Want to get to know a favorite professor? Forget the telephone or even
e-mail. A quick step inside a campus office will truly reveal the person
behind the lecture.
Cast aside notions of a modular cubicle with an efficient-looking In-Out
box sitting on an empty desk. Real offices are expressions of personality,
repositories of collected references, even last stops for cast-off furniture.
At the U, some have 12-foot ceilings with skylights, some are windowless
cubbyholes, and some were never intended as offices. They reflect the
campus mix of old and new buildings, many of which have changed
occupants and purposes several times.
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Fred Montague,
Biology
I guess Im a pack rat. My wife refused to keep an
old orange chair in our house any longer, but I couldnt part
with it. So its here, too. |
Of course, this is only a sampling of faculty offices. The curious should
sneak a peek at the two grand pianos in Susan Duehlmeiers Gardner
Hall office, the piles of papers and files in Ron Ragsdales chemistry
department digs, and the insects, bones, and stuffed animals sharing carved-out
nooks and crannies with staff members in the basement of the Utah Museum
of Natural History. Just be sure to leave a trail of bread crumbs.
Kathryn
Stockton, Gender Studies
"Not
a lot of people have a red wall in their offices. Or a desk
that used to be a kitchen table. But I think they work here."
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Bob
Olpin, Art History
Students usually ask if the microwave and sink work.
They do. I also show them the jar on my desk [labeled, Ashes
of Troublesome Students].
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Sam
Wilson, Art
Im
the resident geezer of the art department. Whatever is about
to be banned or tossed out usually ends up in my office. |
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Mary
Strine, Communication
Most of the books are double
shelved, so I rely on memory find specific titles. |
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Steve
Sternfeld, Linguistics
I was inspired by the lines of
laundry you see hanging all over Naples. So I strung some
flags from my Italian provinces collection. |
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