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Jean Frederic Delord, an emeritus
professor of physics who inspired generations of Reedies, died in October
at age 82 after a long
battle with Parkinson’s
disease. He came to Reed in 1950, was named the first A. A. Knowlton
Chair in physics in 1981, and retired in 1988, 38 years after his
first class. The faculty resolution in memoriam states, “He
contributed enormously to the character and development of the
Reed College physics
department throughout the second half of the 20th century. Above
all he was a good and decent person—a mentor and a cherished
friend of everyone lucky enough to know him.” Delord approached teaching with
personal warmth and humor, staying vigilant to student needs while
also pushing them to achieve more.
He created
a natural science course when students wanted an environmental
science class, and one of his first Reed endeavors was to create
a fourth-year
course which, as the resolution states, “was ambitious beyond all
precedent, either at Reed or . . . at any liberal arts institution.” His
teaching focused on solid state, quantum mechanics, and statistical mechanics;
at one time or another he taught each of the department’s major
courses. He developed a lab to conduct research on semi-conductor surfaces
and was always able to quickly recognize why any physics laboratory was
not working as expected. He was honored by serving as a Fulbright lecturer
at the College de France in Paris and a visiting scholar at the University
of Washington. After retiring, Delord remained highly dedicated to the
college and interested in scientific endeavors, attending his last Reed
physics seminar just two weeks before his death. The faculty resolution
noted that, “When, upon returning home, he was asked how it went,
he—his exceptional critical instinct still unimpaired—responded: ‘Not
a very good talk.’”
Delord was born in France and
received his first degree, in electrical engineering, from the University
of Toulouse. That same year
he was imprisoned for printing anti-Nazi tracts. He was moved
to a
work
camp, managed to
escape in 1943, and continued to operate in the French resistance,
specializing in forged documents and helping many to escape
into Spain. With the end
of the war he went back to school and received a Licence ès
Sciences from the University of Paris in 1947. He attended
the University of Kansas
on an exchange fellowship and earned a Ph.D. in 1951. Reed
professor A. A. Knowlton personally recruited Delord, and soon
after Delord
moved to Portland with his wife, Natalie Nelson, of Newton,
Kansas.
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