/ Stars that died in 2023

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Helen J. Frye, American federal judge, died after a long illness she was , 80.

Helen Jackson Frye  was an American judge and attorney in the state of Oregon died after a long illness she was , 80. Born in Southern Oregon, she served as an active federal district court judge in Portland, Oregon, for 15 years and as a judge for the Oregon Circuit Court for nine years. At the time of her death she was a senior judge for the United States District Court for the District of Oregon.

(December 10, 1930 – April 21, 2011)

Early life

Helen Jackson was born in Klamath Falls, Oregon, in the south-central portion of the state on December 10, 1930.[2][3] Growing up on a potato and grain farm in Klamath County, her father died when she was three and was raised by her maternal grandparents from age three to nine as her mother and sibling recovered from tuberculosis.[4][5] Her mother then remarried and they moved from the family farm.[4]
After high school she attended the University of Oregon in Eugene where she graduated in 1953 with a bachelor’s of arts degree in English and served as class president of her sophomore class.[3][4] To pay for school, Frye worked her way through at jobs such as babysitter and waitress.[4] She was also a member of Phi Beta Kappa.[5] She then taught in public schools.[6] In 1961, Frye earned a masters degree at the school, and then graduated from the University of Oregon School of Law in 1966 with a juris doctorate degree.[3] Between degrees she had three children with her first husband Bill Frye,[4] including filmmaker E. Max Frye.[7] The couple's other children were Karen and Heidi.[5]

Legal career

After passing the bar in 1966 she entered private legal practice in Eugene, and worked for her husband, who was the district attorney for Lane County.[3][5] In 1971, Frye left private practice and became a judge for the Oregon Circuit Court’s second district covering Lane County.[3] Oregon Governor Tom McCall appointed her to the position, and she became the first female judge of the Oregon Circuit Courts.[4][5] Helen and Bill divorced in 1975, with Helen remarrying to Perry Holloman.[5] She remained on that court after winning election to a full term and re-election until 1980, when she became a judge for a new seat on the United States District Court for the District of Oregon[5]
In 1973, as circuit court judge Frye she presided over the trial of Dayton Leroy Rogers, who was found not guilty by reason of mental defect.[8] Rogers was sent to the Oregon State Hospital, was released on December 12, 1974, and then went on to kill several woman before being sent to death row.[8]
Nominated on December 3, 1979, by U.S. President Jimmy Carter, she was confirmed by the United States Senate on February 20, 1980, and received her federal commission that same day.[3] She was the first woman on Oregon's only federal court.[6] While on the court, she presided over the case that voided the incorporation of the community of Rajneeshpuram in Central Oregon.[6] She also dismissed a case concerning the protection of the Northern Spotted Owl from logging in 1989.[9] In 1992, she was the trial court level judge for Kyllo v. United States, an unlawful search case that made it to the United States Supreme Court in 2001.[10] On December 10, 1995, she assumed senior status on the court and is no longer a full-time judge for the court.[3]

Later years and death

Frye was awarded the Meritorious Service Award from the University of Oregon School of Law in 2000.[11] After serving as a part-time judge after moving to senior status, she later retired completely from the court.[1] Helen Frye died on April 21, 2011, at the age of 80.[1]

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Reginald C. Fuller, British Roman Catholic priest and author died he was , 102

Reginald Cuthbert Fuller  was ordained as a priest in 1931 by Cardinal Bourne, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Westminster; ) and appointed Canon (hon.) of Westminster Cathedral by Cardinal Murphy-O'Connor in 2001 died he was , 102. He celebrated his 100th birthday in 2008. 

(12 September 1908 – 21 April 2011)

Born in London, he contributed significantly to the advancement of Roman Catholic life and ecumenism in England during the 20th century, notably through co-founding the Catholic Biblical Association of Great Britain, his collaboration as an Editorial Committee member of the first one-volume Bible commentary for English-speaking Catholics and his General Editorship of its second edition, and his work as a member of the Revised Standard Version Bible Committee and as Co-Editor of the first complete Bible translation in modern English for Catholics from the Hebrew and the Greek, as well as of its ecumenical edition. His specialist subjects were the Deuterocanonical Books, on which he contributed articles to three major Biblical Commentaries (see "Publications" below), and the life and works of Alexander Geddes, a pioneer of biblical criticism, on which he wrote his doctoral thesis (see "Publications" below).

