Donald McGinnis (Eta) 1917-2016

Born in Barberton, Ohio, in 1917 to Samuel and Ruth McGinnis, Dr. McGinnis was a distinguished musician, Professor Emeritus, and Director of Bands Emeritus at The Ohio State University. As an avid fan of collegiate sports and native Ohioan, Dr. McGinnis was an enthusiastic supporter of both the Ohio State Football and Basketball teams. His love of sports was eclipsed by his lifelong devotion to music. As a child, his early prowess in clarinet led to his being the first seventh-grader to be accepted as a member of the Medina County Band. In high school he was a member of the band, orchestra, glee club, and jazz ensemble, was a guard on the varsity football team in his senior year, as well as achieving the scholastic honor of being elected to the National Honor Society. Dr. McGinnis completed his collegiate education with undergraduate degrees in clarinet performance and music education from Oberlin College, followed by MA and PhD degrees in music theory and composition from the University of Iowa. His dissertation was his own composition Symphony for Band, available from Hal Leonard.

In 1941, he began a forty-year career at Ohio State which was interrupted by his enlistment in the United States Navy, where he performed as the principal clarinetist and featured soloist in an elite musical unit. During the war, he received a commission and served as the Communication Officer on the USS Lucidor in the South Pacific, achieving the rank of lieutenant junior grade.

During his post-war career with Ohio State, Dr. McGinnis became the conductor of the Concert Band. Under his leadership, the Concert Band earned national and international recognition with performances in illustrious venues such as Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center. Outside the School of Music, he was the principal clarinetist of the Columbus Symphony for two years, and the principal flutist for another ten years. After retiring from Ohio State, he was the interim conductor of the Capital University Wind Ensemble and Columbus Youth Wind Ensemble for the 1979-80 year. He was appointed conductor of the Southeastern Symphony Orchestra in New Concord, Ohio for the 1979-87 seasons. He was the interim band director at Indiana University of Pennsylvania in 1989.

Among his many honors, he is a member of the Columbus Senior Musicians Hall of Fame, Honorary Member of Phi Beta Mu and Tau Beta Sigma, Distinguished Service to Music Award from Kappa Kappa Psi, and the God and Country Award from the Salvation Army. He was elected a member of the American Bandmasters Association and served as President of that association before being named as an Honorary Life President.

He married Ruth L. Ostrander on November 28, 1946. She preceded him in death on July 1, 2016.

He is survived by daughters, Rebecca, of Tujunga, CA and Martha (David) Gamble of Grove City; granddaughter, Erika Gamble of Reynoldsburg; brother Richard (Mary) McGinnis of Naples, FL; many nephews and nieces; and a legion of students and colleagues.

He was preceded in death by his brother Harold McGinnis.

Family will receive friends at the TIDD FAMILY FUNERAL HOME, 5265 Norwich St in Hilliard, OH. A private funeral service will be held at a later date in addition to a Memorial concert at Ohio State.

Memorial contributions may take the form of checks mailed to The Ohio State University Foundation, 1480 W. Lane Ave., Columbus, OH 43221. Checks should be payable to The Ohio State University Foundation. Please indicate the Donald E. McGinnis School of Music New Day Fund #314212 in the memo line.

Dr. Richard Albert “Doc” Worthington (Nu) 1920-2014

Dr. Richard Albert Worthington, Director Emeritus of the School of Music at ULM, Founder and Conductor Emeritus of the Monroe Symphony, and former Director of the University of Arkansas Razorback Marching and Concert Bands, passed away April 3, 2014.

Known as “Doc” to all his students and friends, he served in World War II in the U.S. Army Air Corps, was a member of the Downtown Monroe Lions Club, and he served as District Governor of the Arkansas Lions Club. He was Grand President of the Kappa Kappa Psi and Tau Beta Sigma Band Fraternities.

Doc was the Commander of the Monroe Squadron of the Civil Air Patrol, Mission, Instructor and Check Pilot. For many years he served as the Commercial, Instrument Rating and Chief Flight Instructor for McMahan Aviation in Monroe. Doc and Philip Thomas with other pilots from around the state formed Angel Flight in 1997. In 2007 Doc, Philip and Sharon Thomas, Wayne Petrus and other pilots in the Monroe area formed Pilots for Patients.

