A scholarship in Judy's name is being established at Pasadena City College. Born in Ontario, Canada, in 1911, Johnston earned a B.Sc. Roysher was a strong supporter of the Library and its librarians and a close friend of the late Vice President for Academic Affairs, John A. Palmer. He was told privately by colleagues that, while he could work on his doctorate there, his involvement in the pre-war years as the president of Scientists for Peace, an idealistic, left-leaning group at Berkeley, meant he would be unable to work at the radiation laboratory, the Rad Lab; he would not be given security clearance. In acknowledgment of his dedication, the church is dedicating its library to his memory. A genial, well-liked person, Jesse was active in campus affairs while at Cal State L.A. After moving to Humboldt, he was chosen as the Dean of the School of Business there.The Emeritimes, Spring1989, ADAM E. DIEHL, Emeritus Professor of Education and Director of Audiovisual Services at Cal State L.A. from 1955 until his retirement in 1970, died February 20, 1989. In 1968, Cal State L.A. honored him with an Outstanding Professor Award. In his final months of life, he defied the cancer slowly consuming his body with resiliency and hope. from Queens College in 1954, followed by an A.M. in 1957 and a Ph.D. in 1962 from Columbia University. Soto-Perez received his B.A. Equally impressive as the range of his interests in literature was his capacity for remembering so much of it. He was stationed at Buckley Field, near Denver, assigned to an examining unit for the selection of personnel for air crews. She graduated with a B.S. He spent the next year, 1970-71, as the deputy state university dean, instructional programs, in the California State University Chancellor's Office. Funeral services were held at the San Gabriel Mission Church, where she was an active communicant. A. Leo Lemay were the first to display language shifts, additions, and deletions as Franklin invented himself as the poor boy made good. He resided in Upland, and had been retired from his post in the School of Education since June, 1979. at USC. Following degrees from City College of New York (CCNY) (BSS, 1949) and Columbia University (M.S., 1950), he labored on his dissertation at CCNY despite a hostile member of his committee who disagreed strongly with the directions and guidance of his committee chair. Born on November 6, 1921 in Honeoye Falls, New York, near Rochester, Frank spent most of his early life in Florida. Prior to retiring in 1989, he served as the department chair. He returned to the United States before the onset of World War II, and played as a soloist with the Chicago Symphony before beginning an even more distinguished career as an accompanist. She had been granted emeritus status at the time of her retirement. A few years after the establishment of the emeriti group at Cal State L.A., Sidney felt the need for the establishment of a statewide association of California State University emeriti. She asked 37 questions; he answered all of them, Rachel states. in 1941, B.S. He was 96. Thelma joined the Los Angeles State College faculty in 1951, when she and her husband, Albert Graves, were each offered a position. (in 1948) and Ph.D. (1951) degrees. In 1984-85, the United Negro College Fund supported his visiting professorship at Bennett College, an HBCU for women in Greensboro, North Carolina. He was an experimental and comparative psychologist, and did behavioral research primarily with fish and sea anemones. Chuck joined the mechanical engineering faculty at Cal State L.A. in Fall 1959, and spent 32 years as a dedicated and enthusiastic teacher of 25 different mechanical engineering courses. He enlisted in the United States Navy in 1944, and saw extensive service in the South Pacific. She became a member of the Board of Directors of the Southwest Museum Collector's Club in 1989 after having served as president and vice president, and then joined the Autry Museum Board. As one top university administrator put it, "he seemed always to know more about the subject I came to discuss with him than I did, even in the academic area I headed. Perhaps it was because he was an assiduous reader who could be observed through the open door to his office deeply engrossed at his countertop desk, literally absorbing the contents of stacks of memoranda, reports, and other materials. After his discharge, he received a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Miami in 1947 and a Master of Arts from Los Angeles State College in 1953. A celebration of Vernon's life was held on March 16 at Oneonta Congregational Church.The Emeritimes, Spring 2013, HERBERT MOSKOWITZ, Professor of Psychology, 1962-1985, died from complications of leukemia at his Encino home on November 21, 2012 at the age of 87. In 1988, at the age of 57, he was awarded his third degree Black Belt in Shotokan Karate. He is broadly known for Soldate 60, the clay body formula that has broad application and is used extensively in the U.S. Joe is most noted for his dedication