Education

Initially Fuller's parents, the physician and medical author, Arthur William Fuller and Florence Margaret Fuller (née Montgomery), of St John's Wood, London, sent their son to Ealing Priory School (the subsequently renamed St Benedict's School) where he happened to share classes and hone his Latin skills in contest with the 20 months younger, the later New Testament scholar and his colleague on a number of major scholarly projects, John Bernard Orchard. Recognizing his academic potential, they then decided to move their son to Cardinal Vaughan School, before sending him for the final years of his schooling to Ampleforth College.

Seminary and academic studies

Fuller attended seminary studies at Allen Hall, St Edmund's College, Ware, Hertfordshire from 1926-1931 and was ordained priest by Cardinal Bourne at Westminster Cathedral in 1931. His academic studies at the Dominican University in Rome earned him a SThL in 1933 and a SThD in 1935, and at the Biblical Institute in Rome a SScriptLic in 1934. During 1964-1968 he took up biblical research at Cambridge University and earned a Ph.D.

Pastoral appointments

At various times during 1950-1994 Rev. Fuller held pastoral appointments in the Archdiocese of Westminster. He served as Rector of the Church of Our Lady of the Assumption and St. Gregory, Warwick Street, London (1950-1963), as Chaplain at Westminster Cathedral (1976-1978), and as Rector of the Church of the Blessed Sacrament, Islington (1978-1983). Since his retirement he served as Assistant Priest at the Church of St. Mellitus, Tollington Park, London (1983-1990, where on one occasion in the sacristy he was attacked by intruders and hit over the head with a crucifix but suffered no lasting injury), and at the Church of Our Lady and St. Joseph, Poplar, London (1990-1994). Thereafter he took up residence in Clergy House at Westminster Cathedral, regularly hearing Confession at the Cathedral and helping with occasional exhibitions. In 2003 he moved to Nazareth House, where on request he continued to provide spiritual guidance to his visitors on an individual basis.

Teaching appointments

Fuller was Lecturer in Biblical Studies at Allen Hall, St Edmund's College, Ware, Hertfordshire from 1936-1949, for the Newman Association from 1950-1954, and at St. Mary's College, Strawberry Hill, Twickenham from 1968-1972. He then spent three years in Kenya as Lecturer in Old Testament Studies at the University of Nairobi from 1972-1975. While there he availed himself of the opportunity to indulge some of his recreational interests and with members of the university staff went mountain climbing and visited Mount Kenya and the Ngorongoro Crater, and admired the wild-life in Serengeti/Tanzania and the Victoria Falls in Zimbabwe.

Other professional activities

From 1949-1990 Fuller was a member of the Society of Old Testament Studies (SOTS). Among his involvement in major professional projects was the co-founding of the Catholic Biblical Association of Great Britain (CBA), of which he then was Hon. Secretary from 1940-1965 and Chairman from 1968-1982. As representative of the CBA he acted in 1963 as Promoter of the English spelling of Biblical names for Catholic use to the Conference of the Bishops of England and Wales (e.g. Noah, Elijah, Joshua, in place of Noe, Elias, Josue as in the Douay-Challoner Bible, based on the Latin text).
Fr Bernard Orchard invited Fr Fuller onto the Editorial Committee of the first one-volume Bible commentary for English-speaking Catholics, entitled A Catholic Commentary on Holy Scripture (1953; [2]) and the Diocese entrusted Fuller in 1951 with the office of Censor Deputatus for the Nihil Obstat in its regard (cf. CHSS, p. iv). When subsequent developments – among them Vatican II and the discovery of the manuscripts in the caves at Qumran – required an updating of the commentary, he was General Editor of its second edition, entitled A New Catholic Commentary on Holy Scripture (1969).
He was, moreover, Co-Editor of the first complete Bible translation in modern English for Catholics from the Hebrew and Greek, entitled The Holy Bible – Revised Standard Version Catholic Edition (1966), and its ecumenical counterpart, The Common Bible (1973). He was a member of the Revised Standard Version Bible Committee from 1969-1980 and of the Joint Committee on the Revised English Bible from 1979-1989. From 1946-1953 he was the Editor of the quarterly journal, Scripture.