Doc was a member of Grace Episcopal Church, serving as a Choir Member, Chalister, and Reader. He also served on the Vestry and as Sr. Warden.

He is survived by his wife of 40 years, Nancy Cozort Worthington, his 3 children, Cyndi, David and Bryan; numerous grand and great grandchildren.
Services celebrating the life of Dr. Richard Albert Worthington will be held at 12 Noon Monday April 7, 2014 at Grace Episcopal Church in Monroe, LA with The Right Rev. Richard Norman officiating. Interment will be in Grace Columbarium. Visitation will begin at 11:00 A.M. at Kilbourne Hall, under the direction of Mulhearn Funeral Home.

In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Pilots for Patients, Grace Episcopal Church or The Monroe Symphony, ULM School of Music, or the University of Arkansas Band.

Dr. James Croft (Gamma Nu) 1929-2012

On September 6, 2012 Kappa Kappa Psi and the college band world lost teacher, friend, and advocate, Dr. James Croft. Dr. Croft was an honorary member of the Gamma Nu Chapter of Kappa Kappa Psi at Florida State University.

Dr. Croft finished his Ph D. from the University of Oklahoma in 1970 and was hired as the director of band at the University of South Florida in 1972. After eigth years at USF he became the Director of Bands at Florida State University and remained there until his retirement in 2003. Dr. Croft’s high school program was selected as one of the groundbreaking Contemporary Music Project ensembles supported by the Music Educator’s National Conference and the Ford Foundation in the 1950’s. He also served as the president of the National Band Association and the College Band Directors National Association. He was also active in the forming of World Association of Symphonic Band Ensembles (WASBE) as a member of their board for 6 years. He was revered as a musician, composer, and clinician working with countless ensembles and composers. He truly was a legend in the college band arena.

For Kappa Kappa Psi, Dr. Croft conducted the National Intercollegiate Band in 1995 and received the Bohumil Makovsky Memorial Award that same year. Dr. Croft received the Distinguished Service to Music Medal during the 1997-1999 biennium, the highest honor Kappa Kappa Psi gives to an individual.

Dr. Croft served as an example, leader, and mentor for countless brothers and band directors across this country. He truly lived up to the high ideals of our fraternity. Our most sincere condolences are with his family and the Florida State University Community.

George N. Parks (Epsilon Nu) 1953-2010

George Nathan Parks, 57, of Amherst, Massachusetts, passed away on September 16 at Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, following a UMass Marching Band performance.

For 33 years, he served was the Marching Band Director at University of Massachusetts. Besides serving as director of the band known as The Power and Class of New England, Parks was professor of music at UMass. He received the university’s Distinguished Teacher Award and the Chancellor’s Medal for Distinguished Service. He was named an Honorary Alumnus of the University of Massachusetts.

Born May 23, 1953, in Buffalo, NY, George grew up in Newark, Delaware, graduating from Christiana High School. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in Music Education from West Chester University, PA, and a Master of Music in Tuba Performance from Northwestern University in Evanston, IL. George began teaching at UMass in 1977, and began the George N. Parks Drum Major Academy the following summer. In 1979, Thom Hannum joined George for a legendary band partnership that lasted 31 years.

A tireless fund-raiser, Parks was the driving force behind the $5.7 million Minuteman Marching Band Building, currently under construction. The new building is named in his honor.

George’s work in music and leadership has inspired thousands of high school and college students to find the best in themselves. Some of his recent students were the children of his first students at the University.

George was a devoted husband and father, who enjoyed watching his son Michael’s hockey games and daughter Kathryn’s equestrian pursuits. George often came to Springfield Central High School to support wife Jeanne and her choral students. Among his favorite things were family trips to Disney World (where he would often run into DMA students), golfing, playing volleyball with the Band staff, watching movies, and choosing music for his favorite meal, spaghetti with meat sauce. He loved to have a houseful of people playing Axis and Allies. George was a communicant of the First Baptist Church of Amherst, where he often played tuba and sang in the choir.

George is survived by his wife of 31 years, Jeanne (nee Clayton), daughter, Kathryn, son, Michael, his mother, Vesta Parks and brother Patrick, of Newark, DE, sisters and brothers-in-law Barbara and Ed Firchak of Ocean City, MD, Pamela and Dan Kopec of Louisiana, brother and sister-in-law Jon and Lorie Parks of Delaware, and his in-laws, Harvey and Barbara Clayton of Jensen Beach, FL, and brother-in-law Robert Clayton of Celebration, FL. He will be greatly missed by his many nieces, nephews, close friends, 390 present “bandos,” and thousands of UMass band and DMA alum. George was pre-deceased by his father, Norman Parks.

