SA国际传媒

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By Dick Anderson Photos by Marc Campos
President Tom Stritikus and Professor of Kinesiology Stuart Rugg at Commencement in May 2025.

With seemingly boundless energy, a passion for teaching, and his signature catchphrase, Rugg helped build kinesiology into a signature program at SA国际传媒

On the morning of May 18, as SA国际传媒 seniors and faculty lined up along Bird Road for the Commencement procession up to Hillside Theater, Professor of Kinesiology Stuart Rugg was in his element. 鈥淚 kept teasing my students that it took me 38 years to get my diploma, compared to four for them,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know the College actually gave emeriti faculty the equivalent of a diploma鈥攚hich was kind of cool.鈥

Thirty-four minutes into the ceremony, standing at the podium next to President Tom Stritikus, certificate in hand, Rugg seized the moment, leaned into the microphone, and uttered three simple words: 鈥淪tay fired up.鈥

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 resist鈥攖hat鈥檚 the way I always respond to my students,鈥 Rugg explains with a characteristic grin a few days later. 鈥淭hat microphone was sitting right there, and there was wonderful energy from the students.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 say that any one class of students is more enjoyable than another, because they all had something special to offer. But this was an incredibly great group to graduate with.鈥

Rugg as a Commencement marshal in May 2013.
Rugg as a Commencement marshal in May 2013.

For decades, 鈥淪tay fired up!鈥濃攐ften accompanied by a vigorous thumbs-up鈥攈as been Rugg鈥檚 signature. The origins of the maxim are lost to time, but its spirit is not. 鈥淚鈥檝e been doing it since I was in the Ph.D. program at UCLA in the early 1980s,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 just thought it was easy, to the point, and got the message across.鈥 (The thumbs-up, however, has a cinematic pedigree鈥攖he 1973 Bruce Lee movie Enter the Dragon.)

When Rugg began his Ph.D. studies, he was a zoology major. 鈥淥ne of the things that inspired the kinesiology path was looking at cheetahs,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hy are cheetahs so fast? What makes an albatross so good at gliding? What makes some animals so good and adapted for these wonderful abilities they have?鈥 This curiosity soon pivoted toward humans. 鈥淭hen it got to a point where I said, 鈥業 want to do this with people.鈥 So I switched from zoology to kinesiology.鈥

He found his calling not just in the subject but in sharing it. As a teaching assistant, he discovered a profound truth: Rather than the grant-dependent research of a large university and all that entails, 鈥淢y lane was really on the teaching side, connecting with the students,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 was TAing anatomy and biomechanics most of my time at UCLA. And I just thought how great it was getting paid to share something I love with other people.鈥

Fate intervened when a job flyer for Occidental was posted at UCLA, and two of Rugg鈥檚 best friends in the Ph.D. program showed it to him. 鈥淭hey said, 鈥楽tuart, they might as well put your name on this job. This is exactly what you want to do.鈥欌 He looked at it and knew they were right: 鈥淚 could not have written a more perfect job for me.鈥

Rugg鈥檚 arrival at Occidental coincided with the transition of the physical education major to a more science-based program in 1987, and Rugg immediately bonded with Professor of Kinesiology and Psychology Lynn Mehl, a friendship that endures to this day. 鈥淟ynn talked to President Dick Gilman about making physical education pretty much a premed-type major, because she thought we鈥檇 get a greater diversity of students,鈥 he recalls.

Stuart Rugg in 1989.
Stuart Rugg in 1989.

In the evolution from physical education to exercise science to ultimately kinesiology, the program quickly gained in popularity. By 1990, 鈥淲e needed an exercise physiologist,鈥 Rugg recalls, 鈥渟o I just called a great friend of mine at UCLA, Eric Sternlicht, and he was here for 24 years.鈥 (In 2014, Sternlicht left SA国际传媒 to join the kinesiology program at Chapman University, where he remains today.). Other key hires included Marcella Raney 鈥01 as an assistant professor in 2008, Melinda Houston as an adjunct associate professor in 2010, and Kirk Bentzen 鈥91 as an adjunct assistant professor in 2014.

Over the years, Rugg鈥檚 teaching philosophy remained simple: Replace memorization with understanding. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot of information. I will do my best to eliminate as much memorization as possible. It鈥檚 trying to make sense out of why things work the way they do. Why are they designed the way they are? And if I can do that, then you don鈥檛 have to memorize as much. It鈥檚 still a language you speak.鈥

Rugg is one of two five-time recipients (along with Eric Newhall 鈥67) of the Donald R. Loftsgordon Memorial Award for Outstanding Teaching, selected by the senior class each spring. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 take it to mean, 鈥極h, I鈥檓 the greatest teacher in the world.鈥 What it meant is I was connecting with a lot of students to get them excited about learning.鈥