and generosity as a professor. In 1990, Dale received the Outstanding Professor Award from Cal State LA. He was offended when he was offered senior citizen rates for membership in the campus chess club. In 1998, he underwent bypass surgery, but his medical difficulties continued as the disease progressed. A memorial service was held on January 12 at Temple Valley Beth Shalom in Encino.The Emeritimes, Spring 2014, ARTHUR H. NIEHOFF, Emeritus Professor of Anthropology, 1968-1986 and chair of the Anthropology Department at Cal State L.A., died on August 25, 2013 at his farm home in Escondido. During Rikard's year as president of the League of Nations General Assembly, ke served on his staff. She directed Cal State L.A.s audiology program for her entire 23 years at the University. 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. He is survived by two brothers, Andris and Juris Ubans. Thanks to the GI Bill and the National Defense Education Fellowship, he continued his studies and received A.B. He could be blunt, however, when necessary, as when he told a young colleague complaining about his teaching load and salary that you shouldnt complain since we are well paid for doing what we love. Art is survived by his wife Jutta, sons Scott and William, and four grandchildren. He was 91 years old. Applying to him the title of one of his own books, colleagues say he followed his career star. Vernon served on dozens of committees and was a faculty advisor to undergraduate and graduate students. William L. Sternal, a counselor who held additional positions at various times, including associate dean of students, director of counseling, and director of other student services, died on July 9, 2005 at the age of 65. The cause of his death was not disclosed. From Portland she went to San Francisco where her operatic career began, singing with the San Francisco Opera. In accordance with his wishes, Townley' s ashes were cast at sea by the Neptune Society.The Emeritimes, Fall 1997, JAY H. ZISKIN, Professor, Counseling Center, 1961-1979, who in 1961 was appointed professor in the Counseling Center at Cal State L.A., died on June 14, 1997 in West Los Angeles of prostate cancer. Eager to embark on a career in academia, he began teaching at CSU Fullerton, but soon moved to the Los Angeles campus, where he remained until retirement. In the fall of that year, Emil and Alice moved to California, where Emil taught and coached at St. Monica High School before beginning his Cal State L.A. career in 1956 as a faculty member and football coach. His professor planned to send him to Harvard University for a Ph.D., but Don was drafted by the U.S. Army and sent to serve in the Korean War. Ram commanded great respect from those with whom he worked. During her long campus career, she achieved a B.A. He continued his activities as coordinator for the Industrial Technology in Service project for about a decade. With his Ph.D. in public administration in hand, he was tapped to accept assignments in Pakistan and Indonesia to assist those countries in developing functional governments. As a result, he never returned to his research and never returned to complete his doctorate. and Ph.D. degrees in experimental psychology at UCLA in 1957 and1958, respectively. She led USC to a pair of national titles and guided the 1984 U.S. Olympic Team to a gold medal. After retirement, Ellie continued to contribute to the Cal State L.A. Emeriti Association, serving as a member of the Executive Committee and as corresponding secretary. He is survived by sons Larry and Alan, daughter Vivian, former wife Lucy Ann, sister Beverly, and longtime friend, Elaine Amromin.The Emeritimes, Spring 2013, JEAN PHYLLIS LACOUR, Emeritus Professor of Psychology, 1977-2001, died on November 22, 2012 at the age of 91, after a long struggle with Alzheimer's disease. His childhood was spent in Southern California. Joe had a worldwide reputation as a researcher and was the recipient of numerous grants from the National Science Foundation and the National Institute of Health. Born in Calgary on July 9, 1923, Helen was the middle child of three. He was a natural and expansive teacher, and his students invariably gave him outstanding evaluations. He published two articles in Spanish in the Revista interoamericana psicolgica . ke was born in Stockholm on July 7, 1913, the second of three sons. To know Ed was to recognize that the same intensity and openness that characterized his professional life defined his life generally. After retiring from Cal State L.A., he was a consultant in higher education and also assisted in the establishment of Lutheran-sponsored Christ College in Irvine, CA, which conferred upon him an honorary LI.D. He established the Hugh W. Kennedy Memorial Scholarship at his alma mater, the University of Michigan. When the war ended, Al enrolled in refresher courses at UC Berkeley and accepted a position in the School of Business of the University of Kansas at Lawrence. In his early years at Cal State L.A., he team-taught methodology classes with Morris