William P. Foster (Delta Iota) 1919-2010

William P. Foster, who revolutionized the once-staid world of collegiate marching bands as the founder and longtime director of the high-stepping, crowd-wowing Marching 100 band of Florida A&M University, died Saturday [Aug 29, 2010] in Tallahassee, Fla. He was 91.

Robert E. Klein/Associated Press
Florida A&Ms Marching 100 at the 2005 Super Bowl. The group has more than 400 members and a worldwide following.
His death was announced by the university.

When Dr. Foster arrived at the historically black Florida A&M campus in Tallahassee in 1946, football halftime shows around the nation generally offered a rendition of the home teams fight song and a smattering of John Philip Sousa marches.

Dr. Foster introduced shows that infused black popular culture into his routines, blending contemporary music, often jazz or rock, with imaginative choreography, his green-and-orange uniformed band members carrying their instruments at a 45-degree angle, legs bent to the same angle.

College and high school marching bands around the nation drew on the Florida A&M style.

Its gotten to the point where I cant remember the last time I saw a halftime show that featured traditional marches, Fred Tillis, emeritus director of the University of Massachusetts fine arts department, told The Florida Times-Union in 1998.

Dr. Foster said there was a psychology to running a band.

People want to hear the songs they hear on the radio; it gives them an immediate relationship with you, he told The New York Times in July 1989, when the Marching 100 headed to Paris, having been selected by the French government to represent the United States with renditions of James Brown at the parade marking the French Revolutions bicentennial. And then theres the energy. Lots of energy in playing and marching. Dazzle them with it. Energy.

Sometimes his band moved at a step every three seconds or so, what he called the death cadence or death march, then zoomed to six steps a second.

It didnt exactly march.

It slides, slithers, swivels, rotates, shakes, rocks and rolls, as Dr. Foster once put it. It leaps to the sky, does triple twists, and drops to earth without a flaw, without missing either a beat or a step. It often became an animation show, simulating palm trees with branches swaying or an eagle flapping its wings.

Dr. Foster became known on campus as the Law, for what could be an intimidating presence, but he began with only 16 bandsmen in 1946. He soon called his musicians the Marching 100 because he envisioned reaching that number at some point.

The Marching 100 has grown to 400 or so musicians, drum majors and flag-bearers. It has played at the Super Bowl, presidential inaugurations and the Grammy Awards and in nationally televised commercials.

William Patrick Foster was born in Kansas City, Kan., on Aug. 25, 1919. He played the clarinet as a youngster and studied music at the University of Kansas. He hoped to become a conductor, but, as he recalled, a dean told him no musical companies would hire a black for that role.

That was when I decided that I would develop a black band that was equal to, or finer than, any white band in the country, he told The Atlanta Journal and Constitution in 1998.

He got students and parents to round up used instruments at his first job, music director for the ill-funded and segregated Lincoln High School in Springfield, Mo., then moved to the historically black Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, where he built a band.

His Florida A&M band first gained recognition on a limited scale by playing numbers like Alexanders Ragtime Band in the Orange Blossom Classic, when the Rattlers would face another historically black school at Miamis Orange Bowl. By the 1960s, as segregation began to bend, the band played at the Orange Bowl game itself and ultimately emerged as a scintillating presence with a wide audience.

Dr. Foster received a bachelors degree from Kansas in 1941 and a masters degree from Wayne State in 1950, both with a concentration in music, and a doctor of education degree from Teachers College at Columbia University in 1955.

He was the author of the memoir The Man Behind the Baton and Band Pageantry: A Guide for the Marching Band.

He retired as the Florida A&M band director in 1998.

He is survived by his sons Anthony and William Jr. and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren. His wife, Mary Ann, died in 2007.

When Dr. Foster arrived at Florida A&M, he looked to innovative performances as a way of building its music department. His protégés included the renowned jazz musicians Cannonball Adderley, on the saxophone, and his brother, Nat, on the trumpet and cornet.

Everything he did was new, Nat Adderley once told The St. Petersburg Times. No one had ever seen anything like it.

