A new perspective on our woven world. A feminist debate. An actor’s life And a new president for Swarthmore. 1 he won’t like this. She’s already nixed the idea of a portrait to hang in Parrish Hall. But between the covers of this magazine, which she edited for 35 years, is where a tribute to Maralyn Orbison Gillespie ’49 rightly belongs. ■m m We have the privilege of working on a great college magazine, and Maralyn Gillespie gets the credit for making it one. Her love of Swarthmore, coupled with her insistence that we reflect the institution warts and all, has given this magazine a sense of integrity often missing from alumni publications. Numerous national awards have confirmed Maralyn’s unswerving commit­ ment to excellence, and her retirement leaves a great void at Swarthmore. To keep her values in our minds as we carry on without her, we have appointed her (again, without her permission— sorry, Maralyn) editor emerita of the Swarthmore College Bulletin. May her name grace our masthead for many, many years. — The Editors I 111 a ll IlStI A j 1F\ Hr* SWARTHMORE COLLEGE BULLETIN • MAY 1992 2 iÆ Ê m The W oven W orld Im agine a map o f the Earth that isn’t just a diagram o f geographical boundaries, but a work o f art made from indigenous textiles. Claire B rill ’89 made such a map, and it’s helping to change our understanding o f the world. By John Vaillant 4 M irror, M irror Fem inist author N aom i W olf visited campus in February— a visit she w on’t soon forget. H er presence sparked a spirited debate over the nature o f the fem inist m ovem ent and the im pact o f her controversial book, The Beauty Myth. By Katherine Cook ’92 Acting Editor: Jeffrey Lott Assistant Managing Editor: Kate Downing Class Notes and Copy Editors: Rebecca Aim Nancy L. T. Lehman ’87 Desktop Publishing Assistant: Audree Penner Designer: Bob Wood Editor Emerita: Maralyn Orbison Gillespie ’49 Cover: This map of the world is different. Made from indigenous textiles and based on a new equal-area projection, it is a reflection of an emerging understanding of the Earth that has changed our way of thinking about everything from Christopher Columbus to our cultural history. It is the creation of Claire Brill ’89 and hangs in the University of Pennsylvania Museum. Story on page 2. Photograph by Walter Holt. Printed on Recycled Paper The Sw arthm ore C ollege B ulletin (IS S N 0888-2126), o f w hich this is volum e LXXXIX, num ber 5, is published in Septem ber, O ctober, N ovem ber, Febru­ ary, May, and August by Sw arthm ore C ollege, 500 C ollege A venue, Swarth­ m ore, PA 19081-1397. Second class postage p a id a t Sw arthm ore, PA and a d d ition al m a ilin g offices. Postm aster: Send address changes to Sw arthm ore C ollege B ulletin, 500 C ollege Avenue, Sw arthm ore, PA 19081-1397. 8 The P la y’s th e Thing As acting careers are measured, Stephen Lang ’73 is still a young man, but already h e’s in a position to call m ost if not all o f the shots. From the Hamburg Show to Hamlet, this Swarthmorean has always known what he wanted to do in life. By W . D. Ehrhart ’73 12 A New P resident fo r S w a rth m o re It was quite a day: With an academ ic procession and a Chinese lion, with serious symposia and striking dances, Swarthmore celebrated the inauguration o f Alfred H. Bloom as its 13th president. We took lots o f pictures so you could share in the occasion. Oh— and then there was the food! 16 Dear A l... “D ealing with advice, ” writes Nancy Bekavac ’69, “is one o f the first burdens visited upon college presidents. ” We asked all seven Swarthmore alum ni who serve as college presidents to add to the mountain o f advice President A l Bloom has been getting since September. Can he manage to follow it all? D epartm ents 20 25 33 50 64 The College Class Notes Deaths Recent Books by Alumni Letters Insert: A Directory for Traveling Swarthmoreans The Woven World magine a map of the world that isn’t just a diagram of geographical boundaries, but a work of art made from indigenous textiles. Imagine a map in which Mexico is cut from a handwoven blanket and France is a fragment of tapestry. Iceland is a patch from a traditional fisherman’s sweater, and New Zealand is a scrap of grass skirt woven in a native Maori design. Africa becomes a collage of intricate patterns and vivid colors, and the ocean is a sea of blue canvas. I by John Vaillant 2 A m e rica n rug w as su g g ested , but he approaching quincentennial of Columbus’ “discovery” of the would that be interesting to a 10-yearold? Probably not, and what if some­ “New W orld” has sparked a hot one threw food at it? No, it couldn’t be debate on what actually defines dis­ an irre p la c e a b le artifact. Posters? covery, a misnomer that has become a euphem ism for uninvited occupa­ T h e y w ere too rep laceable; no one wanted the place to look like a sub­ tio n and th e ft. B eca u se a ttitu d e s way. What about a map? Well, maybe, tow ard expansion and colon ization but it would have to be gigantic, and have changed dramatically since the besides, would that really engage the naively self-congratulatory Columbian interest of hundreds of children of all Exposition of 1892, w e have begun to ages? re-examine the m otives, ethics, and T h en Brill had an idea: It m ight effects of Columbus’ endeavor. A new engage their interest if it was a really v ie w of the w orld is em erging, one unusual map, one like they had never th at in v ite s us to tra n s c e n d th e seen before, a map filled with bright boundaries of Eurocentrism. colors, varied textures, and every pat­ Claire Brill ’89 has presen ted us tern and material you could imagine. with an enlightening perspective on this new world. Brill, a staff member of A map of the world in which Colombia the University of Pennsylvania Muse­ w as m ade from a c o ffe e sack and um ’s Internation al C lassroom P ro ­ China was a dragon em broidered on red silk. gram, has created a map of the world The solution to the problem of the that would have humbled Columbus and is even now changing the world­ wall had been found, but where would view of countless adults and school- the material com e from? What does an indigenous textile from Tuvalu look children. like, and how in the world would you The museum’s Textile W orld Map, get a piece? In many ways this was the which Brill designed and made with the help of two student interns, was a m ost d iffic u lt part o f th e p ro je c t. There are 191 countries and territo­ sum m er p ro je c t sp o n s o red b y the ries represented on the map; virtually In tern a tion al C lassroom P rogram , all of them have their own textile or w hich brings visiting scholars from design, and Brill has used authentic around the world to speak to school materials wherever possible. This has and com m unity groups throughout produced som e exotic results, as in the greater Philadelphia area. the case of French Polynesia, where The idea for the map came about as the solution to a design problem in the native textile, called kapa, is made the children’s lunchroom at the muse­ from pressed tree bark, and the Philip­ pines, where they make pina, a cloth um. T h e dilem m a co n fron tin g Brill and Mary Day Kent, the International woven from pineapple fibers. In order C lassroom co ord in a to r, was a 300- to find the right material, Brill had to research each country or territory to square-foot cement wall as cheerless as it was enormous. What, besides a determine what textile was native to it. Once she chose a representative dinosaur skeleton, would disguise the textile, Brill had to locate a piece big wall and be appealing and educational enough to fit on a canvas sea that was for the hundreds of schoolchildren 13 feet high and 20 feet wide. who eat next to it each week? Thus began an o d y s se y that led Id eas ca m e and w en t. A N a tiv e T S W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN B rill to em b assies, m useum s, g a l­ leries, former Peace Corps volunteers, and in tern ation al organ iza tio n s of every stripe. Says Brill: “I was amazed at th e r e s p o n s e . T h e p e o p le I a p p ro a c h e d w e r e so en th u sia stic about the project. Almost all the tex­ tiles w ere donated to us.” As Brill researched countries and collected their textiles, the enormous complexity of the task came home to her. Inherent in her idea of a “textile w o rld m ap” w ere a host o f ethical questions that would challenge Brill throughout the m ap’s creation. The p r in c ip a l q u e s tio n w as w h a t d o “ in d igen ou s” and “ re p re s e n ta tiv e ” really mean in this context? And who defines them, the “native,” the “dis­ coverer,” or the mapmaker? Says Brill: “I made the map to get kids who come to the museum excit­ ed about the world. At first, I thought of it in terms of an art piece where the point was to differentiate the coun­ tries from each other. Then I decided that I wanted to represent the folk, aboriginal, or native voice as much as possible, where I had a choice. I was interested in supporting that part of the culture. “W e couldn’t deal with all the pos­ sibilities of representation because of the lim itations of the p roject. Y ou could only choose one [textile], and by the parameters of that choice you had to be saying certain things; you just have to live with that and know there are an infinite number of ways to make this map.” The choice of Levi’s blue jeans to represent the United States is a case Please turn to page 62 Claire Brill ’89 collected textiles from around the world to make a 13-by-20-foot world map at Philadelphia’s University Museum. by Katherine C o o k ’92 Mirror, Mirror The debate about body image and feminism was more than skin deep when Beauty M yth author Naomi Wolf visited campus. he weighs 23 percent less than the average American woman and has long willowy legs and flawless skin. Her lips are swollen with a fullness that looks like passion but might well be collagen implants. Her c lo th e s s e em r e a d y to fa ll aw ay, revealing full breasts and perfect but­ tocks. She’s w h ite and sh e’s ev ery ­ w here— on billboards, in magazines, on television, and etched in the minds of both men and women. She doesn’t need a mind or a per­ sonality. Advertisers have found that her b o d y alone can sell everyth in g from lip gloss to cars to beer, and her “don’t hate me because I’m beautiful” grin has becom e as American as apple pie and Chevrolet. But while people aren’t trying to starve themselves into the measurements of an ideal Chevy, as many as 20 percent of college-aged wom en have an unhealthy— perhaps deadly— relationship with food, diet­ ing, and their own bodies, the Renfrew Institute reports. In her best-selling book, The Beauty M yth, fe m in is t w r it e r N ao m i W o lf introduces “her” as the enem y of all women, asserting that such images of fe m a le b e a u ty a re b e in g u sed to underm ine w o m en ’s advancem ent. D u rin g a v is it to S w a rth m o re on February 5, W olf told a crowd of more than 850 men and w om en that this pervasive, patriarchal myth sets up a v irtu a lly u n attain able stan dard of fem a le b e a u ty — on e that has c o n ­ vinced women that if they only work at it hard enough, they too can look like supermodels. And, according to W olf, it ’s no a ccid en t that s o c ie ty pressures wom en in this way. Estab­ S lish m e n t m yth m a k ers r e ly on wom en’s quest for physical perfection as part of a plot to keep them from uniting for social change. Striving to be the fairest one of all divides women and drains time, money, and energy fro m th e ir s tr u g g le fo r p e rs o n a l achievement and sexual equality. In her book and again in her talk, W olf cited alarming eating-disorder statistics as examples of how young wom en take societal expectations of emaciated beauty to an extrem e but horrifyingly logical conclusion. Equal­ ly provocative are the ways in which W olf links the beauty myth with the cosmetic surgery industry, pornogra­ ph y, and o th e r fo rm s o f v io le n c e against women. “You can be sure the powers that be are laughing up their sleeves at us w h ile w e ’re co m p u ls iv e ly jum ping around at aerob ics and com p etin g w ith one another,” W o lf explained. “The beauty myth diverts our atten­ tion from coming together to accom­ plish anything real through a massive wom en’s movement.” Yet even coming together to hear W o lf’s talk w as not ea sy fo r som e Swarthmore women. The issues she raises— and the w ay in which she rais­ es them— have led as much to conflict as to consensus. In November, before anyone knew W olf would be com ing to campus— and before many w ere familiar with her book— a group