NAMES AND FACES
CHEERS
The Academic Council and the Assembly of the Academic Senate announced
the selection of Aimée Dorr, dean of the
UCLA Graduate School of Education & Information Studies and
professor of education, and Mathematics Professor Calvin
C. Moore of UC Berkeley as co-recipients of the Senate’s
Oliver Johnson Award for Distinguished Senate Leadership. They will
be honored at the Annual Senate Chairs Dinner on July 21.... The
Academic Senate’s Committee on Diversity and Equal Opportunity
selects recipients for the Fair and Open Academic Environment Award
every other year. This year, the winners are Professor Susan
Cochran, School of Public Health, for her LGBT curriculum
work; Professor Don Nakanishi, director of the
Center for Asian American Studies, for being a strong voice for
inclusiveness; Alfred Herrera, director of the
Center for Community College Partnerships, for his work in UCLA’s
admissions and transfer programs; Rhonda Younger,
student affairs officer in the School of Nursing, for reaching out
to underrepresented students; and student Sophia Kozak,
for her work to create dialogue on campus.... Dave Miller,
Communications Technology Services client services manager, will
be chair of the Council of UC Staff Assemblies for 2004-05. He is
the first chair from UCLA since Jani Quintero in 1997.
HATS OFF
At the 2004 College Awards Dinner, Jerry and
Joy Monkarsh, two longtime UCLA supporters and
alumni whose volunteer work has involved them in leadership of programs
and projects across the university, were presented with the Honorary
Fellow Awards of the UCLA College. Also, three undergraduate and
three graduate students were chosen to receive the Charles E. Young
and Sue K. Young Student Awards based on their academic achievement,
research accomplishments and community service. Undergraduate winners
are: Angela Mazer, international development studies;
Sean Patrick Klein, business and economics; and
Brian Hong-An Tang, atmospheric sciences and applied
mathematics. Graduate winners are Sally Dickerson,
social psychology; C. Jason Throop, anthropology;
and Charles Hiroshi Garrett, musicology.... A UCLA
Center for Community Partnerships grantee, the Hope
Street Family Center, a human service organization serving
the downtown Los Angeles area, received the Communities of Excellence
Award for its model programs in early childhood intervention, family
literacy, language enhancement training and school-readiness programs,
among others. The award was presented by the Federal Interagency
Coordinating Council for Early Intervention in Washington, D.C.
IN MEMORIAM
John McDougall Christie, famous for his work
in structural geology and microtectonics, and especially for his
insights into the mechanical behavior of quartz in the geological
range of temperatures and pressures, died at age 72 at home in Pacific
Palisades, Calif., on May 7. He began to teach and do research at
UCLA in 1958.
Christie was born in Calcutta, India, on December 4, 1931, where
his father ran a jute mill. His stay in India was short, but he
still fondly remembered the Indian woman who took care of him as
his aya. The family moved back to their Scottish homeland, and Christie
grew up in Invergowrie near Dundee. After primary school in Invergowrie
and a secondary education in Dundee, Christie began studying at
Edinburgh University in 1949. From 1950 on, he attended the Grant
Institute of Geology of that University and obtained his Bachelor
of Science degree in 1953, and his Doctorate of Philosophy under
the supervision of Professor Arthur Holmes in 1956. Christie’s
thesis, “The Post-Cambrian Thrusts of the Assynt Region,”
is based on field work on a portion of the Moine and related thrusts
in the Scottish North-West Highlands.
From 1956 to 1958 Christie assisted Professor Donald B. McIntyre
of the Department of Geology at Pomona College in Claremont, California,
with a National Science Foundation research project on the structural
geology and structural petrology of the Orocopia Mountains, Southern
California; he also was a part-time instructor in that department.
In 1957 he came to the attention of Professor John C. Crowell, then
chairman of the Department of Geology at UCLA. He made a favorable
impression on the faculty of the department and, after all bureaucratic
hurdles had been overcome, was hired. The concluding paragraph in
Arthur Holmes’ letter of recommendation may have been helpful:
“It is with whole-hearted confidence that I recommend Dr.
Christie to your most favorable consideration, and I look forward
to hearing of his having a most successful career.”
In the fall of 1958, Christie began to teach and research at UCLA’s
Department of Geology as Assistant Professor, advanced to Associate
Professor in 1964, and to Full Professor in 1971. Soon after his
arrival, he began a close partnership with Professor David T. Griggs
that lasted until Griggs’ death in 1974. Griggs deformed specimens
of quartz and quartz rocks in his deformation apparatus, at specified
rates and under determined conditions of temperature and pressure,
dry or in the presence of water; Christie investigated the resulting
samples under the microscope, measuring the crystallographic orientation
of quartz grains. From their measurements they were able to state
flow laws for quartz rocks as a function of physical conditions
and the presence of water.
Transmission electron microscopy became available, and Christie
began to look into the internal evidence of strain within individual
quartz crystals in collaboration with Professor Alan Ardell at UCLA’s
School of Engineering. At the magnification obtainable in this instrument,
the regular three-dimensional pattern of silicon and oxygen atoms
could be seen to be disrupted by dislocations, and the more a quartz
crystal had been deformed, the denser were the dislocations. And
the dislocation patterns were similar whether a specimen had been
deformed experimentally or been taken from a metamorphic rock in
the field. Mastery of electron microscopy led to a collaboration
with Professor Arthur Heuer of Case Western Reserve University on
specimens from the Moon, one of the few instances when Christie
became interested in rocks devoid of quartz.
Laboratory work did not diminish Christie’s fascination with
observing and mapping structural phenomena in the field; he collaborated
with colleagues and supervised students’ thesis projects.
The White and Inyo Mountains of eastern California was his favorite
region, with a special preference for the rocks surrounding the
Papoose Flat Pluton.
Diligent and conscientious research did not prevent Christie from
serving with equal diligence and conscientiousness as an administrator.
For many years he was the Graduate Advisor for the Department of
Geology, later of Earth and Space Sciences, to the great benefit
of generations of students. With equal dedication he served on major
Senate Committees, turning the affairs of the Library Committee
and later of the Graduate Council into his personal concerns.
Christie officially retired in 1994, but continued to have an office
and to work in the Department of Earth and Space Sciences. During
his later retirement years, his main scientific interest was the
effect of plate tectonics on the spreading and distribution of the
orchidaceae family of plants. |