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΢Ȧ Retirees

Laurence Josephs

Laurence Josephs, professor emeritus of English, died on June 26, 1997, in Saratoga Springs. He was 74.

Born in New York City and a resident of rural Greenfield Center during his ΢Ȧ career, Josephs lived and worked almost his entire life in New York State. He started his college studies at St. John’s in Annapolis but returned to his native state to earn a bachelor’s degree from New York University in 1945. The following year, he earned a master of arts in English from Columbia University. His first teaching position, from 1946 to 1950, was at City College in New York. From the time that Josephs joined ΢Ȧ’s Department of English in 1963 until his retirement in 1988 he taught courses ranging from freshman English to masterpieces of English literature, and from the 19th-and 20th-century continental novel to poetry workshops. Between his teaching careers at City College and ΢Ȧ, he served as president of the New York advertising firm Positives Research Corporation.

When he first arrived at ΢Ȧ, Josephs began what became a tradition that lasted into his postretirement years: an annual reading of his poems in the living room of the Surrey. The event attracted a large audience from the College and the Saratoga community.

Josephs’s productivity as a poet was termed “prodigious” by a ΢Ȧ colleague, and the dean of the faculty described his work as “intensely personal, autobiographical ... with a freshness of poetic vision that captures and provokes our sensibilities.” Josephs’s collections of poetry include Cold Water Morning, Six Elegies, and The ΢Ȧ Poems: A Retrospective, published in 1975 when Josephs delivered the annual Faculty Research Lecture. His poems were published in a wide range of periodicals, including The New Yorker, Commentary, The Southern Review, and Salmagundi. In 1988, in honor of Josephs’s distinguished tenure as a teacher and poet, ΢Ȧ published a collection titled New and Selected Poems.

In addition to a remembrance conducted by friends and admirers in July, a College memorial service was scheduled for October 28. Professor Josephs is survived by several cousins and close friends.