Publications

In addition to many articles and book reviews that Fuller contributed to specialist journals, e.g. Scripture Bulletin, Priests and People, The Tablet, he wrote articles on the Deuterocanonical Books for A Catholic Commentary on Holy Scripture (1953), A New Catholic Commentary on Holy Scripture (1966) and International Catholic Bible Commentary (1996), and the articles Alexander Geddes, 1737-1802 and Mythology and Biblical Studies to 1800 for Dictionary of Biblical Interpretation (1999).
His Ph.D thesis was published in 1984 under the title Alexander Geddes: A Pioneer of Biblical Criticism, 1737-1802.
He outlined the history of the Church and Shrine of Our Lady of the Assumption and St Gregory, better known as "Warwick Street Church", where he had been a Rector from 1950-1963, in a small illustrated book entitled Warwick Street Church - A Short History and Guide ("Steadfast in Loyalty") (1973).
His friendship with Leonard Cheshire led to his editing a slender volume providing an insight into Cheshire's spiritual resources during his struggle with the effects of motor neurone disease, entitled Crossing the Finishing Line – Last Thoughts of Leonard Cheshire VC (1998, ISBN 0-85439-527-X, see pp. 7-14, 80).

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Harold Garfinkel, American sociologist died he was , 93.

Harold Garfinkel  was a Professor Emeritus at the University of California, Los Angeles died he was , 93.. He is known for establishing and developing ethnomethodology as a field of inquiry in sociology.

(October 29, 1917 – April 21, 2011)

Biography

Garfinkel was raised in Newark, New Jersey, in the years preceding the Great Depression. His father, a furniture dealer, had hoped his son would follow him into the family business. When the time arrived for Harold to attend college, he studied accounting at the University of Newark. In the summer following graduation he worked as a volunteer at a Quaker work camp in Cornelia, Georgia. This was a horizon-broadening experience for Garfinkel. He worked there with students with a variety of interests and backgrounds, and this led him to decide to take up sociology as a career.[2] In the fall of that same year, Garfinkel enrolled in the graduate program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he completed his Masters in 1942. With the onset of World War II, he was drafted into the Army Air Corps and served as a trainer at a base in Florida. As the war effort wound down he was transferred to Gulfport, Mississippi. There he met Arlene Steinbach who was to become his wife and life-long partner.
As a student at Chapel Hill, he was introduced to the writings of Talcott Parsons. In 1946 Garfinkel went to study with Parsons at the newly-formed Department of Social Relations at Harvard University. He also became acquainted, during this period, with a number of European scholars who had recently immigrated to the U.S. These would include Aron Gurwitsch, Felix Kaufmann, and Alfred Schütz, who introduced the young sociologist to newly-emerging ideas in social theory, psychology and phenomenology. While still a student at Harvard, Garfinkel was invited by the sociologist Wilbert Ellis Moore to work on the Organizational Behavior Project at Princeton University. Garfinkel was responsible for organizing two conferences in conjunction with this project. It brought him in contact with some of the most prominent scholars of the day in the behavioral, informational, and social sciences including: Gregory Bateson, Kenneth Burke, Paul Lazarsfeld, Frederick Mosteller, Philip Selznick, Herbert Simon, and John von Neumann.[3] Garfinkel's dissertation, "The Perception of the Other: A Study in Social Order," was completed in 1952.
After leaving Harvard, he worked on two large research projects, one conducting leadership studies under the auspices of the Personnel Research Board at Ohio State University and the American Jury Project for which he did fieldwork in Arizona. In 1954 he joined the sociology faculty at the University of California, Los Angeles. During the period 1963-64 he served as a Research Fellow at the Center for the Scientific Study of Suicide.[4] Garfinkel spent the ’75-’76 school year at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences and, in 1979-1980, was a visiting fellow at Oxford University. He retired from UCLA in 1987.