from the W om en’s Center had covered a Parrish Hall bul­ letin board with a collage of different, y e t a m a z in g ly sim ila r, im ages o f wom en in advertising, asking, “What is really being sold here?” and “How does it make you feel?” R esponses written on the board included: “fat,” “ugly,” “worthless,” and “furious.” “What the bulletin board did was sh ow young w om en w ho are strug­ gling w ith issues about their b o d y image that these are societal norms th e y h a ve in te r n a liz e d ,” ex p la in s Elaine Metherall, who, in addition to "What is really being sold here?” and “How does it make you feel?” were ques­ tions asked when these ads were dis­ played on the Women’s Center’s Parrish Hall bulletin board last November. her responsibilities as associate direc­ tor of Career Planning and Placement, has been facilitating eating-disorder support groups on campus. Y et when Metherall and students fro m th e S w a rth m o re W o m e n ’ s Health Education Project decided to invite Naomi W olf to be the keynote speaker for their February “Working fo r W o m e n ’ s W e lln e s s ” p ro g ra m series, they knew she would not be universally received as a heroine by all feminists. W olf had already been sharply criticized by academic femi­ nists who feel that her theory is too simple, too all-encompassing, and too q u ic k d o gloss o v e r issues o f race, class, and sexuality. However, Mether­ all said, the project committee want­ ed to “create opportunities for stu­ dents to connect and explore issues of wom en’s body image,” and they felt certain that W olf’s ideas would spark valuable discussion, even amid criti­ cism and disagreement. The discussion began tw o nights before W olf’s speech, when a mixedsex group of m ore than 20 students gathered at the W om en ’s Center to talk about her book. Members of this group seemed to accept W olf’s theo­ ry, and, eschewing critical analysis of the th eo ry itself, launched d irectly into an exploration of how images of beauty affected their own lives. Talk soon turned to the question “What is feminism?” as women shared their struggles to reconcile their per­ son al id e n titie s w ith th e fem in ist movem ent. A discussion of whether w om en should w ear makeup led to s o m e te n s e g la n c e s and h e a ted moments. Some adamantly asserted th at w e a rin g m akeup w as s im p ly another w ay of surrendering to the o p p r e s s iv e b e a u ty m yth. O th ers countered that wearing makeup was a woman’s right to be attractive. “I have a real problem with a feminism that does not allow for the feminine,” com­ mented Miriam Greenwald ’94. Jennifer Leigh ’94 seem ed to end th e d iv is iv e n e s s b y sa y in g , “ T h e w hole makeup issue is just another w ay of dividing women. This beauty myth is getting all of us. I can feel the tension right now in this room .” The discussion then turned to one of com­ mon ground. Jennifer Ekert ’94 summed up the feelings of many women, saying, “I’m at a point w h ere I’m tryin g to look beyond appearances to see women as w h o le p e o p le . It ’ s a rea l s tru g g le because I’m going against everything I’ve been culturally taught.” But two days later common ground was again elusive as Naomi W olf met w ith stu d en ts fro m tw o W o m e n ’ s Studies seminars. She hardly had her coat off before the criticism began. W olf became defensive when asked to justify her theory along more aca­ dem ic lines of analysis. Several stu­ dents objected to placing beauty as the p r o b le m th at all w o m e n fa ce instead of as just one of many prob­ lems faced by som e (prim arily white middle-class) women. W olf was frus­ trated as several students criticized her for ignoring issues of race, class, and sexuality and for failing to consid­ er how these might create different p ro b le m s and m yths fo r d iffe re n t women. olf hardly had her coat off before the criticism began. Some students confronted her, while others felt silenced by their peers. W “I didn’t want to speak for an expe­ rience I haven’t had,” answered Wolf. “1was trying to com e up with a theory of power, trying to look at the dynam­ ic, not the specifics, which change all the time.” She added that she some­ times felt feminists w ere too quick to see problem s that “just affect white m idd le-class w o m e n ” as so m eh ow less valid concerns. Yet it Wets the specifics that struck c r itic a l stu d en ts as c ru c ia l and ensured that the d eb a te w ith W o lf lasted for the rest of the hour-long meeting. Caught off guard, W olf later com m en ted that she had not been en tirely prepared to m eet w ith stu­ dents who had such an agenda. These differences in expectations made for a very tense hour as students critical of W olf’s book felt ready to confront her, while students who liked The Beauty Myth felt silenced by their peers. Triana Silton ’92 summed up the criticism w hen she later explained 6 that she felt W olf was irresponsibly o b liv io u s to th e kind o f e x c lu s iv e “v e ry white, v e ry middle-class, ve ry h e te ro sex u a l” w o m e n ’s m ovem en t that could result fronCa book as popu­ lar as The Beauty Myth. “If m y book is inadequate for your uses, then write your book,” W olf had told Silton during the seminar, saying that she w ro te The Beauty Myth so that she could engage wom en in dia­ logue about their own experiences. “One of the main reasons w e asked Naomi to speak to the W om en’s Stud­ ies seminars was so she could have an interaction w ith students w ho m ay on e d a y w r ite th e ir ow n b o o k s ,” agreed Elaine Metherall. She felt that the criticism of W olf during the meet­ ing was valid and stressed that she never meant to present W olf to the two seminars as a model of feminism that they should adopt. Assistant Professor Anne Menke, facilitator this sem ester of the Cap­ stone Colloquium, which is the single required course for all wom en’s stud­ ies c o n c e n tra to rs at S w arth m ore, reflected on the h eated session. “ I think students came into the meeting with W olf with an expectation of dia­ logue, where she would have as much to learn from us as we from her.” After the seminar, Kaethe Hoffer ’92 was glad to have a chance to speak further with W olf at an informal pre­ lecture dinner at the Wom en’s Center. Hoffer did not entirely agreed with her fe llo w stu d en ts’ critic is m o f W olf: “Naomi is trying to get other women to talk. She’s trying very hard to say to w om en, ‘Look, I h ave the sp otligh t right now— com e and join me.’ More women need to write their own books, and I think she b elieves and hopes they will.” W hile W o lf’s visit was the reason such an u n u su ally la rg e g ro u p o f w om en g a th ered fo r din n er at the W om en’s Center, the author willingly took a back seat as the meal became a valuable opportunity for women of all ages to in tro d u ce th em se lve s and share som e of their experiences as women at Swarthmore. After dinner, walking up Parrish lawn to deliver her lecture at the Pearson-Hall Theatre, W olf admitted that the seminars’ confrontational, go-forthe-throat style was milking her apprePlease turn to page 61 t a time when populations are I moved less by militias and laws than by images and i attitudes, self­ esteem is a material i resource that is being deliberately kept in short supply. ■ — N a o m i W olf The following is excerpted and edited from Naomi W olf’s February 5 lecture. light now we are in the midst of a iviolent backlash against feminism and against the gains that women have ? son gro made over the last 20 years. This back­ feel lash takes the form of an increasingly rigid, increasingly non-negotiable ideol­ ogy about beauty that’s being used as a political weapon to undermine women’s advancement.... Now that the women’s movement has dismantled other mythologies— I like the mythjthat you went crazy five I days a month, or the myth that because your brains are smaller you’re stupider than men— the beauty myth i has intensified to take over the work of social control that the others could no longer manage.... My book does not attack beauty per f se. All cultures adorn. All humans— m a le a n d fe m a le — w a n t t o b e a ttr a c tiv e ! t o th e s e x t o w h ic h t h e y a r e a ttr a c te d . ] My book is about how an ideology about beauty, which is not about what makes women sexual, is being used to 1 keep women down. After the law made it illegal to dis­ criminate against women in the work­ place on the basis of gender, employ­ ers began to get around this by dis­ criminating on the basis of looks. Some women, like a policewoman in Oakland, got fired for looking too feminine, too | pretty. Others, like Washington lawyer Ann Hopkins, got fired for not looking pretty enough. She was told she need- II im p th e : ed to walk more femininely, talk more femininely, dress more femininely, and wear makeup if she were to be consid­ ered for a partnership..... By the end of the 1980s, professional women were standing in front of their closets before important professional engagements, saying to themselves, “Too pretty, too feminine. Too busi­ nesslike, too feminine. Too busi- * nesslike...” And it’s not because Ameri­ can women are neurotic and dysfunc­ tional— it’s because legally we don’t have a thing to wear. • When we open Elle or Glamour or Vanity Fair or turn on the TV or go to a movie, we are bombarded with images of the ideal.... We are given the message that some godlike authority has decid­ ed what is good to look at in women. We’re made to believe that this is some kind of template— a direct representa­ tion of male sexual desire. • These fraudulent new cellulite creams are a perfect example of how the beauty myth works. They find something that’s innately female, call it gross and disgusting, and make women feel miserable about it... In The New York Times Magazine the other day I saw one of those ads—you know, a butt, one of those butt ads— and the headline read, “Cellulite: This Is Your Dubious Legacy as a Woman.” You could almost hear the deep male announcer’s voice: “Ninety Percent of Women Have Cellulite.” And it occurred to me that if 90 percent of women have it, then it’s a characteristic of the adult female body, not some gross deformity! .. • [Then there is] the pressure of pornography.... We see a million images of what sex is supposed to look like, or what a woman who is sexually valid and worthwhile is supposed to look like— all in explicit and graphic detail. We all know what the Official Breast looks like, right? We internalize these images before we have a chance to explore and dis­ cover our own real, human, beautiful, imperfect sexuality. For many of us, these images actually construct our sexuality—they go deeper than skin deep. We learn that we can only ask for good erotic care or can only negotiate the sexual contract from a position of strength if we look like Miss July. jg mm Finally there’s the pressure of the ‘thin ideal.’ Something amazing hap­ pened in the early ’70s, and it’s proof to me that this is a backlash against femi­ nism... Twenty years ago one to two percent of the population was anorexic or bulimic. Today The New York Times reports that half of all women under 30 have suffered from anorexia or bulim­ ia.... There are whole subcultures that center around chronic caloric restric­ tion, throwing up, ritualized strange­ ness about food. It’s not aberrant any­ more; it’s highly rewarded.... feminist,” someone else will say, “Well, no wonder she’s a feminist” or “You’re too pretty to be a feminist”— that is very effective political propaganda. This tactic doesn’t just apply to femi­ nists, it applies to any woman who gets out of line.... We get the message loud and clear: We have to apologize with beauty for power, and that in turn can be used against us.... Feminism said you’re all sisters, but the beauty backlash says no, you’re not, you’re competing with each other for scarce resources. Her beauty hurts you. That’s why women say things like, “She’s so gorgeous— don’t you hate her?” If any of you can read or write or vote or drive, if you’ve ever looked up to another woman, if you’ve ever want­ ed to walk home safely or use c6ntraception, if you ever wanted to work or thought you deserved a voice, respect, or fairness— each one of those rights was given to you by generations of femi­ nists who worked and suffered and boy­ cotted and went to prison so that you and I would have those rights.... If any of you have ever done any of those things, you are leading a feminist life and you are a feminist. Beauty Myth author Naomi Wolf American women are not starving because we are self-destructive, masochistic, or bizarre. American women are starving because of the thin ideal. And the ideal did not become so thin because thinness is sexy or beauti­ ful. The ideal became so thin because right now in history obedience is beau­ tiful. .. We should be the most powerful, the most confident, the strongest young women in human history— and we’re not. W e’re silent, we’re barely coping in many cases. We’re not causing the trou­ ble that we could be expected to cause if we were operating at full strength. » Young women learn that all they have to do is stand up and speak out and someone is going to look them up and down and tell them what is physi­ cally wrong with them. And that is scary.... To know that if you say, “I’m a Feminism has been portrayed to our generation as not sexy. This is incredi­ ble because feminism is the sexiest rev­ olution that ever existed. At least for women it invented sexual pleasure. Yet we’re told this is stale, this isn’t new, it isn’t h o t... We need to make feminism sexy—each of us expressing our sexuality, affirming it, saying we have a right to it-—the right to say yes as well as the right to say no. We need to make it peer-driven. Every generation of feminism is peerdriven. No matter how smart she is, you never listen to your mother. We need to realize that at a time when populations are moved less by militias and laws than by images and attitudes, self-esteem is a material resource that is being deliberately kept in short supply. For many of us, the enemy is so subtle because it’s inside of us. We need to make [the movement] our own, to make it happen now. We cannot wait. I have no doubt that we are doing that. I’ve seen it and I’m excit­ ed to be a part of it. All of these things you are going to do. I bet you will. The Play’s the Thing Wherein we catch Stephen Lang ’73 on Broadway as Hamlet and at home as husband and father. “I’m not an overnight sensation,” says Lang. am the luckiest man I know,” says Stephen Lang ’ 73 as he rocks on th e b a ck p o rc h o f his h om e in W e s tc h e s te r County, N.Y., sip pin g herb tea to ward off an early March chill. “I’ve always known what I want­ ed to be, even when I was a kid, but I never dreamed I would actually do it. N o, th a t’ s n ot rig h t. I d id dream : ‘Someday I’ll be an actor.’ It was only after I w as m aking m y livin g as an a c to r th at it d a w n ed on m e that ‘someday’ was here. But this...” He pau ses, sh aking his head in w on d er. T h e fa m ily r o o s te r struts among the bushes by the barn. “I’m hot sure that even in my most fervent fantasies I ever thought I’d be playing Ham let on B roa d w a y ,” says Steve. “This is the pinnacle. I can blow it, but the opportunity is there.” F ou r-y ea r-old N oah, on e o f th e Langs’ four children, wants to play in the tree house Steve built last summer out of old fence rails. T h ey clim b a la d d e r to the tria n gu lar stru ctu re I perched ingeniously among three tree trunks. T h en N oah clim b s back down and fills a bucket with small ro ck s. “ W e m igh t n e ed so m e rocks,” says Noah. Steve hauls them up with a rope and pulley. “ M om m y n eeds so m e k in dlin g,” Steve calls. “Let’s fill up the wheelbar­ row.” Steve climbs down, and he and N oah begin to gath er lo o s e sticks. “I’v e paid m y du es,” he says as he snaps twigs and throws them into the w heelbarrow . “I’m not an overnight sensation.” Indeed not. Lang has been acting all his life. At George School in the late 1960s, he used theater to escape the structure and strictures of boardingschool life. At Swarthmore in the early 1970s, he a c te d in H edda G a b le r, Macbeth, the annual Hamburg Show, and original plays by John Loven ’70 and Aaron Schwartz ’ 70. He did his first professional acting 22 years ago by W .D. Ehrhart ’73 in the Hedgerow Theatre’s 1970 production of Othello, doing 10 shows a week. A fter leavin g Sw arthm ore ( “I took m y last class in 1974 and got my degree in 1975,” he says, “but my allegiance has always been to the Class of ’ 73”), he spent a d eca d e doin g offB roadw ay shows in his native New York City and acting in regional theater all over the country. But in the 1980s the big breaks finally came. In 1983 he landed the role of Happy in Dustin Hoffman’s Broadway revival of D eath o f a S alesm an, earn in g a Drama Desk nomination. In 1985 he sta rred w ith G ene Hackman, Ellen B urstyn, and A n n -M a rg ret in the m ovie Twice in a Lifetim e. From 1986 to 1988, he p la y ed a tto rn e y David Abrams in the NBC television series Crime Story. Since then credits and honors have come at something approaching light speed: He won the Joseph Jefferson A w a rd fo r his p o rtr a y a l of Lou, a h om eless V ietn am vetera n , in The S W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN j j | , j j j , j I ; , ( ro_ s a ( “j my jig. ; 0f 3ff_ ew he- ,py val g a he len he I ; i ! i | i I J j | I | ' yid ' ¡es Speed o f Darkness at Chicago’s Good­ man T h ea tre and the H elen Hayes Award for his role as Lt. Col. Nathan Jessep in A Few G ood M en at th e Kennedy Center and later on Broad­ way. He earned w ide critical acclaim for his starring role as Harry Black in the gritty m ovie Last E xit to Brooklyn; major roles in the m ovies The Hard Way and Another You; the lead role in last fall’s television m ovie Babe Ruth; and Steven Ziegenmeyer in the televi­ sion movie Taking Back My Life. And now the title role in the Round­ about T h ea tre C om pan y’s H a m let, which runs until May 3. R oundabout had been try in g to persuade Steve to do a play for them ever since he played in their produc­ tion of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern A re D ead in 1987. He turned dow n every offer until they finally said, “You name th e play; w e ’ ll d o it.” S teve chose Hamlet. “You have to want to play Hamlet,” he says. “It can’t be just your agent saying, ‘W ell, I’v e signed you up for Hamlet.’ It’s a deep er w ell than any other I know. It’s a role laden with traps and clues, an unsolvable cross­ w ord p u z z le o f a r o le . D iffe re n t answers com e up depending on how you play it. It’s an actor’s role.” There’s a lot of pressure on Steve, Roundabout has signed a long-term lease with the Criterion Theatre on Broadway, even though Ham let is only the R ou n dabou t’s th ird B road w a y production. If it’s good, it could make Roundabout’s reputation as a Broadway company. Though Steve does not say as m uch, th e o p p o s ite seem s equally true. “Everybody has an opinion about Hamlet, ” he says. “People will notice this production. Sure I’m scared, but fear is a great motivator. Not paralyzin§ fear, but nerves, adrenalin. I get nervous when I’m not nervous. It’s a little like those Olympic figure skaters, I’ve got the qualifications to be doing this— it’s just a question of whether or not I can win the gold medal.” As acting careers are measured, Steve Lang is still a young man, but already he’s in a position to call many if not most of the shots. This Ham let is v e r y much his production. Though he’s not the producer, he has virtually all the p rero ga tives of a producer. T h e cast has been ca refu lly hand­ picked. The director, Paul W eidner, was chosen only after four separate interviews with Steve. “I didn’t choose Paul,” Steve explains. “W e chose each other. W e share the same vision of the process.” hrough six hours of rehearsal the previous day, what was most striking was the congenial collegiality of the cast and crew . In the midst of the bedroom scene between Hamlet and Gertrude, Steve had sud­ denly stopped and turned to Paul. “I’ve been thinking,” he had said. “Oh, no,” Paul had replied as the w h ole cast dissolved into laughter. What followed, however, was a hud­ dle as th ey co llective ly w orked out th e b e s t w a y to p la y th e scen e. Almost the w ay Quakers might do it: Ham let by consensus. “It is unusual,” Steve explains later, T “but this is an unusual cast. Th ey’re great actors. And w e ’v e w ork ed to develop a sense of trust in each other. When w e first began rehearsing, w e to o k th ree full days to d o a sin gle reading of the play. It was like a semi­ nar. E veryone got to say what th ey thought and felt. W e did it to build trust, to give each other a sense of who we are.” During rehearsals, which began in early February, Steve has come home only on Sundays, spending six nights a week in a hotel room within walking d is ta n c e o f th e re h e a rs a l sp a c e. “When I’m working, I can’t think about m y family,” Steve explains. “If Tina’s changing Grace, and she says, ‘Let out the cat,’ I can’t say, ‘Sorry, I can’t, I’m being Hamlet now.’ That just doesn’t work. So I have to be away from them. I lo v e m y fam ily. N o th in g is m ore important to me. But I have to block them out, and I can do that because I know Tina will take care of them.” Steve and Tina have been married nearly 12 years. T h ey met when he was filming his first television role, a portrayal of Percy Shelley for a public te le v is io n sp ecial. Tina, then Tin a W atson, was the costum e designer, ive ght ; .on [; a * 7 ,e ft was a long photo session, but the Langs managed to have some fun. From left: Daniel, Steve, Grade, Noah, Lucy, and Tina. LTIN MAY 1992 9 but she gave up her theater career for, as she puts it, “a career in home man­ agem ent. Steve goes to C alifornia,” she says, “and I go to the dry clean­ ers.” Then she laughs. Th is Sunday m orning, h o w ev er, Steve goes to Hebrew School with 11year-old Lucy. “I couldn’t go back to theater,” Tina says after th ey leave. “As a costume designer, I spent a lot of my time doing things like shopping for shoes. I do plenty of that at home. I’m never lonely and I’m never bored.” In addition to caring for their four children, she’s a volunteer at the pub­ lic elementary school Lucy and 7-yearold Danny attend, is raising scholar­ ship m oney for area families in need of nursery care, and is working on a m a ster’s d e g re e in ed u cation (sh e already holds a B.F.A. in painting and an M.A. in theater). “Tell Mom the question you asked,” Steve says when he and Lucy return. “What does God do all day while w e ’re dow n h ere livin g our live s? ” says Lucy. “W h at d id th e rab b i sa y ? ” asks Tina. /‘I didn’t like his answer,” she says, “so I d e cid ed not to rem em b er it.” Later, away from her parents, Lucy talks about what it’s like to have a famous father: “Sometimes my friends tell me they’ve seen Dad in a m ovie or something, but most of the time it’s no big deal. I always miss him when he’s away, but I understand it’s what he wants to do. It’s his decision, not mine. And I think it’s worth it when I see what he’s done and how good he is. I feel really proud of him.” Then she adds, “ M om ’s really im portant too. Even if she isn’t publicly recognized, at hom e sh e’s im portant. It d oesn ’t m atter w hat oth er p e o p le think, at least not to me. I know how important she is.” ucy shares the third floor of the 19th-century fram e house with Steve’s office, a disheveled affair tucked under eaves so low that even a short person can’t quite stand up in it. Th e desk is cluttered w ith playbills and m anuscripts and loose papers, the walls with posters and photos and newspaper clippings: an old Interna­ tional W orkers of the W orld poster, Johnny W eissm u ller and M aureen O ’ S u llivan as T a rza n and Jane, a signed ph oto of form er D odger Pee W ee Reese, a photo of Steve playing saxophone with Miles Davis, notices for a dozen plays Steve’s been in, a 1965 Mets souvenir program, multiple pictures of Tina and the kids, and an o ld p h o to o f A lb e r t E in stein and Sw arthm ore Presiden t Frank A ydelotte. Behind the tw o distinguished gentlemen is a young fellow in cap and gown. It’s Steve’s father, Eugene Lang, Class of 1938. Down in the living room , Steve is stretch ed out on the sofa, h old in g laughing 1-year-old Grace aloft on the palm of one hand while cuddling Noah u n d er th e o th e r arm . His a ctin g awards are tucked away on a shelf, almost lost amid stacks of books that stretch to the ceiling. Assorted memo­ rabilia from his role as Babe Ruth are L For his role in the television movie Babe Ruth, Lang spent six weeks with baseball great Rod Carew, learning how to swing the bat. 10 much m ore prom inent: a casting of the bulbous nose Steve had to wear for the part, a fram ed set of Topps baseball cards released in conjunction with the m ovie, a ph oto of Steve as Ruth in mufti, a bat sign ed b y the whole cast and crew, a signed model of Rod Carew in batting stance. “ I spent six w eek s w ith C arew ,” Steve explains. “He helped me to learn the Babe’s swing. I was up in the Berkshires w hen I heard I’ d gotten the part. I w ent for a walk, w ondering, ‘H ow am I goin g to play this role?’ Then I looked down and there was a bat handle lyin g right th ere in the leaves at my feet. I still have it.” He points to the splintered fragment on a shelf. “I’ll have it all my life, you know that. Th e hitting is the m etaphor. I “You have to want to play Hamlet,” says Lang. “It’s a role laden with traps and clues, an unsolvable crossword puzzle of a role.” knew if I got that right, the rest of the role would come.” “He loved playing Ruth,” Tina adds. “He’s having trouble letting go of it.” “I always loved Babe Ruth,” Steve says quietly. On another shelf is a set of audio books-on-tape that Steve has narrat­ ed. He does a science fiction series and a detective series. “I really enjoy d o in g th e m ,” he says. “ I can d o a dozen or so a year. I’v e always read aloud. I used to read to my grandfa­ ther. He worked in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, near where w e filmed Last Exit. In som e ways, he was a bigger influ­ e n c e on m e than Dad b e ca u s e he shaped the man m y father becam e and that influenced me, but he also influenced me directly. He died only 10 y e a rs ago. He w as an o ld IWW man.” The grandfather’s politics may help explain what the father, a self-made S W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN ¡S§£ 1 Lang’s performance in Last Exit to Brooklyn won wide critical acclaim. millionaire many times over, has done with his m oney. Huge chunks of it have gone to various philanthropic causes such as the I Have A Dream Foundation, which provides college scholarships for disadvantaged chil­ dren, and, of course, to Swarthmore. Very little has gone to Steve and his two older siblings. Danny comes racing into the living room, launches himself into the air, and comes down on Steve’s stomach. “I like a big family,” Steve says when he’s recovered his breath. “I like being able to p ro v id e fo r them b y doin g something I love to do. You look at what most kids are faced with— war, poverty, disease, abuse— m ost kids are born without a chance.” e g e ts up and h ead s to th e kitchen to help Tina make sup­ per. “What most people get out of therapy,” he says, chopping bread into cubes and tossing them into a hot iron skillet, “I get out of making croutons.” “Steve comes home every Sunday and makes croutons,” Tina teases. After dinner and the kids’ bedtime, the house is quiet for the first time since the rooster welcomed the dawn. Steve and Tina finally have a chance to watch a tape of the TV m ovie Tak­ ing Back My Life. It was filmed in Mem­ phis in Novem ber and December, but he hasn’t seen the finished m ovie yet. He has no idea how it has turned out. “Stage w o rk c o m e s d o w n to rehearse, reh earse, reh earse, and then perform,” Steve says. “In film, the rehearsal is continuous. The camera doesn’t respond to you the way a the­ ater audience does. What a film audi- ence finally sees is determined by the editor and the director. Each medium has its own advantages. I en joy the physical challenges of film. I had to do an eight-story fall five different times just to get one scene in The Hard Way. But on television in Crime Story, I had 44 episodes to develop my character. You don’t get that kind of luxury in a film or a stage production.” Steve seems pleased with the new movie, though he deflects Tina’s com­ pliments with a diffidence that looks for all the world like embarrassment. He talks instead of the things he didn’t like about the movie. “Well, you can thank Steven Ziegenmeyer for Hamlet,” Tina says. The TV m ovie paid well enough for Steve to spend th ree m onths as Ham let for what can only be described as ve ry modest financial reward. “Hamlet is the greatest role of all tim e,” Steve says. “Shakespeare put m ore of him self into that play than any other play he ever wrote. He lost a 9-year-old son just prior to writing Hamlet. The boy’s name was Hamnet. This play is the closest you can get to S h a k esp ea re. H a m let, W a itin g fo r G od ot, and D ea th o f a S a lesm a n . That’s the trinity.” T o m o rro w Steve must say a few words at a ceremony honoring Arthur M ille r, a man he ca lls “ on e o f m y h eroes.” He picks up a first-edition copy of Death o f a Salesman, trying to fin d an a p p r o p r ia te e x c e r p t, and begins reading one of Happy’s speech­ es aloud. T h e b o ok is sign ed, “T o S tep h en Lang, w ith m y v e r y rea l appreciation for your Happy, a foun­ dation and su pp ort through th ese many months of evolution of this play. All good luck! Arthur Miller.” “ T h e s e c r e t to p la yin g H a p p y ,” Steve says, “is to pretend you’re Biff the whole time. It’s the younger broth­ er syndrome. I’m a younger brother, so it was easy.” Probably not as easy as S teve m akes it sound. A sin gle scene in the previous day’s rehearsal had left fiim drenched in sweat and panting, as if he had just run several miles. It’s real work, work he loves. “I’d like to do a children’s .movie,” he says. “I’d like to do a musical. I’d love to do some Gilbert and Sullivan.” He puts his arms around Tina, and she lets her w eight sag com fortably against his body. “Theater is magic,” he says. “I’ve never gotten it right yet. Just to k eep th e p r o c e s s a liv e is enough.” W. D. Ehrhart 73 is one o f five writers featured in the Dictionary of Literary Biography/D ocum entary Series #9, “A m e rica n W riters o f the V ietnam War, ” Gale Research, Inc., 1991. H m ay 1992 i .1 (t il Well-paid film and TV roles make it possible for Lang to take on projects like Hamlet. Here he plays opposite Kathleen Widdoes as Gertrude. M A C A R T H U R MCBURNEY* A New President for Swarthmore President Alfred H. Bloom At an unconventional inauguration, Alfred H. Bloom calls on colleges to educate for “ethical intelligence'1responsive to ou r times. T he inauguration of Alfred H. B loom as Swarthm ore’s 13th president was a feast for the eyes, for the ears, and for the palate. But m ostly it was a feast for the mind. In an inaugural address that keynoted a care­ fully planned day o f artistic, cultural, and intellec­ tual e x p lo ra tio n , P re s id e n t B lo o m challenged Swarthm ore to lead undergraduate institutions in [' creating “a new mandate in Am erican education.” He called for the teaching o f “ethical intelligence” to prepare students to take civic responsibility in a multicultural world. “Our undergraduate institutions must prepare a critical mass o f A m ericans to respon d to the needs of a so ciety and of a w orld in need,” said The day’s diverse music included a brass quintet, student singers, a jazz band, and a mariachi band (above). 12 Bloom. “If w e do not, w ho will?” Criticizing “value-free education” as something S W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN Opposite: Seated in the front row on the Scott Amphitheater stage were (left to right) former President John Nason, President Bloom, chairman of the Board of Managers Neil Austrian ’61, former President Theodore Friend, Search Committee chair Samuel L. Hayes III ’57, Vice President Harry Gotwals, Acting Dean Leah Smith, and Professor Emeritus Paul C. Mangelsdorf, Jr., ’49. STEVEN GOLDBLATT '67 Top: Dancers from Stephen Koplowitz and Company blended text, song, and movement in a program called “Dance as Social Dialogue.” Above: The ceremony featured a traditional Chinese lion dance presented by students from Philadelphia’s Hung Gar Kung Fu Academy. Left: More than 100 delegates from other colleges came to honor Swarthmore’s new president on a near­ perfect May morning. How colleges educate students for civic responsibility in a multicultural world was the topic of the first of two afternoon symposia. Participants were Nei Noddings, associate dean of the School of Education at Stanford (far left), Herbert C. Kelman, the Cabot Professor of Social Ethics at Harvard (above left), and Frank F. Wong, vice president for academic affairs at the University of Redlands, California (left). Swarthmore plans to publish the symposium papers in late summer. PHOTOS BY STEVEN GOLDBLATT '67 International students (above) performed folk dances as part of the festivities. The second symposium considered ways in which colleges as institutions can embody and display civic responsibility. Maxine Frank Singer ’52, president of the Carnegie Institution (right), was joined by Fernando Rosas Moscoso, provost of the University of Lima (top right), and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., the W.E.B. DuBois Professor of the Humanities at Harvard (bottom right). cal sh ift o f c o n s c io u s n e s s fro m u n ex a m in ed assumptions about what is right and w rong to a consciously chosen set of values.” He also called for “a horizontal m ove ... through w hich students must look beyond their ow n cul­ tural w orlds to recognize the con­ tinuities that bind their culture to other human cultures, as w ell as the discontinuities that separate th eir cu ltu res ... and th e r e fo r e make for a richer w orld.” The them e of B loom ’s address was ech oed throughout the day as speakers and perform ers illus­ trated and explored other cultur­ al w orld s. T h e h ig h lig h t o f th e £ cerem ony was a traditional Chi- 3 nese lion d a n ce th at d e lig h te d § Bloom, a linguist w h o is fluent in | French, Spanish, and M andarin £ Chinese. The lion dance was part of a full range of events, including a multinational luncheon, that gave the inauguration a distinctive cross-cultural tone. Yet it was the content of B loom ’s speech* and of two afternoon sym posia that set the intellectu­ al tone— and charted a future course for Swarthmore. Colleges, a sserted B loom , must g ive stu­ dents “a detailed understanding of the problem s facing their society and the w orld ... an exposure so viv id that it w ill d e v e lo p in them a lifelon g commitment to responding to them .” Scholars from H a rvard U n iversity, Stanford University, the University of Redlands, California, and the University of Lima, Peru, w ere joined by M a xin e F ran k S in g e r ’ 52, p r e s id e n t o f th e Carnegie Institution of Washington, D.C., in after­ noon sym posia that explored the key questions of how colleges can educate for civic responsibili­ ty in a multicultural w orld and of h ow colleges as institutions can them selves em b od y and display such responsibility._______________ The text o f President B lo o m ’s address w ill be m a iled to Bulletin readers in June. A videotape o f the inauguration w ill be available for $15. Please write to the A lu m n i R elations O ffice fo r details. MAY 1992 Antonio Goodwin ’94 (top) performed the spiritual “Precious Lord— Take My Hand,” and the student singing group Frionas (center), eschewing a scheduled South African tune, sang “A Little Gracefulness.” The day ended with an evening performance by Urban Bush Women (above), the nationally known African American dance company. STEVEN GOLDBLATT '67 that “bears no responsibility beyond that of main­ taining the status quo,” Bloom called for a “verti­ Students protesting injustice and racism (left) gathered more than 700 signatures on a petition demanding federal civil rights prosecution of four Los Angeles police officers. “The events of the past three days make starkly evident the need to act” on a new mandate for American education, said President Bloom in his address. Bloom was among the signers of the petition. Ill maim H a A friend says, m “Swarthmore graduates sometimes act as if they belong to a special society, sharing some remarkable secret that outsiders cannot comprehend. 