She attended Montana State University, from which she received a B.A. Richards early career was spent at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Los Angeles and the Juliana-Maria Institute in Copenhagen, with Margaret Lennox. Jesse was born November 24, 1920 in Bearden, Oklahoma. Besides Cal State L.A., he created maces for USC, the University of Buffalo, Syracuse University, and Bethune-Cookman College. He taught at several Philippine universities, John Jay College of the City University of New York, the University of Hawaii, and CSU Long Beach before coming to Cal State L.A. in 1971. 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. In 1995, Chuck opened the Village Square Gallery in Montrose. Sig became an emeritus professor in 1986. Born in Hollywood on June 27, 1929, John graduated Phi Beta Kappa with a B.A. Sue helped Ron raise his two children from a previous marriage, as well as the many dogs, cats, and birds they adopted. David grew up in Marshfield as the youngest of four brothers born to Helen Connor Laird and Melvin Robert Laird, Sr. To his family, he was a walking encyclopedia of Butler family history. An expert in the Westward Movement, Steckmesser taught in the History Department from 1960-1985. San Antonio Gardens, a retirement facility in Claremont.The Emeritimes, Fall 1991, JANICE MAE DUNKELBURG, wife of Emeritus Professor James Dunkelburg, Vice President for Administration and Secretary of the Emeriti Association, died July 31, 1991 after a long illness. The Emeritimes, Winter 1990, DAVID LINDSEY, Emeritus Professor of History, a member if the Department of History faculty for 27 years (1956 until 1983), died August 26, 1989, at his Long Beach home. There he lived among many new and interesting friends who remember him fondly for his wit and charm. Another aspect of their love of books was their willingness to run the semiannual book sale for the Southern California Section of the Mathematical Association of America (MAA), which publishes the American Mathematical Monthly. He also was commissioned by the Los Angeles County Fair to do a 100 by 50 foot mural with the theme, "Feather River Water Project." After his retirement, Arnie traveled widely and pursued many interests, but most important to him was his work with Beth Chayim Chadishim, the worlds first reform Jewish LGBT synagogue, of which he was one of its first members and its president from 1975 to 1977.The Emeritimes, Winter 2017, BEVERLY JEANNE SCHNITZLER, Emerita professor of art, 1959-1997, died peacefully on August 1, 2016 in Scottsdale, Arizona. Upon her return, she taught an African graduate seminar and later, an undergraduate proseminar on the African novel. He was smart, efficient, calm, logical, reasonable, and had a great sense of humor. That sense of humor was one of Dons hallmarks, whether recalling anecdotes for Thats A Good One!, livening up a gathering, or exchanging jokes in person and via email with colleagues. in 1950 from UC Santa Barbara; an M.A. His earlier career included service as a military policeman during the Korean War, service with the San Fernando Police Department, and service with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, where he took an early retirement to become an educator. From the age of nine, her main interest was dancing, and she thought it would be her lifelong career. August 1, 2022 by Carl. He received institutional grants at Cal State L.A. for research in speech criticism and a creative leave for research on "The American Tradition in Public Address." She incorporated the Orff concepts into her teaching, and continued her own studies in other institutions, including the Orff Institute and USC. Founded in 1947, the University serves more than 27,000 students and 240,000 distinguished alumni, who are as diverse as the city we serve. Len is survived by his wife of almost 73 years, Jean; sisters-in-law Jane and Joan; and numerous nieces and nephews. 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. At the same time, Don proved himself a dedicated teacher. Her Ed.D. Those who came in contact with Gunjit were impressed by his keen mind. One of his former students is Rudy Acua, in many ways the founder of the Chicano Studies movement. The cause of death was not disclosed. He taught in Montana, Wyoming and California before returning to his native Los Angeles to join the faculty of Los Angeles City College in 1933. at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, majoring in French and Spanish, with a minor in English. Perhaps the most important of these was his influence in curriculum matters. Al was an avid reader of Jane Austen and Shakespeare. He had suffered from Parkinson's disease since 1996 and, during his final two years, lost his ability to walk or stand, and finally his speaking, swallowing, and breathing muscles were impaired. His daughter reports that he felt this teaching position was the career best suited for him. Because of his position as a regional manager of Avianca, they traveled frequently, and whenever they traveled to Spanish-speaking countries, Matilde would always look for authentic materials for her textbooks. Len continued going to Senate meetings well into his 90s, and put many miles on his car driving to Long Beach and other meeting sites throughout the state. They moved to California, where Gunjit founded Sikand Engineering Associates in 1958. Courses he taught included inorganic chemistry, general botany, general biology, fungi, morphology of vascular plants, cytology and microtechnique, plant tissue culture, and radiation biology. 