The Roots of Ethnomethodology

Parsons sought to offer a solution to the problem of social order (i.e., How do we account for the order that we witness in society?) and, in so doing, provide a disciplinary foundation for research in sociology. Drawing on the work of earlier social theorists (Marshall, Pareto, Durkheim, Weber), Parsons postulated that all social action could be understood in terms of an “action frame” consisting of a fixed number of elements (an agent, a goal or intended end, the circumstances within which the act occurs, and its “normative orientation”).[5] Agents make choices among possible ends, alternative means to these ends, and the normative constraints that might be seen as operative. They conduct themselves, according to Parsons, in a fashion “analogous to the scientist whose knowledge is the principal determinant of his action.”[6] Order, by this view, is not imposed from above, but rather arises from rational choices made by the actor. Parsons sought to develop a theoretical framework for understanding how social order is accomplished through these choices.
Schütz, like Parsons, was concerned with establishing a sound foundation for research in the social sciences. He took issue, however, with the Parsonsian assumption that actors in society always behave rationally. Schütz made a distinction between reasoning in the ‘natural attitude’ and scientific reasoning.[7] The reasoning of scientists builds upon everyday commonsense, but, in addition, employs a “postulate of rationality.”[8] This imposes special requirements on their claims and conclusions (e.g., application of rules of formal logic, standards of conceptual clarity, compatibility with established scientific ‘facts’). This has two important implications for research in the social sciences. First, it is inappropriate for sociologists to use scientific reasoning as a lens for viewing human action in daily life, as Parsons had proposed, since they are distinct kinds of rationality. On the other hand, the traditionally assumed discontinuity between the claims of science and commonsense understandings is dissolved since scientific observations employ both forms of rationality.[9] This raises a flag for researchers in the social sciences, since these disciplines are fundamentally engaged in the study of the shared understandings that underlie the day-to-day functioning of society. How can we make detached, objective claims about everyday reasoning, if our conceptual apparatus is hopelessly contaminated with commonsense categories and rationalities?
Accepting Schütz’s critique of the Parsonian program, Garfinkel sought to find another way of addressing the Problem of Social Order. He wrote, “Members to an organized arrangement are continually engaged in having to decide, recognize, persuade, or make evident the rational, i.e., the coherent, or consistent, or chosen, or planful, or effective, or methodical, or knowledgeable character of [their activities]”.[10] On first inspection, this might not seem very different from Parsons’ proposal. Their views on rationality, however, are not compatible. For Garfinkel, society’s character is not dictated by an imposed standard of rationality, either scientific or otherwise. Instead, rationality is itself produced as a local accomplishment in, and as, the very ways that society’s members craft their moment-to-moment interaction. He writes:
Instead of the properties of rationality being treated as a methodological principle for interpreting activity, they are to be treated only as empirically problematical material. They would have the status of data and would have to be accounted for in the same way that the more familiar properties of conduct are accounted for.[11]
Social order arises in the very ways that participants conduct themselves together. The sense of a situation arises from their interactions. Garfinkel writes, “any social setting [can] be viewed as self-organizing with respect to the intelligible character of its own appearances as either representations of or as evidences-of-a-social-order.”[12] The orderliness of social life, therefore, is produced through the moment-to-moment work of society’s members and ethnomethodology’s task is to explicate just how this work is done.
A vital thread throughout Garfinkel’s inquiries was derived from Aron Gurwitsch’s studies of the phenomenal field. This interest led Garfinkel to investigate many non-concept driven modes of local organization, investigations that may be witnessed in his studies of the legally blind woman Helen,[13] inverting lenses,[14] freeway traffic flow, and pedestrian crossings. Ethnomethodology has distanced itself from many of the customary epistemologies of rationalism, positivism, and concept-driven inquiries, and has placed increasing emphasis on the practical ways that parties concert their activities in local settings. This interest is derived from both Schütz and Gurwitsch, but the embodied analyses of Maurice Merleau-Ponty[15] also offered important direction.
