The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, May 17, 1983.- Page 7 PROF LIVES WITH GERMAN TREASURES America fits Garbaty best By CHERYL BAACKE He has vivid memories of waving a paper swastika as Hitler and Mussolini rode by when he was an eight- year-old child in Berlin. Thomas Garbaty was raised by governesses in one of Germany's wealthiest families, surrounded by luxury in a house with fur- niture that belonged in a museum. The Garbaty name was a "household word," in Germany. His grandfather was famous for opening the first cigarette factory in Berlin. ALL THE FAME was left behind when his family moved to New York prior to World War II. The move was the "beginning of a new life," for Garbaty, now living in Ann Arbor as a professor of English literature at the University, his home filled with fur- nishings his family carried from his youth in Berlin. PROFILE Sitting behind his large wooden desk, surrounded by bookshelves stacked to the ceiling in his study, at 53, the dark-haired man says he feels that he belongs in America. "My real pleasure and happiness began when I grew up in an American neighborhood. Of all coun- tries in the world, this is the one that fits me the best," says Garbaty. HIS LARGE brick house off Geddes Road is filled with furniture dating back to the 1500's, 16th century paintings, and silver by Odiot. a Paris, the man who also designed silver for Napolean's mother. "Sometimes at night, I look at my paintings, I walk around like a ghost," says Garbaty whose voice has no hint of a German accent. "It's like A Christmas Carol, the ghost of Ebeneezer Scrooge thinking of his youth." His study is filled with medieval English literature, a subject he has taught to University students for 22 years. GARBATY NEVER thought he would bea teacher. As a freshman at Haverford College in Pennsylvania he planned to go into medicine. By his second year he decided to major in English, but after graduating in 1951, he struggled through a year of law school at Yale which Garbaty said was a disaster. His luck proved no better when he tried to join the CIA in 1957. "I had a hankering for adventure and foreign in- trigue," says Garbaty," but that was a flop; I couldn't even become a spy." With dreams of being the next James Bond behind him, he completed his doctorate in English at the University of Pennsylvania. "I SLOWLY, slowly got interested in (English.) I just backed into it because I just didn't know what else to do," he says. But Garbaty has tried to keep that spirit of adven- ture in his teaching. Although many students would think an English professor was an intellectual, Gar- baty said he loves movies and television. "Too much seriousness can be poison. I can't be too serious, I hate it," he says, adding that he watches Leave it to Beaver with his 17-year-old son Michael. GARBATY TAKES his work seriously. Although he enjoys students and teaching, he also values privacy and does most work at home. "I don't like to work in my office," he says, I work here in my study. When I'm working it's a physical thing. I start taking off my shirt and that's, of course, horrible. You cannot have students suddenly coming in and saying, 'My God, what's happened to you?'" Teaching a good class, Garbaty says, is a tremen- dous high, it's a tremendous ego trip. It is like going out on stage, but better because you can see the audience." KNOWING ALL of his students is a goal Garbaty strives for and he makes an effort to learn their names. "And I don't get to know (students) until they've written for me. Then I can see into their souls, their minds," he says. The only part of teaching Garbaty doesn't like is grading papers. "I don't like to put the grade down. When a student sees that he got a B- or a C +, I don't like to disappoint them." ALTHOUGH HE has taught middle English literature and Chaucer courses since coming to the University, Garbaty says the job never gets boring "It's a whole different ball game every time you teach the class. You've got different classes, com- pletely different minds that react in a totally dif- ferent way to something you've taught many times. "They suddently ask you questions you've never thought about before that you really may not even know the answer to." In many ways, Garbaty and his family are still very European. His wife, Elsbeth, a travel agent, was raised in Switzerland and travels abroad often. His daughter Bettina, a junior at Haverford College, at- tended Swiss schools for several years, and Garbaty says she is still split between being European and American. Garbaty's family planned a move to Switzerland in 1977, but decided against it because of high costs. Even though Garbaty has fond memories of his childhood in Berlin and loves to travel, he likes Americans better than Europeans because of their kindness and good humor. "I'm not a Pollyanna when I say these things. I say them from a lot of experience of dismal human traits. In more or less expecting the worst everyday from everyone, I'm constantly happily surprised." Daily Photo by JEFF Sd Prof. Thomas Garbaty, who teaches medieval English literature at the Garbaty says he fell into his profession, but now le thinks every day is a new University, does all of his work in his study at home, surrounded by furniture challenge. and antiques collected by his parents when they lived in Berlin, Germany.