Dr. Robert B. Kamm (Alpha) 1919-2008

Dr. Robert B. Kamm, the 13th president of Oklahoma State University who led the university during a period that encompassed both growth and turbulent times on campuses across the nation, died Friday, October 10, 2008 in Okmulgee. He was 89.

He served as OSU president from 1966 to 1977 and is remembered for having served in higher education as a teacher, counselor and administrator at OSU for more than 45 years. The president and first lady, his wife Maxine, were loved by students, staff and faculty.

“The Oklahoma State University community is saddened to learn of the passing of one of our university’s most beloved presidents,” said OSU President Burns Hargis. “Dr. Kamm made a lasting difference in the lives of students, and had a real impact on the Stillwater community, our state and our world. He became President during my undergraduate days at OSU and truly inspired me to seek opportunities in public service. Dr. Kamm will be remembered for his warmness, his friendliness and his philosophy of putting people first.”

Kamm was born on Jan. 22, 1919, at West Union, Iowa. He received his B.A. degree in English and theater arts in 1940 from the University of Northern Iowa, and completed his master’s degree in 1946 and his Ph.D. in 1948, both in counseling psychology and higher education from the University of Minnesota. He began his career as a high school teacher in 1940 in his native state of Iowa.

It was during his service in the Navy in World War II that he was first on the campus of Oklahoma A&M College, spending three months as part of a year-long radar study. After the war and his completion of his higher degrees, he was named Dean of Students at Drake University in Iowa, and also served as both Student Personnel Dean and Freshman Dean at Texas A&M University.

He came to Oklahoma State University as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences in 1958, and was promoted to vice president for academic affairs in 1965. He served as OSU’s president from July 1, 1966, to Jan. 31, 1977. It was under his leadership that OSU became known as a national leader in telecommunications and international outreach. During his tenure, he emphasized academic excellence and underscored the centrality of students, faculty and staff in the learning experience.

Kamm resigned as OSU’s president in 1977 to run for the U.S. Senate, losing to incumbent U.S. Sen. David Boren.

On Feb. 1, 1977, he was named university president professor and past president, and became a member of the faculty of the Department of Educational Administration and Higher Education in the College of Education. On Jan. 1, 1988, he was named President Emeritus and Professor Emeritus.

When OSU began preparations for its 1990 Centennial Celebration, Kamm was named the director of the Centennial Histories Project, which produced 26 books. He authored 72 journal articles and five books. His final book, “The Best of Mind and Spirit,” was published in 2002.

His international achievements were recognized in 1976 when he was appointed, with the rank of ambassador, as a member of the executive board of the United States Education, Scientific and Cultural Organization. He was chair of the U.S. delegation to the 19th general conference of UNESCO in Nairobi, Kenya, and also chair of the U.S. Commission for Observance of the 25th anniversary of the United Nations.

Kamm served as president of the American College Personnel Association from 1957-58, and was chairman of the Council of Presidents of the national Association of State Universities and Land-Grant colleges from 1974-75.

He also served as chairman of the board of Oklahoma City-based World Neighbors Incorporated and as a member of the U.S. Commission on the Reform of State Government.

In 1988, he was presented with OSU’s highest award, the Henry G. Bennett Distinguished Service Award for outstanding citizenship and leadership, at the university’s 93rd commencement ceremony.

He also was awarded a doctor of Humanities from Oklahoma Christian College in 1976, and a Doctor of Humane Letters from Oklahoma City University in 1992. He received the Medal of Honor from the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1996, and the Cornerstone Award for Administration from the Oklahoma College Public Relations Association in 1999.

He was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame in 1972; the Oklahoma Educators Hall of Fame in 1987; the Oklahoma Higher Education Hall of Fame in 1994; the Stillwater Hall of Fame in 1995; and the College of Education Hall of Fame in 2000.

The first Robert B. Kamm Distinguished Lecture in Higher Education was held in 1992. The lecture, which is supported by the Robert B. Kamm Lecture Fund of the Oklahoma State University Foundation, brings private and public sector leaders together to discuss issues that will shape the future of education, particularly higher education, in Oklahoma.