Garfinkel regarded indexical expressions as key phenomena. Words like here, now, and me shift their meaning depending on when and where they are used. Philosophers and linguists refer to such terms as indexicals because they point into (index) the situational context in which they are produced. One of Garfinkel’s contributions was to note that such expressions go beyond "here", "now," etc. and encompass any and all utterances that members of society produce. As Garfinkel specified, “The demonstrably rational properties of indexical expressions and indexical actions [are] an ongoing achievement of the organized activities of everyday life”.[16] The pervasiveness of indexical expressions and their member-ordered properties mean that all forms of action provide for their own understandability through the methods by which they are produced.[17] That is, action has the property of reflexivity whereby such action is made meaningful in the light of the very situation within which it is produced.
The contextual setting, however, should not be seen as a passive backdrop for the action. Reflexivity means that members shape action in relation to context while the context itself is constantly being redefined through action.[18] The initial insight into the importance of reflexivity occurred during the study of juror’s deliberations, wherein what jurors had decided was used by them to reflexively organize the plausibility of what they were deciding. Other investigations revealed that parties did not always know what they meant by their own formulations; rather, verbal formulations of the local order of an event were used to collect the very meanings that gave them their coherent sense. Garfinkel declared that the issue of how practical actions are tied to their context lies at the heart of ethnomethodological inquiry. Using professional coffee tasting as an illustration here, taste descriptors do not merely describe but also direct the tasting of a cup of coffee; hence, a descriptor is not merely the causal result of what is tasted, as in:
coffee taste descriptor
Nor is it an imperialism of a methodology:
taste descriptor coffee
Rather, the description and what it describes are mutually determinative:
taste descriptor coffee
The descriptors operate reflexively by finding in the coffee what they mean, and each is used to make the other more explicit. Much the same may be said about rules-in-games or the use of accounts in ordinary action.[19] This reflexivity of accounts is ubiquitous, and its sense has nearly nothing to do with how the term “reflexivity” is used in analytic philosophy, in “reflexive ethnographies” that endeavor to expose the influence of the researcher in organizing the ethnography, or the way many social scientists use "reflexivity" as a synonym for "self-reflection." For ethnomethodology reflexivity is an actual, unavoidable feature of everyone’s daily life.
Garfinkel has frequently illustrated ethnomethodological analysis by means of the illustration of service lines.[20] Everyone knows what it is like to stand in a line. Queues are a part of our everyday social life; they are something within which we all participate as we carry out our everyday affairs. We recognize when someone is waiting in a line and, when we are "doing" being a member of a line, we have ways of showing it. In other words, lines may seem impromptu and routine, but they exhibit an internal, member-produced embodied structure. A line is “witnessably a produced social object;”[21] it is, in Durkheimian terms, a “social fact.” Participants' actions as "seeably" what they are (such as occupying a position in a queue) depend upon practices that the participant engages in in relation to others' practices in the proximate vicinity. To recognize someone as in a line, or to be seen as "in line" ourselves requires attention to bodily movement and bodily placement in relation to others and to the physical environment that those movements also constitute. This is another sense that we consider the action to be indexical—it is made meaningful in the ways in which it is tied to the situation and the practices of members who produce it. The ethnomethodologist's task becomes one of analyzing how members' ongoing conduct is a constituent aspect of this or that course of action. Such analysis can be applied to any sort of social matter (e.g., being female, following instructions, performing a proof, participating in a conversation). These topics are representative of the kinds of inquiry that ethnomethodology was intended to undertake.
Ethnomethodology was not designed to supplant the kind of formal analysis recommended by Parsons. Garfinkel stipulated that the two programs are “different and unavoidably related.”[22] Both seek to give accounts of social life, but ask different kinds of questions and formulate quite different sorts of claims. Sociologists operating within the formal program endeavor to produce objective (that is to say, non-indexical) claims similar in scope and to those made in the natural sciences. To do so, they must employ theoretical constructs that pre-define the shape of the social world. Unlike Parsons, and other social theorists before and since, Garfinkel’s goal was not to articulate yet another explanatory system. He expressed an “indifference” to all forms of sociological theorizing.[23] Instead of viewing social practice through a theoretical lens, Garfinkel sought to explore the social world directly and describe its autochthonous workings in elaborate detail. Durkheim famously stated, "[t]he objective reality of social facts is sociology’s fundamental principle."[24] Garfinkel substituted ‘phenomenon’ for ‘principle’, signaling a different approach to sociological inquiry.[25] The task of sociology, as he envisions it, is to conduct investigations into just how Durkheim’s social facts are brought into being. The result is an “alternate, asymmetric and incommensurable” program of sociological inquiry.[26]

