Los Angeles Times

An advocate for diversity

JEWEL PLUMMER COBB

- By Anh Do anh.do@latimes.com

Jewel Plummer Cobb, president of Cal State Fullerton during a time of growth in the 1980s, has died.

Jewel Plummer Cobb, the president of Cal State Fullerton during a time of unpreceden­ted growth in the 1980s and one of the first African American women to oversee a major university in the western United States, has died at the age of 92. Cobb had been living in Maplewood, N.J., and suffered from Alzheimer’s disease.

When Cobb arrived at the Orange County campus in 1981, she found a school bursting at the seams and lacking diversity — no campus housing for students, no women’s studies programs, few minority faculty members and officials who seemingly paid little attention to community outreach.

Cobb set about making changes, partially through the sheer force of her no-nonsense management style and 16-hour workdays, colleagues said.

“Jewel was an absolute dynamo. Her life was dedicated to helping the disadvanta­ged, long before that became a popular cry,” said Jack Bedell, professor emeritus of sociology and former chairman of the university’s Academic Senate. “Right away, she set an example for the rest of us that the university’s first responsibi­lity is to students.”

Cobb, the granddaugh­ter of a freed slave, told Bedell that her background compelled her to focus on the needs of those often ignored. She grew up in Chicago, raised by a doctor and a teacher. Though she came from a middle-class upbringing, segregatio­n meant she had to attend underfunde­d public schools designated for African Americans.

While she was a student at the University of Michigan, African Americans were prevented from swimming at public pools, and black students were isolated in one dormitory. She transferre­d to Talladega College in Alabama, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in biology. Later, she moved to New York University to study cell biology, earning a master’s degree and a doctorate in cell physiology.

A biologist by training, she never let go of her desire for learning, friends said.

“Once, my son opened up his sixthgrade science book and there she was, one of six people featured as leaders in her field,” Bedell recalled. “She always had high standards; she was classy in every way.”

By the time she retired from Cal State Fullerton in 1990, her legacy would include rapid enrollment growth, the opening of new communicat­ions and engineerin­g schools, the launch of a satellite campus in southern Orange County and a public-private venture to build a Marriott hotel on campus. She was dubbed “The Queen of Concrete” by some.

Cobb was also credited with recruiting more women and minorities, both as students and professors. She establishe­d the school’s first endowed professors­hips and launched partnershi­ps with universiti­es abroad, forming student and faculty exchanges, along with getting state funding for a dormitory that now bears her name.

Cobb’s own research focused on skin cancer and zeroed in on the ability of melanin to protect skin from damage. She spent years documentin­g how hormones, ultraviole­t light and chemothera­peutic drugs could cause changes in cell division. Her published works include 36 research-related journal articles, plus others on the advancemen­t of women in scientific fields.

“She often told me that she faced more struggles as a woman than as a minority,” Bedell said.

What Cobb left behind is an appreciati­on for affirmativ­e action tied to excellence, said Barbara Stone, a former political science professor and a member of the search committee that recommende­d Cobb for the president’s post.

In 1990, when asked how she would like to be remembered, Cobb told Diane Ross, then-president of the Assn. for Women in Science: “I think I’d like to be remembered as a black woman scientist who cared very much about what happens to young folks, particular­ly women going into science.”

She is survived by a son, Roy Jonathan Cobb; a daughter-in-law, Suzzanne Douglas Cobb; and a granddaugh­ter, Jordan.

‘I think I’d like to be remembered as a black woman scientist who cared very much about what happens to young folks.’ — JEWEL COBB, to the then-president of the Assn. for Women in Science in 1990

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? ‘ABSOLUTE DYNAMO’ Jewel Plummer Cobb, a biologist by training, led Cal State Fullerton during a time of unpreceden­ted growth for the university in the 1980s.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ‘ABSOLUTE DYNAMO’ Jewel Plummer Cobb, a biologist by training, led Cal State Fullerton during a time of unpreceden­ted growth for the university in the 1980s.

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