Great expectations fulfilled
Judy Rosener is proud to say that she is a rare breed, an Orange
County Democrat who makes Lido Isle her home.
Rosener is a housewife-turned-activist who went after and obtained
a doctorate at age 50. She’s written two books, was a board member of
KCET-TV, Channel 28, served as a commissioner on the California
Coastal Commission and now teaches at UC Irvine.
The 74-year-old recently sat down with the Pilot’s Luis Pena and
fondly reminisced.
Where did you grow up? What kind of childhood did you have?
I was born and raised in one house in Los Angeles, and having
driven by to see it in the last few years, I have to say it hasn’t
changed much. The neighborhood was, and still is, a rather low-income
neighborhood. Although my father was a Caltech graduate and my mother
a graduate of UCLA (rare for women in those days), it was the
Depression and my father ended up selling insurance because he
couldn’t find an engineering job. I was fortunate to have loving
parents who in the early 1950s moved to Newport Beach. We had a
wonderful childhood. Although it was the Depression and we were poor
financially, our childhood was culturally rich. I was in junior high
school when World War II started and I remember hearing about the
bombing of Pearl Harbor, listening to President Roosevelt on the
radio and going with my mother with our ration books to get white
lard and little packages of yellow stuff to mix with it to make the
lard look like butter. And I remember collecting all kinds of metals
for the war effort. I also remember walking to school with a group
and every day stopping on the way home to buy twin popsicles for five
cents. In those days, we stayed after school and played on the
playground, for of course, we had no TV and not much else to do.
Sports were very important.
How did you end up in Newport-Mesa?
Actually my husband, Joe, laughs about this. We were living in
Pasadena where my husband had attended Caltech before we were married
in 1951. He had a managerial-level job at a good-sized electronics
company at the time but wanted to do something else. I saw an ad in
the paper for a CEO of a plasma physics company in Santa Ana. The
response was to a P.O. Box number. I suggested he answer the ad. I
first met my husband Joe on little Balboa Island in 1947 and we both liked the beach, so we thought it would be fun to move to Orange
County. So he responded to the ad never expecting to hear back. It
turned out that the owner of the company in the ad was the same man,
Gabriel Giannini, who owned the firm for which he was working at the
time. Giannini was a sailor and I assume he moved his R & D firm to
Orange County so he could sail. He lived on Lido Island, and when we
looked for the best public school (our children were then 3, 5 and 7)
we learned it was Newport Elementary. So we bought a house on Lido in
1959 and have lived there ever since. Although my husband left the
firm when it moved to the East Coast.
What are your greatest accomplishments in life?
I feel my greatest accomplishments are sequential. I was a
stay-at-home wife and mother of three children for 18 years. I went back to school at middle age, got a master’s degree and then a PhD at
the age of 50. I then became a full-time professor at UCI in 1982 at
the age of 52 and I’m still teaching, writing and doing research. I
helped save the Upper Newport Bay as a member of the 1969 Orange
County grand jury. I helped save views and access to the beach along
the Orange County Coast as a Coastal Commissioner from 1973 to ’81. I
have written two management books used widely in corporations and I’m
working on a third. And I have written articles and columns in
numerous publications. In conjunction with my teaching and writing, I
have been a keynote speaker in the Great Hall of the People in
Beijing, China, in Zurich, Switzerland, Ireland, Israel, Mexico and
Canada in addition to major conferences in the U.S.
If you could re-do one moment or incident in your life, what would
it be?
I would like to have kept my mouth shut many times when I
impulsively felt compelled to make controversial comments.
What profession other than yours would you like to have tried?
None, I love what I’m doing. I like being a professor because it
provides intellectual stimulation, time flexibility, the chance to
shape the life of others, security of employment and exposure to
wonderful people of all ages, backgrounds and talents.
What are some differences between a typical day in your life now
versus a day in your life 20 years ago?
First of all, today I don’t cook! I don’t iron and I don’t vacuum.
I contract out. ... Today, I’m at the computer for many hours; not so
20 years ago. Today, I read four newspapers a day and lots of
magazines and journals so that I can be an up-to-date professor.
Didn’t have to do that 20 years ago. Today, I talk on the phone while
driving my car. Couldn’t do that 20 years ago. And today, as I
approach 75, I look at the obituary column, which I didn’t do 20
years ago.
What is the greatest lesson you’ve learned in your life?
Nothing tops being loved by those you love. I say this because
being happily married and having a loving family has provided a safe
harbor that has allowed me to be myself.
What do you treasure most?
It sounds corny, but what I treasure most is the fact that I have
a wonderful close-knit family, and lots of friends and colleagues who
provide me with intellectual and emotional challenges and support. I
say this because being able to share the “ups” of life maximizes the
joys. Being able to share the “downs” of life minimizes their impact.
I’m of the belief that when it comes to sharing “ups” and “downs,”
who better to share with than family, friends, and colleagues?
What traditions did your family have that you remember?
My extended family, many of whom live in California, has a
tradition which we call “Duzins of Cuzins.” Each year we gather at
one of our homes and spend the day together. Usually 50 to 60
relatives attend -- it’s a potluck -- and cousins, reflecting four
generations come from the East Coast and as far away as Australia to
eat, sing, tell stories, play games and take a family picture. We
keep track of births, deaths, marriages and job changes, and it’s a
tradition I suspect will continue for a long time.
What would you like people to always remember about you?
That I felt fortunate to have had a wonderful life, and spent
time, money and my professional expertise trying to enhance the lives
of others less fortunate.
What was one of the best of the unexpected things that happened in
your life?
Perhaps the most unexpected thing that happened to me was getting
a PhD at the age of 50, and being recognized around the world as an
expert on men and women at work. As a graduate of UCLA in 1951, my
lifetime expectation was to be a good wife, mother, grandmother and
community volunteer. Clearly receiving a PhD at the age of 50 and
being made a full-time faculty member in the graduate school of
management at UCI at the age of 52 changed that expectation!
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