IOBA Standard - Vol III, no. 2
People will gather in George Rogers Park, the lower level, around 11:30 the
morning of Friday, May 10, 2002. The park is located on the western end of
Lake Oswego, between the lake and the Williamette River, in the greater
Portland, Oregon metropolitan area. I wish I could join them.
These people will be family and friends of Dr. Leonard W. Lanfranco.
The gathering will be to share memories, stories, and thoughts about, and
to celebrate the life of Len Lanfranco. Like countless others, my own life
is a little richer because I came into contact with this man.
Leonard W. Lanfranco was born in Oakland, California, June 12, 1939. Len died
from a brain aneurysm April 30, 2002. The important stuff happened
between these two dates.
It is difficult to sum up a persons life. How do you judge what is
important? What are the things that count?
I suspect the most important event in Lens life occurred in Vancouver,
Washington, on May 1, 1965, when he married Mardell Flewelling. For Len and
Mardell, their daughters and granddaughter this date was critical. The day
following his death they would have celebrated 37 years of marriage.
As important as Lens wedding date was to him and his family, the rest of
us probably need to look a little farther.
Most summations of a lifetime concentrate on the persons accomplishments.
If this were the measure Len would indeed be worthy of praise and respect. His
life was filled with important tasks attempted and achieved.
Len's
professional, educational, and intellectual achievements
were outstanding. His degrees were from leading universities in his field.
His professional accomplishments were in responsible, difficult positions with
respected institutions, and he succeeded wherever he went. This was a man
who undertook important tasks, and completed them.
You can often tell a lot about a person by looking at the investment they
make of their time, outside of the office.
Len came through in this arena also. He was willing to back his ideas
and convictions with time and effort. I met Len when IOBAs former president
Deb Graham, told me she had a great new member whom I needed to get involved
with IOBA. I called him and we emailed back and forth for several days. I had
recently been elected to succeed Deb, and was looking for intelligent,
motivated people to fill a few slots on IOBAs board.
I asked Len to take on the task of PR Committee Chair, and to sit on IOBA's
board. Len's mother had died shortly before I contacted him and he was
wrapping up her affairs. Len had a history of heart problems. When we met he
had just gone through a change of medication that caused him difficulties and
loss of energy. He battled the heart problems throughout our acquaintance, but
very seldom complained. In addition to these personal challenges, Len was in
the process of conducting his annual Oregon Book Fair. Most people would have
told me their plate was full, and to find someone else for the job.
Lens only request was that I give him two weeks to wrap up a few of his
loose ends before taking on this new assignment. This was typical of the man.
His life consistently reflected a high level of commitment. His efforts for
IOBA more than met my expectations.
He gave IOBA his energy, his intelligence, and his tremendous good will.
Personally, I learned to consider him a friend, a trusted confidant, and
advisor.
Lens commitments were undertaken with purpose and resolve. He was a founder
of the American Advertising Museum, and served as a member of its board of
directors. His other involvements show a consistent pattern of thoughtful,
compassionate commitment. When needed he was willing to battle for his
causes.
When the Oswego City Council moved in 1999 to change and reduce its commitment
to the public library, Len Lanfranco was in front of the council. His recorded
testimony is intelligent, insightful, and well organized. Although I wasnt in
the council chambers, I am sure it was also presented clearly and
confidently.
In 1991 when the Oregon Senate Committee on the Judiciary considered changes
to the states law on public access to legal documents, Len was there,
testifying clearly on the potential effects of the law, and their
consequences. On numerous other occasions, Len took stands to defend
principles. He believed ideas were important, and he was willing to stand and
be counted.
These involvements are important parts of a persons life. Perhaps even more
important are the other lives one touches, and how these touches affect others.
Here again Len made a difference. I only knew him at the end of his journey.
When I met Len he was a mature, considerate, gentle souled man. This was not a
secret I alone discovered. I have contacted dozens of Lens acquaintances.
Each has told me of his generosity of spirit, and the high value they placed on
the friendship of this good man. These contacts go back more than forty years.
Dr. G.T Hurley was Lens professor at Cal State in the early 1960s. Despite
the thousands of faces that have come and gone since, Dr. Hurley still retains
detailed, warm memories of a bright, motivated young man with the world in
front of him. Len Lanfranco touched peoples lives wherever he went, and those
people remember him with love, respect and admiration.
So after all, what is important? What is the true measure of a man? We each
decide upon our own set of values. For myself, I believe that what we do with
our lives has meaning, that our dealings with each other are important, and
that in the end it is what we do with what we were given that counts.
Len was able to "talk with crowds and keep (his ) virtue", and "walk with
kings" without losing the "common touch ". He definitely forced his "heart and
nerve and sinew to serve (his) turn long after they were gone," and he
"(filled) the unforgiving minute with sixty seconds worth of distance run."
I believe Kipling would have called him a man. I know I called him friend.
Leonard Lanfranco, I'm glad I met you.
Len's family has requested that any donations be given in Len's memory to
either:
        Friends of the Lake Oswego Library
        706 Fourth Street
        Lake Oswego, OR 97034
                      or
        Oregon Donor Program
        PO Box 532
        Portland, OR 97207
Comments from a few of Lens Friends
-
Greg & Julia Williams, Booksellers (IOBA)
- I met Len through the IOBA. Soon after I joined, I volunteered for the
PR committee, and over the past few months, Len and I had worked closely
on creating some IOBA promotional material.