Influence on later research

A substantial corpus of empirical work has developed exploring the issues raised by Garfinkel’s writings. Directly inspired by Garfinkel, Harvey Sacks undertook to investigate the sequential organization of conversational interaction.[27] This program, pioneered with colleagues Gail Jefferson and Emanuel Schegloff, has produced a large and flourishing research literature. A second, smaller literature has grown out of another of Sacks' interests having to do with social categorization practices.[28] Early on, Garfinkel issued a call for ethnomethodologically-informed investigations into the nature of work.[29] This led to a wide variety of studies focusing on different occupations and professions including: police work,[30] scientific research,[31] medical practice,[32] jazz improvisation,[33] mathematical proof,[34] philosophizing,[35] and classroom instruction.[36] Lucy Suchman, an anthropologist, did an ethnomethodologically-informed analysis of learning to use a copy machine.[37] It represented an important critique of theories of planning in Artificial Intelligence.

Selected publications

The bulk of Garfinkel’s original writings came in the form of scholarly articles and technical reports most of which were subsequently republished as book chapters. To appreciate the sequential development of Garfinkel's thought, however, it is important to understand when these pieces were actually written. Seeing Sociologically,[38] for example, which was published relatively recently, was actually written while Garfinkel was a graduate student. It is an annotated version of a draft dissertation proposal prepared two years after arriving at Harvard. Toward a Sociological Theory of Information[39] was also written while Garfinkel was a student. It was based on a 1952 report prepared in conjunction with the Organizational Behavior Project at Princeton. Some of Garfinkel’s early papers on ethnomethodology were republished as Studies in Ethnomethodology.[40] This volume is considered a classic by those working in the area. Later, Garfinkel edited an anthology showcasing examples of early ethnomethodologically-informed research.[41] A selection of his later papers were republished as Ethnomethodology’s Program: Working Out Durkheim's Aphorism.[42] This collection, together with Studies, represent the definitive exposition of the ethnomethodological approach.

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

W. J. Gruffydd, Welsh poet died he was , 94.

William John Gruffydd  better known by his bardic name of Elerydd, was a Welsh Baptist minister and poet who served as Archdruid of the National Eisteddfod of Wales between 1984 and 1987 died he was , 94.
Like all Archdruids, Elerydd was himself the winner of a major prize at the National Eisteddfod, in his case the crown at the Pwllheli Eisteddfod in 1955 and at Cardiff in 1960.

(1916  – 21 April 2011)

Works

 Poetry

  • Ffenestri (1961)
  • Cerddi'r Llygad (1973)

 Autobiography

  • Meddylu (1986)
  • O Ffair Rhos i'r Maen Llog (2003)

Other

  • Folklore and myth (1964)
  • Tua Soar (1994-7) Capel Soar y Mynydd, Ceredigion.

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Jess Stonestreet Jackson, Jr, American wine entrepreneur, founder of Kendall-Jackson, died from cancer he was 81


Jess Stonestreet Jackson, Jr.  was an American wine entrepreneur and self-made businessman died from cancer he was 81. He started the Kendall-Jackson wine business with the family's 1974 purchase of an 80-acre (32 ha) pear and walnut orchard in Lakeport, California that was converted to a vineyard. The first release of Vintner's Reserve Chardonnay in 1982 closed the gap between the super premium and cheap wine market. Today, Vintner's Reserve Chardonnay is one of the most popular wines on the market.[1] His style as a vintner was focused upon single-vineyard, mountain grown wines.

(February 18, 1930 – April 21, 2011)

Early Life and Education

Jess Jackson grew up during the Great Depression and was raised in San Francisco, California. His father, a teacher, was out of work three times while he was growing up, and there were times when the family had to survive only on rice. To help support his family, Jackson started working at an early age. From the age of five, when he got his first job as a paper boy, he worked a variety of careers, including candy maker, a soda jerk, a temp at the post office, a hops picker, a longshoreman, a teamster, a lifeguard, an ambulance driver, and a policeman, among other things, all before graduating from the University of California Berkeley law school. [2]
Jackson graduated from San Francisco's Abraham Lincoln High School. He earned a law degree from Boalt Hall Law School at the University of California, Berkeley. While studying law he simultaneously held down jobs as a policeman and an ambulance driver to put himself through school. Upon his graduation from Boalt in 1951, Jackson started practicing real estate law.

