For more than 50 years, Francis directed numerous church choirs. He taught the summer field geologic mapping course in the Sierra Nevada Mountains for two summers. He was an adviser on Uganda's constitutional revision. She is survived by her brother John, sister Foye, two nieces, an aunt, and many cousins. He served two years on active duty (1944-46) and five postwar years in the Naval Reserve. He had been professor of Bible and translation at Asyut College, 1935-37; professor of Hebrew and Old Testament at Presbyterian Theological Seminary, Cairo, 1937-48; and professor of Oriental studies at American University in Cairo, 1948-69. He was truly a person who tried to work out the inevitable difficulties between administration and faculty governance. He was extraordinarily supportive toward both students and faculty. Concurrently with his teaching career, he served as a contributing editor for Skin Diving Magazine . Bill became Assistant Director, later Acting Director, then Executive Director. Services were held in Glendale on August 17.The Emeritimes, Fall 2003, JOHN SWAIN, Acting Associate Dean and Associate Dean, College of Arts and Letters, 2000-2003, and Professor of Music, 1984-2003, a Cal State L.A. faculty member for 19 years, passed away at his home in Rosemead on August 3, 2003 at the age of 52, after a courageous battle with colon cancer. There she became a major reference resource for both students and faculty on ethnohistory as well as the art and anthropology of the indigenous cultures in the areas in which she had lived and worked. Leon has the medals to show for it. He established the first Ph.D. program in chemistry at another HBCU. in mathematics from Columbia University in 1951 as well as completing his B.S. His invention of the square on the glass backboarda device to aid improvement in shooting basketsand the multicolored basketball were widely adopted, and are credited with advancing the sport. There he met the love of his life, Ellen. In research, he mentored a dozen undergraduates, five master's students, and one postdoctoral associate. She completed her doctorate at UCLA in 1952 and came to CSLA, where she remained until her retirement in 1967. He described being a bishop as a challenge and time-consuming position, but it is a choice experience which I shall always value. The University recognized this quiet giant by selecting him to receive the Outstanding Professor Award in 1980, and in 1988, Outstanding Alumnus of the School of Education. Born on December 29, 1918 in Painsville, Ohio, Edward was the eldest of three children of Axel Nelson and Elma Karpinin. The Daytons moved from Pasadena to Carmel Valley in 1985, after Bruce retired. Dr. Bishop earned a B.S. Faculty, family members, administrators, and students voiced their appreciation for the professor who dedicated himself to the betterment of students. In the department, he taught a variety of courses on comparative politics and international relations, in addition to courses specifically on South Asia and India. She obtained a B.E. His death was reported in the Fall 1993 issue of The Emeritimes; however, no additional information was available at that time. Ed took particular pride in mentoring minority and female students, guiding many to professional and Ph.D. programs. in 1953 and M.A. His interest in anatomy and skeletal remains continued as he involved students in a number of different projects. His fellow faculty members have described him as "a good hearted and gracious man." For years after his retirement, the History Department received phone calls from news organizations wishing to interview him. His preferred genre then was folk music, and he sang and strummed throughout his college years. George is survived by Patricia, his wife of 49 years, son Kevin and daughter-in-law Alexina, and three grandsons. After receiving his A.B. Cathy was recovering from cancer when she had a heart attack. From 1970 to 1990 he was an active member of the reserve component of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, retiring with the rank of Reserve Captain. Late in his retirement, he also painted in a unique geometric style. He also was registered as both a Professional Chemical Engineer and Professional Mechanical Engineer with the State of California.The Emeritimes, January 1984, GEORGIA S. ADAMS, Professor Emerita of Education and a member of the faculty group which organized the Emeriti Association, died in her sleep Sunday, February 19, 1984 at her Altadena home. In 1964, he also began the first of his remarkable 44 consecutive years of service in the Academic Senate, the last portion of which he served as representative of the emeriti. A memorial was held at Firefly Bistro in South Pasadena