{ Teaching through mesmerization: Barbara Jordan at the LBJ cle Physics that is a choice in the core curriculum for under- graduates. Students rate him a solid and even entertaining instructor, but Glashow says he finds the experience frus- trating at times. "I find it more exciting to work on my own research than to teach undergraduates who are a somewhat hostile audience," he says, noting that while 500 students jostled for places in his introductory course the year he won his Nobel, the number is now down to 50 to 100. "Fame is very fleeting," he observes with a grin. have become the leading patrons of literature, sus- The Writer: Almost by default, American colleges taining many writers who teach while they practice their art. School after school employs literary lights: E. L. Doctorow at NYU; Pulitzer Prize-win- ning poet Rita Dove at Arizona State; novelist Lee Smith at North Carolina State. The University of Chicago's Commit- tee on Social Thought permits Nobel Prize-winning novelist Saul Bellow to lecture on just about anything he pleases. Colleges have also nurtured Joyce Carol Oates, the author of 18 novels, 13 books of short stories, 8 of poetry, 5 of essays and literary criticism and 2 off-Broadway plays. Now at Prince- ton, Oates returns the favor with a firm commitment to teaching. She recalls the first time she ever taught, at the University of Detroit in 1962. "As soon as I walked into the room, I felt a really pleasant sensation. Ijust felt that I liked the students, that I was going to get to know some people by way of their writing, and they would get to know me." Oates conducts her creative-writing classes as a round- table discussion. "I very rarely give written notes to my students," she says. "It tends to freeze or fossilize some remarks and makes them seem too important. I would rather talk with somebody very seriously over a period of time and let the significance of what I'm saying sink in, rather than saying, 'On page three you have a dangling modifier'." Students clearly appreciate the personal atten- tion from such a prolific and well-known writer. At first, says senior Jean Paul Faguet, "it's a huge ego boost, with stars bursting all over." Later it becomes more routine. "It's coming from someone who knows her craft extremely well," Faguet says. "I don't think it's the Joyce Carol Oates whom you see in The New York Times. It's your professor giving help." The Orator: The scene re- peats itself every Septem- ber: Barbara Jordan begins to speak, and 16 worldly graduate students at the University of Texas move from nervousness to intimidation to awe. At first it's simply the voice, that chillingly resonant tone that earned the former congresswom- an distinction as the finest orator in America. But there's also some- thing frightening about the inten- sity of her classroom manner. "I can be fairly intimidating, don't you think?" Jordan once inquired of former law student Brett Camp- bell. Campbell nearly snapped to WILL VAN OVERBEEK attention as he instantly respond- School ed: "Yes, ma'am!" To a generation of Americans, Jordan is synonymous with one of the most mesmerizing moments in the debate over whether to impeach Richard Nixon. In less than 15 minutes, the previously obscure congresswoman from Houston riveted the national atten- tion, speaking on the sanctity of the Constitution in a voice so profound that many later remarked it had seemed to come from heaven: "My faith in the Constitution is whole. It is complete. It is total." Jordan's manner makes her classes "a personal challenge more so than an intellectual challenge," says Ann Gill, who is completing her master's thesis under Jordan this year. "I've seen her in the classroom when students weren't pre- pared," Gill recalls. "They weren't treated very sweetly." After the initial shock, however, students grow intensely fond of the woman who tests them so rigorously. She was recently voted the best teacher at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs; dozens of students queue up for a place in the two 16-student seminars on ethics in govern- ment that she teaches every semester. Third-year law stu- dent Paul Begala is one of the lucky ones; he got into Jordan's seminar after only a one-year wait. "Obviously the perspective she has is unique," says Begala. "Taught by any other politician," he continues, "[ethics] would be a very short course." Jordan's intimidation has its purpose: to force her stu- dents to think on their feet, to confront their values and to mold them into problem solvers who are able to withstand the inertia of bureaucracy. Forced to use a wheelchair by an illness she declines to disclose, Jordan has shunned publici- ty in recent years. However, in a final interview with the campus newspaper in 1982, Jordan explained how she sees her mission: "Now I believe, and I believe this sincerely, that if we here at the LBJ School can get enough of these students there in the public sector, they will turn it around." The interview confirmed what many had always suspected: Bar- bara Jordan's faith in her students is as profound as in the Constitution. HARRY ANDERSON with CLAUDIA SMITH BRINSON in Columbia, EDWARD DEMARCO Jr. in Atlanta, KAREN SPRINGEN in New York, TODD BARRETT in Washington, D.C., SHAWN DOHERTY in Cambridge, CHRISTOPHER M. BELLITTO in Princeton, ELLEN WILLIAMS and LISA BROWN in Austin 1 12 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS SEPTEMBER 1987