Beyond Measure
Five faculty members retire at the end of the academic year. What follows are tributes acknowledging their immeasurable contributions to Hollins.
Jean Fallon, French
It is an honor and privilege to write this tribute for Jean Fallon, professor of French, on the occasion of her retirement from Hollins. Jean joined the faculty in 1990. During her estimable career, she has been an active scholar, publishing two books, and has contributed new and interesting courses to the curriculum. Those of us who have had the pleasure of observing her teach can attest to the fact that she is a creative, high-energy, passionate, funny, and engaging professor. Her students love her teaching style and have been inspired by her love of French language and culture, as evidenced by the following remarks:
Professor Fallon was the first professor I connected with at Hollins. She has a heart of gold, and I鈥檝e never had a professor who cared more for students than she does.听She made class fun for everyone and was always cheerful. She encouraged me to travel abroad, and I credit her for having such faith in me for all I have achieved here at Hollins.
Monica Osborne ’20
Madame Fallon taught me my first-ever French class, and her amazing teaching abilities, positive attitude, and sincere concern for her students were a large part of what led me to becoming a French major. She always brings so much joy into a room, and her creativity and compassion do not go unnoticed. She has been a vital part of my education, and I wish her nothing but the most well-deserved rest and happiness during her retirement.
Mar铆a Fernanda Junco Rivera ’19
During Jean鈥檚 time at Hollins, she has made significant and lasting contributions to our community. She worked on such important endeavors as the Heritage Committee and served as a passionate advocate for Hollins Abroad鈥揚aris (HAP), writing a book-length manuscript about the program that captures the memories of countless alumnae participants. Jean served as our departmental liaison to HAP for many years and corresponded with each and every student while they were abroad. This kind of personal attention to her students鈥攁nd to her colleagues and friends who also frequently receive kind, handwritten notes鈥攈as made an indelible impression on all of us. She is thoughtful beyond measure and cares deeply about everyone in her life.
In addition to her admirable contributions to Hollins, Jean has other passions. She is a dedicated runner, an avid gardener, and a gifted photographer. Of this last talent Morgan Wilson notes, 鈥淛ean is able to capture some of nature鈥檚 most subtle and beautiful moments in ways that most people would either miss or never take the time to see.鈥 This keen observation says so much about Jean鈥檚 character.
While the Hollins community will miss Jean dearly, we are happy for her to have more time to dedicate to her passions, and to her husband, Mike M.A.T. 鈥01; her sons, Aaron M.F.A. 鈥12 and Jordan; and her daughter-in-law, Stephanie Lohmann Fallon ’08, M.F.A. ’12.
In closing, I include below a few reflections from Jean鈥檚 colleagues and friends.
Jean is a much-beloved teacher known for her creativity,听kindness, and devotion to students. We are so very grateful to Jean for her many years听of commitment and contributions to the department of modern languages and to Hollins.
Annette Sampon-Nicolas, French
I met Jean in 1992 when she invited me to read for an International Women’s Day event she was helping to organize.听The next year, Jean let me sit in on her French class to refresh my very rusty skills, and I experienced what a generous and effective teacher she was. Our friendship grew from there.
Cathryn Hankla ’80, M.A. ’82, English
I鈥檝e always admired Jean, and though our paths don鈥檛 cross as often as I would like, I鈥檝e always seen her as a mentor and faculty role model.听She鈥檚 also one of the kindest, most generous people I know.
Morgan Wilson, biology
Though too infrequent, every encounter with Jean was听marked by her joy, goodwill, and graciousness. These听are the qualities,听among others, that have benefited听generations of Hollins students fortunate enough to be in her classes as well as the Hollins community.
Bob Sulkin, art
Alison Ridley, professor of Spanish
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听Jeanne Larsen M.A. 鈥72, English
Strangers passing Jeanne Larsen on the sidewalk can鈥檛 be blamed for doing a double take.
Like Andy Warhol, like Patti Smith, like Prince, Larsen possesses that most intangible quality: some essence of coolness. It鈥檚 a certain something infiltrating every molecule of her being, right down to the way she sort of glides across Front Quad.
I鈥檓 sure I stared the first time I met Larsen, some 20-plus years ago. She sat a stack of books on the circulation desk at Fishburn Library, where I spent my work-study hours my first year.
It wasn鈥檛 only her famous crown of glorious, copper-red curls I found so startling. It was the way she peered at me with the intensity of a tropical cyclone.
