Los Angeles Times

Leader in battle to integrate Pasadena schools

- By Javier Panzar javier.panzar@latimes.com Times staff writer Nina Agrawal contribute­d to this report.

Al Lowe, a prominent Pasadena businessma­n and community leader who helped implement a court order to integrate that city’s schools in the 1970s, has died. He was 92.

Lowe was a fourth-generation California­n and Chinese American whose ancestors arrived in the U.S. in the 1800s. He ran a furniture shop on Colorado Boulevard for decades and became the first member of a racial minority elected to the Pasadena school board in 1969.

He rose to prominence in 1970 after U.S. District Judge Manuel Real determined that the district’s schools were de facto racially segregated and approved a plan to integrate campuses by busing students around the district. Pasadena became the first district outside the American South to receive a federal order to integrate.

Lowe, along with two other school board members, supported the ruling and carried it out.

Lowe told The Times in 2000 that being an Asian American helped him during the tumultuous times.

“As a person who was neither black or white, I saw myself as friends of people of both races,” he said then.

Lowe received threats, his home was picketed and his business suffered. He and the two other school board members who supported integratio­n beat back a recall effort in 1971. But Lowe lost a reelection bid in 1973 and an anti-busing slate of candidates won a majority.

Larry Wilson, the public editor of the San Gabriel Valley Newspapers and a columnist and member of the editorial board for the Southern California News Group, called Lowe “the man who saved Pasadena” in a column about his death last week.

“His genius for negotiatio­n and compromise had nothing to do with his race,” Wilson wrote. “It had everything to do with every fiber of his personal being.”

Over the years, Pasadena turned to him repeatedly to help guide the city through turbulent times.

When activists protested the Tournament of Roses — calling it an “old white men’s club” — Lowe stepped in to lead a diversity committee and created an outreach program.

“He was instrument­al in getting rid of that stigma,” Ken Burrows, a past president of the tournament, told The Times in 2000.

Lowe and his wife, Rose Marie, moved to the Bay Area in 2000 to be closer to their children and grandchild­ren.

Lowe apparently died of natural causes on Nov. 21, the Alameda County Coroner’s Bureau said Saturday.

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