Donald Merrifield, priest and university president, dies at 81

LOS ANGELES — Father Donald P. Merrifield, 81, president of Loyola Marymount University during an era of rapid growth for the Los Angeles Catholic school, has died.

Merrifield died today at Good Samaritan Hospital in San Jose from a heart attack, a university spokesman said.

Merrifield became the 11th president of Loyola University in 1969. As the first president of Loyola Marymount after Loyola merged with Marymount College in 1973, the Jesuit priest oversaw a transformation of the campus with construction of 13 buildings and a greater emphasis on enrolling minority students.

“Look at the many, varied faces on our campus and you see the influence of Father Merrifield,” Loyola Marymount’s president, Father Robert B. Lawton, said in a letter to faculty and staff.

In a 1969 Los Angeles Times story announcing his inauguration, Merrifield asked that ceremonies be kept simple and any funds normally used for the event be spent on minority scholarships.

“Father Merrifield was president certainly at a decisive moment in the university’s history,” Father Robert Caro, vice president for mission and ministry, said in an interview with the Times. “One of the great things he did was opening LMU in a very proactive way to previously unrepresented groups.”

Father Joseph LaBrie, a psychology professor at Loyola Marymount, called Merrifield “an incredible thinker” and said the school’s “expansion to the campus that’s so glorious and highly competitive owes its beginnings to him.”

Loyola Marymount has nearly 9,000 undergraduate, graduate and law school students.

Donald Paul Merrifield was born Nov. 14, 1928, in Los Angeles and graduated from Inglewood High School.

He received a bachelor’s degree from the California Institute of Technology in 1950, a master’s degree from the University of Notre Dame in 1951 and a doctorate from MIT in 1962, all in physics.

He joined the Society of Jesus in 1951 and was ordained in 1965.

Merrifield taught physics at the University of San Francisco and also taught at Santa Clara University and Loyola before becoming president. He was a consultant at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory from 1962 to 1969.

At Loyola, he also was known for his work with the homeless and with the Missionary Brothers of Charity in Los Angeles. “He was equally at home with the rich and the poor,” Caro said.

Merrifield served as Loyola’s chancellor from 1984 to 2002.

Since 2008, Merrifield had been living in Los Gatos at an assisted-living facility for older and retired Jesuits.

He is survived by a brother, Peter.

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