Page 8 - 1969 Wardlaw
P. 8

 Mr. LeGrand Most Helpful
 As graduates return from college, ask them which teachers were most helpful in preparing them for college during the last year at Wardlaw.
Mr. Jacques E. LeGrand, senior English teacher, is a name you will hear over and over again. The 1969 Maroon and Gold is dedicated to him.
Mr. LeGrand, a graduate of Rutgers University, is admired by everyone, especially by the twelfth graders. Advice he gives seniors about college and college life is soundly based upon a depth of per­ sonal experience and a wealth of common sense. He has been a genuinely contributing factor to the success which Wardlaw graduates have had in institutions of higher learning.
He enjoys great popularity among the students
he teaches. His manner is easy-going with an ever­ present sense of sly humor. With all of this, he is a hard worker who makes his classes enjoyable and fills his students with an eagerness to learn.
He is an apparently inexhaustible source of in­ formation in a surprising number of fields. Know­ ledgeable discussions range from ancient history to hot rods.
In 1967 Mr. LeGrand was appointed assistant headmaster of the school. During his fourteen years on the faculty, he has taught a variety of subjects in both the humanities and the sciences.
Mr. LeGrand has been more than helpful to the Glass of 1969. Grateful graduates will not forget his aid and advice.
Mr. Jacques E. LeGrand

























































































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