99 Whatever it was, it left the feeling that for a period o f time we lived intensely and at one point actually knew something. — George R. Spann ’65 Thomas College 16 Dear Al... Seven Swarthmore alumni currently serve as college or university presidents. We asked them to write an inaugural advice column for President Al Bloom. Dear Al, Some time ago, I was approached by a man who is writing a book about new college presidents. He is especial­ ly in terested in virgins, th ose w ho have not been presidents before and th e re fo re are still ... No, th at’s not right. Let me start over. What he want­ ed was an impressionistic evaluation made within the first two years on the job. “W hat ex p erien ces,” he asked, “from your undergraduate education do you find most valuable?” I told him th ere w ere three: The first was learning that being smart w a sn ’t en ou gh — you h ave to w ork hard to achieve anything. The second was learning from team sports that working together is good; it makes winning possible. You may lose, but it’s still good to work togeth­ er as a team. Th ere was a third thing that was hard to put into words, but it included the intense, exhaustive working out of problems. Something along the lines of Walter Pater’s advice to burn with a “ hard gem lik e fla m e .” Or H o lm e s ’ n o tio n th at h a v in g th e ir h earts touched with fire in their youth made his generation exceptional. A friend says, “Swarthmore gradu­ ates sometimes act as if they belong to a sp ecia l s o ciety , sharing som e remarkable secret that outsiders can­ not comprehend.” Whatever it was, it left the feeling that for a period of time w e lived intensely and at one point actu a lly knew som eth ing. Perhaps civic responsibility grows out of this. It seems to me that Swarthmore peo­ ple are as sensitive and concerned in th is re g a rd as a n y g ro u p I h a ve known, except the Quakers, which is a good reason for keeping that tradition alive at the College as well. George R. Spann ’65 Thomas College WA eing a college A J president is easy. Everyone knows how. Students and their parents, alumni and faculty, trustees and staff—all are eager, willing, indeed passionate, about explaining how to be a college president. — Nancy Bekavac ’69 Scripps College Dear Al, Pleased as I am to have been asked to advise you upon your ascension to the presidency of Swarthmore, I am a bit embarrassed at the task. First, you will discover, as all new presidents discover, that being a colS W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN Mj lege president is easy. I know that giate leadership, which is the Princi­ because, as President Chace of W es­ p le o f U n e x p re s s e d A d v ic e : Even leyan University has recently remind­ when you follow all of the advice on a ed us, everyone knows how to be a given subject, and even if the advice college president— students and their is, or can be made to appear to be, parents, alumni and faculty, trustees consistent, som eone who knew what and staff. Luckily, all of these people you really should do w ill have neglect­ are eager, willing, indeed passionate, ed to tell you, and you w ill therefore fall about explaining how to be a college in to error. T h ere are, to m y know l­ president, often in w ords of one or edge, no fail-safe strategies for avoid­ two syllables only. ing this danger. Dealing with the advice— and the Having armed you with my advice, c o rr e s p o n d e n c e , th e p h o n e m es­ and as an alumna and Manager, not to sages, and the calendars of meetings mention a resident of the American to hear such a d v ic e — is one of the city with the highest ratio of college first burdens v is ite d upon c o lle g e presidents to students, faculty, and presidents. Then, after receiving the staff, I will, of course, watch your pres­ advice, the fledgling president only idency closely to assure m yself that need follow the advice. Alas, it is my you are promptly, unhesitatingly, and sad duty to tell you that there’s the a c c u ra te ly fo llo w in g m y a d v ic e — rub. whether or not I’ve managed to write Laughingly simple as our jobs are, it all down. You get the idea. pellucid as the directions for success Nancy Bekavac ’69 are, there are just three factors that Scripps College stand between you and membership on the All-Am erican C olleg e P re s i­ dents’ All-Star Team. The first is an odd phenom enon that could be labeled the Fickle Arrow of Fate Principle: The advice is contra­ d ictory . Stu d ents u n ifo rm ly fa v o r attention to student needs and wish­ es; parents want lo w er tuition and higher standards; faculty m em bers want to be supported as scholars and confirmed in full participation in the academic community without, howev­ er, too much service on committees; trustees and alumni want the college the way they remember it, perfect in every way; and staff m em bers want only what is best for the college, high­ er ed u c a tio n , and th e lo n g -ra n g e future of X (X being their particular field of expertise, whether deciduous trees, fisca l s ta b ility , a u d iovisu a l equipment, or health care). trengthen the The second barrier to presidential underlying values nirvana is the Problem of Excessive Simultaneity: A ll o f the advice must be o f the institution acted upon at the same tim e. As w e while reaching out to know— or at least, as our faculty col­ leagues kn ow — it is im p o s s ib le to new constituencies . maximize, actualize, or apologize for one piece of advice at the same time — John H. Jacobson, Jr., ’54 that one is busy following, ignoring, or Hope College compromising all of the other pieces of advice. Finally, even if you manage to deal successfully with the preceding prob- Dear President Bloom, lems, you are likely to encounter diffi­ For me as a student 40 years ago, culties with the third barrier to colle­ Swarthmore was first of all a commu­ MAY 1992 nity of intelligent p eople w ho cared deeply about learning. Before going to Swarthmore, I had not experienced such intensity about learning, and I h a ve n ot fou n d it in m an y p la ce s since. In one respect the College was quite homogeneous. Yet Swarthmore was also a place where a wonderfully diverse group of people contributed to each o th er’s education b y being who they were and by being articulate about their ideas and commitments. The faculty was superb, though it w as s o m e y e a rs a fte r g ra d u a tio n before I fully appreciated how good it really was. But I have always thought that it was the students them selves who provided much of what was real­ ly special about a Swarthmore educa­ tion. Some of my fellow students were ch ild ren of fam ous parents. Som e w ere international students w h ose formative experiences and education w e re v e r y d iffe re n t from m y own. Som e b ro u g h t th e s o p h is tic a tio n gained from living in one or another of the w o rld ’s great cities. Others, like myself, came from small towns. The differences in background among stu­ dents, and among faculty members as well, w ere essential to the quality of intellectual life at Swarthmore. Swarthmore gave its students the opportunity to experience first-rate minds in face-to-face conversation. Th at o p p o rtu n ity cam e in H onors seminars, in classes and post-class discussions, in faculty offices, in the dining hall, and in many other con­ texts. That opportunity is at the core of what Swarthmore meant to me. Swarthm ore stood for som ething fine and noble. Swarthmore stood for love of learning, for intellectual curios­ ity, for moral values, and for a con­ cern for social justice. Individual facul­ ty members, administrators, and stu­ dents made important contributions to my own spiritual growth. One of the important tasks facing the president of a healthy college is to preserve and strengthen the underly­ ing valu es o f the in stitu tion w h ile reaching out to new constituencies that will sustain its vitality in genera­ tions to come. A great tradition can­ not be preserved without growth find change. Your wisdom is greatly need­ ed to secure a future that m atches Swarthmore’s past. John H. Jacobson, Jr., ’54 Hope College 17 / t is hard to say what presidents do that matters most , but high on my list would be to ask good questions and to listen carefully to the answers. Since we rarely really listen to each other ; if you do listen, you will have a remarkable effect on people. — Judith Aitken Ramaley ’63 Portland State University Dear President Bloom, It isn’t easy to be a president. The only person on campus who is expect­ ed to think about everyth in g is the president. Everybody else has a par­ ticular point of view or responsibili­ ties, but the president tries to make sense of it all. It is hard to say what presidents do that matters most, but high on my list would be to ask good questions and to listen carefully to the answers. Since w e rarely really listen to each other, if you do listen, you will have a remarkable effect on people. T h e re are m any w ays to recru it people to a shared view, to sort out 18 the many possibilities that an institu­ tion can pursue and to give everyone a sense of belonging to a shared enter­ prise. The most powerful way is to use carefully crafted questions to focus attention on what matters to the insti­ tution and to encourage its faculty, staff, students, and friends to discover th e a n sw ers th at a re th e r e ju st beneath the surface. Y ou r first big question, regarding educating for civic responsibility in a multicultural soci­ ety, is a v e ry good one. You should ask only a few questions, and each should be as thoughtful as your inau­ gural theme. A second w ay that presidents cre­ ate community is by being the chief adm irers o f th eir institutions. T h e most precious resource you have is your own time and attention. You will be tem pted to spend you r tim e to o freely, esp ecia lly in you r first year. There are so many people to meet, so many things to learn about the histo­ ry, tra d itio n s, and p o s s ib ilitie s of Swarthmore College. Your own curios­ ity, y o u r co m m itm en t to this new group of p eople you have cast your fo rtu n e s w ith , and y o u r se n s e o f r e s p o n s ib ilit y w ill lu re y o u in to overexten d in g you rself. I hope you resist the tem ptation to say yes to e v e r y invitation, to m eet ev ery o n e who wants to see you, to fly to every city with an active alumni group— all in your first year. Take your time. Give you rself the op portu n ity to absorb what you are learning and to reflect on what it means. There is nothing more exhilarating than a p r e s id e n c y , n o th in g m o re demanding. No other role in society requires so much or offers a greater challenge. M y favorite image of warn­ in g is th e ta le o f th e W o g g le b u g , T.E.H.M., a ch aracter in one of the W izard of Oz books by Frank Baum. Th e W oggleb u g lived in the schoolhouse floor and one day got project­ ed, larger than life, onto the schoolhouse wall. He began to b e liev e he was v e ry important, so he began to travel about, billing himself as “Thor­ oughly Educated and Highly Magnified (T.E.H.M.).” It is v e r y ea sy to b e lie v e all the things projected on you for good or ill by your friends and critics. Do remem­ ber this, and don’t accept too quickly either the criticism or the praise you are bound to receive. A dose of humil­ ity will protect your sense of propor­ tion and preserve your ability to help Swarthm ore C ollege hold fast to its co re iden tity and purpose. What is n e e d e d in th is era o f ch a n g e is a steady hand on the tiller. Th e best way to preserve your steadiness is to ch erish y ou r tim e w ith fam ily and friends. T h ey w ill su pport you and offer you time to be fully yourself. As a graduate of Swarthmore Col­ le g e , I h a v e lo n g a p p r e c ia te d the unfathomable value of an excellent lib­ eral ed u cation . I am glad that you have accepted the call to serve a fine institution. May your presidency bring you joy and fulfillment. Judith Aitken Ramaley ’63 Portland State University r o engage talented people in an enterprise so essential to our culture and well-being is exceptionally rewarding. — Neil R. Grabois ’57 Colgate University Dear Al, In one of his regular epiphanies— o r is it a p o s ta s ie s ? — Y o g i Berra S W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN rem inds us: “W hen you co m e to a crossroads, take it!” As so often hap­ pens w ith Y o g i’ s sta te m e n ts , th e apparent w isdom of this advice dis­ solves u nder scru tiny. But in this case, you have found an im portant crossroads and made the right choice for Swarthmore and for yourself. There will be many moments of joy as you lead our great college into the 21st century, but if m y experience is any guide, there may be som e infre­ quent moments when you wish you’d taken the other road. I can assure you that they will pass, because both you and the community share a commit­ ment that ensures eventual consen­ sus. What a wonderful decision proce­ dure— sure to reach a resolution, if only you wait long enough. There is no more exciting responsi­ bility than the presidency of a great college. T o be able to engage talented people in an enterprise so essential to our culture and well-being is excep­ tionally rewarding intellectually, emo­ tionally, and even sp iritu ally. Th e tough decisions will have to be made without perfect information, but, after all, that’s what makes them difficult. All those wonderfully articulate, smart p e o p le w ill, h o w e v e r , be d a rtin g around you like moths around a can­ dle, pulling you in m ore directions than a body can move. As I look back on m