Throughout his career at Cal State L.A., Gerhard was also an outspoken and deeply committed champion of faculty rights. In the following years he was instrumental in bringing instruction in these subjects into the curriculum of the business administration degree. in 1949, for which he majored in chemistry with minors in physics and math, he went into public school teaching for four years, and concurrently began graduate study in education. Even there he played unique roles. A memorial service honored him at this church on August 4. She will be greatly missed and forever remembered by me. Another student wrote, Professor Krilowicz, I am so overwhelmed to find out the news. He attended Samuel Staples Elementary School and Fairfield Preparatory School. Langston once again appeared in the NAIA National Tournament, where the Lions fell in a first-round game. He was respected internationally as a scholar of the Bible, an authority on early church history, a linguist and humanistic professor. A physical geographer, Clems teaching responsibilities included courses in geomorphology; California, the United States, and USSR; field methods; and map interpretation. Kevins fondest memories of his father are the long talks the two of them had discussing religion, history, philosophy, literature, and politics. In the Cal State L.A. Department of Political Science, Jack was a specialist in both public administration and labor-management relations. Harry and Jean enjoyed eating out and were experts at finding outstanding eating experiences in and near the San Gabriel Valley, including such favorites as the Parkway Grill in Pasadena and La Serenata de Garibaldi in Boyle Heights. degree from Syracuse University in 1954 and M.A. To improve advisement, he created a Peer Advisement office staffed by students and supervised by a graduate student who reported to him. After finishing preparatory school, she completed a year of study in political science in France before receiving a scholarship to continue her education in the United States. A year later he attended Officer Candidate School, was commissioned as a second lieutenant, and was sent to Europe as the youngest combat platoon leader in the 42nd Infantry, the famed Rainbow Division. in 1950. One of her proudest moments came in 1975 when she was awarded the University's Outstanding Professor Award. He was driven to do more, accomplish more, learn more, teach more, and be more of a leader. Immediately upon taking office, Vice President Greenlee became involved in converting the campus to year-round operation and adopting the curriculum from the semester system to the quarter system. from Columbia University in 1950, and his Ph.D. from the University of Washington in 1963 with a dissertation titled British Radical Secularism: Unbelief from Bradlaugh to the Mid-Twentieth Century. Before the American entry into the war, Don earned a B.A. Among his contributions to the University, John Cox served as president of the Emeriti Association for 10 years. In the area of academic affairs, it was a time of ongoing, nationwide searches for new faculty members, added classes in almost every discipline, and new courses and degree programs. He was a dedicated scholar and passionate teacher who was committed to engaging students in ways that related their experiences in the classroom to their lives. Jim is survived by his wife Laura, an alumna and long-time lecturer in the English Department, and their two children.The Emeritimes, Fall 2017, CAROL JEAN NUMRICH, former Director of the University Development Office for more than 30 years, died on April 25, 2017 at the age of 82. Her first teaching position was at Smith College in Northampton, where she also choreographed and performed. He concluded that "the results were irrefutable. A gunnery officer with the rank of lieutenant (jg) on the USS Tracy, a minelayer in the Pacific Theater, he saw action at Guadalcanal and Bougainville, for which his unit was honored with a presidential citation. She led the Lions to a 48-12 record over two seasons and to a pair of appearances in the NAIA National Tournament. In 1943, about to begin his senior year, he was drafted into the army as an infantry private. He received his B.A. On a whim, she joined a friend headed for sunny California shortly after her graduation. On retirement in 2000, she became an active member of the Emeriti Association. The Benoits settled in Bakersfield, where their three sons were born. He was 82. degrees in 1940 and1942, respectively. The Recorder provides legal news and analysis that helps lawyers run their firms and practices and navigate the innovation economy in Northern California with an emphasis on the intersection of . His work is included in Europe as well as the United States. In 2002, he received the Special Achievement Award for Dedicated Service to Pacific Palisades. In 1986 he was honored with the Certificate of Merit from the American College Testing/National Academic Advisory Association National Recognition Program for Academic Advising. Burt joined the Cal State L.A. faculty in 1965 and enjoyed 30 years of teaching. All the while, he maintained the infectious good humor that made conversations with him a joy. Though he was willing to be drawn repeatedly into administration, Martys love for teaching and encouraging his students prevailed, and he was happy to have been able to complete his career in the classroom. She and her husband Hy were married 58 years and had two children, Barbara and Larry, and two grandchildren.he Emeritimes, Fall 2010, MARIE-ANTOINETTE ZRIMC, Emerita Professor of French, 1964-1992, died at her home in South Pasadena of Parkinson's