Guido Weigend

1920 - 2016

Guido Weigend

Guido Weigend, who had a long career as a professional geographer, college dean and professor, and spy, passed away on April 1, 2016, at the age of 96.

Guido Gustav Weigend was born on January 2, 1920, in the small Austrian town of Zeltweg but grew up in Vienna and attended school there. In 1938, at the age of 18, he watched as the German army marched into Austria and annexed his country. Soon afterward, he found himself drafted into the German army. Naturally alarmed by this prospect, his father – then living in Chicago – encouraged him to travel to America.

Like most European refugees of the period, his route was circuitous. He first went to Sofia, Bulgaria where his mother co-owned a coffee shop. There he spoke to someone in the American consulate who successfully helped manage the difficult feat of getting him an exit visa. He left Europe by passing through Italy and North Africa, eventually making his way to the United States.

Weigend was a linguist with facility in several European languages, so his transition to life in America was relatively painless. He took advantage of his good fortune, timing, and location by soon enrolling at the University of Chicago, graduating in 1942. He became a US citizen in 1943.

His talent for languages (he spoke eight) and his familiarity with European geography and cultures was put to quick use by his adopted country. Between March 1943 and December 1945 he served in the US Army in the office of the OSS (forerunner to the CIA), going on several missions behind German lines during the war. It was long suspected, although never completely confirmed by him until late in his life, that he continued with clandestine activities long after the war.

Returning to the University of Chicago after 1945, Weigend completed a master’s degree with a thesis entitled “Water Supply of Central and Southern Germany.” Soon afterward, he began doctoral work, completing his dissertation on “The Cultural Pattern of South Tyrol” in 1949. His dissertation was published by the University of Chicago as Research Paper, No. 3. He proudly considered himself a professional geographer for the rest of his life.

After his return to Chicago, he met and married Areta Kelble after a six week courtship. They had a common link – both had been in Europe during the war, she in the Red Cross. Their long marriage ended with the passing of Areta in 1993.

While working on his doctoral dissertation he taught at Beloit College, Wisconsin, but upon completion of his Ph.D. he accepted a job at Rutgers University, New Jersey, where he spent 27 years on the geography faculty, teaching students, researching and writing. He wrote scholarly articles on many topics, most of them on Europe, and on ports and shipping in general. Two of the articles were published in French, and he reviewed several French and German books in major American journals.

Weigend rose steadily through the ranks at Rutgers from Assistant Professor to Professor. He chaired the Geography Department for 16 years between 1951 and 1967, and he then served as Associate Dean from 1972 to 1976.

In 1976 he headed west to Arizona State University (ASU) where he assumed the position of Dean of Liberal Arts and Professor of Geography. His leadership skills and personal style as Dean of the largest college on campus were especially appreciated during the next eight years as the university continued its transition into a major research institution.

During his years as Dean and afterward, the Weigends frequently hosted parties at their home a few miles from ASU. These gatherings were joyous, entertaining, and stimulating affairs. Invitations were a pleasant and coveted perquisite of their friendship and generosity.

Stepping down from the Dean position in 1984, Weigend took a one-year sabbatical in southern Africa, producing additional scholarly papers, including two on Namibia. Upon his return to Arizona, he re-entered the Geography Department full time, mentoring students, doing research, and providing a living example of how to be a scholar, an administrator, and a gentleman all at the same time. He retired from ASU in 1989, and lived in Phoenix the rest of his life.

Guido and Areta Weigend are survived by the three children that they welcomed into the world: Kenneth Weigend is national sales manager at WR Lynch in the San Francisco Bay Area; Nina Wilkey-Olejarczyk is a physician in Glendale, Arizona; and Cynthia Buness is an attorney in Paradise Valley, Arizona now focused on patient advocacy work.

Written by Malcolm Comeaux, Martin J. Pasqualetti, and Cynthia Buness

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