Today, I know that鈥檚 just how Larsen talks to people. A seeker of genuine connection, she reaches out to people of all ages and walks of life. In conversation, all her attention is focused on the here and now. She鈥檚 not daydreaming about the hawk she spotted on a recent hike or worrying whether her cats are waiting to be fed. It鈥檚 all you and her and a shared moment in time.
Of course, I hadn鈥檛 seen anything yet. To witness Larsen in a classroom is to see Yo-Yo Ma at the cello, Julia Child mixing in the kitchen.
When I started this essay, I searched my file cabinet to find an old syllabus from her Contemporary American Poetry class. It鈥檚 classic Larsen. Don鈥檛 rehash what has been said in class. Do not use other critics鈥 work. Think for yourself.
It reminded me how Larsen directs her classroom discussions with the precision of an air-traffic controller. She somehow manages to keep blowhards in check, while inspiring even the biggest introverts to speak. After all these years of teaching, she鈥檚 certainly heard a hundred students wax on about the religious themes in Denise Levertov鈥檚 poems, yet she listens to each comment with an expression of deep interest. When a student finishes, Larsen pauses for a beat, mulling over the comment as if swishing a fine wine. She rephrases the observation (elevating it in the process) and uses it to move forward to the next element of the text. Every student who graduates from one of Larsen鈥檚 classes leaves feeling like she has a gift worthy of offering the world.
While she may be known for her unflinching kindness, Larsen takes the responsibility of honing young minds seriously. She doesn鈥檛 mince words when attention is required: You need to learn to use a semicolon. Go further with your analysis. The prose needs to be tighter. That said, the edicts are always followed by encouragement. You鈥檙e a real writer. Don鈥檛 stop now!
As a senior, I won the golden ticket: I had Larsen as my thesis advisor. For an entire year, I had the good fortune to meet with her one-on-one in a dim but cozy office in Bradley Hall to talk about the novel I was attempting. We discussed diagrams, character development, and pace. Lovely language, she reminded me, can鈥檛 compensate for a skeletal plot.
The sessions gave me a chance to know Larsen more as a person, instead of the near-mythic figure English majors sometimes turned her into. Here are some things I know: she worships cats; she delights in the year鈥檚 first snow fall, newly blooming plants, and her husband鈥檚 homemade pies; after growing up on U.S. Army posts, she鈥檚 continued traveling the globe; she treasures the richness of the world鈥檚 languages and cultures; she loathes bigotry; she鈥檚 a feminist, like whoa; she enjoys picturing the far reaches of space.
Larsen sees the study of the written word as the opposite of luxury. Words are a thing of power and magic.
Even though I鈥檝e had some months to digest the news, I struggle to picture Hollins without Professor Larsen. I鈥檝e taken to reassuring myself that less Larsen on campus might mean more Larsen for the world. Her award-winning book of poems, What Penelope Chooses, came out in March. She鈥檚 hinted a novel might be in the works. Surely, there will be more traveling, which will indubitably sire more creative offerings. And so, all I can do is to borrow a phrase she used to write on my papers. I say to Jeanne, my mentor, my friend: Push on!
Check out to keep up with Larsen鈥檚 post-Hollins adventures. For details about What Penelope Chooses, winner of the Cider Press Review Book Award, visit www.糖心传媒.edu/penelope.
Beth JoJack ’98 is a Roanoke writer who has never sweated punctuation more than with this essay.
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听George Ledger, psychology
George Ledger is one of the most surprising teachers at Hollins.
For nearly 40 years he has taught psychology, specializing in cognitive science鈥攖he technical subjects such as testing, patterning, abnormal psychology (which he insists is not to be applied to his colleagues). He is also tech savvy: I remember working with George on encryption programs, going through them byte by byte to break the copy protection. In spite of this he has, his colleague Bonnie Bowers insists, 鈥渕aintained a strong and principled aversion to online platforms like Moodle and is not terribly fond of PowerPoint. You can always tell where George has taught a class, because the boards are covered with his spidery notes and complicated diagrams.鈥
For the most part, George is a solitary who likes solitary activities: fishing, a longtime passion; riding his motorcycle; wandering the halls of Dana at all hours; gardening. Unlike a lot of contemplatives, George鈥檚 ruminations as often lead to exasperation as calm: He is very smart, and like a lot of smart people, he believes that problems are, at base, fairly simple; which is why he doesn鈥檛 actually think he鈥檚 that smart, and why he is surprised (and annoyed) that so many people just don鈥檛 get it. If George had a theme song, it would be Chuck Berry鈥檚 鈥Too Much Monkey Business.鈥
All of which is not to say that George lacks an empathetic side. The evident care he takes with plants鈥攈is office is easily mistaken for a greenhouse鈥攕uggests a nurturing side, reinforced if you鈥檝e ever seen him deal with children. Years ago, George went fishing with my son and his daughter, and was very plain that 鈥渢he first rule of fishing is don鈥檛 drown.鈥 He is a student of the flora and fauna outside Dana (colleagues excluded) and can tell you where the foxes hang out and where the ducks nest. If his empathy seems to extend in a rather more attenuated form to students, it鈥檚 because he has confidence in them: Do the work and don鈥檛 drown and all will be fine.
