A U.S. protege of stock-picker Jean-Marie Eveillard at First Eagle Investment Management LLC, who managed its $1.5 billion First Eagle Gold Fund since 2009. Died Nov. 2 of cancer. Charlie Trotter, 54. The Chicago-based chef who closed his namesake restaurant in 2012 after a 25-year run in which it won 11 James Beard Foundation Awards. Died Nov. 5. HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013299