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Phil and Barbara James

Life Summary

First the bones...

1932       
                Born:    Boston, Mass;  Detroit, Michigan
1954       
                SB, Chemistry, MIT
                BA, Political Science, Wellesley
                Married
1957       
                PNJ:    Ph. D., Organic Chemistry, University of Illinois, Urbana
                BLJ:        proofread children’s encyclopedic anthology entitled “Our Wonderful World;” 
                one year toward MA, Social Work
1957-1959   
                PNJ:    University of California, Berkeley:  Assistant Professor
                BLJ:    Berkeley Red Cross:  Head of Volunteers
1959-1962   
                PNJ:    American Cyanamid Company:  chemist at Lederle, then
                college recruiter out of the Rockefeller Center headquarters office
1962       
                Michael Gregory James (Greg) born
1962-1966   
                San Fernando Valley years:
                PNJ:    Technicolor Corporation, Hollywood:  research chemist,
                            then Special Assistant to the Vice President for Research
                BLJ:    graduate work in Political Science
1964       
                Lawrence Law James (Larry) born
1966-1974   
                San Diego years:
                PNJ:   University of California, San Diego (UCSD):  Assistant Vice Chancellor -- Graduate Studies and Research,
                then Executive Assistant to Chancellors William J. McGill (later President of Columbia University),
                Herbert F. York (first Director of Defense Research and Engineering under JFK and LBJ),
                and William McElroy (earlier Director of the NationalScience Foundation)
                BLJ:   President of Oceanids (faculty and staff women of UCSD);  began work toward
                Master in Public Administration
1974-1977   
                PNJ:    University of Southern California:  Director, Idyllwild Campus
1977       
                BLJ:    M. P. A., San Diego State University
                Thesis:  “Administrative Challenges of a Developing Campus”
1977-1988   
                Beverly Hills years:
                PNJ:    Deluxe General (subsidiary of 20th Century-Fox):  Director of Administration and Planning; 
                Northrop Data Processing:  Director of Strategy Planning;  County of Los Angeles: 
                Chief, Strategic Information Systems Planning
1979-1981   
                BLJ:    President, League of Women Voters of Beverly Hills
1983       
                MGJ:    BA Brown University
1985       
                MGJ:    Married Susan Appleby in Wellesley College chapel
1986       
                LLJ:    BA Brown University
                MGJ:    Christopher Gregory James born
1987       
                BLJ:    J. D., Loyola Law School
                Barbara’s mother died three days after Barbara had taken Bar examination
1988-1997   
                Hollywood and Northridge years:
1988-1997   
                PNJ:    California State University, Long Beach:  Faculty member in
                Information Systems and Strategic Management;  consultant for    
                Department of Health Services, Los Angeles County
                BLJ:    practicing attorney
1988       
                MGJ:    PhD, Computer Science, UC Irvine
1989       
                MGJ:    Jillian Susan James born
1994       
                Northridge earthquake:  epicenter 3 miles from our house
1997-1999   
                Both:    Retired;  full time RVing
1999-      
                Both:    Settled in Claremont, California;  community activism and RV travel
2005       
                Both:    Moved to Sun City, Arizona
_________________________________________
Now the meat...

We’ve always loved to travel.  That’s probably our first passion.  During graduate school we saw 48 states while there still were 48 and before we were 25.  Since then we’ve seen Alaska and Hawaii and all of the provinces of Canada while the boys were growing up, plus a “freshman course” trip to Europe (British Isles and northwestern France) in 1993.  Our second tour around North America (in our motor home) was especially exciting and fun.  We hated to “settle down,” but our consciences called us to a less hedonistic lifestyle.  Nonetheless, we still travel as often as we can;  in the fall of 2002 we traveled to 35 states, picking up #47, #48, and #49 that we will have visited in our motor home leaving only #50, for which we have to wait for the bridge to be built.  And we’ve had a long motor home trip each year since then.

I love the mountains and have backpacked along many Sierra Nevada trails including two trips to the summit of Mount Whitney (one in a thunder snowstorm in August!).  Barbara loves history, politics, our roses and the seashore.  We’ve visited beautiful gardens in many states and Canada, Civil War battlefields, etc., and read all the plaques (just ask our kids!).  One appeal of the academic life has been the long vacations, which we’ve utilized to the fullest.

We also like to eat (some of our friends will remember...) and have enjoyed many fine and famous establishments everywhere we’ve been.

One fun set of events stands out in our recent history:  our fraternity mini-reunions at Hilton Head (1998), San Francisco (2000), Phoenix (2003), Estes Park (2005), and planned for Fredericksburg, Virginia in 2007.

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

I’ve had many successes and many frustrations.  I always wanted a public service career, particularly in an environment that encouraged thoughtfulness, reflection, creativity and discussion rather than productivity, and service to those less fortunate rather than profit.  I’ve been lucky enough to have had that for about half of my career -- in teaching, research and government.  But despite many high points in those areas, I’ve also had good years in industry.  I’ve never felt I achieved what I should have, but taking my career all together, “it floats,” in the words of a famous Methodist minister, Ralph W. Sockman.

The most exciting career experience for me was at UC San Diego.  It was heady stuff working with Nobel Prize winners, UC faculty and executives, community leaders, and Regents in the tumultuous 1960s and ‘70s as we were developing UCSD to be a world class institution.  And it’s the only job I’ve had where I felt that the whole Phil James was being effectively used and that I made a significant contribution to the evolution of the institution and the community which housed it. 

