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OBITUARIES
Max R. Pitstick
Max R. Pitstick, of Xenia, passed away Oct. 14
at his home. He was 78.
He was born April 29, 1930, in Jamestown, the son of
Raymond and Gertrude (Bittner) Pitstick. Max served his country in
the U.S. Army from 1951 to 1953 and retired after 50 years in the lumber
business at PK Lumber in Yellow Springs. He enjoyed carpentry, gardening,
golf, hunting and playing cards.
He was preceded in death by his parents; brothers,
Bob and Bill Pitstick; and most recently by his dear friend and co-worker,
Bill Hoag.
He is survived by his wife, Pauline F. (McKnight) Bittner
Pitstick; children and their partners, Cathy Brown (fiancé, Jeff
Fulton) of Springfield, Randy and Brenda Pitstick of Yellow Springs, and
Steven and Charlene Pitstick of Springfield; stepsons and their partners,
Larry and Kathy Bittner, San Jose, Calif., and Rick and Martha Bittner
of Xenia; grandchildren, Colton, Rhett, Caleb, Ethan (serving in the U.S.
Marines in Afghanistan), Hunter and Chase Pitstick, Valerie Ward, Kelly
Staggs, Chelsea Brown, Marnee (fiancé Lee Bennett) Bittner, Richard,
Dawn, Lauren and Dustin Bittner; great grandchildren Justice, Jaden, Addison
and Madelyn; brothers and sisters-in-law, Jim and Gladys Pitstick of Cedarville,
and Don and Ann Pitstick of Cocoa Beach, Fla.; several nieces, nephews,
other relatives and friends.
A memorial service will be held at a later date. If
desired, memorial contributions may be sent to the American Heart Association/American
Stroke Association, Ohio Valley Association, P.O. Box 1820039 Dept. 013,
Columbus, OH 43218-2039. Arrangements are under the direction of
McColaugh Funeral Home, Inc., Xenia, Ohio.
David Landes
Up out of the Mississippi Delta in and around Bluesman
BB King territory, David Lamont Landes was born in 1941. His parents,
Art and Margaret Landes, worked as organizers on the Delta Cooperative
Farm in Clarksdale, (Coahoma County) Miss., and with the Southern Tenant
Farmer’s Union in Abbeville, S.C. In 1946, David’s family
moved to Yellow Springs, Ohio.
He died unexpectedly on Oct. 13, 2008.
Following graduation from Bryan High School in 1960,
David attended Swarthmore College. In 1961 he transferred to Antioch College
in Yellow Springs. The next year he survived a spinal cord injury and
lived 46 more years as a spirited quadriplegic and disability rights activist.
After graduating from Antioch in 1965, David attended Washington University
in St. Louis, Mo., where he received his Ph.D. in economics.
He joined the faculty of San Jose State, in 1969 as
part of a group of economists devoted to teaching economics relevant to
the less affluent majority of the world. He was part of a group of radical
economists “dismissed” from SJ State in 1974 and went on to
become a “Freeway flyer,” serving on faculties at Foothill,
Indian Valley and Sonoma State. David was a founding member of the Union
for Radical Political Economics (URPE).
His life reflected the ways in which people with disabilities
broke barriers and paved new avenues for social justice. David traveled
extensively with the Disabled International Support Effort (DISE) to Nicaragua,
El Salvador and Cuba, conducting workshops and delivering medical supplies.
For several years, he served as coordinator for student affairs at the
computer technologies program in Berkeley, Calif. David was also an interviewer/editor
for the UC Berkeley Bancroft Library Oral History Project on the disability
rights movement. Along with serving on the board of the Oakland Men’s
Project, he was appointed to the Mayor’s Commission on Disabled
Persons in Oakland, Calif.
In the 1990s, he was a member of Quadzilla, a Bay Area
rugby team for people with disabilities. For the past year, David was
actively involved in efforts to save Antioch College. Although he referred
to himself as a lapsed Quaker, his daily life evolved around its core
vision and principles of conflict resolution, peace and unwavering social
justice.
His love of baseball was as unyielding as the work
ethic he brought to teaching thousands of students micro and macro economics.
From 1996 to his death, David served as an instructor at City College
of San Francisco Department of Social Science. Six years ago, he predicted
the burst of the housing bubble and railed against the economic policies
now strangling the country, as well as other economies around the world.
The ultimate mensch, and at ease with the highs and
lows of life, he was just a “cool dude” and a fabulous father
who lived to tell about his daughter’s tumultuous teenage angst
and celebrate her graduation from Mills College, at age 36.
He is survived by his wife of 22 years, Daphne Muse;
brothers, Don Landes (Santa Cruz, Calif.), Michael Landes (Eugene, Ore.)
and Phillip Lawson (Rome, Ga.); daughter, Anyania Muse (Woodstock, Ga.);
nephews Matt Landes and Devin Landes; nieces Talia Landes and Crista Lawson;
and his grandchildren, Maelia Jones and Elijah Jones; sisters-in-law,
Deborah Marks (Santa Cruz, Calif.) and Nancy Callaghan (Eugene, Ore.);
and Betty Goshen Muse, his deeply cherished mother-in-law. He is also
survived by a host of family, friends and colleagues around the world.
A celebration of his life is pending.
In growing his legacy, contributions can be made to
the David Landes Scholarship Fund, c/o 2429 East 23rd Street, Oakland,
CA 94601-1235.
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