Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA)

 - Class of 1959

Page 28 of 172

 

Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 28 of 172
Page 28 of 172



Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 27
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Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 29
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Page 28 text:

ScMKil iiiU ' riiiin r I ' l ' iii- I ' l iii ' al .1 de Graaft ' leads a Russian discussion. RUSSIAN Frances de Graaff is the human dynamo who generates knowledge of the one Slavic language offered in these parts. Teaching phrases for all occasions, she presents her subject with both dispatch and care, and makes a point of intro- ducing her students to the lighter sides of the language as well as the more serious. Multi- lingual Miss de Graaff is the owner of a polylingual dog named Tony. This intelligent beast listens to her elementary and secondary classes with the bored yawn of an old pro. Ruth Pearce arrived on the scene last Sep- tember to help the beleaguered Miss de Graaff cope with the quadrupled enrollment in Ele- mentary Russiari. She brings to the subject a high regard for accuracy and a fanatical deter- mination to have everyone speak with an im- peccable Moscow accent. Although she admon- ishes those stumbling on vowel mutations, con- jugations, aspects, and declensions to memor- ize like parrots, an ochvn kIio)osIio greets the performance of the knowledgeable. A smiling Ruth Pearce and a dubious Frances de Graaff prepare a class for their budding diplomats. SPANISH There are many clues to the personality of Sefior Manuel Jose Asensio: his physiology (short, stocky, dynamic) ; his philosophy (con- fident optimism coupled with sympathetic understanding) ; and, most significantly, the personal devotion he inspires in all who come to know him. The atmosphere of la Casa (pro- saically, Williams House) is a case in point — only el Senor (and la Sefwra) could make that cold grey Quaker pile of stone reflect the rich warmth of a Spanish atmosphere. No one who has studied literature ivith him can forget the depth of his insights or the sound scholarship that documents them. On sabbatical leave for the past semester, he will return next fall, ready to give several more courses than he ' s paid to teach. When Senor Asensio ' s second-semester re- placement failed to arrive, a frantic plea to B.M.C. produced Seiior Joaquin Gonzalez- Muela, a pleasant, easy-going scholar in modern Spanish poetry. His wide teaching experience adds color to his courses, and class discus- sions range from College problems to the Cuban Revolution. Joining the Haverford faculty in February, Senor Casiano Fernandez (another Asensio substitute) announced, We do not learn things about the language. We learn the language it- self. A strong believer in the conversational method of teaching, he furnishes delightful digressions into all aspects of Spanish and Latin American culture. Manuel Asensio, benevolent despot of Spanish house, radiates a regal warmth throughout his tiny realm.

Page 27 text:

PHILOSOPHY Prosidiiifr over the phil depurlment, Duuglas Steere defends an essentially non-rational — or should we say supra-rational — position ajrainst I.B.M. Parker; he is obviously a man to be reckoned with on intellectual Ki ' ounds. His true gift, though, is his ability to slip away from the troubles of philosophy to an ephemeral level where contradiction vanishes, where life meets its source, and where things begin to happen. There are the cynics who say the new level is underground, in Plato ' s cave. There are others who observe the sense of delight obvious in all that he does and suspect that the new level has something to do with Jeremiah ' s tree. A latter-day Socrates, Frank Parker believes that the unexamined life is not worth living. Also, the unexamined thought is not worth giv- ing in his classes. Master of the gentle but deadly riposte, he is lucidity personified ; one can almo.st hear the mental wheels turning whenever he lectures. Nor do the wheels grind slowly, though they grind exceedingly fine. Said an honors graduate from Sharple.ss: Mr. Parker was at my oral. He asked if the psy- chologist made value judgments. I said no . . . and found out in five minutes that the answer was yes. Thus does wisdom begin. Paul Desjardins has come this year to be the maitrc d ' hofel at French Hou.se and the new life-blood of the philosophy department. Often seen striding across campus, he seems lost The search for truth continues on into the autumn after- noon idlTcf-break. Larry Maud relates Zen Buddhism to the statements of (seated) Engelhardt, Smith, Zapf, Bennett; (standing) Green, Putnam, Newcomb, Tobias. somewhere in the circle of Plato ' s World-Soul. In class his enthusia.sm often blurs the issue at hand, and discussion sometimes becomes a good game of Blind Man ' s Bluff. But the Socratic method is a welcome innovation in the department, and as he settles down to Haver- ford life, we know that lines of meaningful communication will open. After all, il faiit cul- tiver notre Desjardins. Henry Joel Cadbury In-ings to his course on the history and philosophy of Quakerism a famed scholarship in Friends ' history and a wide reputation for his charitable activities as a Director of the A.F.S.C. Students signing up for Phil 24 in hopes of a snap course are some- what disillusioned, but this pain is more than alleviated by their pleasantly gained knowledge of the idiosyncrasies of great Quaker figures. Jovial profe.ssors Parker, Desjardins, and Steere take a break from their metaphy.sieal labors.



Page 29 text:

SOCIAL SCIENCES Will Lyons resorts to a quality control chart to hold attention on a late Friday afternoon. ECONOMICS The Executive in the ec department is chair- man Howard Teaf, who guides his future Adam Smiths with an iron hand. When the finger points at you, watch out ! You had better be exactly right, if you want to be heard. A stickler for precision, Mr. Teaf has been known to spend an entire class period looking for a single word — and we sometimes suspect that he has it hidden in his long sleeves near the floor. His weekly disai pearances are accounted for by his varied off-campus activities as a C.P.A., labor arbitrator, and advisor to the state insurance program. And his vigorous tax- ation of dormant intellectual resources has had multiplier effects on student development. Mild-mannered, even-tempered Ho Hunter, ' 43, demonstrates his marginal propensity for statistics in his latest book, Soviet Transporta- tion Policy. (Approximately one-third of the book is charts and graphs. ) Students knew well his love for figures even before the book was published. His favorite diversion while travel- ling between Woodside Cottage and Whitall, thir d floor, is attempting to break his own speed record in climbing and descending stairs. Once in class. Ho sits with hands folded and feet extended, ever ready to give an animated dem- onstration of some obscure point, such as the indifference curve applied to sticky buns and orlon shirts. He is pleased when consulted about KlI I J Messrs. Hunter, Lyons, and Teaf sit engrossed in thought concerning Haverford ' s academic recession. papers and anyone bringing him a rough draft is almost sure to get a 90. Will Lyons came to Haverford in the fall of ' 57, having sacrificed a lucrative Wall Street career to join the ranks of long-suffering col- lege professors. Further armed with a hard- earned M.I.T. education and experience on the War Production Board, he seems to us novices in the world of practical affairs to be the pos- sessor of an unlimited number of acquaintances and hot tips on the market. This background enables Will to conduct lively classes, liberally spiced with original, thought-provoking con- cepts — all without notes. A sympathetic lis- tener to every student ' s problems, he makes a fine coffee companion. With the.se virtues and a love for stocks ending in 0-I-D, Will lends a bit of color to the ec department. The Ec Club celebrates a rise in Polaroid stock: (seated) Lyons, Roberts, McLeod, Hobaugh, Kaufman; (standing) Davis. Fox, West, Speakman, Long, Krone, Hurford, Shelton. Blanchard, Silverblatt. Kain.

Suggestions in the Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) collection:

Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

1961

Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

1962


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