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! As a very young man, he followed his father into the infantry and participated in five different campaigns in World War II, including the storming of Normandy Beach. thesis students in the early '70s was Samuel Durrance, who went on to earn a doctorate and later became known on campus as the Cal State L.A. astronaut for his two shuttle flights as a payload specialist. He began his teaching career at Cal State L.A. in 1971. Returning to New York University, he completed the Ph.D. in 1941. His military decorations include the Legion of Merit, four Meritorious Service Medals, and the Air Force Commendation Medal, among others. In 1965, the Cal State L.A. Associated Students awarded her honorary membership. Tom received B.A. She was known to have declared, I couldn't die. Irene was born in 1927, during the depression, on a farm in Iowa. In 1959, he relocated to Southern California, where he worked for Systems Development Corporation, an early designer of computer software, until he began teaching at Cal State L.A. One colleague reports that John was a numbers guy surrounded by clinicians and researchers. As a result, he faced years of an expensive legal battle before his case attracted the attention of the American Civil Liberties Union, after which he was aided financially both by a generous and dedicated defense lawyer and by contributions facilitated by Nobel laureate Linus Pauling, who chaired a Quaker legal fund that granted financial aid to such fights as Daytons. 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. at USC in 1960 and a Ph.D. at UCLA in 1971. Bruce developed a mathematical model, which produced beam simulations (all done using a slide rule!) His subject specialties included political science, history, sociology, and social work. Once their ammunition was gone, they were overwhelmed and forced to surrender. She became emerita faculty in 1976 when she was chair of the Secondary Education Department. Frank had a 32-year career in the auto industry prior to coming to campus. His extracurricular activities were playing clarinet in the band, which provided a scholarship that paid his tuition of $25 per semester and boxing, which he pursued until he encountered some long-armed Italians in golden glove competition in Chicago. He joined the Emeriti Association immediately upon retirement, and was soon serving on its executive committee. The line to enter his retirement party stretched from the location of the former University Club far down the campus main walkway. He loved involving everyone in the family in music by giving them lessons, and always encouraged them to pursue their education. There is a postulate offered by some political scientists that the people of a democracy will select persons best qualified to lead them at any given time. In 1981, he chaired a WASC accreditation team that traveled to Indonesia and Malaysia for site visitations of schools in the East Asian Regional Conference of Schools. She was able to develop sites for clinical experience with dietetic personnel at a number of hospitals and clinics. in history at Los Angeles State College of Applied Arts and Sciences in 1961, the only alumnus to become a member of the Cal State L.A. history faculty. in 1954. Through this effort, Hershel was also the Region IX Director for the federal Center on Child Abuse and Neglect. In 1984, he and his slide rule collection appeared in Newsweek. Other honors included representing the California State University on the State Liaison Committee for Foreign Language Articulation in the 1970s and 1980s, and representing California on the National Defense Education Act Committee on Foreign Language Teaching at New York University in 1965. Beverly and Bernie traveled the world extensively, back in the day when parents got a 90 percent travel discount with Pan Am. Dr. Bishop earned a B.S. In 1973, he had published his first of many textbooks entitled Contemporary Clinical Psychology , and in 1976 he had published Abnormal Psychology: A Social/Community Approach. He received one of the University's early Outstanding Professor Awards. He is survived by his son Timothy, his brother Robert, and two stepsons. Carols greatest joy came from being a mentor to many throughout her career, and famiily and friends. He was 86. When they returned to Montana after the war, they tried to accept those winters again, but California beckoned. Charley is survived by Janet, brother David, two children from his first marriage, and a granddaughter. An active supporter of the Democratic Party, Boubion served as field deputy for Councilman Edward R. Roybal, and in 1776 he was named by Governor Edmund G. Brown, Jr. as one of the first non-lawyer members of the State Bar of California Board