disease on June 7, 2010 at the age of 83. They developed the curriculum, organized the School of Engineering, and worked on the architectural design of the engineering building, particularly the laboratories and equipment. She was very active in the ACLU, NAACP, United Farm Workers Union, and Southern Poverty Law Center. Some of his articles, such as "The Hollywood Actor: Occupational Culture, Career and Adaptation in a Buyers' Market Industry" (1990) and "Defining the Characters and their Situations in the Production of Television Culture" (1993), are good examples of how Friedman integrated his considerable inside knowledge of the entertainment industry into sociology scholarship. Bill of Rights, he was kept busy teaching and was neglected for his own progress toward the degree. Tony actually did later propose a joint doctoral program with UCLA. He retired in 1975. The majority of the collection, amounting to over 200 works of art, has been assigned by Judd for donation to the Portland Museum of Art in Oregon. They moved to Basel, Switzerland in 1970, where he remained until her death. He frequently luxuriated in Australian summers by spending winter quarters directing at the Australian Academy of Dramatic Arts. For many years, he was a marshal at Honors Convocation and Commencement. After all, the college was adding 1,000 or more students each year, and there had to be additional faculty and classrooms. He was 88 years of age. They shared many trips overseas to China, England, Ireland, Italy, France, Germany, Czech Republic, Austria, and Hawaii. The one remaining hurdle was majormoneybut that didn't daunt Pauline. He served as Dean of the School of Humanities and Fine Arts until his retirement in 1980. Popular with both his colleagues and students, Tom was one of the first recipients of the Outstanding Professor Award, which he received in 1970. Jerry suffered with his back all of his adult life. This meant new schools, funded by tax drives and bond issues, all of which Harry was proud to recollect were successful. Miller, 52, spent the past two seasons coaching at L A memorial was held in July.The Emeritimes, Winter 2011, JUDD MICHAEL HAMMACK, Emeritus Professor of Economics, 1969-1999, died in Santa Monica on September 17, 2010. He composed and recorded his music, which he also conducted in the U.S. and abroad. He also was a member of the Ohio State University Alumni Association of Southern California, Big Ten Club of Southern California, administrative board of South Pasadena United Methodist Church, and South Pasadena/San Marino YMCA, where he was awarded the YMCA Devoted Service Award in 1974. He served as chair of the Department of Educational Foundations from 1973 to 1979, retired in 1980, and moved back up to the Bay Area with his wife Dorothea, a nurse. He served as thesis adviser for a large number of students pursuing M.S. One of his publications was on a new specimen of his favorite plant, penstemon, that had been discovered in Mexico and named for his now-emeritus colleague James Henrickson. He ran over 55 marathons between the ages of 67 and 80 years, participating in races in many different countries. When his chair finally deemed his dissertation ready for defense, he received an offer from Cal State L.A.s Marketing Department to begin at the start of the new school year. Following World War II, Jesse moved to Southern California and earned his A.B. Ken was an active participant in academic governance, serving as chair of the Library Faculty Affairs Committee from 1990 to 1992, 2002 to 2004, and 2007 to 2009; chair of the Program Review Subcommittee of the Educational Policy Committee from 2000 to 2004 and 2008-09; and member of the Academic Freedom and Professional Ethics Committee from 2008 to 2013. She is survived by her daughters Mary and Ann, her son-in-law, and two grandchildren.The Emeritimes, Fall 2014, EMIL PETER WROBLICKY, Emeritus Professor of Physical Education and Football Coach, 1956-1987, died on March 22, 2014 at the age of 89. Carols sister Diana died a week after her, on May 2. The Cal State L.A. Emeriti Association has remained limited to emeritus faculty members. in 1938 at Pennsylvania State University, and his doctorate in 1950 at the University of Chicago. In addition to teaching a variety of theory classes, Tom was the department expert on British and Canadian politics. His annotated bibliography of Sources (for the study of Native American languages), begun in the late '60s, appeared as his last major publication in volume 17 of the Smithsonian's Handbook of North American Indians . He oversaw the completion of the Physical Sciences building and the move of the department into it in Fall 1972, as well as the final approval for purchasing and installing a 4 MV Van de Graaff nuclear accelerator, the first of its kind in the California State University system. He had also taught there as temporary faculty beginning in 1955. He had just been promoted to associate professor, thanks to policy that allowed advancement in rank of early faculty who lacked the doctorate but who had been especially active in faculty governance. He was a member of the Reserve Officers Association, Retired Officers Association, Phi Delta Kappa, and California Audio-Visual Education Association. It has recently come to the attention of the Emeriti Association that Patricia Little, wife of Ted Little, Emeritus Professor of Art died in November 2013. He was a talented tenor soloist, performing in his church and in Los Angeles Civic Opera productions. Similarly, he organized and led a series of support groups for people traumatized by the Northridge earthquake. in 1952, and an Ed.D. She went on