Business interests

In the late 1950’s, Jess Jackson started a law firm that went on to argue cases in front of the Supreme Court. He also pursued other business interests, including being one of the four founding members in the 1970’s of Decimus, a company which leased IBM mainframe computers to corporations.
In 1974 Jackson purchased an 80-acre pear-and-walnut orchard in Lakeport. He converted it to growing premium Chardonnay and other varietals after realizing that there was increasing demand for high-quality grapes in the area. He sold the property’s grapes to local wineries until 1981, when a down market led to a surplus of grapes on the market. Faced with the prospect of selling his grapes for a price that wouldn’t cover the costs of growing them, he decided to make his own wine. Instead of following the market by producing low-quality, inexpensive wines, Jackson studied the market and realized that there was a shortage of high-quality wines at affordable prices. He decided to produce wines that would fill that gap, and, two years later, he released the first Kendall-Jackson Vintner’s Reserve Chardonnay. That year it became the first wine to ever win a Platinum Award from the American Wine Competition.
Among the wineries in his Jackson Family Wines portfolio, as of 2009, are Kendall-Jackson, Murphy-Goode,[3] Robert Pecota Winery,[4] Byron Estates, Edmeades, Matanzas Creek, La Crema, Stonestreet, Arrowood, Lajota, Cardinale, Atalon, Lokoya, Carmel Road, Cambria, Hartford Family Wines, Vérité, Archipel, Chateau Potelle, and Freemark Abbey. As of early 2009 it was ranked as the ninth largest winery holding company in the United States.[5]
In 2005 Jackson was listed by Forbes Magazine as the 366th wealthiest person in the world (tied with many others), with 1.8 billion dollars in assets. The 2010 list by Forbes Magazine placed Jackson as the 536th richest person in the world with 1.9 billion dollars in assets. [6]

Vintner's Hall of Fame

Every year the Culinary Institute of America sponsors the induction of wine industry leaders into the Vintner’s Hall of Fame. Nominees are selected by a nominating committee, which creates the list of nominees that is later voted on by group of wine writers, critics, historians, and past inductees. The nominees with the most votes are then inducted into the Vintner’s Hall of Fame.
Jess Jackson was inducted into the Vintner’s Hall of Fame in 2009 for his outstanding contributions to the wine industry. He was among several other industry luminaries being inducted that year, including winemaker Warren Winiarski, whose Stag's Leap Cabernet Sauvignon won first place against Chateau Mouton-Rothschild and Chateau Haut-Brion in the 1976 Judgment of Paris and forever changed the way California wines were viewed worldwide, and the legendary Beringer Brothers, whose award-winning wines helped to establish Napa Valley's reputation as a top grape-growing region.[7]

Vintner's Reserve Chardonnay

Kendall-Jackson Vintner’s Reserve Chardonnay debuted in 1982 with a 16,000 case production.[8] In 1983, Vintner’s Reserve Chardonnay won first ever Platinum Award from the American Wine Competition.[9] Not coincidentally, American’s taste for the Chardonnay picked up at the same time.[10] The wine is characterized as an oaky chardonnay with a slightly more residual sugar.
Kendall-Jackson Vintner’s Reserve help Chardonnay become the most popular grape varietal[11] amongst American wine drinkers. Vintner’s Reserve Chardonnay is the most popular selling wine made from that varietal,[12] [13] which makes it the most popular wine in America.[14]
Ray Isle of Food and Wine Magazine ranked Vintner’s Reserve Chardonnay as one of his "50 Wines You Can Always Trust" in April 2007.[15]
Kendall-Jackson Vintner’s Reserve Chardonnay is also a staple in the household of Barack Obama.[16][17]

Thoroughbred horse racing

Jess Jackson won the horseraceinsider.com award Sportsman of the Year 2008 Insider Award: "To owner Jess Jackson for believing in the greatness of his beloved Curlin then went above and beyond the call to prove it."[18]
In 2007 Jackson bought a controlling interest in Curlin, who won the Preakness Stakes and the Breeders' Cup Classic in that same year.[19] In 2008 the horse went on to win the $6 million purse at the Dubai World Cup.[20]
Fresh on the heals of Curlin's success, Jackson, On May 6, 2009, along with Harold T. McCormick, Stonestreet Stables, announced the purchase of Rachel Alexandra, winner of the Kentucky Oaks by more than 20 lengths and undefeated in 2009. On May 16, 2009, she would go on to place first in the 2009 Preakness Stakes. Rachel Alexandra would go on to win 2009 American Horse of the Year. She was bred to Curlin upon her retirement.

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Ken Kostick, Canadian cooking show host (What's for Dinner?), died from complications of pancreatitis he was 57,

Ken Kostick was a Canadian chef and television and radio personality, best known for co-hosting the television series What's for Dinner? with Mary Jo Eustace died from complications of pancreatitis he was 57,.