If you walk around Dana you will probably find George there, no matter the time of day: 3 (a.m. or p.m.), 8:30 (a.m. or p.m.), 5:30 (a.m. or p.m.). This confounds everyone. Several of us have discussed this, and, having dismissed the obvious explanation that he is Nosferatu, find ourselves mystified: It鈥檚 possible that he moonlights as a security guard, albeit without the uniform. Perhaps he doesn鈥檛 sleep and subsists on catnaps or dozing off during meetings.
Of particular interest is how well educated he is: How does a cognitive psychologist make the time to read (and finish) Gravity鈥檚 Rainbow? When the faculty had a reading group that went through The Iliad, Moby-Dick, The Aeneid, and Paradise Lost, George was there every step of the way. I have had conversations with George about changing brake shoes, subatomic particles, contemporary literature, cognitive development, the friction coefficient of rubber tires and asphalt (important if you ride a Triumph). All professors at Hollins are well trained in their field, and many know a fair amount about other subjects; but to bridge the humanities-sciences divide so effortlessly is very rare. The earl of Chesterfield said that erudition should be like a watch: Keep it hidden until needed. Chesterfield would find no more devoted acolyte than George Ledger, whose depths are deeper than the vasty deep.
Although much of this goes unnoticed by colleagues, George has firmly established the confidence of the faculty. They elected him chair a few years ago, and he has served on nearly every committee, council, and ad-hoc advisory whatever for the last four decades. Unflappable, affable, direct, and funny, George has proven to be one of the most valuable faculty members during his time at Hollins.
To say that he鈥檚 irreplaceable is false, because someone will fill that slot; but more important, it鈥檚 incomplete: George goes so far beyond what is expected in a colleague that we would need to hire three or four people to take his place.
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Joe W. Leedom, professor of history
Naturally, Joe鈥檚 favorite book is Moby-Dick. The man himself is physically and intellectually imposing, truly a big fish鈥攁nd Melville assures us that a whale is indeed a fish鈥攊n the small pond of Hollins. A colleague described him as 鈥渁wash in his own abundant knowledge,鈥 and I confess that I have never known a person with a wider compass of reading. Not a passive or forgetful reader, Joe is a rigorous, curious, and contrarian critic. He eagerly engages in debate with colleagues or students on an article in Slate, a verse in the Gnostic Gospels, a review in Rolling Stone, a scene in Hamlet, or the sack of Antioch in both Raymond of Aguilers and the anonymous Gesta Francorum, whether he read the piece last night or last century. A true professor of the liberal arts and onetime holder of the Berry Professorship for excellence in teaching literature, Joe helped lead Sowell faculty reading groups on the Iliad, Catch-22, and, of course, Moby-Dick.
In many senses a Stoic, not the least his preference for lingering in the portico of Pleasants while smoking Marlboros (menthol, lights), Joe readily offers his thoughts to those willing to listen. And students do listen: only for very few admired teachers do followers create Twitter accounts like @Sh*tLeedomSays or print pamphlets like 鈥淟eedomisms.鈥 Along with the fierce intellect, he can swear like a sailor and swap salty jokes at poker, which he regularly wins by combining calculation with timely bluffing. Joe鈥檚 semi-annual posters for the now-defunct History Department Party are the stuff of legend, and, as with all satire, valuable documents on the Zeitgeist of an institution. I recall the penultimate HDP when he saved us all from the county policeman who (honest-to-God!) while cracking his knuckles sneered: 鈥淚t smells like a brewery here鈥; to which Joe replied, 鈥淲ell鈥ou are standing next to a full recycling bin.鈥 Wit, coolness under fire, and an eye for folly.
