REMEMBERING GOOD FRIENDS FROM WAY BACK WHEN


REMEMBERING GOOD FRIENDS FROM WAY BACK WHEN

            Over the last sixty years I have had very many students, many of whom I still remember. But along the way there has been a group of them that have stood out in my memory largely because we, for one reason or another, have remained good friends. I would like to share a few of my concrete memories of these friends so you can see why they have become so special to me.

            In my first group of students at Seattle Pacific College in the early 1960s there were six young fellows with whom I became very close friends and have remained so with several of them ever since. Del Wisdom and Warren Barnes from the “Inland Empire” near Spokane Washington became vital parts of my first group of philosophy majors. They, along with the others in this group, were extremely outstanding students and went on to distinguish themselves, in both graduate school and after.   

Warren was well known for his unique and frequent laughter in class. It was akin to an insistent crow-call and a quiet snicker, both endearing and annoying simultaneously. Everyone soon came to know that behind that laughter lay a very brilliant mind. Warren had his emotional difficulties throughout those four years, but after earning his graduate theology degree he emerged as aa effective union leader for the California Farm Workers.  

Del Wisdom served as a kind of “older brother” to Warren and the others in this special group. He also helped me out in his final year of college grading freshman philosophy papers. After graduation Del inherited his aunt’s farm in Eastern Washington and chose to drop out of his graduate philosophy program at the University of California to take over his aunt’s farm. Soon he turned it into one of the largest and most successful vegetable farms in the West. Del spent his “spare time” advising a group of farmers in Mexico and Guatemala. In his “retirement” years Del has continued to advise local farmers while managing his growing bookstore business in Eastern Washington.

            Jim “Skip” Matthews came from Seattle and double-majored in philosophy and literature with distinction. His only “B” grade was in a softball PE class. Jim was the most lively and outspoken of the group, but his insights and remarks were almost always recognized as on the mark. He grew up playing trumpet and testifying at fundamentalist youth rallies, but in college he soon became, along with his philosophy colleagues, more of a mainline Protestant Christian. In his Senior year Jim served as editor of the student newspaper and was enthusiastic supporter of the newly formed philosophy major. Jim earned his Doctorate degree at Vanderbilt University in English and went on to an outstanding teaching career.

Jim and I taught together at Eckerd College for a number of years before he became President of a church related prep school in Texas. He was an outstanding educator and was always well-liked by his students. I had the good fortune of living in his garage apartment for several years while we were both in St. Petersburg, Florida. In this way I got to know his son Justin during his childhood days. Jim and I had many long talks during those years about how our lives had met and continued to intertwine over the years. He called me just the other day and reminded me of some of my peculiar teaching methods in our first years together. Made me laugh O).                      

After earning his master’s degree in philosophy, Dale Rammerman went to law school at the University of Washington and later became a judge in the state and local court systems. In his “retirement” Dale moved to Anacortes, Washington and became a lay reader in the Episcopal Church where he still serves on a regular basis. Whenever we got together for small reunions Dale would share many interesting and funny stories about the ins-and-outs of legal systems. I think his training as a statistician for our college basketball team stood him in good stead when he got to law school.

Dale’s high school buddy Roger Dexter was obviously one of the very brightest of this very bright group. His wry sense of humor kept us all on our best metal during those years before he went off to earn his philosophy degree at Yale. Roger loved basketball and rumor has it that he spent many hours playing pick-up ball in the Yale gym while earning his Ph.D. degree. I recall several long conversations with Roger about the basis of his Christian faith, and we had not finished these before his untimely death a few years after he began his teaching career at Portland State University in Oregon.

            Jim Watson received a scholarship to study philosophy at the University of Chicago but as soon as he arrived there his eyesight failed him. Jim was always the gentle, humorous “wise old owl” amongst this group. He had spent much of his youth in the Boy Scouts of America organization, so it was natural that he sought a career working for this organization. He also worked for many years as Director of Curriculum for the Seattle School System. When it came time for me to choose a student to write a recommendation for my own Ph.D. studies, I asked Jim to do the honors. I did get to know Jim better in the years after I returned to Seattle later on.

            Dale Cannon interrupted his undergraduate study of philosophy to study for a year in his other “first love”, physics, in Edinburg, Scotland. Along with his colleagues, Dale was both brilliant and committed to a life of learning and teaching. In fact, he, like myself, chose to do his graduate work at Duke University in the philosophy of religion. We have been able to meet each other at various philosophy conferences over the years to renew our on-going discussions of the ideas of Michael Polanyi and religious belief. Dale developed a strong career as a professor of philosophy at Western Oregon University. We both had Professor Wm. Poteat as our dissertation advisor at Duke. We, like the above-mentioned others, stay in touch with each other on a semi-regular basis.

