His work ensured that the airport — now the Bob Hope Airport — remained an aviation facility and an important transportation link in Southern California.
Maureen Osborne
January has been a tragic month on local railways, and 2006 was no different.
Nearly a year after a Metrolink train headed through Glendale collided with an SUV parked on the tracks, killing 11 and injuring more than 200, Maureen Osborne, of Glendale, died in a similar accident at a Burbank crossing.
Osborn had just dropped off her son at Bob Hope Airport for his flight home to Michigan early on Jan. 6. Minutes after Osborn left her son, her four-door Toyota sedan was hit by a Metrolink train at a crossing at Buena Vista Avenue and San Fernando Road in Burbank, killing the 76-year-old widow and mother of four.
Witnesses said Osborn drove her car around the lowered crossing gates just before the accident, according to Metrolink spokeswoman Denise Tyrrell.
Osborne was known as a kind woman and caring neighbor, who volunteered at COPPS, the Community Police Partnership — the Glendale Police Department's substation in Montrose.
Charles 'Walt' Rosenthal
Charles "Walt" Rosenthal had a passion for the outdoors, and he died in the midst of doing work that allowed him to fulfill that passion.
Rosenthal, a Burbank High School graduate, died on April 6 in an accident at Mammoth Mountain near China Bowl Run.
As a member of the Mammoth Ski Patrol, Rosenthal and two fellow patrolmen were surveying a hazardous snow area when the two slipped into a volcanic gas vent.
Rosenthal died trying to rescue them.
Rosenthal was a researcher for UC Santa Barbara's Institute for Computational Earth System Science, working in the field in Mammoth. During the snow season, he served as a member of the Mammoth Ski Patrol. After graduating from Burbank High in 1965, Rosenthal earned a bachelor's degree from UCLA, then went on to obtain a master's degree in geography at UC Santa Barbara, according to a news release from UC Santa Barbara.