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In the interest of speed and timeliness, this story is fed directly from the Associated Press newswire and may contain spelling or grammatical errors.
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Thomas Kellogg, best known for designing Avanti, dead at 71
Sunday August 17, 2003
LOS ANGELES (AP) Thomas Kellogg, an industrial designer best
known for his work on the Avanti sports car, has died. He was 71.
Kellogg died Thursday at Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian in
Newport Beach, two weeks after being injured in a car accident. He
was injured after his Mercedes-Benz hit a center divider while he
was driving to lunch.
``He was very well liked, sensitive and caring,'' his daughter,
Kris Machado, of Aliso Viejo, told the Los Angeles Times in
Sunday's newspaper. ``He was also very analytical and would always
offer his opinion on any design whatsoever. Even in the hospital he
was analyzing the way the room was it sounded like it met his
approval.''
Kellogg was part of a four-member team that designer Raymond
Loewy assembled in 1961 to design the futuristic Avanti sports
coupe for the Studebaker Corp. The team designed the car while
working in a rented Palm Springs home and it was introduced a year
before Studebaker went out of business in 1963.
``I've concluded that the car is cosmic,'' Kellogg told The
Associated Press in 2000. ``It has some sort of personality or
spirit that keeps finding people to take it over and stroke it and
keep it going.''
Kellogg, who graduated from Pasadena's Art Center College of
Design in 1955, had a long career as a freelance designer. He
designed motor homes, recreational vehicles and fiberglass boats.
He also created exteriors for Rolls-Royce and Porsche, a line of
dinnerware and the shuttlecraft for the original ``Star Trek''
television series. He also was extensively involved in the interior
design of the DC-10 airplane for McDonnell Douglas.
He joined the industrial design and packaging firm of Gould &
Associated in 1972 and his package designs won several design
awards.
More recently he had been teaching form development at Art
Center College of Design.
Survivors include his former wife, Greta Kellogg, of Irvine;
daughters Kara Kellogg, of Irvine, and Machado; son, Thomas W.
Kellogg Jr., of Irvine and four grandchildren.
A memorial service has been planned for Wednesday at Calvary
Chapel in Santa Ana.
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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