After trading a few emails, it became readily apparent that Len was a bright,
sociable and kind individual. I soon discovered that he was also gracious
and generous, eager to praise and recognize the contributions of others.
Our correspondence focused on the IOBA, but as we got to know each other a
little bit better, we started to chat about numerous other topics, and I
thoroughly enjoyed our correspondence.
My wife and I will be permanently relocating to Portland later this summer.
When Len learned about our plans, he was extremely enthusiastic and
genuinely excited for us (despite the already-overwhelming influx of
ex-Angelenos into the area). He made us feel so welcome, and it was
comforting to know that the minute we stepped off the plane, we'd already
have someone to call a friend in our unfamiliar new home.
We're tremendously saddened that we'll no longer have the opportunity to
get to know Len better, and our hearts go out to his family and friends.
-
Pat Ahearn, Quill & Brush
- Although I never had the pleasure of meeting Len in person, I did
correspond with him many times over the last few years. He was very
knowledgeable, an excellent writer and had a delightful sense of humor.
His professional experience in the PR field and as a senior trade
association executive was a wonderful benefit to our organization. Len
offered IOBA's Board excellent professional help whenever and wherever it
was needed. He will be missed.
-
Debbie Cross, Wrigley-Cross Books
- My association with Len was through the Portland Area Used Booksellers'
Association and the Oregon Book Fair. My personal opinion of Len was that
he was one of the last old-fashioned booksellers who believed in personal
service and had extremely high ethical and professional standards. Of
course, his field of expertise was very specialized so hand-selling was a
big part of it. He knew what his regular customers wanted, always followed up
with customers to make sure they received their orders, refused to mail in
anything but a new sturdy cardboard box, etc
-
Jerry Blaz, The Bookie Joint -
It is, indeed, a terrible loss. It is also a terrible loss to IOBA. As a
member-at-large I have seen that it is not easy to get people to give of
themselves to volunteer their time and talents. Len was a member of that
elite group that did volunteer their time and talents, and so even if most
of us knew him only as a virtual personality, all of IOBA is lesser because
of his passing. May Len LanFranco, of blessed memory, rest in peace.
-
Dave Rickard, Chapterhouse Books -
I was fortunate to have met Len last year when I had a booth at the
Oregon Book Fair, which he ran. What I expected to be a 20-minute meeting
at a local Starbucks to ask his advice turned into a two hour rambling
talk, primarily about common acquaintances in journalism. I didn't
know until then he had a master's degree in journalism from the
University of Oregon, and a doctorate from the University of Missouri, and
knew well some of my professors at Fresno State.
What I did know was that he was the warmest of men, and every bit of
correspondence from him about the book fair was accompanied by a personal
message to "call me and we'll have a cup of coffee."
-
Shirley Bryant, Authors & Artists -
Len was generous with his time, knowledge, and help. Back in January, 2002,
when I was trying to organize sending thousands of books to the Afghanistan
University Library to replace those ruined during their years of war, Len
volunteered information on shipping methods and was trying to contact people he
knew who could perhaps help with the logistics of actually getting the books
directly to the Libray. The project got put on hold as, for the time being,
there isn't a way around their political situation, but I very much appreciated
Len's generosity and help. This seems to have been typical behavior for Len,
and all of those of us whose lives he touched will miss him.
-
Pat Holt, Holt Uncensored Newsletter -
I worked with Len only one time, when he invited me to speak at the Fair
in 1999. I vividly recall the exhibit floor as a living, breathing,
organic thing that seemed to percolate with energy and love for books
because Len himself was personally attentive to everyone's needs. He
knew so much about trends and issues in the industry that I followed him
around taking notes as he feverishly gestured to this booth and that to
illustrate his point, that change was coming to this field and we all
better be prepared. He took me out to dinner with his friendly and
welcoming family and made me - truly a novice to the trade - feel as much
at home as if I had been coming to the Fair all my life.
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Dr. Leonard W. Lanfranco
Professional Background
1996 2002 : Owner & Operator Oregon Antiquarian Book
Fair, Oswego, Oregon
1996 2002 : Owner & Operator Columbia Books, Oswego,
Oregon
1985 1995 : Executive Director Oregon Newspaper Publishers
Association, Portland, Oregon
1981 1985 : Executive Director Association for Education in
Journalism and Mass Communication, Columbia, South Carolina
1970 1981 : Chairman, Department of Journalism, University of South
Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina
1967 1970 : Faculty School of Journalism, University of
Missouri, Columbia, Missouri
1965 1967 : Faculty Department of Communications, Gonzaga
University, Spokane, Washington
1958 1965 : Management Contra Costa Times, Walnut Creek,
California ; Oakland Tribune, Oakland, California ; Antioch Ledger,
Antioch, California ; Columbia Missourian, Columbia, Missouri
Education
Ph.D, School of Journalism, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri
M.S., School of Journalism, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon
B.A., California State University, Hayward, California
Civic Involvement
Independent Online Booksellers Association (IOBA) Chair PR
Committee, Board of Directors
Lake Oswego Friends of the Library
Lake Oswego Heritage Council
Oregon Heritage Museum, Board of Directors
Oregon 4-H Foundation, Board of Directors
Oregon Donor Foundation, Board of Directors
American Advertising Museum, Founder, Member of Board of Directors
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