I gather that a former president blanched at Joe鈥檚 election to chair of the faculty. Like Moby Dick, Joe looms mysterious and threatening from the perspective of Ahabs. And, yes, he accepts that those folks may call him by half the whale鈥檚 name. But the man is surprisingly gentle, be it playing fetch with the dogs for hours on Tinker Beach with [Professor Emerita of Biology] Harriet Gray, putting on gloves to load [the late Professor of English] John Cunningham鈥檚 furniture into a van (鈥渉e can never be truly said to handle us without mittens鈥), or floating across the stage in a gondola for the Hollins production of Nine. He displays a sensitivity for the polite and the ceremonial that comes, perhaps, from having an English mother and an easygoing family. Principled, precise, and fair even to those who might wish him ill, Joe possesses an understanding of the theories and practices of Roman and English law that any jurisconsult would envy. With all his equanimity, had he not been an academic, I think he would have made a fine judge. I heard that growing up Joe worked on an oil rig and read Shakespeare on breaks. Indeed, 鈥渧ery like a whale.鈥
George Fredric Franko, professor of classical studies and chair of philosophy and classical studies
听Bob Sulkin, photography
Bob was hired in the summer of 1980, with a recent M.F.A. from the University of Iowa and a portfolio of photographs that were unique and distinctive. He drew on his negatives to accentuate forms and rhythms. This tactic was often considered a destructive way to create a photo, as the integrity of the negative was considered sacrosanct. Since his University of North Carolina鈥揅hapel Hill undergraduate work was in history, he brought a different mindset to making photos.
Bob was an immediate success as a teacher, and he became a valued colleague. He proved to be an able administrator, too, as he revitalized and reorganized the January Short Term, keeping it a signal feature of Hollins鈥 experiential model of education.
Bob was innovative in his thinking about the content of classes and explored such topics as cell phone and scanner-based image making. Almost everyone has a smart phone, he reasoned, so let鈥檚 learn how to use it for more than taking a selfie.
He initiated and taught the History of Photography course, which began with innovations in the 19th century and ended with the most avant-garde works. Bob has been a valued mentor to many students in the art department and beyond over the decades, and I had often heard them express their appreciation for his insights and support.
I too learned much from Bob about the content embedded in the art of photography. In the summers when [the late Professor of Art] Lewis Thompson, Bob, and I shared studio space in the old Parsonage on the hill, we would discuss ideas about perception, perspective, and the imagination of space in art.
His own work has evolved into complex studio constructions of implied dramatic narrative, which brought out his interests in popular culture and history to reveal themselves in his imagery. His extensive bodies of work have garnered critical attention in numerous exhibitions, including at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.
Bob鈥檚 legacy to Hollins derives from his long and dedicated service as teacher, mentor, and colleague. I am so pleased to see that he will have the time in his retirement to focus on his creative life in his studio. I am eager to see what comes next.
Bill White, professor emeritus of art
It was my privilege to be Bob鈥檚 colleague in the art department for 25 years. His inquisitive spirit and broad knowledge of photographic possibilities and traditions shaped the content of his courses and his dedication to bringing the art world to Hollins.
He provided students with in-depth experiences in a broad range of studio and art history courses, including analog and digital photography, often focusing on alternative processes and methods for creating images. In his interactions with students there was always a sense of mutual respect and encouragement. His knowledge of photographic possibilities and traditions was combined with an emphasis on each student鈥檚 talents and concerns.
His legacy outside the classroom includes countless contributions to the cultural life of Hollins. He curated numerous exhibitions of nationally recognized photographers for the gallery program and brought many artists and curators to campus to speak, meet students, and visit classes. He was instrumental in designing the outstanding photography facility in the Wetherill Visual Art Center. On two occasions, he sponsored a photography festival that featured a themed approach to contemporary photography, facilitating an exchange between students and the artistic community.
Bob鈥檚 modest and enthusiastic approach to art always created an appetite for further exploration of ideas, whether you were a student or faculty member. His own photographs evolved into studio assemblages themed on identity, culture, metaphysical machines, and prototypes. He invented imagined worlds from the most unlikely objects, using a view camera to photograph his constructions. Each semester he roamed the design studio, where the detritus of art making remained after the students left. I learned how the camera lens transforms items like dirty plexi, odd artifacts, paper, rope, foam, foil, shards, wheels, or plaster into something new by watching him select objects for his use. There are only a handful of artists who change the way you see and make art in your lifetime. Bob is one of those individuals who changed me.
Jan Knipe, professor emerita of art
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