He famously weaves stories into his lectures, so much so that when Rugg taught his last classes in spring 2024, one of his students, Kristin McCauley 鈥25鈥攁 kinesiology major from Las Vegas 鈥渨ith a great life force鈥濃攚as adamant that the final exam include a five-point question: 鈥淲hat鈥檚 your favorite story of Professor Rugg鈥檚?鈥 He laughingly obliged. 鈥淚t was much fun to read what people said. That kind of thing means the world to me.鈥

For the last four years, Rugg has been volunteering at a no-kill animal shelter in Canoga Park. 鈥淚 go there a minimum five days a week for two to three hours a day, and I walk all the big dogs鈥攚ell, as many as I can get out,鈥 he says. There are 45 big dogs on average: 鈥淏eing that it鈥檚 a no-kill shelter, some of the dogs have been there for four or five years, so they鈥檙e my buds away from home.鈥

Back home, Rugg shares his space with his 鈥渇our-legged daughter鈥濃15-year-old Millie, a Jack Russell mix that he adopted around the age of 4. 鈥淚 call her my life coach,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y second one went to heaven last year.鈥 In the coming months, he hopes to plan a few road trips, 鈥渂ut I love this little dog so amazingly so I can鈥檛 just take off all of a sudden.鈥

Rugg also hopes to get back into photography, having taken many of his students on camping trips to Yosemite, Joshua Tree, and Big Sur over the years. 鈥淚 just started taking students to Yosemite, and photography is a natural extension. To me, it was a wonderful way to get people to look at nature. It had nothing to do with kinesiology, and more to do with the beauty of light.鈥

In addition, Rugg is opening himself up to new outlets for his boundless energy. 鈥淎 great friend of mine who鈥檚 also an Occidental alumnus is a professional photographer, and he wants to do everything from podcasts to seminars in photography and creativity. They wouldn鈥檛 have a kinesiological focus at all. They鈥檇 be more about getting people excited about doing things and realizing they have the ability to do them.鈥

With his departure, the department that Rugg helped build is in transition. (Vanessa Yingling, formerly an associate professor of kinesiology at California State University, East Bay,  joins Occidental as a kinesiology professor and department chair this fall.) Whatever comes next, he says, 鈥淚 just knew in my heart it was time to step out and let some of the younger people and the College decide, where do you want to go with kinesiology? I鈥檓 so happy that I was part of it up to this point. But I didn鈥檛 want to overstay my welcome.鈥

The 鈥渄iploma鈥 Rugg received in May symbolizes a much larger gift commemorating the last 38 years. 鈥淭his whole job has been a gift鈥攏ot just in what I鈥檝e been able to teach but because of the people I鈥檝e met along the way. I鈥檝e seen the joy of watching people develop over four years, including some of the ones that doubted some of their ability at first. But as soon as that switch clicked on, they knew what they wanted to do.鈥

For Rugg, that has always been the point: to connect, excite, entertain, and ensure that everyone stays fired up.

Matthew Bernstein 鈥04: From the moment you step into Stuart Rugg鈥檚 classroom, it鈥檚 clear you鈥檙e not just in for a lecture鈥攜ou鈥檙e in for an experience. He sets the tone immediately: 鈥淒on鈥檛 call me Dr. Rugg鈥攃all me Stuart.鈥 And then there鈥檚 his trademark slogan: 鈥淪tay fired up!鈥 That humility, approachability, and deep respect for his students shapes every part of his teaching.

Stuart doesn鈥檛 just teach鈥攈e shares knowledge. He鈥檚 open to learning from his students, valuing their ideas and perspectives as much as his own. My roommate and fellow kinesiology major Scott Armstrong 鈥04 and I were blessed enough to be published with Stuart鈥攁n experience I will never forget, crunching numbers late into the night with Thai food. I can safely say I pushed his boundaries as much as he did mine. That mutual respect makes for a rich and collaborative learning environment where curiosity thrives.

One of many highlights of learning with Stuart were the class trips to Yosemite. More than just sightseeing adventures, they were immersive, thoughtful, and unforgettable lessons in observation, connection, and wonder. Stuart brings learning to life in ways that go far beyond the classroom.

If you were lucky enough to have Stuart Rugg as a professor, you left the classroom not only more knowledgeable but more inspired, more curious, and more grounded in what it means to be both a learner and a teacher. Thank you, Stuart鈥攜ou鈥檙e truly one of a kind.

A kinesiology major at Occidental, Matthew Bernstein 鈥04 received his Doctor of Chiropractic degree from Southern California University of Health Sciences. In 2010, he founded Elite Sports Medicine, which has grown from a single-discipline chiropractic practice into a multidisciplinary medical facility specializing in chiropractic care, orthopedic treatment, pain management, and physical therapy.

Top photo: Rugg energizes the crowd at Commencement on May 18, 2025, while at the podium with President Stritikus.