San Diego, CA
“Coop” Gary Albert Cooprider – San Diego Union-Tribune
“Coop” Gary Albert Cooprider
OBITUARY
As a young man he met the love of his life on a Great Falls, MT, blind date with a twist: he was supposed to meet someone else, but Patti stepped in for her friend who had the flu. That one moment set the course of their future. He soon proposed to Patti over the phone while she was modeling in New York City. Patti fell for the handsome, successful Montana KQDI radio DJ and said YES to his grand plans for their lives. This valentine, February 14th 2026, they would have celebrated their 67th anniversary.
“Coop”, as you know him, lived an extraordinary 89 years; ingenious and full of creativity, broad interest in the arts, civically engaged, well-traveled, and with his unique charm, he made an impression on those who met him.
Early in Coop’s life, his parents Jessie and George ‘Al’ Albert, moved the family back from northern California to Spokane, WA. Coop was the big brother to Christina (Jun 2001), Sandy (Wenatchee, WA), and Douglas ( c. early 1940s). He applied his self-learning and tenacity, which spanned from his time as a paper-delivery-boy with his Radio Flyer wagon to a job creating artful signs and billboards, and eventually the move to Great Falls where as a radio DJ he shared his passion for music. He mingled with and interviewed musicians like Johnny Mathis, Ella Fitzgerald, and many more. Music was integral to his life.
In 1964, with only four children in tow, Coop and Patti (Patricia Darlene Keister; Jan 2021) made a bold decision – they packed up and moved to Germany to start Prudential’s first branch in Europe, where Coop simultaneously pursued his love of singing (stage name: Buddy Ashton), socialized with and helped coordinate USO and other shows of U.S. performers, such as Charley Pride, when they came to tour in Europe.
To best support their growing family in Germany, Coop ultimately chose to focus on his financial planning business. Together, Patti and Coop raised seven children; in succession: Kyle (Nov 2023), Tayna (Nakata), Kamila, Kendra (Paul), Gabrielle (Sillas), Molli, and Shannon (Slayer); each proud to look to their dad as a role model.
For nearly three decades, Coop supported U.S. service members and families living overseas, helped them create financial stability and protect their futures. He built an agency that provided substantial civilian employment while serving U.S. military personnel across Europe.
He believed in preparation, responsibility, and providing support to those you love. Coop’s kids often heard his mantra “grow independent together”.
With foresight and joie de vivre Coop and Patti filled their kids’ childhood with culture, education (in part at German schools), travel and adventure (through much of Europe, across U.S., North Africa, etc); created memories that shaped their lives.
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Global travel as a couple included Russia, China, and South Africa among others, exploring the world to feed their diverse and lifelong interests.
In 1991 Coop and Patti moved to sunny San Diego, as The Winning Team, they led an active and interactive social life. A friend from the art community expressed losing them as ‘it feels like the end of an important era in San Diego’s cultural scene’ and had joked with them that it seemed at times that ‘they had twinned themselves’, as they were ever-present at cultural and charitable events around town.
Most people who met Coop, be it at an arts event, restaurant, at the gym, or at Peet’s Coffee, were spontaneously serenaded with a personalized song in his voice that carried the smooth, timeless sound of Frank Sinatra and Vic Damone. Later in life, he recorded his own CD titled “14 for My 7,” featuring classics such as I’ve Got The World On A String, Summertime, and Come Rain or Come Shine. It is a gift to his family that allows a piece of him to live on.
Love of culture and the arts had Coop and Patti return to NYC numerous times; after semi-retirement, they even spent a full year living in the Big Apple, just to experience it more fully. Patti introduced him to Birdland jazz club, where he sang on stage with local and well-known musicians, which began an annual tradition of sorts. Singing truly brought joy to Coop and those in the audience.
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In each community they lived, life was a dream that both Coop and Patti created, making long-term friends and connections with their genuine passion toward anything to which they set their minds.
In San Diego, another friend of the arts recalls the impact that Coop and Patti made, which included the pivotal roles they played to coordinate and participate in events to benefit the launch of the Wolfstein Sculpture Park, the rescue of ARTWALK, help to save the 10,000 sq ft space in Balboa Park for SD Art Institute (now ICA), benefit the Globe theater, Paladion atrium’s exhibit of Collectors and Council Member’s Choice Benefit. Throughout the years, some of their support was shown by adding pieces of both established and up-and-coming artists to their ‘Cooprider Family Collection’ (Artworkarchive.com).
Coop’s engaging personality and charm carried him through a life rich with stories and laughter. Please share a thought or memory in the comments as you listen to him sing ‘Summertime’ at https://www.youtube.com/@mollipaige2152 (‘Legacy of Coop and Patti Cooprider’ channel).