Better. It was a hard-fought victory, and democracy in this nation is the safer for Bruces determination to right a wrong. He leaves his wife Mary, three daughters, five grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.The Emeritimes, Spring 2000, JANICE ELAINE DAY, Professor of Dance, 1960-1986, died on April 29, 2000 after aggressively fighting cancer. His survivors include his wife Diane, daughter Bonnie Jean, sons Christopher and Albert, three sisters, and a brother.The Emeritimes, Fall 2001, RON E. HULL, Assistant Professor of Physical Education, 1963-2001, and Head Coach of Football, 1976-1978, who served on the physical education faculty for 37 years, died of heart failure on July 22, 2001 at the age of 61. and USC (Ed.D. His father was a gifted photographer who died in Norman's infancy, and his mother raised Norman and his siblings in strained circumstances. degrees from Temple University in 1960 and 1973, respectively. Fondly remembered for her charm, tact, and bright conversation, Marie was also a teacher and scholar with high standards, and was devoted to literary excellence. After receiving his M.S. Funeral services were held at St. James Episcopal Church on February 26. While growing up in southern California, Miller displayed extraordinary talent on the basketball court. at the University of Southern California in 1958. He continued at that university for his Ph.D., which was awarded in 1966 for a thesis supervised by Felix Gutmannthey became lifelong friends and collaboratorson electric properties of psychotropic compounds. Dr. Graves was a member of a small team of educational administrators, led by Dr. Howard McDonald, who developed a complex college curriculum, put together a faculty of able teachers, and built an entire new campus to house classes and laboratories in the years following World War II. As president until 1996, he rebuilt the schools reputation as Colorados premier teaching university and stabilized its $120 million budget while dramatically improving private sector support. Throughout the 1970s, his support for emeriti issues increased, and he was the dominant figure in the establishment of the Emeriti Association at Cal State L.A. He was licensed as a professional engineer in both New York and California. degree in chemistry with honors in 1940. Much of Joes work centered on the transient nature of material, such as earth, water, fire, and the night sky, and his focus was on the creative process more than the conclusion. True to his love for higher learning, he volunteered to participate in the UC Irvine 90+ Study on Aging. Bill was born on May 26, 1931 in Evansville, Indiana. He was president of the campus AAUP. Thus began a true David and Goliath story. Fred had stopped drinking wine at the lunches more than a decade ago, saying that he always waits until the sun goes down before the first glass. Following his discharge, he earned an MSLS degree at Columbia University, and then pursued additional graduate study at Harvard while working there as a reference librarian. She was first and foremost a champion and an advocate for students. from Pomona College in 1955. Matilde is survived by her husband Rodolfo, her three sons, and their families.The Emeritimes, Fall 2007, JEANINE (GIGI) GAUCHER-MORALES, Emerita Professor of French and Spanish, 1965-2000, passed away unexpectedly at the age of 69 on May 20, 2007 of cardiac arrest at her home in San Gabriel. War then intervened, and he served in the Navy as an aviation radioman on an aircraft carrier in the Pacific. He and his family moved to Los Angeles after he finished elementary school. He was a member of the Cairo Rotary Club, and he served as president of the Rotary Club of Heliopolis in 1959 and 1960. In 1982, he retired from the Army. He was 93 years old. She wrote a bill dedicating $800 million in bond money to construct school classrooms. A memorial service will be held in the CSUDH Student Union on Sunday, February 9, 2003 at 1:00 p.m.The Emeritimes, Winter 2003 ROBERT BRYAN BENOIT, Emeritus Professor of Counselor Education, 1965-1990, died in March 2003 of long-term complications following a stroke. He is survived by son Tony and daughter-in-law Alice Hillbruner, daughter and son-in-law Tina Laurie and Paul Barry, and four grandchildren.The Emeritimes, Spring 2005, SIGMUND H. JAFFE, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, 1958-1986, died January 3, 2005 in Camarillo. He also initiated one of the early searches for theo retically predicted small-scale fluctuations in the isotropy of the cosmic background radiation, and provided the first quantitative evidence for large scale clustering in the distribution of galaxies. Mac then began his life as a consummate potter, painter, sculptor, writer, and poet. Finding law too practical, his family says, Mr. Leary returned to California to teach English at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, where he wrote with James S. Smith two college-level English textbooks "Think Before You Write" and "Thought and Statement." His