on April 11.The Emeritimes, Spring 2012, WAYNE PAUL ALLEY, Emeritus Professor of Biology, 1969-2000, died on June 22, 2012 from lung cancer, at 73 years of age. Lou had lived in Lake Arrowhead for many years when his second wife Jean died in June 2005. She is one of the main reasons I chose a career in science. Known by his middle name, Dale was born on October 28, 1934 in Portales, New Mexico, and moved with his family to California as a child. At the time of his death, Steckmesser was working on a book to be titled John Wayne and the Mythic West, as well as on the history of Natchez Trace which included his walking the entire distance.The Emeritimes, Fall 1995, WILLIAM H. BRIGHT, Associate Professor of Business Administration, 1950-1980, who served as Director and as Assistant Dean of Summer Sessions and Extension, died on May 9, 1995 in Pasadena from complications of myasthenia gravis. One of his first assignments on the Council was to help draft procedures for faculty promotions that would include faculty in the evaluation process. Subsequently, the chemistry department at Howard University has graduated more African Americans with Ph.D.s than any other college or university in the United States. Following abdominal surgery, he suffered complications that he could not overcome. Very active in academic governance, Dick served on committees from the department to university level and in the Academic Senate, in particular those involving professional ethics. Words cannot capture the awe, excitement, and motivation an 18-year-old black kid from the rural tobacco fields of North Carolina experienced as a college sophomore at Hampton University when his organic chemistry professor showed him the Textbook of Organic Chemistry with a photograph on the jacket cover of the author, an African American professor at Howard University named Dr. Lloyd Ferguson, said Costello Brown, emeritus professor of chemistry at Cal State L.A. As students, we were struggling with equations and nomenclature, and here was someone who looked like us who had written a whole book on organic chemistry! Marilynn graduated from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 1956 with a Bachelor of Nursing degree and interned at Cook County Hospital in the same city. Her coursesfrom general education to graduate levelreflect her scholarship in all these areas, as do her many publications, addresses, and consultantships. After retiring in 1992 he continued to teach one quarter per year until 1994. She taught various courses in the area of educational foundations. He was a member and paid leader of the Sierra Club. He is well remembered by many of his former students for his tough course on law and the media, dealing with libel, slander and the like. From 1934 to 1940, he taught at Big Creek High School in War, West Virginia. Survivors include his wife Lorraine, four children, and several grandchildren.The Emeritimes, Spring 1995, JOSEPH G. PHELAN (Psychology, 1959-1983) died on March 5, 1995, after a long illness. After Pearl Harbor, the Army and Jerry both wanted a second opinion, and when the medics examined him, indicated that it was up to him and asked if he wanted to try it. from Milwaukee State Teachers College, now the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. In recent years, he traveled to England to see his British colleague and friend, Sir Trevor Smith, who became Lord Smith. A memorial service honored him at this church on August 4. In 1957, Louis joined the faculty of the newly formed Los Angeles State College. Survivors include his wife, Louise, and two daughters. As acting associate dean of graduate studies and research, she administered several grants, produced a graduate studies brochure, and edited university and school guidelines and procedures to conform to the California Education Code. In 1955 the men's and women's physical education programs were merged, and Bud was named chairman of the Department of Physical Education, a post he held until 1969. A graduate of the Bronx High School of Science, he received a B.A. Hundreds of CPAs attended the program each year. Before that appointment, he had served as the admissions director at the Air Force Academy, near Colorado Springs, from its founding in 1958 to his military retirement as a lieutenant colonel in 1962. Her primary areas of research included multilingual/multicultural education, language development, biliteracy, new models of teacher education in a global community, and school transformation.The Emeritimes, Fall 2018, EDWARD JOHN KORMONDY, Vice President for Academic Affairs and Professor of Biology, 1982-1986, retired academic administrator, science educator, and author, died at home on April 28, 2018 ending his battle with cancer. Gunjit is survived by his wife Margarete; children Mark, Rene, and Annette and their spouses; and two grandsons. Dr. Heath grew up in Los Angeles and earned BFA (1950), MFA (1951), and Ed.D. A cofounder of CSLA' s Chicano Studies program, he designed and taught many of the classes in the undergraduate curricula. He also taught part-time at East Los Angeles College and Rio Hondo College early in his teaching career. 