(June 1, 1953 – April 21, 2011)

Kostick was born in Winnipeg and attended St. John's High School.[5]
He hosted He Said, She Said with Ken and Mary Jo on W Network. [3] His other television credits included Ken Kostick and Company on Food Network Canada, Countertop to Table Cuisine on Global,[citation needed] and What's for Breakfast?, a morning radio show on Toronto, Ontario radio station CIRR-FM, from April 2007 to December 2008.[6]
He also wrote several bestselling cookbooks and put out an eponymous line of cooking products.[4]
On April 21, 2011, Kostick died in Toronto of complications of pancreatitis.[2]He was 57 years old.

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Max Mathews, American engineer and computer music composer, died from complications from pneumonia he was , 84.

Max Vernon Mathews  was a pioneer in the world of computer music died from complications from pneumonia he was , 84.


(born November 13, 1926, Columbus, Nebraska, USA – April 21, 2011, San Francisco, CA, USA)

Biography

Matthews studied electrical engineering at the California Institute of Technology and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, receiving a Sc.D. in 1954. Working at Bell Labs, Mathews wrote MUSIC, the first widely-used program for sound generation, in 1957. For the rest of the century, he continued as a leader in digital audio research, synthesis, and human-computer interaction as it pertains to music performance.
Although he was not the first to generate sound with a computer (an Australian CSIRAC computer played tunes as early as 1951),[1] Mathews fathered generations of digital music tools. He described his work in parental terms in this excerpt from "Horizons in Computer Music," March 8–9, 1997, Indiana University:
"Computer performance of music was born in 1957 when an IBM 704 in NYC played a 17 second composition on the Music I program which I wrote. The timbres and notes were not inspiring, but the technical breakthrough is still reverberating. Music I led me to Music II through V. A host of others wrote Music 10, Music 360, Music 15, Csound and Cmix. Many exciting pieces are now performed digitally. The IBM 704 and its siblings were strictly studio machines – they were far too slow to synthesize music in real-time. Chowning's FM algorithms and the advent of fast, inexpensive, digital chips made real-time possible, and equally important, made it affordable."
"Starting with the Groove program in 1970, my interests have focused on live performance and what a computer can do to aid a performer. I made a controller, the radio-baton, plus a program, the conductor program, to provide new ways for interpreting and performing traditional scores. In addition to contemporary composers, these proved attractive to soloists as a way of playing orchestral accompaniments. Singers often prefer to play their own accompaniments. Recently I have added improvisational options which make it easy to write compositional algorithms. These can involve precomposed sequences, random functions, and live performance gestures. The algorithms are written in the C language. We have taught a course in this area to Stanford undergraduates for two years. To our happy surprise, the students liked learning and using C. Primarily I believe it gives them a feeling of complete power to command the computer to do anything it is capable of doing."
In 1961, Mathews arranged the accompaniment of the song "Daisy Bell" for an uncanny performance by computer-synthesized human voice, using technology developed by John Kelly of Bell Laboratories and others. Author Arthur C. Clarke was coincidentally visiting friend and colleague John Pierce at the Bell Labs Murray Hill facility at the time of this remarkable speech synthesis demonstration and was so impressed that he later told Stanley Kubrick to use it in 2001: A Space Odyssey, in the climactic scene where the HAL 9000 computer sings while his cognitive functions are disabled.[2]
Mathews directed the Acoustical and Behavioral Research Center at Bell Laboratories from 1962 to 1985, which carried out research in speech communication, visual communication, human memory and learning, programmed instruction, analysis of subjective opinions, physical acoustics, and industrial robotics. From 1974 to 1980 he was the Scientific Advisor to the Institute de Recherche et Coordination Acoustique/Musique (IRCAM), Paris, France, and since 1987 has been Professor of Music (Research) at Stanford University. He served as the Master of Ceremonies for the concert program of NIME-01, the inaugural conference on New interfaces for musical expression.
Mathews was a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering and a fellow in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Acoustical Society of America, the IEEE, and the Audio Engineering Society. He held a Silver Medal in Musical Acoustics from the Acoustical Society of America, and the Chevalier dans l'ordre des Arts et Lettres, Republique Francaise.
The Max portion of the software package Max/MSP is named after him (the MSP portion is named for Miller Puckette, currently teaching at UC San Diego).
Mathews died on the morning of 21 April 2011 in San Francisco, California of complications from pneumonia. He was 84. He was survived by his wife, Marjorie, his three sons, and six grandchildren.

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...