area of the world was South Asia, and Tom consulted and ran institutes on South Asia throughout his career. At the university level, John served as a member of the Academic Senate, Educational Policy and Resource Committee (which he chaired during Summer Quarter 1985), and Joint Honors Subcommittee. A much loved and respected professor in the Criminal Justice Department and director of the master's degree program in criminalistics, Longhetti received his B.A. In addition to her daughter, Helen is survived by a son, a stepson and six grandchildren. In his large lecture introduction to American politics course, taught in King Hall Lecture Hall 1, he lectured on the unfairness of the relocation of Japanese-Americans during World War II. Terry served on the University General Education Task Force in the early 1980s that crafted the original general education program. After losing Jean in June 2007, Harry sent out a message that December that provided updates on the education and employment of both his children, also indicating that Brian was living with him and that Carolyn was visiting regularly. He was appointed to the faculty in the former Department of Health and Safety Studies in 1963, following several years as registrar. Lu had an outsized talent and personality that stole the show wherever she went. The final text, known as the Kunming-Montreal agreement, officially recognises Indigenous Peoples' work, knowledge, innovations and practices as . Joanne was born in Chicago and began her college education there, receiving a B.S. He earned a B.S. One particular area that they both liked was science fiction and fantasy. Before joining the Cal State L.A. faculty, Jean taught at eight schools and was the director of the Speech and Hearing Rehabilitation Clinic at the University of Illinois College of Medicine. He was instrumental in procuring a set of aerial photographic images from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, covering all of California. Funeral services were held at the family plot at Lyles Church in Fluvanna County, Virginia.The Emeritimes, Fall 2020, THOMAS ANNESE, Emeritus Associate Professor of Philosophy, 1961-1992, died on July 7, 2020. Florence was the widow of Solomon Diamond, former emeritus professor of psychology, and herself a psychologist formerly in professional practice. From 1969 to 1973, she directed the Brain Behavior Reptile Laboratory in the Psychology Department and served as department coordinator of graduate programs and chair of the Graduate Programs Committee. Cal State LA was 10-1 at home with the only defeat coming in overtime. 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 . Although he will be greatly missed by his former students and colleagues, his work continues to be cited widely by behavior analysts interested in understanding and teaching verbal behavior. The second son of six children, K.T. Earle received his bachelor's, master's, and Ph.D. degrees from USC. He received a B.A. The associate chair of the department for many years, Jane served effectively on department, school, and university committees, and was key on selection committees for new faculty. He hired a technician and another faculty member to help build a mass spectrometer for age dating and chemical research on ancient rocks. Like Jean, she succumbed to Alzheimer's disease. In this capacity, she was granted the civilian rank of GS-15, the equivalent of a brigadier general. His desk was a sea of papers, books, and file folders from which he could somehow extract the very document one requested. By the 1980s, Lou was working closely with the United Neighborhood Organization (UNO), founded in Chicago as a grassroots undertaking between community groups and churches. He faced the same fate as many notable physicists, including Edward Condon, Joseph Weinberg, Giovanni Rossi Lomanitz, David Bohm, Max Friedman, I. David Fox, Byron Darling, Wendell Furry, Albert Einstein, Philip Morrison, Bernard Peters, and J. Robert Oppenheimer. He was always on time, remembered his lines, remembered his blocking, and was always in good humor even during the long technical rehearsals. After her initial training at Hunter College in New York, and advanced training at Oklahoma A&M, she was stationed in Washington, D.C. as a yeoman (petty officer). As a long-time friend of his put it, He never hesitated to stand up for what he felt was right, but he was a very tolerant person. Norman is survived by his wife, Doris, whom he married in 1958; son David; daughters Jessica and Sara; and four grandchildren.The Emeritimes, Fall 2012, JACKIE LOU HOYT, Emerita Professor of Physical Education, 1958-1992 and a former member of the Emeriti Executive Committee, passed away on July 31, 2012 after a lengthy illness. More recent sources of pride include his establishment of the Stuart Fischoff Excellence in Musical Theater Award at Southern Illinois University (SIU) in Carbondale, where he and Rachel lived following his retirement from the University, and his donation of his library and papers to SIUs Global