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. Because Harry did not like to drive the freeways, years before GPS technology was available he became an ace at finding expeditious surface routes to a host of locations far and near to his home. His assailants remain at large, unidentified. In his 13 years (1966-79) as President, Dr. Greenlee led the campus through a second major phase of maturation. There he interacted with a varied and wild international group of bohemians. Some of his triumphs were Figaro, Orpheus in Hell, Kiss Me Kate, Cabaret, and A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum . In conclusion, Cheryl Miller is a successful American former basketball player. She received her Ed.D. He received his Ph.D. from Louisiana State University in 1951 and was appointed Assistant Professor at Los Angeles State College of Applied Arts and Sciences (as Cal State was then known). He was instrumental in setting up a continuing education program for CPAs at Cal State L.A. Dr. For the remainder of his long career at Cal State L.A., he continued to teach medieval and Roman history on a regular basis. He then went on to a career with the New York Police Department. Perhaps the recognition that Lamar most cherished was that given him by the faculty of the Charter College of Education in 1995 to honor his extraordinary contributions to the College, by naming the center used to prepare teachers and offer children and youth of the community enrichment classes in writing and other academic areas the C. Lamar Mayer Learning Center. In 1981, he retired from the faculty and relocated to Maui. Many were not the decisions that he wanted to make, but expediency demanded action. He is survived by his wife Marilyn, five children, and 11 grand-children. program in the Department of Industrial Arts. The Emeritimes, Spring 2011, HERMAN J. LOETHER, Professor of Sociology, 1957-1967, a pioneer student as well as professor at Cal State L.A., died March 28, 2011 after an extended illness. 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. Her children's classes included both dance and acrobatics. She had had surgery for colon cancer, but complications that followed defeated her efforts to survive. He was awarded his doctorate in botany, plant physiology, and plant pathology by the University of Chicago later in 1946. Apart from teaching, he served for many years on the Foreign Language Advisory Panel of Californias Commission on Teacher Credentials. Manny had a career with Bethlehem Steel before he was called to serve in the Armed Forces during World War II. He published more than a dozen papers based on research about the Philippines. Stephanie was born in 1942 in Kansas City, Missouri to Shannon Jenkins from Shreveport, Louisiana and Carl Edwards from the island of Dominica, who met while attending Lincoln University in Jefferson City, Missouri. Services were held in San Diego on April 10. Ben's two sisters and stepmother also survive.The Emeritimes, Fall 2005 BERNARD J. He was instrumental in developing and modernizing the hydraulic engineering curriculum and making it a thriving program. After earning an A.A. degree at Santa Ana Junior College in 1940, he worked as a tool designer for Lockheed Aircraft until the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, and then joined the Army Air Corps and served in the Pacific theater as a camera repairman, earning five battle stars. He also served as a research associate at the Fels Institute of Local and State Government at the University of Pennsylvania and the Taxpayers' Association of New Mexico. During the 1940s and 1950s, Paulee was a star with the Met. After graduation, Jane moved to Chicago and married Warren Burton Lewis, whom she had met at Pomona College. His interest continues even now. He was one of the few professors who really understood the value of performance auditing, and was interested in getting this information out to the general audit community. In 'My Urban Wilderness in the Hollywood Hills', published in 1983, Lillard told of the mammals, reptiles and insects on the one-third acre that he lovingly tended; of the plants and trees, the swelling buds and the aphids that threatened them. Her national and international awards include the International Distinguished Service Award from the