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词条 Draft:Joseph Juhasz
释义

  1. Personal life

  2. Academic and professional life

  3. References

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| name = Joseph B. Juhasz
| image =
| native_name = Juhász József Borisz
| native_name_lang = hu
| birth_name = Juhászi József Borisz
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1938|1|30}}
| birth_place = Budapest
| occupation = professor
}}{{eastern name order|Juhász József Borisz}}

Joseph Juhasz (January 30, 1930, Budapest) is a Hungarian-American university professor of architecture and environmental design.

Personal life

Joseph (Joe) Juhasz was born in pre-WWII Hungary to William and Mary (Christanus) Juhasz. He was their third son. Born of a Jewish mother and part-Jewish mother, he spent his early years evading progressively the growing anti-Jewish activities in the country.

At the end of the war, his father and oldest brother were part of a progressive liberal pro-Western movement which eventually ran afoul of the authorities as Hungary was absorbed into the Soviet Empire. By 1948, with the impending arrest Cardinal Mindszenty, the Juhasz family was advised by their American contacts to smuggle themselves out of the country. This took place in three stages between December 1948 and January 1949. Joseph was smuggled out of Hungary to Vienna in the trunk of 1947 Plymouth owned by an American diplomat, Steven Koczak[1]. Vienna being an island in the middle of a Soviet-controlled zone, the second movement took place in the Spring of 1949 to the American zone in the city. The spent the remainder of the year in exile.

At the end of 1949, the family moved to Italy and in 1951, they relocate to the United States.

Joseph graduated from Xavier High School (New York, NY) in 1957.

He married Suzanne Hecht in 1963. They have three children, Alexandra Juhasz (1964), Jennifer Schwartz (Juhasz), Atonia Juhasz. The divorced in 1981.

In 1981 he married Lorrine Wood. They have two children, Christine Juhasz-Wood (1983) and Linda Juhasz Wood (1985). They divorced in 1994.

Academic and professional life

He attended Brown University (Providence, RI) from 1957 -1961 on an ROTC Scholarship. At Brown he was the first undergraduate teaching assistant in the history of the school and graduated cum laude with honors in psychology.

Immediately upon graduation he became an active duty officer in the U.S. Navy.

He served on the U.S.S. Forrestal (CVA59) from 1961-1963 as officer of the deck for all general quarters, conditions (including the Cuban Missile Crisis) and eventual qualified for command duty officer. From 1963-1964 he was navigator on the U.S.S Capricornus (AKA57). From 1964-1965 executive officer and navigator of the U.S.S. Sheboygan County (LST533). In the spring of 1965 he resigned his commission as a protest of the Vietnam war, a conflict he viewed as "winnable"

From 1965 - 1969, he was a graduate student in psychology at the University of California Berkeley, receiving in PhD in psychology in 1969. His primary advisor was Theodore Sarbin, with whom he began co-publishing while still a graduate student. His dissertation dealt with the links between psychological role theory, imaging, imagining and being imaginative.This line of research led to evaluating the status of hallucinations in direction and toward the role of human creativity in architectural design in the other.

In 1968 he became a regular faculty member in psychology at Bennington College.

From 1970 -1972 he was assistant professor of psychology at Bucknell University. While at Bucknell, he has a, National Science Foundation post-doctoral fellowship to the University of Otago, in Dunedin, New Zealand. From 1973-1974 he a visiting assistant professor at the College Five (now Oakes College) a the University of California Santa Cruz. In 1974 he moved to the University of Colorado Boulder. He retired in 2012 with the rank of full professor. During his tenure he served as department chair, interim dean and chairs of the faculty assembly and inter campus faculty council. Additionally from1978-1979 he was visiting professor at the University of Toronto and taught at Sung Kyun Kwan University as a visiting professor international summer semester 2009-2016 and the Community College of Denver as a lecturer in architectural technologies from 2012-2017

He is currently professor emeritus at the University of Colorado.

The transition from teaching psychology to environmental design was facilitated by his co-edited book Environments (1974), with Steven Friedman[2]. This book, along with several others in the same year, helped launch the formal field of architectural and environmental psychology.

In addition to his academic work as an academic researcher and teacher, Juhasz has been producing, directing and participating in numerous radio programs on KGNU community radio in Boulder Colorado, including the long-running show, Good Old CU. He his also a participant in the International Press Roundtable.

References

1. ^{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/979429533|title=SINGLE YELLOW ROSE : a memoir.|last=ANNA.|first=KOCZAK,|date=2012|publisher=TATE Publishing & ENTERPR|isbn=1618629069|location=[Place of publication not identified],|oclc=979429533}}
2. ^{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/940360|title=Environments: notes and selections on objects, spaces, and behavior|last=Stephen,|first=Friedman,|date=1974|publisher=Brooks/Cole Pub. Co|others=Juhasz, Joseph B.,|isbn=0818501014|location=Monterey, Calif.,|oclc=940360}}
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Juhasz, Joseph}}Category:Hungarian emigrants to the United States
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