Janice Corbett envisioned two dream jobs in her life:

The 1994 alumna wanted to work for the Cal Aggie Alumni Association, so she could stay in touch with her Aggie family, recalled Rich Engel, assistant vice chancellor of Alumni Relations and executive director of the CAAA. Corbett realized this dream, starting as the membership manager and rising to associate executive director, with time as interim executive director.
And she wanted eventually to succeed ASUCD business officer Mark Champagne, because âshe had worked for him as a student and thought his role was the center of everything UC Davis,â Engel said. She realized this dream in 2013, only to have cancer intervene last year.
Corbett died Sunday (April 29) at the age of 47, at her home in Davis, with her family beside her, one year and one day after her diagnosis.
âStudents meant everything to herâ
Hers was a life well lived with family and friends, and service to the university she loved. âHer students meant everything to her,â said her husband, Larry. âThat was her life. She loved mentoring them. She loved coaching them. She loved helping young people.â
He spoke while poring through hundreds of cards and letters of sympathy. âThey have nothing but gratitude for her, as she does for them.â

Corbettâs father, Herb Wimmer, said UC Davis provided the perfect platform for her passion for mentoring young people. âThatâs a huge piece of who she was,â he said, noting how former students stayed in touch with her from all over the world.
âIf you wanted to say what she was about, she was about UC Davis,â her father said.
Corbett, who grew up in Pinole, arrived at UC Davis as a freshman in 1989 and became immersed in campus activities. She was a member of the Picnic Day Board from 1989 to 1993, Campus Unions and Recreation Board, Student Activities Advisory Committee and the Deanâs Student Advisory Committee in the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, as well as a program advisor in Student Housing. On top of all that, she worked as the assistant business manager of the ASUCD from 1991 to 1994.
âJanice is synonymous with Aggie Pride,â said Allison Chilcott â93, who met Janice Wimmer when they worked for the ASUCD as students. âOne of her many legacies was teaching everyone she came in contact with, what it meant to be a loyal Aggie. I canât imagine campus without her.â
Engel met Corbett in 2003 when he was serving as CAAA vice president and she had just been hired. âShe said that coming back to UC Davis was her top priority after working for Barclays (Global Investors) and the Institute for Fiduciary Education after her graduation in 1994,â Engel recalled. Then she told him about her other dream job, adding that she felt it would never happen because she was convinced Champagne would never retire.
âVibrant and full of lifeâ
Well, he did, in 2013. By this time, Engel had become the CAAAâs executive director and Corbettâs boss. âThe ASUCD actively recruited her to her other âdream job,ââ Engel said.
âShe was the most loyal, fair and professional employee you could ever work with,â Engel said. âAs a manager she was honest and forthright and could have the difficult conversations as easily as she could compliment a job well done.â
Kathy Wilton worked in the ASUCD business office when Janice worked for the ASUCD as a student. âShe was vibrant and full of life ... she was a bright light,â said Wilton, who continues to work for the ASUCD and was there when Corbett returned as the business manager.
âThat light continued to shine throughout her life,â Wilton said. âShe will forever be my Aggie Daughter.â
Corbett herself became âMama Warriorâ during her battle with cancer, and her friends and loved ones became her âWarriorsâ â as proclaimed on the T-shirts they wore to Pajamarino last fall.
One of those âWarriors,â San Lee, has worked as UC Davisâ Undergraduate Admissions representative in Hong Kong since 2011, and returned to Davis to be with Corbett before she died.

âJanice has been my mentor since I worked as a student employee at CAAA in 2007,â Lee said. âWe stayed in touch after I graduated in 2009, and she had guided me through so much in life â professionally and personally. She even planned my wedding back in 2016 in Winters.â
The friends promised to plan each otherâs 50th wedding anniversaries, leading to Leeâs plaintive Facebook post April 30: âNow, whoâs gonna be in charge for our 50th wedding anniversary?â
Leeâs post continued: âThank you for being in my life. You have been the light to many, many people, everyone in this community and beyond, all the students you worked with ... with your wisdom, your grace.
âYou loved us with all your heart and we would not be where we are without you. Your babies around the world will miss you terribly, part of you will always remain within us and thatâs the legacy we are carrying on. ... âTil we meet again, my Mama Warrior.â
Corbett was a double major at UC Davis, earning a Bachelor of Science degree in agricultural managerial economics and a Bachelor of Arts in psychology. Amid her career at UC Davis, she earned an MBA with high honors from Golden Gate University in 2005.
Chilcott and Corbett knew each other for nearly 30 years through different phases of their lives: undergrads, at the CAAA when Chilcott served on the board, as parents of children at the same schools and church, and as work colleagues when Chilcott became executive director of development for the Office of Research in 2005.
âEverybodyâs personal cheerleaderâ
âJanice always gave so much of herself to everyone she met â students and colleagues alike,â Chilcott said. âShe was everybodyâs personal cheerleader, with a radiant smile, an empathetic ear and endearing wisdom. She worked harder than anyone Iâve ever known but still managed to connect deeply with people across campus, one on one, in meaningful ways.
MEMORIAL CONTRIBUTIONS
The family announced that memorial contributions may be made in Janiceâs honor to her favorite charities:
- , 2506 Pine St., P.O. Box 15367, San Francisco 94115-0367
- , 3480 Buskirk Ave., Suite 340, Pleasant Hill 94523
- St. James School Music Program, 1215 B St., Davis 95616
âShe was always using her wide network to connect people who could benefit from knowing one another. I came away from every interaction with her inspired to be a better version of myself.â
Corbettâs Facebook page radiates rainbows and hope â and Aggie challenges: âHug an Egghead until you catch someone smile ... collecting a Silo of smiles,â she posted Jan. 29. Then, two days later, âReach out to an Aggie from your past you havenât connected with in years and see how much joy it brings.â
She is survived by her husband, Larry, and two sons, Anthony and Dominic; parents, Christine and Herb Wimmer; sister and brother-in-law, Nancy and Steve Veatch; many aunts, uncles, cousins, nephews and nieces; and a multitude of friends around the world.
A funeral Mass will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday, May 8, at St. James Catholic Church, 1275 B St., Davis, and a reception will follow in Asmundson Memorial Center at the church.