Professors Dan Fineman, Adelaida Lopez, and Linda Lasater had a lasting impact outside the classroom鈥攋ust ask their students
It鈥檚 a rite of passage each spring鈥攁s 色界吧 says goodbye to a newly minted class of graduates, a handful of professors grade their last set of papers. Following the conclusion of the academic year, English professor Dan Fineman, Spanish and French studies professor Adelaida Lopez, and adjunct chemistry professor Linda Lasater are retiring from the College. But this year, their customary sendoff鈥攁 department party, an academic reception, recognition during Commencement in Hillside Theater鈥攈as been upstaged by a once-in-a-century pandemic.
Fineman, who turned 70 last September, has been riding out the quarantine with his wife of 38 years at their home in Eagle Rock. 鈥淥n one hand, we don鈥檛 have to go anywhere in order to make our livelihoods,鈥 says Fineman, who met Pamela Hillman in 1979 when she was working in the 色界吧 registrar鈥檚 office (where she worked for three years). 鈥淥n the other hand, we are the people who are most liable to die from this.鈥淚t鈥檚 an interesting mixed bag.鈥
In his 44 years of teaching at Occidental, Fineman鈥檚 main educational passions have been the work of Herman Melville鈥攖he subject of his dissertation at Princeton University鈥攁nd Emily Dickinson. 鈥淢y wife calls her 鈥榯he other woman,鈥欌 he says.
A native of Vineland, N.J., Fineman came to Occidental in 1976 from Princeton, where he taught for two years while completing his Ph.D. in American literature. With the job market slumping in 1975, 鈥淭he tactic was to send out as many applications as you could possibly muster,鈥 he recalls. 鈥溕绨 was kind enough to interview me. I thought it was unbelievable here.鈥
Compared to the Princeton winters鈥攚hich are 鈥渂asically mud [but] very good for scholarship,鈥 he says鈥斺渙ut here it was birds of paradise and wonderful warm weather. 色界吧 was the first one that called me up and offered me a job. I accepted it and had the great pleasure of calling up four schools and say, 鈥楴o, thank you.鈥欌
Fineman has shared his enthusiasm for 19th-century American literature with generations of 色界吧 students. Among them is Rob Williams 鈥86, a Melville fan who had just dropped a class and was shopping for a replacement when he eyed a stack of Melville鈥檚 novels in the Occidental bookstore and thought, 鈥淗ere鈥檚 my ticket.鈥
鈥淲e plowed through all Melville鈥檚 novels,鈥 says Williams, who majored in history at 色界吧. 鈥淚t was fantastic鈥攑robably the most interactive, completely collaborative class I ever had at 色界吧. We argued about things constantly. Dan would come to class with a different take on something every time. After that, I took lots of other classes with him.鈥
Williams utilizes Fineman鈥檚 teachings to this day as owner of Ontometrics, the L.A.-based software development company he founded in 1988. 鈥淒an uses a fusion of literature and philosophy, so that influenced me a lot. I feel like philosophy plays a pretty ongoing role in software development.鈥
For Fineman, the greatest reward of teaching is simple. 鈥淪ome students catch fire. When you see someone wake up intellectually, that鈥檚 the most thrilling thing,鈥 he says.
鈥淗e teaches with such passion and intensity,鈥 says Ethan Goldberg 鈥14, who majored in English and comparative literary studies at 色界吧 and is currently an adjunct professor and fellow at Queens College, City University of New York. 鈥淗e cared on a visceral level about people understanding the material and making the material relevant for them beyond just some poem.鈥
When he completes his Ph.D., Goldberg鈥攚ho took four classes with Fineman鈥攑lans to look for a job as an English professor, passing on the Fineman fire. 鈥淓ach piece of writing that we looked at was considered at an almost life-or-death level,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd he makes his passion contagious. I still think about classes that I took with him.鈥
Delarys Ramos Estrada 鈥19 encountered Fineman as a sophomore when she took American Literature Before 1900. 鈥淚t was divided between Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd I just fell in love with his teaching style and his personality. He鈥檚 very clear about really abstract things. And he鈥檚 funny. He made me laugh a lot.
