E DS at the end of the semester, complete with fried grasshoppers. For his larger lecture class, Grove developed a computer pro- gram that lets students create their own digs. "You get more interested, you do more reading, you listen more attentively," says 1987 graduate Kevin McLaughlin, assess- ing the effects of Grove's technique. "And you learn more." Keeping his students awake in class is only a part of Grove's commitment. "Many teachers give lip service to the idea that teaching is important," says Linda Klepinger, an associate professor of physi- cal anthropology whose office is next door to Grove's. "He spends lots of time during office hours. Undergrads come in and talk to him for hours. But he doesn't find this a task. He loves it." Somehow he also found time to write "Ancient Chalcatzingo," a 600-page book published last spring about his excavation of an Olmec Indian outpost. "Research makes me a hell of a better scholar," he says. "It gives students an advantage by giving them up-to-date ma- terial." Although Grove loves his on-site work, he won't give up teaching. "I like interacting with young people. I think it keeps me young," he says. "When I go back to reunions I wonder, 'Who are these old farts?'" The Maverick His professional peers regard him as one of the country's outstanding con- stitutional scholars, but many of his Mormon brethren can't say his name with- out shuddering. In conservative Utah, J. D. Williams is an outspoken liberal. He turned-loudly-against the war in Viet- nam. He called for the impeachment of President Nixon; now he's recommending it for President Reagan. Those same Utah- ans who denounce the University of Utah as a hotbed of "liberalism and immorality" say Williams is largely to blame. On cam- pus, though, he commands the respect of both faculty and students-no matter what their political views. "For my four years, I would rank J.D. up with the top two teach- ers I had," says John Youngren, an English major who graduated last spring. "Wheth- er it was a snowy day in the middle of November or a bright day in the middle of May, J.D. was there. And he was going to make the class something that every stu- dent could remember him by. I really felt he put his heart and soul into every lecture, every day." What keeps him going, Williams says, is teaching. "I've gotten fatter; I've gotten older," he says. "The students are my rea- son for existence. And in every way that I can, I'm going to communicate that to them." Over the years, Williams has de- 30 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 40 A liberal who makes Mormons shudder: Williams teaching constitutional law at Utah fined his goals as a teacher. What lasting impression would he like to leave on his students? "One, J.D. cared about me. Two, he knew his subject. Three, he truly in- spired me to learn it. Four, he respected my academic freedom to make up my own mind. And five, I know a whole lot more about what it is like to be a free person as a result of being in his course." The Mediator Dorothy Cowser Yancy started college in 1960, when she was just 16, and over the next 26 years she made stops at 10 more colleges and universities. Along the way she picked up a master's degree in history, a doctorate in political science and a certificate from Harvard's Program for Management Development; while being a good student she also learned what makes Cutting straight to the point: Georgia Tech's MARGARET BARRETT-GE a good teacher. Now her students at Geor- gia Tech get the payoff. "She's a tough prof, but she really knows and enjoys the material," says junior Leslie Lissimore, a textiles-engineering major who took Yancy's course in Afro-American history last spring. "She goes beyond what's in the textbook and relates things to what's hap- pening today," says recent graduate An- thony Riviere. "She encourages you to talk to her after class and you feel free to come by to talk about whatever is on your mind. She's blunt, bold and straight to the point-and she cares." That caring-exemplified by her open- door office-has turned Yancy into Geor- gia Tech's favorite fence mender, especial- ly on racial issues. It also doesn't hurt that Yancy, the daughter of a farmer, grew up in a segregated Alabama. "She has the respect and trust of both the black stu- dents on campus and the Tech administra- tion, allowing her to provide a Yancy kind of dialogue," says history ORGIA TECH professor Robert McMath, who has worked with Yancy since both arrived at Tech 16 years ago. "The racial climate here is not perfect, but there is a high- er degree of understanding that is due in large part to Dorothy Yancy." Off campus, Yancy of- ten serves as a mediator in la- bor disputes; getting to know people "from the shop floor to the top office" gives her a per- spective she can bring back to her students. Her two profes- sions call for many of the same traits. Yancy mediates the way she teaches-not by. coddling people but by stretching them. 0 APRIL 1988