y Swarthmore experience and ask myself how it con­ tributed to who I am, I can tease out som e p a rticu la rly im portan t influ­ ences. T o Monroe Beardsley I ow e a sense of personal responsibility for critical judgment, and to the College a sense of civic responsibility. Finally, I owe to Swarthmore the opportunity it provided to m eet m y w ife. She has advised me, guided me, and provided a vantage point from w hich to see both p ro b le m s and m y p e rh a p s idiosyncratic reactions to them, all the w h ile h e lp in g m e n ot to take myself too seriously. You are fortu­ nate to have Peggi for balance, per­ spective, companionship, and love. As you complete the first of many distinguished years as Swarthmore’s president, I wish you good fortune, with the knowledge that you will make a difference to what the C ollege is, ought to be, and will be. Neil R. Grabois ’57 Colgate University MAY 1992 warthmore’s most significant attribute is quality. Put quality fírst at all times. — J. Robert S. Prichard ’71 University of Toronto Dear President Bloom, First, congratulations. Y ou have assumed the presidency of the finest coeducational liberal arts college in the world. It is an enormous force for good. It has shaped the lives of all who have had the privilege of attend­ ing. My years at Swarthmore were the most significant time of change in my life. I will always be grateful. You have inherited a great trust and responsi­ bility. It now falls upon you to build on the stunning record of innovation, accomplishment, and contribution of the College’s past while reinterpreting the College’s traditions to accomm o­ date and advance the future. S econ d , so m e a d v ic e . S w a rth ­ m ore’s most significant attribute is quality. Put quality first at all times. So many forces work against quality, and so much courage and commitment is required to reinforce and reinterpret it. Swarthmore must set the standards for all others. Third, the challenge. I w rite from w hat is argu ably the w o r ld ’s m ost multicultural city. Educating for civic responsibility in this context presents tremendous challenges. At the same time, I believe success in this chal­ lenge will be one of the hallmarks of academ ic and intellectu al strength into the next century. Seize it. W e can all continue to learn much from Swarthmore. I look forw ard to w atch in g the C olleg e th riv e under your leadership. J. Robert S. Prichard ’71 University of Toronto / know that healthy and animated debate will flourish and that commitment to diversity will feed the College’s inveterate appetite for self-examination and intellectual dialogue. — David H. Porter ’58 Skidmore College Dear President Bloom, Enhancing cultural diversity is on the agenda of Swarthmore, Skidmore, and most institutions of higher educa­ tion today. There are many good rea­ sons fo r this co m m itm en t— m oral, societal, personal— but one especially relevant to the academy, and one too o fte n o v e r lo o k e d , is th e fa ct that diversity has always been a powerful, Please turn to page 61 19 g COLLEGE Students’ appeal halts exploitation of a national forest By turning their fined proj­ ect for Associate Professor Jacob Weiner’s ecology course into a legal appeal to the United States Forest Service, three Swarthmore students have blocked cur­ rent management policies that they felt endangered the ecosystem of West Vir­ ginia’s Monongahela National Forest. “W e decided to confront the ecological crises of our times directly,” said Bren- dan Kelly ’92, a political sci­ ence major. Kelly, along with another political sci­ ence major, B.J. Chisholm ’93, and biological anthro­ pology major David Tecklin ’92, filed a legal appeal on two issues affecting the Monongahela’s ecosystem. The students combined their ecological knowledge with provisions of the National Environmental Protection Act and the National Forest Manage­ ment Act to make their case. They objected to a plan for the Monongahela MACARTHUR MCBURNEY '93 Brendan Kelly ’92, B.J. Chisholm ’93, and David Tecklin ’92 used a Forest Service appeal process to save hundreds o f acres o f timber. 20 that would allow oil and gas wells to be drilled in the next 10 to 15 years and would call for the construc­ tion of new roadways. They also appealed the sale plan for timber, which grants the highest-bidding private timber company access to over 1,700 acres of the forest. The winning company would be allowed to clear-cut 1,000 acres. In addition to destroying the “biological integrity” of the forest, the students said, the propositions would sacrifice the envi­ ronment to business inter­ ests. “The taxpayers’ money pays for the assess­ ments and the drawing up of the plans, and private companies reap the prof­ its,” said Kelly. “The Forest Service is creating econom ­ ic markets that are destroying the forests.” As a result of their suc­ cessful appeals, the stu­ dents were invited by the grass-roots environmental group Preserve Appalachi­ an Wilderness to testify before the House Interior Appropriations Subcom­ mittee against Forest Ser­ vice management policies and to lobby members of Congress to encourage support for the Ancient Forest Protection Act and the Forest Biodiversity Pro­ tection and Clear-cutting Prohibition Act. “I was told a number of times by congressional aides that it was very refreshing not to be sitting with a professional lobby­ ist but to talk with some­ one who was more invest­ ed in the issue,” said Chisholm. “As students, w e have access to a lot of informa­ tion and technical skills,” Tecklin said. “Our role is to provide them to concerned citizen groups to facilitate their own efforts.” Known as the Eastern Forests and Mountains Conservation Project, the campus group has expand­ ed this semester to more than 20 from the original three Swarthmore stu­ dents, Tecklin said, allow­ ing them to review in detail policies affecting other national forests. They plan to organize a course on conservation biology and applied ecology that will monitor forest manage­ ment using current envi­ ronmental research. — Sara Shay ’92 Long-awaited Intercultural Center opens in Clothier After years of student inter­ est and more than six months of formed planning, Swarthmore’s new Intercul­ tural Center opened on April 4. The center, which occupies three former offices and the old Board of Managers room in Clothier cloisters, will initially pro­ vide space for the Hispanic Organization for Latino Awareness (HOLA), the Swarthmore Asian Organi­ zation (SAO), and Action Les-B-Gay, the bisexual, gay, and lesbian alliance. President Al Bloom praised the “extraordinary energy, thought, and sensi­ tivity” of the students who worked to translate long­ standing interest in such a center into spaces and pro­ grams that will “provide support for individual groups to explore and gain comfort in their own identi­ ties while creating an envi­ ronment in which people from different backgrounds can come together to learn from and delight in each other.” S W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN E Provost Jim England named to Temple post James W. England, Swarthmore’s provost since 1984, has been appointed provost of Temple Univer­ sity. He will oversee a facul­ ty that, at 1,700 members, is 30 percent larger than Swarthmore’s entire stu­ dent body. As the universi­ ty’s chief academic officer, he will be responsible for its curriculum, library, scholarly press, and branch campuses in Rome and Tokyo. England said he was looking forward to the challenge of working at a major urban university that serves a wide spec­ trum of «people. “If higher education doesn’t work at schools like Temple, then America is not going to work,” he told The Philadel­ phia Inquirer. Temple, with 33,000 stu­ dents, is not without its challenges. It has suffered from ongoing disputes between its faculty and administration, leading to two bitter faculty strikes in the last decade. Yet according to the Inquirer, England was the first choice of Tem ple’s faculty, one of whom said he would bring a much-needed “sense of civility” to the university. England will assume his new duties in June. Presi­ dent A1 Bloom has stated that England’s successor will be appointed from among Swarthmore’s cur­ rent tenured faculty. A portrait honoring former Dean Janet Dickerson was unveiled March 21 in cere­ monies attended by Dickerson, who is currently vice president o f student affairs at Duke Univer­ sity. Among guests at the unveiling were Maurice Eldridge ’62, director o f development (left), and Simmie Knox, the Washington, D.C., artist who created the portrait. A gift o f the Class o f 1991 and Walter and Marge Pearlman Scheuer, both ’48, the idea for the portrait grew out o f last year s Parrish walls dialogue, sparked by the question o f why “no person o f co lo r” was repreMAY 1992 E C Garnet Sages audit classes; program extended to all ’40s alumni “Try it,” say these pioneers in the College’s new audit­ ing program for Garnet Sages about their novel sented among the paintings near the Admissions Office. After several months o f almost daily post­ ing o f communications centering on the issues o f diversity, race, opportunity, and strained rela­ tions at Swarthmore, a portrait o f Malcolm X was hung and subsequently removed and slashed. When the Class o f 1991 was asked by their officers to select their senior gift to the Col­ lege, the vote was overwhelmingly in favor o f the portrait because o f Dickerson’s importance to the life o f the College. The portrait now hangs in the place where the dialogue occurred. G E experience. Walter Steuber ’41 (Introductory Biology): “Biology had been a blank spot m y whole life. Every time I picked up a newspa­ per, I would find a story on molecular biology, and I never knew what they were talking about. This course has changed my life, and I have a whole new vocabulary to help me read the newspapers.” George McKeag ’27 (Introductory Astronomy): “It’s great! A real privilege! And the instruction is superb.” Carolyn Hogeland Herting ’38 (Opera): “I love it! I come away refreshed from each class. The students are so bright— they are all my friends.” Catharine Wilson Wright ’24 (Th e International Economy): “It’s great expe­ rience just being with all these nice, bright kids. The course is something to sink your teeth into.” Interaction with stu­ dents varies from class to class. Steuber says, “95 percent of them are scared of the old guy and keep their distance, but 5 per­ cent are very cordial.” Herting tells this story about how she broke the ice in her class: “In the first class, Jim [Professor Free­ man] said that when Verdi composed Othello, he was an old man of 73 and had been in retirement for 10 years. “At the second class meeting, I decided to raise my hand to ask if I could say something. I intro­ duced myself as a Garnet Sage auditor and said I wanted them to know that I am a year older than Verdi was when he composed 21 E Othello. Everybody laughed.” Herting ended up solv­ ing a casting problem for one group of students in the class who w ere produc­ ing a segment of Mozart’s The M agic Flute, by recruit­ ing a grandchild and two of his friends. Because of the enthusi­ asm of the participating faculty and these auditors, and because there were only four Garnet Sages who took advantage of this opportunity to audit class­ es, the College this fall will extend the program to all alumni in classes in the ’40s. This summer Garnet Sages and other ’40s alum­ ni in the greater Philadel­ phia area will receive an invitation and information about classes open to them. President appoints special assistant for women’s concerns President A1 Bloom has appointed Patricia Whit­ man, the College’s equal opportunity officer, as his special assistant for wom en’s concerns. In an April 3 letter to the campus community, Bloom said Whitman would assist him by “working with students and by supporting commu­ nity efforts to ensure a safe and hospitable environ­ ment for women.” Her parttime position was increased to full time so that she could expand her responsibilities. Whitman cited “the per­ ception that the current [College] judicial system is not meeting the needs of women who feel that they have a grievance. There is a campus dynamic causing women to feel insecure and unable to give voice to their grievances.” Height­ 22 E C ened concern over these issues during the past year led the Dean’s Office in February to publish a brochure detailing the Col­ lege’s policy on sexual assault and harassment. The brochure was “a good first step,” said Whit­ man. She defined her goal as “helping to create an atmosphere where no one need question the College’s