to the Catholic University of America, where she earned a B.S. The next few years were to be just as important: her son Ricardo was born in 1954, and in 1956 she received her Ph.D. in Arts and Letters. Professionally, Dunkelberg organized workshops and consulted with various community agencies and school programs. He ran twice, unsuccessfully, for public office, for the Community College Board of Trustees and for the California State Assembly. He co-authored a textbook on American government that included contributed sections by a number of department colleagues. At the end of the day, it was her cats, her books, and her beloved hillside that were her best company. Faculty Wives Club. That a serious chemist was also a superb cook was no surprise to those who shared her table. As a result of this experience, he was inspired to write his first mystery book, Smoking Frog Lives (2009), followed by Blood on the Stone (2012) and Mourning and Remembering (2013). Her specializations within sociology included statistical analysis of research data, social psychology, gerontology, and medical sociology, in which she developed and taught the course in our program. Wayne and Christine, better known as Kippy, came to California in 1974, when Wayne was appointed to the USC library as acquisitions librarian. Keiths parents and uncles and aunts were all farm people, and they all lived in the vicinity. He was the sole author of Critical Dimensions: The Art of Public Address (Random House, 1966) and many critical reviews. In 1940, he joined the faculty of Iowa State College and spent 19 years as an administrator and teacher of government and history. Bruce designed a giant electric conducting system to be tethered to the bottom of the bay just offshore of the marina, over which ships would sail. He was 94 years old. Jean is remembered by friends, family, and students as a warm, kind, and generous woman with a special affinity for cats.The Emeritimes, Spring 2013, VERNON F. LEIDIG, Emeritus Professor of Music, 1950-1982 , died peacefully of natural causes on February 23, 2013. Just as Ivan would have wanted, his passing was commemorated with a paddle out at his beloved San Onofre State Beach in August 2018, where he loved to surf, play volleyball, and collect rocks and anything else that washed up on the sand.The Emeritimes, Fall 2020, ALICE ROBERTA (BOBBIE) HANNAH LLOYD, wife of former publications manager and emeritus professor of administration William E. Lloyd, died peacefully in Pasadena on April 24, 2020. An avid swimmer, she earned both gold and silver medals from the American Athletic Union in 1955. He was highly intelligent, serious, and capable . Al loved the outdoors, running marathons and endurance bike rides, and spent many summers leading backpacking trips in the Sierra Nevada with his family. A memorial was held on May 17, 2014 in Cambria.The Emeritimes, Spring 2015, PAUL H. ROSENTHAL, Emeritus Professor of Information Systems, 1988-2013, died at his home in Sherman Oaks on August 6, surrounded by his family and friends. In 1956, he earned his doctorate in finance at the University of Missouri. Managing the subsequent state of affairs no doubt called for ingenuity and techniques not found in standard economic theory. The dozen or so agents who were to go into Tokyo were taken into a windowless room. Most recently, he had edited a yet-to-be-published work by G. Harold Powell, "Letters From the Orange Empire." When he was offered a similar position at Cal State LA, he accepted immediately. Patterson is survived by her parents, Robert and Dora Patterson, of Gloversville; daughter Adrienne Royce of Ann Arbor, Michigan; son Nathaniel Hollenbeck of Lake Orion, Michigan; four brothers and three sisters of Gloversville and Johnstown, New York; and many nieces, nephews, and cousins.The Emeritimes, Spring 1998, BUTRUS ABD AL-MALIK, Professor of History, 1969-1990 had already served nearly a normal lifetime of distinguished scholarship and teaching when he came to California State University, Los Angeles in 1969 as a Distinguished Visiting Professor of History at age 60. Funeral services were held at the San Gabriel Mission Church, where she was an active communicant. Thelma was very alert until the last year of her life, enjoyed her friends and family, read without glasses, and was content and happy. The Emeriti Association received word that Kenneth Wynsma, emeritus associate professor of art, died on October 17, 2011 in St. Petersburg, Florida, at the age of 81.The Emeritimes, Winter 2013, SIDNEY P. ALBERT, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, 1956-1979, died on January 9, 2013 about three months before he would have celebrated his 99th birthday. He was very family-oriented and loved traveling together and participating in family celebrations. He was appointed university-wide dean of instructional administration in 1974, and served in that role until 1980. He has described in detail the many issues related to its establishment. A resident of Castro Valley, the former Democratic state senator and assemblywoman from the Los Angeles area was best known for her focus on education during her 25 years in public service, which distinguished her as the woman with the longest record of service. Very active in his field, he served on the boards of directors of the Downey Museum and the Pasadena Society of Artists and participated in the USC Postdoctoral Colloquium. One of his most significant projects was a series of measurements relating to the energy conversion processes in the interior of stars, including the sun, specifically the one in which three helium nuclei fuse into a carbon nucleus. In addition