His family includes grandchildren of whom Coop was incredibly proud: Tamy and Julian (née Heinz – dad Kyle), Erin, Ian, and Lillian (Paul), Shane (Sachs) and Aliah (mom Gabrielle), Chelsea (née Halladay) and Julia (mom Shannon), extended grand-kids, too, Blake and Tylor (bonus mom Molli). Coop’s legacy lives on in spirit.
At the home he had shared with Patti in San Diego, Coop passed away peacefully on the night of January 19, 2026. Reunited with his forever valentine, he is now pain free.
You can honor Coop’s memory with donations to an arts organization such as https://icasandiego.org/donate/ or to a community org such as the San Diego Brain Injury Foundation, which he proudly sponsored due to his son Kyle. https://sdbif.org/support-sdbif/
Through the ultimate gift to UCSD’s School of Medicine, Body Donation Program, Coop contributes to medical education and research, and hopefully more insight to prostate cancer and the lymphatic system.
San Diego, CA
5 things to know about Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei
San Diego, CA
Joan Endres – San Diego Union-Tribune
Joan Endres
OBITUARY
Born January 1939 in Cincinnati Ohio. Died February 14, 2026, in San Diego, California, with her sons at her side. Her beloved husband Dean passed away in 2010.
Joan was the only child of Thomas and Edna Palmer. In 1943, the family moved to San Diego, where Joan graduated from Helix High School in 1956.
In 1957 Joan married Dean Endres of San Diego, where they raised two sons. Joan followed her two great passions outside the home, the Arts, and Gardening. Both activities being a way to bring beauty to others and to the community.
Joan received a degree in Environmental Design from San Diego State University, and afterwords worked at UCSD, for the Campus Architect.
As an artist, Joan worked in various media, especially ceramics. She was active in many cultural and arts organizations, eventually becoming President of the Combined Organization for the Visual Arts (COVA). Later she turned to gardening, with the Water Conservation Garden at Cuyamaca Community College and the Master Gardener Association of San Diego County.
Joan is survived by her son Jeff and wife Katrin, grandson Jackson, and son Todd Endres, all of La Mesa, and sisters Alice Buck of Phoenix, Elaine Kennedy of San Diego, Nancy and husband Don Jones of Vista, Eva Budzinski of Cloudcroft, New Mexico, and their children and grandchildren.
There will be a Celebration of Life for Joan in the near future. Those who wish to attend should contact celebratejoanuvart@gmail.com to receive details when they are confirmed. In lieu of flowers, the family respectfully suggests a donation to the Water Conservation Garden or the Diego Visual Arts Network (SDVAN).
San Diego, CA
San Diego State moves back into NCAA Tournament field in latest ESPN Bracketology
The San Diego State Aztecs’ have moved off the bubble and back into the NCAA Tournament’s Field of 64 in the latest ESPN’s Bracketology projections.
The Aztecs must feel like a yo-yo, but now it’s in a good way. Bracket expert Joe Lunardi moved them from the bottom of the First Four Out — No. 72 — to holding the Mountain West’s automatic bid after an 89-72 home romp Wednesday night over Utah State, which had held the auto-bid in bracketology for a few weeks now.
Lunardi now has the Aztecs as the No. 11 seed in the West Region, with a projected first-round date against former MW rival BYU in Portland.
Lunardi wrote that SDSU’s auto-bid “shifts the entire bubble.”
Wednesday night’s victory not only pulled the Aztecs (19-8, 13-4) into a tie with Utah State (23-5, 13-4) atop the MW standings, but it was just their second Quad 1 victory in six such opportunities.
SDSU’s next two games are both Quad 1 chances, at New Mexico on Saturday and then at Boise State on Tuesday night.
The win lifted the Aztecs only one spot in the NCAA NET Rankings, to No. 43. Those rankings are used by the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee as the primary sorting tool for selection and seeding for March Madness.
SDSU’s resume for earning an at-large berth has been on shaky ground all season, and was seriously damaged last week when the Aztecs lost at home to Grand Canyon and were then routed at Colorado State, both Quad 2 games.
SDSU’s best bet to assure a trip to March Madness for the sixth straight season is to win the MW tournament in Las Vegas and claim the automatic bid. That requires winning three games in as many days, and perhaps a third showdown against the Aggies, who beat the Aztecs 71-66 in Logan on Jan. 31.
Lunardi now has Utah State projected as an at-large team, but still with the No. 7 seed in the East, facing No. 10 Texas A&M in a first-round game in St. Louis.
New Mexico (21-7, 12-5), lurking just a game behind SDSU and USU, has dropped from the Last Four In at No. 68 to the First Four Out at No. 70.
The Aztecs were the unanimous preseason pick to win the MW regular-season title in their final season in the league before moving into the Pac-12 along with Utah State, Boise State, Fresno State and Colorado State.
Saturday’s game at New Mexico is set to tip off at 11 a.m. PT and will air on CBS.
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