of Governors. He was then appointed as an assistant professor of education at St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York. He also was the master's degree adviser for the department. When the league initiated its year-end tournament in 1966, Cal State LA won, and the women were repeat champions the following year. She also was the head coach and general manager of the WNBAs Phoenix Mercury for four seasons and led the Mercury to the WNBA Finals in 1998. Her interests and activities included garden design and fiber arts, notably the weaving of Rya rugs. Louis acquired extensive experience in the organization, development, and direction of both choral and instrumental groups in public schools, colleges, and communities. After 1977, he worked for The Aerospace Corporation and TRW, Inc. (later part of Northrop Grumman Corporation) until his retirement in 2007. in 1954 from UC Santa Barbara, M.A. John was born in Yankton, South Dakota and graduated from the University of South Dakota in 1972 with a BFA in music. He remained at both institutions throughout his career, retiring in 1985. His son explained that Herb would go and teach at Cal State, with a bow tie in his pocket so he could put it on for lectures, then head to his lab at UCLA. Surviving colleagues from the Psychology Department were aware of his employment at UCLA but were not uncomfortable with this arrangement, feeling that Cal State L.A. students and faculty profited from visiting and sometimes working in the Moskowitz UCLA lab. She was a strong advocate of aural/oral education teaching hearing-impaired individuals to use their residual hearing to learn to speak and speech-read. Al graduated in 1950 from the University of Wisconsin, Madison with a B.S. Her extraordinary generosity was evidenced in her establishing graduate fellowships, including the Carol Smallenburg Fellowship for students studying global education or media in secondary social sciences, the Harry Smallenburg Fellowship for students in counselor education, and the Margaret A. Thornton Fellowship for students in elementary and secondary education. The dozen or so agents who were to go into Tokyo were taken into a windowless room. Universally well-liked by his colleagues, Friedman was regarded as a "gentleman scholar." in Zoology in 1939 from the University of Washington and taught this in high schools. He then went to the University of New Mexico, where he earned his Ph.D. in 1968. Gunjit is survived by his wife Margarete; children Mark, Rene, and Annette and their spouses; and two grandsons. Among his many achievements was a Fulbright fellowship in Argentina from 1972-73, which gave him a chance to meet some of the writers he studiedand visit their favorite haunts. Despite a small roster, Miller guided the Golden Eagles to their best home record in the programs history. He resided in Upland, and had been retired from his post in the School of Education since June, 1979. Not only faculty, but students as well were drawn to him and appreciated his knowledge and his humanity. He was a passionate teacher and a lifelong mentor to many students, and his positive impact will long resonate throughout the art education community in Southern California and beyond. He looked up, saw a travel agency, and promptly bought a one-way fare to Santa Barbara because an army buddy had described its beauty. They always met at Rosemaries favorite lunch place, Julienne, in San Marino, and Rosemarie always had the same luncha filet of beef sandwich and a bottle of beer (sadly, nobody else could drink as they were all still working), and they always shared a dessert. Ed authored more than 70 publications in ecology, biology, and science education, including on higher education of Chinas 55 minority nationalities. It was not only the academic job market, however, that collapsed in the early 1970s. Most professors would insist on release time to pursue such an endeavor, and so did Bernie. In 1966, he earned his masters degree in engineering administration from the University of Utah. Her husband was an aviator, so he often flew her from one appearance to another. She served as an accreditation visitor and worked with the American Nurses Association and the California Nurses Association to improve access into nursing. Rashad published 48 papers, mainly in the field of the adsorption and surface chemistry and catalysis. In 1958, she was hired as an assistant professor in the Division of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation. He was also held in extremely high regard by the external community, especially high school counselors, teachers, and community college contacts. Hubert was married twice, but had no children. He voluntarily provided therapy to individuals and families in need. She was higher education consultant for the Michigan Governor's Task Force from 1977 to 1978. Bob Howard was one of the very few true geniuses I have ever had the pleasure of working with, recalls emeritus professor Martin Roden. 