鈥淥ne of my favorite refrains that he had in class was, 鈥楬ow can you be effing bored? You鈥檝e never been here before in this singular, particular moment!鈥 Trying to explain concepts like that, he just gets really excited.鈥
For Estrada鈥攚ho was teaching English at a high school in Umlazi, South Africa, as a Fulbright Scholar before the pandemic sent her home鈥擣ineman left an impression both as a person and as an academic. 鈥淪ometimes he can come off as curt or a little distant but I think there鈥檚 a tenderness about him,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really subtle and was helpful to me throughout my time at 色界吧.鈥
Fineman鈥攚ho served as president of the Faculty Council (1998-2000) and has at times been a vocal critic of the College鈥攈as a typically pragmatic view of his 色界吧 legacy. 鈥淥nce you leave, you pretty much disappear into the woodwork,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 get calls from students from 30 or 40 years back saying, 鈥楾hank you for teaching me how to write.鈥 That鈥檚 probably the most enduring thing.鈥
For Eduardo Garcia 鈥22, Professor Adelaida Lopez was his introduction to the Spanish department at 色界吧. 鈥淚 took a high-level grammar class with her and I fell in love with the department,鈥 says the resident of Healdsburg in Sonoma County. 鈥淎fter that class I decided to declare my Spanish major.鈥
Lopez was drawn to Occidental because she 鈥渨anted to teach in a city that had a large Spanish-speaking population.鈥 She joined the faculty in 1990 after receiving her B.A. from Wellesley College and her master鈥檚 and Ph.D. from Columbia University.Part of her teaching emphasis focused on novels in the realm of magical realism. 鈥淩eading and thinking about literature was an important part of my work,鈥 says Lopez, whose classes also canvassed women鈥檚 literature of Chile, Uruguay, and Argentina. 鈥淟istening to students鈥 thoughtful reactions to literature was always very meaningful to me.鈥
And that became meaningful to Garcia. 鈥淭he second semester we read One Hundred Years of Solitude [the acclaimed 1967 novel by Colombian author Gabriel Garc铆a M谩rquez] and that鈥檚 a difficult text even in English, right?鈥 he says. 鈥淲hat really surprised me were two things. First was her ability to make a really complex text very digestible for college students who are taking their first high-level analytical literature course.鈥
Second, 鈥淗er knowledge about things would just trip me out,鈥 Garcia continues. 鈥淟ike connecting things from the text to biblical passages. I would find myself walking out of class thinking, 鈥榃ow. I can鈥檛 believe I thought of that.鈥 But in reality, it wasn鈥檛 entirely me that thought of it, she just drew it out of me.鈥
Lopez says her most memorable moments in the classroom were 鈥渨hen all the members of a class laughed together.鈥 That occurred often, according to Garcia. 鈥淭here was a lot of humor in the class鈥攕omeone would be struggling with the text, and then suddenly there would be that aha moment. It was like, oh, that鈥檚 what was going on.
鈥淭he other thing too was that she鈥檚 funny, but I don鈥檛 think she knew how witty and funny she was until we all laughed,鈥 Garcia continues. 鈥淪he was just being herself, and she鈥檇 say something and we鈥檇 start laughing, then she鈥檇 start laughing, too, when she realized we were getting a kick out of her.鈥
But in between the spontaneous hilarity, Lopez inspired deep respect. 鈥淚 feared and revered her at the same time because of her greatness,鈥 says Hady Cortez 鈥95, an assistant principal in the Los Angeles Unified School District. 鈥淪he helped me improve my critical thinking and writing skills, and I loved her classes. She influenced my career choice without even knowing it.鈥
Prior to her current job, Cortez taught Spanish in the L.A. school system for eight years. 鈥淚 emulated my classes after Professor Lopez,鈥 she says. 鈥淪he was challenging, and she pushed our thinking.鈥
In spring 2001, Carl Fischer 鈥02 returned from a semester of study in Madrid. He was steeped in the Spanish experience but knew little about Latin America. 鈥淪o I took a class with her on exiled Latin American writers. I really loved it,鈥 says Fischer, now a professor of Spanish at Fordham University. 鈥淚t was my first introduction to it, and something that I now have dedicated my career to. It was a pivotal moment for me.鈥