World Council for Gifted and Talented Children (2003), Distinguished Service Award from the National Association for Gifted Children (1997), and Ruth Martinson Award from the California Association for the Gifted. After 1977, he worked for The Aerospace Corporation and TRW, Inc. (later part of Northrop Grumman Corporation) until his retirement in 2007. His first book was a collaborative effort with Cal State LA vocal professor Esther Andreas, The Voice of Singing. He joined the faculty of the Department of Industrial Studies, now known as the Department of Technology, in 1959, where he taught until his retirement in Summer '88. One of his popular science lectures was entitled What's the Matter? He also wrote articles for the newspaper in Leisure Village. His parents were Noel and Gwendolyn Ferguson, a businessman and a maid. Irene and Herb Goldenberg were recently recognized for their contributions to the field of family therapy and were awarded the 2007American Family Therapy Academy lifetime achievement award. There, during the war, the Japanese kept hundreds of Chinese captives, mostly from Manchuria, as slave laborers under deplorable conditions. Golden Eagles Fall In A Titanic Battle With Cougars. Her greatest influence was probably Esther Andreas, noted singer and pedagogue, and she also coached with Gerhard Albersheim and Henry Jackson. He was passionate about teaching and was an extremely popular teacher who remained friends with many of his former students. In an unassuming and capable manner, he sought to create a consensus, to support and improve those standards. As the director of University Development, Carol established the institutional advancement program and was instrumental in establishing the Cal State LA Foundation. Born in San Diego, Sabrina received her B.A. 8(1), 1981 and Race and Poetry: Two Anthologies of the Twenties, College Language Association, March 1986. As a department administrator, he strenuously opposed the separation of social work faculty from the Department of Sociology, arguing pragmatically that we're better off bigger than smaller. During 1974 and 1975, Paul and history professor Richard D. Burns traveled together to small towns in several western states to present lectures and seminars on public policy, educational and other community issues, and development of resources. He was 83. Alice was born January 9, 1934 in Natchitoches, Louisiana to Thomas and Lela Nora. He helped establish a Summer Shakespearean Festival at Occidental. His writings about economic matters relating to higher education continue unabated with a book titled, "Toward Intelligent Choice: Philosophy of a Concerned Academic and Practicing Activist," and another, "Managing with Scarce Resources," a collection of articles, and an autobiography that deals primarily with the World War II years and the occupation of Japan. After seven years, they returned to the United States to live in Tacoma, Washington, near relatives. Last May he was made a fellow of the Historical Society of Southern California for his historical and environmental contributions. His uniform number 28 was officially retired at the induction ceremony and family members were presented with a framed Cal State LA baseball jersey. He chaired a committee on study abroad for the campus from 1962 to 1964 and was a member of the Chancellors Statewide Advisory Committee on International Programs during that period. Some 15 years after its publication in 1972, it was still one of the 10 most cited books in public administration. He was instrumental in the development of the department and its curriculum, particularly in quantitative methods. Some of her contributions were matched by external corporate donors. A few years after his retirement from Cal State L.A., Charles moved to Sedona, Arizona, and eventually began detailed research on his own genealogy. He earned a B.S. Ben felt he needed the money to attend college, so he attempted the demonstration. 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. One of his teaching strengths was the identification and preparation of potential graduate students. His passions also included California and Western paintings and works on paper, as well as Oriental rugs and textiles. In 2005, the campus Senate bestowed on him the title of Pater Senatus. Both were given a contract with the Metropolitan Opera Company. Survivors include his wife of 57 years, Mary Alice; two daughters, Susan Meyer of Hermosa Beach and Gaynor Cannon of Temple City; a sister, Dorothy Carson, of Albuquerque, NM; and four grandchildren. He appeared in several movies that received Academy Awards for acting honors, though like Jack Benny and Bob Hope, he joked every spring about not winning that year. Harold