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. After she settled in Los Angeles, Erika finished her undergraduate education at what was then Los Angeles State College (B.A., 1958), working her way through college like so many of our students, in her case as a waitress in a German restaurant. His coaching duties included baseball, tennis and water polo. Joining the many thousands of other veterans attending college after the war, Tony majored in biochemistry at USC, completing a B.S. Burt joined the School of Education faculty in 1952 and retired in 1979. Following his work with the Associated Clinics, he was chair of the Psychology Department from 1967 to 1973. During his tenure as University Librarian, Morrie was professionally active on local, state, and national levels. He was called to active duty during the Korean War, where he was a radioman on the USS Helena. He had the ability to see things that others couldn't, and came up with ways to show the effects of alcohol on divided attention, which can significantly affect performance. He then taught part-time each year in the early retirement program until the late 1980s. From those who knew and worked with him, Dr. Greenlee earned the highest marks as a university administrator, as evidenced by the impressive scope and number of state and city leaders, in addition to faculty, staff, students, and alumni, who praised his accomplishments highly at his retirement banquet. The program was organized by Frederick Burwick, one of his students at Cal State L.A., who published the translation as an emeritus professor of English at UCLA. He was one of the architects of the Spanish M.A. Wayne's health deteriorated in recent years as a result of diabetes. 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 was the "father figure" in the department, respected for his counsel, fairness, and institutional memories of the department. There he met his wife Margarete, to whom he was married for 61 years. In addition to teaching at Cal State L.A., she also worked briefly as administrative assistant to then-state senator Mervyn Dymally. It was there that he met many lifelong friends and his wife Peggy Virginia Hedrick. The lesson didnt take, but memories of Vilma standing by and for students, colleagues, and friends are indelible. In 1954, Abdallah came to the United States and enrolled at UC Berkeley, from which he graduated with an M.A. After graduation, he was assigned to railroads in Bao-Tien, Shanghai-Nanjing, and Taiwan. Born in El Dorado, Kansas, Hap earned his bachelor's and master's degrees from Kansas State University and Ph.D. from the University of Southern California. He is survived by his wife Hazel; children Sharon, Darrel, and Toren; and one granddaughter. He graduated from John C. Fremont High School in Los Angeles in 1951 and served in the U.S. Navy from 1951 to 1955. During 1969-70, he coached Compton College to a 33-0 record season and was named California basketball coach of the year.The Emeritimes, Fall 2017, ROBERT H. MORNEAU, JR. Word has come to the attention of the Emeriti Association of the death of Robert H. Morneau, Jr., Emeritus Professor of Criminal Justice. Judys knowledge, work ethic, ideas, and writing and speaking ability became known throughout the California State University and state. He also raised more than two million dollars for the Luckman Fine Arts Complex and piloted Cal State LA through its Western Association of Schools and Colleges five-year interim report. He then went on in 1967 to the U. S. Department of Transportation as head of its Safety Standards Division. Under Lous leadership, the Department of Chicano Studies made a bold move towards education, focusing on the preparation of elementary, secondary, and college teachers. He transferred to UCLA, where he earned bachelors and masters degrees in psychology, in 1962 and 1965, respectively. Services were held on August19 at the Pasadena Congregational Church in Pasadena, where she was an active participant in programs for developmentally disabled persons.The Emeritimes, Fall 2012, MALCOLM A. In 2006, she received a National Philanthropy Award. She continued to teach at Middlebury College for a few years and she continued publishing. For several years he was the in-country vocational education consultant in Malaysia. He graduated from Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa in 1942, where he played football; in 1981, he was named to the 100-year, all-time Drake football team. Ted predeceased her in January 1989.The Emeritimes, Fall 2015, FRANK R. BALLE, Emeritus Professor of Civil Engineering, 1962-1997,and Registered Professional Engineer in California, died on July 1, 2015 at the age of 81 following several months of declining health. In 2016, Lou published his book, Chicano Homeland: The Movement in East Los Angeles for Mexican American Power, Justice, and Equality. The Norbys were married in 1939 and lived in Yakima initially. in French was from UCLA in 1948, and his M.A. In 1965, he was honored as Outstanding Professor, in the third group to receive this award. He held B.A., M.A. That energy seemed to extend beyond the class time as well, for students always came early to his classes, stayed afterwards to ask questions, and then showed up during his office hours to continue the discussions.

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