He has been included in “Who’s Who in America,” “Who’s Who in the World,” “Who’s Who in American Education,” and “American Men of Science.” In 1966 he was named a lifetime member of the Board of Directors for the State Fair of Oklahoma; was named a Distinguished Member of Phi Kappa Phi national honor society in 1976; and was named “Oklahoman of the Year” in 1976 by the Oklahoma Broadcasters Association.

In 2002, he was honored by being selected to be an Olympic Torchbearer in Stillwater, where he started his run on campus. He was an honorary life member of the OSU Alumni Association Board of Directors.

He served as president of the Stillwater Medical Center Foundation from 1990-91; president of the Stillwater Family YMCA from 1982-84; and president of the Arkansas-Oklahoma YMCA Cluster of the YMCA from 1984-86; President of the Will Rogers Council of the Boy Scouts of America from 1977-79, and received the Silver Beaver Award in 1980. He served as president of the Stillwater Rotary Club from 1962-63; was named Stillwater’s first Paul Harris Fellow in 1977, and received, along with his wife, Maxine, Stillwater Exchange Club’s “Book of Golden Deeds” Award in 1977.

He was active in the United Methodist Church, including service as lay leader and as church school teacher and superintendent. He also served as president of the Oklahoma United Methodist Foundation from 1988-93.

He truly loved people; he loved the students; and he had a great love for Stillwater and, of course, OSU.

He was devoted to his wife and family. During his beloved wife Maxine’s illness, he chose to move out of their home and live with her in Grace Living Center for the last 14 months of her life. He was predeceased by his parents; wife; two brothers, Harold Kamm and Balz Kamm; one sister, Ednah Mae Goines; and one great-granddaughter Nevaeh Kamm. He is survived by one daughter, Susan White and her husband, Phil, of Longmont, Colo.; one son, Steve Kamm and his wife, Peggy, of Okmulgee; four grandchildren, Jeff White and his wife, Sarah, of Longmont, Derek Kamm and his wife, Rebekah, of Mounds, Clay Kamm and Adrienne Hickman of Glenpool, Jessica Mackey and her husband, Jace, of Morris; three great grandchildren, Makayla Rain Kamm, Jacey Mackey and Aiden Robert Kamm; and one sister, Barbara Temple of West Union, Iowa.

The family has requested that memorial donations be made in his name to OSU Foundation, 400 S. Monroe St., Stillwater, OK 74074, First United Methodist Church, 400 W. 7th Ave., Stillwater, OK 74074, Stillwater YMCA, 204 S. Duck St., Stillwater, OK 74074, and Stillwater Medical Center Foundation, P.O. Box 2408, Stillwater, OK 74076. There are also scholarships in the Kamms’ names at both OSU and Stillwater Medical Center which could be designated if the donor wishes.

Hiram Henderson Henry (Alpha) 1918-2008

Hiram Henderson Henry, 90, of Stillwater died Thursday, Oct. 2, 2008, in Stillwater. Services will be at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at First Presbyterian Church with Dr. B. Gordon Edwards officiating. Interment will be in Sunset Memorial Gardens. Family will greet friends from 6:30 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. Monday at Strode Funeral Home Chapel. Strode Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

He was born on July 24, 1918, in Raiford to Chester White Henry and Myra Anna (Morris) Henry, the fourth of six children. The family moved to Claremore in 1925. There he graduated from high school in 1936. He attended Oklahoma A&M College and graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Instrumental Music in 1940. While at college he was a member of the band, orchestra, pep band and Student Entertainers. In 1940 he became band and orchestra director at Pauls Valley public schools. It was there he met his future wife, Wanda June Suggs, and they were married Nov. 27, 1941, in Pauls Valley.

He enlisted in the U.S. Navy during World War II in April 1942 and was assigned to the Seabee Band was stationed in Norfolk, Va., and later in Williamsburg,Va. After two and a half years with the Seabee Band he was assigned to the Navy School of Music in Washington, D.C. as an instructor. He served there a year and was discharged from the Navy in October 1945. He entered the University of Southern California in November 1945 and received a Master of Music degree in July 1946.

He was invited to the join the staff of the Music Department at Oklahoma A&M College in 1946 as assistant director of bands, director of a newly formed all-girls band, and instructor of low brass and percussion. He advanced in rank from his initial appointment as instructor to full professor in 1967.