position on harassment, assault, or intimidation. It’s important that the College be unequivocal on these issues, that there be clear sanctions against such behavior, support for vic­ tims, and, when appropri­ ate, education for men and women alike.” Scott Arboretum offers video tour A 17-minute videotape highlighting the collections and gardens throughout the campus has been pro­ duced by the Scott Arbore­ tum. Produced by William Pinder ’78, the video com­ bines still and moving footage to give the viewer a tour of the College’s horti­ cultural beauty in all sea­ G E sons: the magnolia collec­ tion in full flower in spring, the rose garden in summer bloom, oaks and maples in I flaming fall colors, and hol­ lies loaded with berries in the winter. The video is available at the College bookstore for $7 or may be purchased through the mail. Checks for $9 ($7 for the video plus $2 shipping) should be made payable to the Scott Arboretum, Swarthmore College, 500 College Ave., J Swarthmore, PA 19081. Three named to Board of Managers At its December meeting, Swarthmore’s Board of Managers elected three new members: David K. Arthur ’89, Christopher B. Leinberger ’72, and Wilma A. Lewis ’78. Arthur, a research assis­ tant with the environmen­ tal consulting firm ICF, Inc., was named a Young Alum­ ni Manager. After receiving a B.A. in environmental studies from Swarthmore, he attended Balliol College at Oxford University, where he received a B.A. in ! philosophy, politics, and economics. Leinberger is a manag­ ing partner with the Metropolitan Futures Group and with Robert Charles Lesser & Co. in Santa Fe. A real-estate and metropolitan development consultant, he holds an M.B.A. in strategic planning from Harvard Business School. Lewis is assistant chief in the civil division of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia. After graduating with dis­ tinction from Swarthmore, she earned a J.D. from Har­ vard Law School in 1981. Both Leinberger and S W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN E Christopher Leinberger ’72 David Arthur ’89 Lewis were nominated by the Alumni Association and are known as Alumni Man­ agers. All three are serving four-year terms. C the Board of Managers from 1956 to 1976 and an Emeritus Manager since then, died in January of heart failure. He was 86. Clothier graduated from Swarthmore with Honors in English and membership in Phi Beta Kappa. He received an LL.B. degree from Harvard Law School and for more than 50 years practiced law with the firm of Edmonds, Obermayer & Rebmann (now Obermay­ er, Rebmann, Maxwell & Hippel), specializing in real-estate law. Clothier was a director of and coun­ sel to the Philadelphia Art Museum and an officer of the First Unitarian Church and of the Pennsylvania Bar Association. He is survived by his wife, Dorothy, three daugh­ ters, a son, and 11 grand­ children. Reisner, who served on the Board as an Alumni Manager from 1950 to 1954, died in November. Until her retirement in October, she had been assistant to the president of Bryn Mawr College. After graduating Phi Beta Kappa from Swarth­ more, Reisner received an M.A. in history from Bryn Mawr, where she worked most of her life. She served as vice president of the Alumni Association and was a class secretary and reunion gift chair. She is survived by her two sons and three grand­ children. Two former Managers die Williams Club of New York open for membership Two former members of the Board of Managers, George Ball Clothier ’26 and Ellen Fernon Reisner ’31, have died. Clothier, a member of Swarthmore College is an affiliate member of the Williams Club in New York City. Swarthmore alumni can join the club with full membership privileges. MAY 1992 With rates for both local and out-of-town members, the Williams Club offers dining facilities, meeting rooms, and overnight accommodations at prices well below the major hotels. If you would like more information, please send your request to: Williams Club Info, Alumni Office, Swarthmore Col­ lege, 500 College Ave., Swarthmore, PA 19081. Antonia Hamilton Hamilton named to Foundation and Corporation post Antonia (Toni) W. Hamil­ ton has been named direc­ tor of Foundation and Cor­ porate Relations. She replaces Karen Hoover, who has becom e associate director of major gifts for the Colorado School of Mines. Hamilton previously was director of Corporate and Foundation Relations at the University of Iowa Foundation. Prior to that she served as director of public relations in the Iowa City office of Hansen Lind Meyer, an architectural/ engineering firm. A 1962 graduate of Smith College, Hamilton holds master’s degrees from the University of Vir­ ginia and the University of Michigan. Birdie swatters undefeated in winter season Badminton (12-0): The var­ sity “Swatters” had the best overall record of any of the Garnet winter sports teams, finishing the season without a loss in dual match competition. Cap­ tain Leslie Bell ’92 led the squad all season from her number-one singles spot and captured the PAIAW singles crown. Elizabeth Grossman ’92 and Rosie McCauley ’93 proved to be a formidable doubles team and made the semifinals of the Northeast Collegiate Tournament at Swarth­ more, thus earning all­ region honors. The women combined with the men’s club team to finish third overall in the regionals. Men’s Basketball (11-14, 6-4 MACSE): The 1991-92 campaign can only be described as a roller-coast­ er ride for head coach Lee Wimberly and the men’s varsity basketball squad. The team dropped their first nine games of the sea­ son (including losses to Division I opponents Yale and Lafayette and to a nationally ranked Franklin and Marshall squad) and then won their next seven in a row. The seven-game winning streak included two wins in the Skidmore College Invitational as the Garnet captured their first tournament crown in recent history. The squad then proceeded to lose four more in a row before bouncing back with a 4-1 record in their last five games, including tw o wins over archrival Haverford. Senior Scott Gibbons became the all-time leading scorer in College history as he finished his career with 1,563 points, eclipsing the 23 E old mark of 1,507 by Jim Reilly ’50. Gibbons racked up an impressive collection of seasonal honors as well: He was named to the all­ tournament teams at both the Scotty W ood and Skid­ more tourneys; he was named both PhiladelphiaArea Small College and Middle Atlantic Conference Player of the Week; he led the MAC Southern Division in scoring with 21.4 points per game; and he was named to the MAC South­ east League All-Star Team find to the National Associ­ ation of Basketball Coach­ es All-Middle Atlantic Dis­ trict Second Team. W om en’s Basketball (616,1-11 MACSE): The Lady Garnet improved dramati- C cally on their one-win sea­ son of 1990-91, upping their season wins to six and winning their first league game in two years. Sophomore Kerry Laufer led the squad with 15 points per game before an ankle injury sidelined her late in the season, and she was named to the postsea­ son MAC All-Academic Team. Head coach Karen Yohannan will have her hands full next year— grad­ uation will claim senior co­ captains Robin Tanabe and Martha Wofford, and starters Laufer and Jenny Willis ’94 will be studying abroad. Indoor Track: Both the men’s and wom en’s squads enjoyed success during the MACARTHUR MCBURNEY ’93 Scott Gibbons ’92 (#30 above) set the all-time College record for points scored in a Swarthmore basketball career. His season-end 1,563 points eclipsed the old mark o f 1,507 set by Jim Reilly ’50. 24 E indoor campaign, as the women captured the Cen­ tennial Conference Invita­ tional, finished second at the PAIAW meet, and earned third place in the MAC championship (only one point out of second). A total of 12 school records were broken, and junior Liz Dempsey won the MAC championship in the 55meter hurdles. In addition, three athletes were named to the MAC All-Academic Team: sophomores Am y Iwan, Tina Shepardson, and Joanna Vondrasek. The men’s team finished second in the centennial meet and had several out­ standing performances, including winning the dis­ tance medley relay events at the prestigious Yale Invi­ tational and the MACs. Tw o members of the men’s squad, sophomore John Edgar and senior Guian McKee, made the MAC AllAcademic Team. W om en’s Swimming (57): Britta Fink ’93 recorded Swarthmore’s highest fin­ ish ever in the NCAA Divi­ sion III Swimming Champi­ onships in Buffalo, N.Y., on March 13-15, when she fin­ ished ninth in the 200-yard breaststroke event. Fink became Swarthmore’s only All-American of the winter season for her efforts. Fink also is the only Swarthmore swimmer ever to hold a Middle Atlantic Con­ ference record, with her time of 2:26.39 for the event. Sophomore Kate Moran also qualified for the nationals in the 100yard backstroke and fin­ ished in 23rd place in her specialty. The wom en’s team finished with a record of 5-7 for the season. Men’s Swimming (3-9): Senior Adam Browning became the first Swarth- G E more swimmer, male or female, and only the fourth in the MAC’S 42-year histo­ ry, to win his or her event for four straight years in the MAC championships, as he won the 100-yard but­ terfly. Peter Keleher ’93 W e t s the Garnet’s other MAC champ, as he cap­ tured the 200-yard butter­ fly crown. Despite out­ standing individual perfor­ mances, the team as a whole struggled, finishing with a 3-9 dual meet record for the season. W restling (2-14): Despite their rather dismal dual match record, the 1991-92 season contained many individual highlights and W e t s a fitting tribute to the 50th anniversary of wrestling at the College. Senior Dennis Jorgensen became the first Garnet wrestler to win a MAC crown in 14 years when he won the 177-pound class at the conference champion­ ships at Swarthmore. By virtue of his win, Jorgensen received a bid to the NCAA Division III Championships at Trenton State on March 6-7, but he was eliminated in the first two rounds. In addition to Jorgensen’s accolades on the mat, he and teammates Kevin Wil­ son ’92 (w ho finished fourth at 190 at the MACs) and Wes Rochette ’94 (sixth at 158) were named Scholar All-Americans by the NCAA Division III Wres­ tling Coaches Association. H ood Trophy Update: At the conclusion of the winter sports season, Swarthmore led Haverford eight points to four in the quest for the Hood Trophy. Swarthmore bested the ’Fords in men’s and wom en’s swimming and swept both basketball games during the winter. S W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN Giving the Hom eless a Voice Joan S eaver McAllister '51 publishes a newsletter with crucial help from hom eless families. he headline reads: “Back and Forth.” What follows is the first-person story of Andrea Williams, who lost her house in 1986 as the result of an electrical fire. She, her husband, and their three children were left with nothing, and they have not been able to find a satisfacto­ ry home since. They have had to deal with living among drug addicts and with school problems for the chil­ dren as they moved from the New York City shelter sys­ tem to dirty and and danger­ ous apartments and back again. Andrea is still deter­ mined to find a decent place to live and writes from her own knowledge: “Never turn your nose up at anyone because the same thing can happen to you.” This story is from How... When... Where, a monthly newsletter for homeless families put togeth­ er by journalist and writer Joan Seaver McAllister ’51 and an associate, Barbara Lippman, who does layout and editing. It goes out in both English and Spanish versions to the almost 5,000 families who live in the New York City shelter system at any one time. “Our best-read stories are the insider stories [like Andrea Williams’], written by people in the shelter system who are part of families that have become homeless,” declares McAllister, speaking rapidly and with enthusiasm. “The insider stories give fam­ ilies in trouble the sense that other people are dealing with the same problems, are man­ aging somehow or other to get out of this pickle. “And then we also give them the hard information about subjects that concern them, like subsidized hous­ ing programs, health issues, T 40 job training, and their legal rights in the shelter system,” she continues. In February and March, for instance, the newsletter featured basic health information for preg­ nant women, and April’s issue contained a questionand-answer article about finding and furnishing an apartment. What makes McAllister’s enterprise special is that her readers are also her co-work­ ers in producing the newslet­ ter and getting it out to the people who need it. Integral to the