ɫapp

Spring 2023: In Memory

Note: An * before a name means the alumnus was a faculty or staff member, too. So they are also listed under Faculty/Staff with their dates of service at Kent State.

1930s

Florence Quinette, BA ’38, MA ’41, July 5, 2022


1940s


1950s

Betty Graber, BS ’50, June 14, 2021

Ronald Bacon, BA ’52, December 21, 2021

Koon Ching, BBA ’52, September 14, 2022


1960s

Nancy Herr, BS ’67, MA ’69, September 26, 2022


1970s

Joyce Cooper, BS ’70, May 19, 2022

Richard Brietstein, DPM ’71, March 29, 2022

John Robert “Rob” Andrews, BA ’73, October 9, 2022

Chibuzor Nnate Nwoke, BBA ’75, April 11, 2022


1980s


1990s

Kimberly Bayless, MEd ’90, January 14, 2022

Betty Hurst, MLS ’93, January 2, 2023

Carolyn Dean, AAS ’98, July 10, 2021


2000s


2010s


2020s


Faculty/Staff

Professor Emeritus of History (1966–1995), July 26, 2020
He taught American studies and history. An avid jazz clarinetist and pioneering researcher in jazz studies, he wrote several books on the cultural history of jazz.
     “I remember Dr. Kenney as an authority on American colonial history. An excellent and thought-provoking lecturer, he exposed students to some of the latest knowledge in the field and we were expected to do work as demanding as more selective academic institutions.” —Thomas M. Grace, BA ’72

Professor Emeritus of Sociology, ɫapp at Stark (1966–1994; 1995–2009; 2012–2013), July 10, 2022
He held a variety of administrative and teaching positions after serving in the U.S. Army during the Korean War. He was an executive director for the YMCA, associate executive director and planning director for the United Way, director of community schools and director of the Midwest Writers Conference.
     He received a Fulbright Award to teach sociology and social work at Trent Polytechnic in Nottingham, England, for the 1982-83 academic year in its division of social sciences. He resumed his teaching mainly on the Stark Campus of ɫapp between 1966 and 2012. In 2019, he wrote his book, A Religious Journey: The Sun of God.

Professor Emeritus of Special Education (1979–2010), October 18, 2022
As a scholar and researcher in the 1970s, he championed the cause of supported employment and was among the leading voices for people with severe disabilities.
     After coming to ɫapp in 1979, he began obtaining federal funding for personnel development that focused on transition coordinator competencies and was instrumental in launching Ohio’s statewide Transition-to-Work (TTW) endorsement for secondary special education.
Memorial gifts may be made to the at ɫapp.

assistant dean and assistant professor of Pan-African studies at Kent State Ashtabula (1984–1998), March 26, 2022
He served as assistant dean of Academic Affairs, director of Multicultural Affairs and assistant professor of Pan-African studies at ɫapp at Ashtabula for 14 years.

senior research officer, (1986–2007) July 10, 2022

inaugural managing director at Porthouse Theatre and ɫapp Theatre (1990–1991), July 22, 2022

Bridgestone Chair of International Marketing and director of the Global Management Center (2015–2023), February 1, 2023
He was a world-renowned expert and author on entrepreneurship. In December 2021, Hisrich was named one of the top 2% of researchers worldwide in a study published by Stanford University scholars.
     In honor of his gift to Crawford Hall, the Robert D. Hisrich Faculty and Staff Lounge will be named for him in the new building.
Memorial gifts may be made to the  or by mail to KSU Foundation, P.O. Box 5190, Kent, OH, 44242. Please indicate Foundation Fund # 10062F on a check when making a gift.

associate professor in the School of Health Sciences (2021–2022), December 13, 2022
Prior to being promoted to associate professor in 2021, she was an assistant professor (2015–2021) and an adjunct faculty member (2010-2015). In addition to touching the lives of students in her classrooms, she published academic research on intimate partner violence and substance abuse.
     She was a problem gambling prevention specialist at Townhall II and worked at Horizon House Residential Treatment for Women. She also was president of the board of directors for United MSD Foundation, a charity dedicated to finding a cure for Multiple Sulfatase Deficiency, as her son, Jett, has this terminal illness.


BACK TO SPRING/SUMMER 2023

POSTED: Thursday, May 4, 2023 01:33 PM
UPDATED: Thursday, September 19, 2024 05:09 AM