He was Director of Marching Bands until 1957 when he was appointed Director of Bands. He directed marching and concert bands until 1966 when an additional assistant director was hired for marching and pep bands. The Concert Band performed concerts on campus each year and took an annual concert tour throughout the state to various high schools and communities. They also performed at state music conferences and on area TV stations. One of the most popular activities of the band program was the summer concert series at Theta Pond. He was the conductor for 33 years. These summer band concerts inspired the establishment of the Stillwater Community Band that continues to flourish. He retired from Oklahoma State University in 1981 after 35 years. He remained active with student organizations including the OSU Alumni Band, Kappa Kappa Psi and Tau Beta Sigma, as well as attending many Music Department concerts and events.

His primary area of interest was in the preparation of students to be instrumental music teachers. He maintained close contact with former students who taught in public schools and universities across the nation. They shared their reports of successes, happy occasions and families. He was also an advisor for student organizations such as Kappa Kappa Psi, Tau Beta Sigma and the Music Educators National Conference.

He was a guest conductor at numerous summer band camps throughout the nation each year as well as guest conductor for several clinics and concerts. He was a member of several state and national professional music organizations, serving in leadership positions in each.

In addition to his teaching duties, he was chairman of the Oklahoma Band Clinic for many years, chairman of instrumental music contests, summer band camps, summer music reading clinics, and was chairman of the State Music Contest Committee for many years. He was elected to the Oklahoma Bandmasters Hall of Fame in 1972 as a result of the numerous activities and years of service to music education in the state.

He was recognized by many professional organizations for his work. In 1977, the national band fraternity, Kappa Kappa Psi, awarded him its highest honor, the “Distinguished Service to Music” award. In the same year he was recognized as “Outstanding Teacher of the Year” by the College of Arts and Sciences. He was elected to the Oklahoma Music Educators Hall of Fame in 1988.

Mr. Henry served an integral role on the Steering Committee for the 100 year celebration of bands at OSU, commemorated in fall 2005. In the fall 2006, the OSU Alumni Band Association, in conjunction with Alumni Band Day, presented “A Tribute to Mr. Hiram Henry” through a series of events, noting his significant contributions throughout the years.

He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church and served as a Sunday school teacher and two terms as a Deacon and Elder. He joined the Golden K Kiwanis Club and became active in community projects early in his retirement serving as song leader, program chairman and president. His community service as a volunteer included meal deliveries for Elderly Nutrition, Stillwater Medical Center and transportation for friends, community dinners and events for children. He was recognized for this by Kiwanis with their “Kiwanis Tablet of Honor Award” for community service in 2000 and their “Lay Person of the Year Award” in 2004 for District 16. He also received the Rotary “Stillwater Citizen of the Year Award” in 2003. The Sunshine Seniors honored him as their “Volunteer of the Year” in 2000. The nayor of Stillwater issued a Proclamation in 2000 recognizing the many years of numerous and varied volunteer activities.

Mr. Henry was known for providing consistent and loving daily assistance to his wife, Wanda, the nine years she was a resident at Westhaven Nursing Center. During that time, he chaired the Family Advocacy initiative. He was a dedicated father to Jan and Bob, and to their children and grandchildren, as an exemplary role model for living a full, selfless and giving lifestyle.

He was preceded in death by his parents; his wife Wanda in June 2008; one brother, Britton Henry; and four sisters, Leona Tanner, Bonnie Helm, Velva Stewart and Kiamichie Brown.

He is survived by a daughter, Janice Brucker and her husband Bill of Columbia, Ill.; one son, Robert Henry and his wife Anna of Lubbock, Texas; five grandchildren, Katrina Kirby of Los Angeles; Chris Brucker of Millbrae, Calif.; Jeremy Brucker of Columbia, Ill.; Matthew Brucker of Columbia, Ill.; and Scott Henry of Dallas; four great grandchildren, Ashley Kirby of Columbia, Ill.; Caroline Molinier of Los Angeles; Jack Molinier, Jr., of Los Angeles; and Landon Brucker of Columbia, Ill.; and many nephews and nieces.

Memorials may be sent to the OSU Music Department, 132 Seretean Center, Stillwater, OK 74078; Stillwater Medical Center, 1323 West 6th Street, Stillwater, OK 74074; Judith Karman Hospice, 915 South Main Street, Stillwater, OK 7407; and Elderly Nutrition, 312 West 9th Avenue, Stillwater, OK 74074.