Obituary: W.E. 'Gene' Deskins / Math professor cultivated students and garden

Posted: August 3, 2012 at 6:13 pm

Feb. 20, 1927 - July 30, 2012

W.E. "Gene" Deskins, a professor and mathematician who was chairman of the math department at the University of Pittsburgh during the 1970s and 1980s, enjoyed being in the classroom.

"He loved to teach. He loved finding students who really enjoy math," said his daughter, Samantha E. Deskins of Austin, Texas.

Mr. Deskins died Monday in his Point Breeze home. He was 85 and had been suffering from dementia.

He was a native of Morgantown, W.Va., and received a bachelor's degree from the University of Kentucky and master's and doctoral degrees from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

His area of research was in classic group theory, a branch of modern algebra, said Charles Cullen, an associate professor emeritus at Pitt and a department colleague of Mr. Deskins.

Mr. Deskins was a frequently published scholar and a lecturer and invited speaker at various academic gatherings in this country and abroad.

Beginning in the early 1950s, he taught at Wisconsin and later at Ohio State and Michigan State universities. By then, he had developed an affinity for Pittsburgh, He traveled a number of times from Columbus, Ohio, to attend Pittsburgh symphony performances and eventually made this city his home, his daughter said.

In 1971, Mr. Deskins came to Pitt as a professor and chairman of the mathematics department. After stepping down from the chairmanship in 1987, he became associate dean of what was then called Pitt's college of arts and sciences, a position he held until retiring from Pitt in 1995 as a professor emeritus.

"He did a great deal to strengthen the research abilities of the mathematics department," Mr. Cullen recalled.

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Obituary: W.E. 'Gene' Deskins / Math professor cultivated students and garden

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