to her many dedicated years as an educator, Lu sang for the Dallas Opera and was a versatile character actress, acting in a number of movies, television shows, and commercials. She was active in this work virtually until the time of her death. The widow of George Francis, emeritus professor of accounting, Betty was also a CPA and George's partner in private practice. from what was then Los Angeles State College in 1951, followed by his doctorate in psychology from UCLA in 1956. Starting as periodicals librarian, Morrie served as head of reference, head of reader services, and assistant college librarian. In addition to these professional activities, Mildred was a conscientious participant in faculty affairs, serving on many committees and particularly in the Academic Senate, where she was elected secretary in 1970. Bud met his wife Bette in Iowa and they married in 1946. Arthur's interests were extraordinarily comprehensive. A Masonic memorial service was held at Little Church of the Flowers in Forest Lawn Memorial Park. Fernando touched many lives, and members of the Cal State L.A. community who shared part of his life with him mourn the loss of their highly respected colleague. She retired to her home in Venice, California, but remained as active as she could. Maurine joined the Cal State L.A. faculty in 1950. As the campus was considered the upper-division extension of LACC, she and others taught courses at the junior and senior level and many of them were in the field of teacher training. He also earned an M.A. A former president of Division 26 (History of Psychology) of the American Psychological Association, Diamond personified scholarship. There he met the love of his life, Ellen. In Southern California, he chaired the Altadena Town Council, the Foothill Area Community Services Board of Directors, and the Southern California Conference of the UCC Camping Committee. The cause of death is unknown. He began his Cal State L.A. career in 1956, rapidly rising through the academic ranks to become chair of his department from 1967 to 1970. He served on numerous university committees and had four scholarly publications. He was able to get top speakers from large national accounting firms as well as top people from the Internal Revenue Service, U.S. General Accounting Office, and Securities and Exchanges Commission. During his years at CSLA, Clemmensen published numerous articles in professional journals, made many presentations before societies, and was the recipient of several research grants. Ferron left Cal State in the mid-60's to take the post of President of Dixie College in Utah, from which he had retired sixteen years ago. Jessie was accepted at Stanford University, which accepted only five women each year. His frustrated chair, Susan Mason, says that he was just not one of those people you can push to complete paperwork. The Emeriti Association had granted him associate member emeritus status only days before his death. He was an educator and administrator for more than 50 years, including provost positions at four California State University campuses. Services were held at Forest Lawn, Glendale, on April 11.The Emeritimes, Spring 2003, HAROLD STORCH, Professor of Electrical Engineering, 1955-1987, died on December 28, 2002 in Mission Viejo, where he resided after his retirement in 1987. One particular area that they both liked was science fiction and fantasy. His published obituary cites that he never missed an opportunity to work, never took a nickel he did not earn, and taught his children a solid work ethic by example. In his personal life, Bob was the consummate host, with a marvelous sense of humor, and his puns, according to the family, were the stuff of legend. Bob and Pat had numerous adventures, spending many years shuttling to their beach house in Mexico, camping, fishing, and traveling. He resumed his studies later in life, receiving an MBA from the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania in 1954. He then taught high school social science and history for four years in Albuquerque. Having grown up in the Santa Ynez Valley, he graduated from Santa Ynez High School and went on to discover the field of geological science at UC Santa Barbara (UCSB), where he obtained his B.A. He joined the English faculty at Cal State Los Angeles in 1953 as associate professor and assistant dean for academic affairs. They settled in rural eastern New Mexico, where he attended the local public schools and went on to what then was Eastern New Mexico Junior College. During the 1980s he published Die Tonsprache (The Language of Tones) and a second edition of Psychology of Music , which was first published in 1974. He was 88. Richard loved to see water from where he lived, and this included residing in Malibu and Topanga Canyon in California, and after retirement, on Orcas Island in the San Juan Islands of Washington and in Bellingham. Born on December 29, 1918 in Painsville, Ohio, Edward was the eldest of three children of Axel Nelson and Elma Karpinin. Jean worked closely with the public and private schools that were serving children with hearing impairments. Wirt began as a journalist, where his writing won him honors, including a Pulitzer nomination for his investigative reporting. A native of Texas, Betty earned bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Texas-Austin in English and drama. Beverly was born in Alexandria, Virginia, but grew up in Southern California in a large family of four girls and one boy. He was 88 years of age and had suffered a stroke previously, which was followed by complications that led to his death.
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