| Eulogy by Dean Harry Hellenbrand
I
first met Dick at Stanford. He preceded me by several years in Albert
Guerard's program,
Modem Thought and Literature. AlbertÑa brilliant but, at that time, slightly paranoid
manÑrecoiled in horror as many of us newer graduate students followed Dick and
carried the program away from Albert's troika of psychology, intellectual
history, and
literature to critical theory, film studies, and popular cultureÑall those
infectious pests
of post-modem critical thought.
Many
years later, Dick phoned me about the dean's gig at Poly. Since my wife.
Donna, threatened
to eviscerate me, if I did not get us out of the land of oh-yahÑMinnesotaÑI applied.
The rest is the stuff of comedy. At last, I could work in a place where
someone understood
Yiddish humor. That that place was Cal Poly was itself a Yiddish joke!
Dick
was the best teacher I know. I taught with him several times in his large
lecture courseÑValues,
Media, and Culture--in the Business Rotunda. He had a precise way of handling
large classes. Make the matter relevantÑconnect, say, Pride and Prejudice to Bridgette
Jones. Do not make either one an allegory of the other. Never spend more than twelve
minutes on a topic, lest studentsÑweaned on mediaÑbecome glaze-eyed; force them
to integrate the topical strands that the lecture weaved. Be an impresario
but not a distraction.
Use film, PowerPoint, Dr. Seuss hatsÑvisual illustrations of the ideas at
hand since
this is the MTV generation. Entice, seduce, instruct. The Rotunda really
should have
a plaqueÑDick in Seuss hatÑto memorialize the thousands whom he delighted there. But
of course, no teaching recipe could reproduce Dick. Brilliant, allusive,
hilarious, he spoke
and wrote lucidly and simply. That's quite a trick. But he had the even rarer
talent of
actually listening, deeply hearing and looking at you when you talked to him.
Also, like
other bright people with high standards in the CSU, he had a well cultivated
sense of the
absurd because of the endless frustrations. Yet he endlessly mounted his
steed, waged battle
on behalf of his dear Humanities program, and always spoke his mind honestly.
To
be frank, few of us make much difference in the world. Dick, however, did. I
always will
remember the slow walks to class with him the last time that he taught,
pausing for breath
and strength. He modeled perseverance, courage, dedication. Noah and Kathy,
he was
a menschÑa dudeÑwho made living, learning, and laughing parts of one whole
focus.
I would miss him even more if I did not see him shrug and hear him chortle as
I write this. |