Fischer did his Ph.D. on Chilean literature and in 2016 published Queering the Chilean Way: Cultures of Exceptionalism and Sexual Dissidence, 1965-2015 (New Directions in Latino American Cultures). Lopez 鈥渉elped me narrow down my interests into kind of a workable academic project,鈥 he says. 鈥淪he鈥檚 a great listener and really interested in helping students talk through different ideas.鈥
Lopez says she鈥檒l spend her retirement 鈥渃ontinuing to read, write, and learn about other literatures, cultural expressions, and languages.鈥 She sees her legacy at the College as 鈥渟imply a part of the legacy of the Spanish department, which encourages and stimulates student interest in the Spanish language and in Spanish and Latin American language, literature, and culture.鈥
Ask Linda Lasater how she arrived at 色界吧 and her answer is quick and easy: 鈥淚 ended up here because I love teaching,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how else to put it.鈥
Her trajectory to Occidental is a bit more circuitous. Lasater discovered her passion after her student teaching experience at State University of New York at Cortland, where she graduated in 1973 as an education major. She later spent six years teaching biology, chemistry, and general science at a Florida high school, but something was missing.鈥淚 went and got my master鈥檚 in administration of education, thinking I could be a principal, but that took me out of the classroom,鈥 she explains. 鈥淪o I ended up getting my Ph.D. in biochemistry at the University of South Florida and did my postdoc at UCLA. That鈥檚 what brought me to California.鈥
Lasater took a job as a research chemist with the Veterans Administration Medical Center and UCLA鈥圫chool of Medicine, but when a teaching position opened up at 色界吧, 鈥淚 bit the bullet, quit my job that was paying more, and came here. I鈥檝e been happy as a lark ever since.鈥
In 1994, then-department head Chris Craney asked her to take over Occidental鈥檚 Academic Mastery Program, which supports students enrolled in introductory classes in general and organic chemistry, physics, cell and molecular biology, and calculus. Lasater agreed鈥攚ith the provision that she could continue teaching as well.
鈥淚鈥檓 the director of the entire program, doing administrative duties, budget management, all payroll, and providing training for all 17 facilitators,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚鈥檝e had a lot of really talented students who have applied to be a facilitator for me in chemistry. And I鈥檝e seen them get excited about teaching rather than just doing the research.鈥
鈥淪he was a very tough teacher, but she did a great job of explaining everything,鈥 says Joey Najjar 鈥19, a chemistry major from Santa Fe, N.M. 鈥淚鈥檒l be going to med school next year, and she was one of the big influences in helping me get there. She encouraged me to go into the Academic Mastery Program and start tutoring my peers. That鈥檚 where I found out I really liked teaching.鈥
Senior chemistry major Marc Kawada never missed a week of AMP when he began taking intro-level science courses as a first-year. 鈥淒r. Lasater was behind all of the hiring and training of the wonderful facilitators who host these workshops and mock exams,鈥 he says. 鈥淎fter that first year, I was recommended for the AMP job and eventually got the position as a general chemistry tutor. I consider this to be the beginning of a very fulfilling chemistry experience at 色界吧.鈥
Bringing human warmth to the cold world of science is a Lasater trait. 鈥淲henever I ask my fellow chemistry majors why they chose this major, one reason that always comes up is that it truly feels like a family of chemists, and Dr. Lasater has had a huge role in that,鈥 Kawada says. 鈥淪he also made sure to bake sweets for chemistry socials, whether it was related to AMP or not.鈥
Lasater is leaving the AMP going strong, with at least one major change over the last quarter-century. 鈥淣ow at least of half, if not two thirds, of my AMP staff are female,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat confidence growth in terms of women in science is something that I鈥檝e seen a big change in here at 色界吧.鈥
How does someone who loves teaching plan to spend her time in a world without classrooms? 鈥淥h, I鈥檒l get caught up on my housework,鈥 Lasater says with a laugh. 鈥淏ut the biggest thing I want to do is travel.鈥
Given the current realities of COVID-19, 鈥淚t鈥檒l be a while,鈥 she admits. 鈥淚 still have a lot of family on the East Coast, and I have nieces who live in Norway. But those trips will be down the road.鈥
Photos by Marc Campos. Fineman photo (1977) by Joe Friezer.