            A sort of “free-loader” in this group was Rex Hollowell, late-comer to our philosophy group but, after a year’s theological studies in Edinburgh, earned his master’s degree in philosophy at the University of Washington in Seattle and landed a position in philosophy at Spokane Falls Community College. Rex was an outstanding, vibrant teacher who fascinated and entertained his students with his wit, while introducing them to some of the intricacies of philosophy. After many years as a first-rate teacher, Rex died a premature death of some strange disease that I didn’t understand.

As one might surmise, I consider my time with the above-mentioned persons/scholars one of the very most important aspects of my own life, both as a teacher and as a friend. My interactions with them at the very beginning of my teaching adventure was absolutely crucial to my own development as a teacher and as a person. These vibrant young men gifted me with their intelligence and friendship at a time that served as a very special gift to me when it proved crucial for me personally and for my development as a teacher.

Although I have had literally thousands of students, many of them close friends, I can honestly say that this group, my first group, has always meant the most to me personally. To be so close for so long to so many of them has been an extremely rich gift. How lucky can a guy get? I am so very grateful for their persons and their lives. 


7 responses to “REMEMBERING GOOD FRIENDS FROM WAY BACK WHEN”

  1. What a delightful jog down memory lane! I shall refrain from adding anecdotes to flesh out those memories, lest this thankful response become something non-intended.

    Suffice it to say, the times were delightful and meaningful, shall never be forgotten, and our friendship shall forever be dear to my heart.
    Del

  2. Hi Jerry and friends:

    Not to correct you but to set the record straight, I count 8, not just 6 of us among those you mention.

    Yes the whole experience was great, yes, but more than that: the convivial order we experienced together is something described and acknowledged in depth by Michael Polanyi as a feature of a Post-Critical intellectual ethos. (I’ve written about this, should any of you be interested. A post-critical ethos is quite different from a critical (or, specifically, the modern critical ethos). For us who were involved, it was an immersion in authentic philosophical dialogue, something you can’t get simply from wrestling with a book or a set of ideas by yourself.

    Two other emendations to the account Jerry gives of my academic career: I was an undergraduate student at Seattle Pacific majoring in philosophy and physics from 1960-63 and 1964-65. One of my physics profs, with whom I worked as a research assistant, invited me to join him at the University of Manchester in Manchester England (not Edinborough) to be his research assistant. (I was already trained in the work he had me do there, relieving him of having to train a new assistant in England. While in Manchester, I took 3 year long courses in philosophy and 2 in physics, under his supervision, so that SPU could give me full credit for the year, as well as pay me for my lab assistant work. It was a great experience all around, plus a great opportunity to travel in Northern Europe over the year (plus two summers).

    After SPC I received an NDEA fellowship in philosophy and philosophy of science from Duke University. On Jerry’s recommendation, I started taking a series of courses from William H. Poteat in the Department of Religion. I came to realize that I could only pursue the issues that drew me into philosophy in the first place by moving out of the Philosophy Department and into the Religion Department to study with and under Poteat. That turned out to be more of a fateful decision than I realized at the time. But it got me into the comparative study of religion, which became a staple of my teaching responsibilities until my retirement in 2003.

    One of the losses of my heading to Europe that year was my losing touch with that group of students under Jerry during their senior year and graduation. I did re-establish contact with Jim Watson, which I kept current until he died (of cancer) a couple of years ago.

    By the way, there were even more than the 8 students Jerry mentioned. There was at least one young woman, Janet Youngren, I believe, and 3 or 4 or more other young men who were loosely associated. I can’t recall them now, however, without consulting a yearbook.

    Dale

    • Thanks so much Dale for filling in so many blanks. I too remember Janet Youngren but she did not take very many philosophy/religion courses. I also remember Eddie Trenner, Ray Holcomb, and Rodm Freed as being on the edges of that group. Paz, Jerry

      • Hey Dale – I think we both failed to mention Dennis Yule as a many-time participant in our classes, etc. He was a “fellow traveler” Paz, Jerry

  3. They all remember you, Jerry, as I do, as one of the most important influences on their philosophical thinking. But for you, I would not have seen the importance of the later Wittgenstein. Dj

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