Lester Mazor

Lester Mazor (d. 2011) was a Hampshire emeritus professor of social sciences and the law.

In his retirement he was a visiting professor at Central European University (Budapest) and active commentator on Hampshire affairs. A self-styled anarchist, Lester was a vocal critic of various aspects of the Hampshire administration and academic policy. He assisted multiple students and student groups in undertakings relating to academic reform and self-responsibility.

He also really, really liked Sully's.

Memories of Lester
Professor Emeritus Lester Mazor died peacefully March 6 in Berlin, Germany, where he had lived full-time since his retirement in 2007.

Lester was a founding faculty member, having joined Hampshire College in July 1970. He taught and mentored Hampshire students interested in law and related fields for nearly four decades. Earlier in his distinguished career, he served as law clerk to the Honorable Warren E. Burger, who became Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Lester was also for a time the youngest law professor in the nation at the University of Utah, where he taught from 1962-1970. He joined Hampshire as the Henry R. Luce Professor of Law. His intellectual accomplishments were numerous, with publications that include books and articles on the legal professor and legal philosophy, including co-authoring Introduction to the Study of Law.

"Mentor" is the word most frequently used by former colleagues and students who have shared messages of remembrance over the past day since learning of Professor Mazor's death.

President Marlene Gerber Fried: "Lester was one of my mentors at Hampshire. He was on the board of CLPP when I first arrived and we served on committees together. He taught me about Division II and Division III, which he said did not have to be a performance at Carnegie Hall but it did have to be 'a very good recital.' He was wise, iconoclastic, completely devoted to Hampshire and to his students. He will be sorely missed."

Sigmund Roos 73F of Block & Roos in Boston and chair of the Hampshire College Board of Trustees: "Lester was one of the chief influences in my choosing a legal career," said Roos. "He was really an amazing teacher, and someone who even as he was teaching was always learning.

"He also influenced me to remain closely involved with Hampshire. Lester and his colleagues are the reason I care so much about the College, and that was reinforced by his own frequently stated confidence in the younger professors who joined the faculty more recently."

Caren Kaplan 73F, an American studies professor at UC Davis: "Lester Mazor was my first and most significant intellectual mentor. I spend my life thinking about and teaching things that Lester first introduced to me. But I never really expected to do this without him as an interlocutor. There are, finally, no words to express my sadness at his untimely passing."

Alex Kreit 98F, director of the Center for Law and Social Justice at Thomas Jefferson Law School in San Diego: "To me, Lester embodied Hampshire's spirit and educational philosophy, where education is a collaborative endeavor that extends beyond the classroom.

"It seemed like every time you visited his office, you'd leave with a new book or article to read and sometimes even with a new directed study. He always had high expectations for his students and if you wanted to work with him, you had to be prepared to engage thoroughly and enthusiastically in your work. In turn, he was fiercely devoted to his students. Once you became one of Lester's students, you weren't just his student until graduation. You were his student for life. I've never known a teacher who was more beloved by his students than Lester."

One of Alan Goodman's first and most vivid recollections of Hampshire was playing basketball with Lester and a flock of students. Lester liberally interpreted the rules of the game, always to his advantage, undoubtedly as a way to make up for the athletic advantages of the younger students on the other team. The most memorable part was the intense conversations about projects and divisional examinations that followed the game.

Our condolences go out to his wife, Ann Spier-Mazor; his children, David Mazor of Amherst, Shari Mazor McDaid of Dublin, Ireland, and Marya Mazor of Long Beach, California; and his grandchildren Kerry, Kacie, Asa, and Zelda.

Lester greatly enjoyed his family and during his final year he was proud to see his brother Stanley Mazor receive the 2010 National Medal of Technology from President Obama for the co-invention of the microprocessor. He is survived also by Stanley and a sister, Debigail Mazor, both of California.