moved to Arizona after retiring in 1982. Joanne's areas of specialization included managerial accounting and decision making. Walking the empty streets, he witnessed an Army truck barreling down the street that struck and killed a little girl without even stopping. Several years after retiring from Cal State L.A., Bunny moved to Denver to be near her daughter Kathy, son-in-law Brian, and granddaughters Elizabeth and Leslie. As the college grew, Don's abilities were essential in the development of the curriculum and credential programs of what first became the Division of Education. in zoology, with minors in botany, psychology and history. Within two days of getting the flu, he came down with pneumonia, and he died the following day. His survivors include Ruth, to whom he was married for 54 years, son James John, and daughter-in-law Deborah.The Emeritimes, Fall 2006, ROBERT TURNER LEWIS, Emeritus Professor of Psychology, 1952-1982, died at age 82 on April 4, 2006 from multiple myeloma, less than two weeks after he and his wife Jane celebrated their 60 th wedding anniversary. Her last formal performance was at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo with a troupe called Variable Velocity, which included members of all ages. Her own garden was a showplace. John wrote a number of monographs on "psychological operations" in several Southeast Asian nations, as well as two entitled "The Soviet Propaganda Program" and "Tensions Within the Soviet Union" in the 1950s. Mid-way through his tenure as President (1972), the California State Colleges (CSC) became The California State Universities and Colleges (CSUC), and our campus became California State University at Los Angeles (the word "at" was later replaced by a comma), an action that greatly pleased him. She wrote many articles on tennis and a book, Tennis, now in its eighth edition. Rosemarie was raised in Aberdeen, Washington and graduated from Weatherwax High School in 1960. Jack was hired during President Howard McDonald's term in office, and remained his good friend throughout their retirement years. He became increasingly alarmed at the decline of their familiarity with their literary heritage. Doug was born on February 5, 1927 to Irvin and Mabel Currell, and spent his early childhood in Tulsa and Drumright City, Oklahoma. I learned a great deal from him and his legacy includes helping hundreds of thousands of students to achieve their goals. Millers international playing career was highlighted by gold medal performances in the 1984 Olympics, the 1983 Pan American Games and the 1986 Goodwill Games where she led each team in scoring. She lived in Los Angeles until six years ago when she decided to move closer to her family in Portland. With his 398th win on February 10, 2002, John became the Universitys all-time leader in victories, surpassing the late Jim Reeder, for whom the Cal State LA baseball field is named. He taught at Cal State L.A. and several other universities in his long career. John is survived by his wife, Ginny, a son Steve, who lives in Ashland, OR, and a daughter Andrea, who resides in Long Beach.The Emeritimes, Winter 1991, MICHAEL F. (MIKE) ABBADESSA, long-time member of the staff of the Physical Education Department who was known to many as an organizer and promoter of faculty-staff golf tournaments for the CSEA and the Athletic Department, died October 1, 1990 of cancer at 64 years of age. Dr. Spielman, holder of degrees from Stanford and USC, had been a member of the University's chemistry faculty since 1961. It was then that she met her second husband, Bernard Warner, a professor of health and safety studies at Cal State L.A., whom she married in 1967. degrees, Jake first taught in the Alhambra elementary schools. 31 jersey in November of 2006. in nursing in 1971 from Cal State LA. During a sabbatical, Richard ended up at the Tewa pueblo in Taos, where he was embraced by the people there and lived among them off and on from 1963 to1978. A memorial was held on August 29 in Salem.The Emeritimes, Fall 2011, MARY A. KRAMER, Emeritus Associate Professor of Family Studies and Consumer Sciences, 1963-1991, passed away on December 31, 2010. He taught at the University of Washington, University of Alaska, and Washington State University before beginning doctoral studies. They lived in Alameda, where Jack attended grade school, graduating in 1944. John lived in Pasadena but he also had a condo in San Diego. During those 23 years, he was also an experimental psychologist at UCLA, according to an extensive obituary in the Los Angeles Times, which explained that applying for faculty positions at UCLA and Cal State L.A., he was offeredand quickly acceptedboth.
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