Since then I’ve basically enjoyed each new opportunity, but there have been some un-pleasant periods and some unpleasant work situations.  And, I’ve often felt that I had to suppress parts of me that were in conflict with the organization in question -- my bleeding heart liberal leanings, for example, when I was working with senior corporate executives.  By venturing beyond academia I became involved in whole new areas of technology, which I loved.  For a while I was considered a “thought leader” in office automation in Los Angeles, which brought many heady experiences. 

Socially, life in Beverly Hills, Hollywood and the movie industry was exhilarating.  It was a thrill to dine with Virginia Mayo (an idol during my teens) at one of the American Film Institute’s Lifetime Achievement Awards events (the one for Bette Davis) while I was at 20th Century-Fox!  That was right up there with Debbie Reynolds’ visit to ___ in 1954;  also a thrill!  We’ve met her several times since while living in Beverly Hills. 

But perhaps the job that was the most sheer fun for me was the two years I spent college recruiting with American Cyanamid in 1961-62.  There was the traveling, of course (and I could often include Barbara), plus the interaction with the best and brightest faculty and students all over the country.  I felt most abreast of chemistry during that period too, partly because of the discussions with students and faculty and partly because the commuting and traveling gave me many hours to study the literature.  We hated to leave New York City and our Lederle/Cyanamid associates, but since we now had a child it was time to put down roots, and California was irresistible.

FAMILY

Barbara was a housewife for much of my career -- but an active one in the community.  In San Diego, in addition to Oceanids, she was on the Board of the YWCA, and there, too, in 1968, a few months before Martin Luther King’s assassination, with many others we co-founded Citizens United for Racial Equality (CURE), a local activist group that continues today.  We were also active there at the beginning of Common Cause, headed in San Diego by Mike Walsh, who had been a White House fellow for John Gardner when he was Secretary of HEW.  Mike later became CEO of Tenneco, but died of a brain tumor not too many years later. 

In Beverly Hills, while Barbara was President of the League of Women Voters, there was a significant fight with the City of Beverly Hills over a land deal.  Her predecessor as president was sued by a city councilman for $6 million and by a developer for $45 million.  Our son, then at Brown (which was already destroying us financially) commented, “That would have set us back a bit!”  Barbara’s fight with the city led her at last to her law career, predicted much earlier by aptitude tests in high school, which she continued until we  retired.  She found practicing “LA” law (primarily family law) frustrating and difficult.  She began her odyssey with Gloria Allred, later worked on a Howard Hughes case, and had other interesting experiences throughout that period.

Both of our boys went to Brown for undergraduate work.  Greg, now 44, worked for Data General in the Boston area for about three years, then got married (to Susan -- 13 years his senior!), had 2 kids and began graduate school at UC Irvine, where he got his PhD in computer science.  Susan got an MBA and began work toward a PhD in human resource management.  He’s been at American Express first in Houston and now in Phoenix for nearly ten years,  where he directs worldwide data reporting for customers who use the Corporate Card.  Those tiny kids are now 16 (Jillian) and 19 (Christopher, now a sophomore at the University of Arizona).  He and Susan divorced in 2003;  we are still close with all of them.
 
Larry, 42, learned the movie business at Beverly Hills High School where he and Nick Cage both won “Academy Awards” for an original film Larry created which starred Nick.  He’s now a free-lance editor, producer, and director in Hollywood working primarily on TV episodes for the History and Discovery Channels.  This gives him periods of free time which he loves.  A few years ago he was associate editor for “Adaptations,” starring Nick Cage and Meryl Streep.  He’s still single but has many girlfriends, owns a house and five acres of land in the desert above Los Angeles near Mt. Baldy, and is building his own motor home.  (None of this pre-fab stuff for him!)  A few years ago he did a documentary on “Ghost Towns in Death Valley” which premiered at the Gene Autry Museum of Western History and is for sale in the gift shop at Furnace Creek.  He’s particularly interested in doing his own documentaries and is heading in that direction.

THE PRESENT

We are enamored of retirement!  Our typical day begins about 10 A. M. and runs well past midnight.  We love being in the West, we love our home, and we love the freedom to travel as the spirit moves.  We moved to Arizona in 2005 and are already way too involved, Phil especially so in efforts to fix election technology problems. 

LIFE’S HIGHLIGHTS

∑    A wonderful life partner who kept me on track time after time along this
wandering pathway.

∑    Opportunities to know personally some of the greatest thinkers of our time.

∑    Learning to love being alone for several days in the high mountain wilderness of
California.

∑    Learning to endure -- indeed, to enjoy -- the physical effort required to
reach that wilderness.

∑    Progeny with diverse approaches to carrying forward our values.

∑    The opportunity to see as much of North America as we have -- as often as we
have.  ...and a little of Europe as well.

LESSONS LEARNED -- SOME TOO LATE –
TO BE PASSED ON TO THE NEXT GENERATION!

∑    Learn how to read your environment accurately as it evolves and to re-invent
yourself as often as necessary in order to evolve with it.

∑    Avoid excesses in modesty and arrogance, but know how to sell yourself and
how to network.

∑    Live life in all three boxes all the time:  learning, work, and leisure.

∑    Don’t put off what you want too long -- you never know when delayed may be-
come denied.  (...and my favorite quote:  “Live your dream!  Life is not a dress rehearsal!”)

∑    Make a positive contribution to the common good, helping those who have so much less to improve their lives.

∑    Be honest enough to be grateful, and grateful enough to be useful.  Most of us
have been born so lucky!