Media Research Center. His postdoctoral experiences included teaching at the UCLA Brain Research Institute and in Mexico at Universidad Veracruzana Centro de Investigaciones Cerebrales. Colleagues remember the challenges of teaching classes without proper facilities to accommodate the activity classes or dressing rooms to change clothes. She began her career as a nurse educator at Dearborn Community College in Michigan. In the late sixties, he was elected president of the California Music Educators Association. He later on turned his research emphasis to the biology of desert tortoises, and acted as a statistical consultant to several research groups seeking to save this endangered species. He loved nothing more than sharing his passion with those around him and was always eager to educate those who were interested. He guided the department for 17 years, retiring in 1973. His sculpture was exhibited regularly (many will remember his several pieces that were on display in the Maryann C. Moore Conference Room, Admin. Chuck and Thelma celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in 2005. Chors degrees were in accounting, and he made his career and found his calling in shaping the minds of future generations as a professor of accounting at Cal State LA, where he taught for 17 years, beginning in 1985. He retired from football then, at the peak of his sports career, and was named pastor of the Lincoln Avenue Methodist church in Pasadena. He went to Washington, D.C. for government employment in 1944, and he and Charlotte were married that year in Alexandria, Virginia. She also acted as the international liaison for overseas students who needed to meet Immigration and Naturalization Service guidelines for American study. In addition, he was president of the campus chapter of the California Faculty Association. Sociology Department chair Steven Gordon, who knew Terry first as his Cal State L.A. class instructor and later as faculty peer, recalls, Among my department colleagues over the decades, Terry may be the one who most expressed a zealous and unflagging enjoyment of the sociological life of the mind. In 1942, he received both his B.S. He was a member of many societies and associations in the field of audiology, and he was editor of The Voice from 1966 to 1968. He loved the whimsy in restaurants that could have a big brown hat on the roof or be shaped like a coffee cup or a ship. He obtained an M.A. Rosemarie was an avid bridge player and tennis player, and she could often be found on campus, even after she retired, playing tennis with colleagues Donald Dewey and Joan Johnson. After retirement, Arlene continued to live in the Los Angeles area with her husband, Irving, who survives her.The Emeritimes, Winter 1992, SEYMOUR L. CHAPIN, Emeritus Professor of History, died on February 3, 1992 at the age of 65 in Los Angeles from heart complications. His effort resulted in The Fingerhut Guide: Sources in American History (1973). He and Dorothy were together for nearly 16 years.The Emeritimes, Spring 2003, HANNA SHAY, wife of Carleton Shay (Education), died on January 23, 2003 of cancer, after a five-year siege. He also was a consultant to an Episcopal church in Highland Park. Thus he was a major figure in the development of the present campus, including the preponderance of the buildings and grounds that the University encompasses today. I was really against my son Erik Seidenglanz being a street performing magician. She is survived by two sons, a daughter, and three grandchildren.The Emeritimes, Fall 2006, LOUIS C. DE ARMOND, Emeritus Professor of History, 1950-1979, died in San Mateo the day after his 88 th birthday (2006). He had been ill for the last year and a half. In December 1989, Alan and Lia were married in the Civil Registry in Argentina, followed by their religious ceremony in January 1990, the year in which Lia came to live in the U.S. Hannah Malena, the joy of Alan's and Lia's life, was born in May 2006. He held B.A., M.A. He taught full-time at Cal State LA from 1959 to 1980. Even after retiring in 2002, Al was active in his scholarly pursuits, serving as past-president of the California Reading Association, a Fulbright scholar in Ecuador, and a Researcher in Residence at the American Embassy in Baku, Azerbaijan. Upon his return, Joe attended Fairfield University in Connecticut, where he developed a deep appreciation for education and for the Spanish language. In the years that followed, he was active in academic governance, serving on most university committees, the former Faculty Council, and the Academic Senate. Other plays that he directed here include The Caine Mutiny Courtmartial, Macbeth, King Lear, Oedipus, East Lynn, Damn Yankees, Ah Wilderness, The Bells are Ringing, The Skin of Our Teeth, Side by Side by Sondheim, Dylan , and Plaza Suite . Her parents had a general store, which provided the family's livelihood, and Jean was an active participant in its management, particularly after her father's death in 1949.
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