newsletter is a chang­ ing corps of distributors, who are members of home­ less families living in the shelter system. They hand out the newsletter in the shelters and let McAllister know what kind of stories and information it should contain. For the help they give, the distributors are paid $15 a month. Certainly the money is useful, but according to McAllister, that’s not the biggest benefit. “It’s impor­ tant that they have their own sources of information and have a sense that they can do something for them­ selves. If you have no home, no job, no future, it is very nice to have somebody and something counting on you, respecting your intelligence, asking for your opinion.” And McAllister does count on them, respect them, and rely on their opin­ ions. She meets monthly with the distributors who are close by, mostly in Manhat­ tan and the Bronx, and semi­ annually with distributors from all over the New York City area. “They talk about what concerns them, and I sit and take notes,” McAllis­ ter explains. “That’s mainly how I find out what they need, and I get a lot of infor­ mation from them because they’re good reporters.” She bristles when she thinks about popular stereo­ types of the homeless. “Con­ trary to the public image, just about everybody wants to get back into some kind of educational program or get job training, but it’s virtually impossible to work while you’re in a shelter trying to find permanent housing and don’t know where you’re going to live next month,” McAllister maintains vigor­ ously. “They have the prob­ lems of poverty, like lack of education and health prob­ lems. But in almost five years, I can’t remember any of the people in the shelter system I’ve worked with who couldn’t function as well or better than anyone I know personally— if they had money.” McAllister started the newsletter in 1987 after becoming interested in the problems facing homeless families through her involve­ ment in the Citizens Commit­ tee for Children, which did some of the earliest studies of welfare hotels and the housing problems of families in New York. She was on a task force studying these hotels and became intrigued by the problems of children being raised in that atmo­ sphere. Her first idea was to plan programs for these children. “But I discovered that there were services being run by people better qualified than I, like athletic programs. The problem that became evi­ dent to me was that the fami­ lies didn’t know about them. I figured, my background is journalism, this I could do.” Thus How... When... Where was* born, sponsored by the Citizens Committee for Chil­ dren and supported by vari­ ous foundations. Currently, the J.M. Kaplan Fund, the Drexel Burnham Lambert Foundation, and the Seaver Institute are supplying funds for the newsletter— “and I’m looking for more!” McAllister adds quickly. Of all the jobs she’s done in her life, this is the one she “loves the best,” says McAl­ lister. But still, she wouldn’t mind being put out of busi­ ness. “I started the newslet­ ter in 1987 and couldn’t be more surprised that it’s still needed. Like everybody who works with homeless fami­ lies, w e’re saying, ‘What are we still doing here?’ ” —Rebecca Aim S W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN Building a Constitution Without Shared Values South Africans can ’t agree on uniforms for their Olym pic team. Can they write a viable constitution that is a radical break from the past? By Tom ’65 and Bevra Brown Krattenmaker ’65 uring the first week of May 1991, Bevra took final examinations in three courses at the University of the District of Columbia and Tom graded 125 antitrust exams written by his stu­ dents at Georgetown law school; then we crossed our fingers while handing over care of the house to our 19year-old son and boarded a plane for South Africa. For the next 13 weeks, our home was the city of Durban in the province of Natal. There, supported by a Fulbright grant, Tom was visit­ ing professor of constitution­ al law at the University of Natal’s Howard College of Law. What we saw in South Africa was alternately beauti­ ful and brutal. Durban is a gorgeous city of lush green hills stretching away from sparkling clean beaches washed by the Indian Ocean. It is also ringed by squatters’ camps, the “townships” where Durban’s black popu­ lation resides. These consist of plywood or tin shacks crammed together as far as the eye can see, with no toi­ lets, streets, play areas, or electricity and, at most, one tap of running water for thou­ sands of people to share. Similarly stark contrasts exist throughout the country. For example, the Drakens­ berg Mountains run through the center of the country, which is largely rural. These mountains are as beautiful as James Michener ’29 described them in The Covenant. But close by the Drakensbergs, black South African farmers are trapped D 44 in hopeless poverty. They live in mud huts without run­ ning water or electricity, till­ ing thin soil that can barely sustain plant life. These indigenous farmers usually speak neither English nor Afrikaans (the languages of the white ruling class) and are governed by a feudal sys­ tem in which hereditary chiefs exercise extraordinary discretion and women have almost no power. Why did we go? Tom has been teaching constitutional law for 23 years. To him, from a professional standpoint, South Africa is the most inter- esting place in the world. Bevra, a mathematics teach­ er, observed classrooms in a rural elementary school and conducted review sessions in math for black youngsters preparing to take the national test for high-school gradua­ tion. Tom taught undergradu­ ate and graduate law classes at the University of Natal, conducted faculty seminars at other law schools, consult­ ed with political and academ­ ic groups on constitutional reform, and generally made himself available as a speaker for any group that would pro­ vide a free meal. South Africa is just as enigmatic up close as it is from a detached distance. Seventyfive percent of its inhabitants are black, and no black person has ever been permitted to vote. Though the all-white governing Nationalist Party (NP) has repealed the most visible and ugliest forms of apartheid and permitted black political liberation parties (especially the African National Congress, or ANC) to operate inside the country, black South Africans still do not have voting rights. The NP and the ANC have commenced negotiations to establish a new constitution for South Africa, and in a recent referendum, white voters supported this initiative. Yet as events in Eastern Europe reveal, one does not make a country by writing a constitution. Rather, for a constitution to be durable, it must be built upon some common interests, values, or goals among the citizenry. For »example, the present South African constitution was cemented by a common desire among whites to exclude and oppress the black majority. What might bind together a multiracial, democratic South Africa? Certainly not language; in South Africa no single language is spoken by as fnuch as two-fifths of the people. Nor is religion a common bond; while most people in most racial groups in South Africa would probably describe themselves as Christian, Afrikaners and Xhosa find very different lessons in the same Bible. Sometimes cohesive nations are built upon common fears, but black and white South Africans do not fear a common enemy. Quite the contrary, they fear each other. If the NP and the ANC do in fact each speak for a large constituency, then there is littie in shared economic goals to build on, either. The NP practices what we call “quaint fascism.” Under its S W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN ret tin cul syi th< ad' tel me Th be ex< av ue mi th; of ; in all 19 th< wl fla na na tn 01 vi< ra lai bi he to pi P< P( / m si C( Ui ti< m m S( tt ^ tii tr tc c< Vl ei Vl 0 ^ v ^ ' “ Recent Books by Alumni We welcome review copies of books by alumni. The books are donated to the Swarthmoreana section o f McCabe Library after they have been noted for this column. Jacqueline Carey 76, Good Gossip, Random House, 1992. Eleven interlocking stories make up this comedy of mod­ ern manners about a group of “almost hip, nearly glamorous urbanites” in Manhattan. David Chalmers ’49, And the Crooked Places Made Straight: The Struggle for Social Change in the 1960s, The Johns Hop­ kins University Press, 1991. This social history, a compre­ hensive guide to one of Ameri­ ca’s most evocative decades, describes the ways in which the civil-rights movement touched off a widening chal­ lenge to traditional values and social arrangements. Walter W. Powell and Paul J. DiMaggio 71 (eds.), The New Institutionalism in Organiza­ tional Analysis, University of Chicago Press, 1991. This vol­ ume offers, for the first time, both often-cited foundation works and the latest writings of scholars associated with the institutional approach to organizational analysis. Jonathan Franzen ’81, Strong Motion, Farrar Straus Giroux, 1992. Offering a timely and compelling vision of an ailing society, Franzen’s second novel follows young Louis Hol­ land in a tale about earth­ quakes, love, the environment, and growing up. Marjorie Garber ’66, Vested Interests: Cross-Dressing & Cul­ tural Anxiety, Routledge, 1992. The author explores the nature and significance of cross-dressing in Western cul­ ture, drawing on history, liter­ ature, film, photography, and popular and mass culture and concluding that there can be no culture without the transvestite. 50 Richard E. Goodkin 75, Around Proust, Princeton Uni­ versity Press, 1991. In this study, the author places “around Proust” a variety of things: other literary texts, other (nonliterary) artistic forms, and other (nonartistic) modes of intellectual pursuit. The Tragic Middle: Racine, Aris­ totle, Euripides, The University of Wisconsin Press, 1991. This book links the philosophical texts of Aristotle with the trag­ ic dramas of Racine and Euripides to show that tragic heroism results from a conflict between two ways of approaching a problem: a practical approach based on compromise and a theoretical approach that admits only mutually exclusive solutions. Deborah Hitchcock Jessup ’56, Waste Management Guide: Laws, Issues & Solutions, The Bureau of National Affairs, Inc., 1992. This book is a pragmatic guide through the morass of regulations and issues affect­ ing solid waste management, including laws, municipal waste recycling policies and issues, pollution prevention, disposed technologies, and more. Madeleine Kahn 77, Narrative Transvestism: Rhetoric and Gender in the Eighteenth-Centu­ ry English Novel, Cornell Uni­ versity Press, 1991. Kahn cre­ ates her term “narrative transvestism” to describe the device through which male authors assume the first-per­ son narrative voice of women, and she analyzes in detail nov­ els by Defoe and Richardson in this context. Milton Moskowitz, Robert Lev­ ering ’66, and Michael Katz, Everybody’s Business: A Field Guide to the 400 Leading Com­ panies in America, Doubleday, 1990. This book looks at the country’s 400 most influential companies in terms of global presence, consumer brands, industry and product rank­ ings, number of employees, profits or losses, and more. Bryan D. Mangrum ’60 and Giuseppe Scavizzi, A Reforma­ tion Debate: Karlstadt, Emser, and Eck on Sacred Images, Three Treatises in Translation, Dovehouse Editions Inc., 1991. These treatises, translated here for the first time in English, established the terms of reference for one of the most important debates of the Reformation: religious imagery seen as fostering superstition vs. its helpfulness in promot­ ing devotion. Daniel Marcus ’80, Roar: The Paper Tiger Television Guide to Media Activism, Paper Tiger Television Collective, 1991. This graphic-laden book details the history, and need for alternative media projects and contains a guide to do-ityourself video production and distribution, as well as resource lists. John K. McNulty ’56, Federal Income Taxation ofS Corpora­ tions, The Foundation Press, Inc., 1992. Intended for law stu­ dents, lawyers, and scholars from other legal systems, this book is designed to explain the U.S. federal income tax law of those corporations elected to be taxed under Subchapter S of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. Glen O. Gabbard and Roy W. Menninger ’47 (eds.), Medical Marriages, American Psychi­ atric Press, Inc., 1988. Featur­ ing first-person accounts and case vignettes, this book looks at the inner workings of the physician’s marriage—the psychological issues and sources of conflict that emerge in the various stages of marriage and family. Christopher Morris ’66, Mod­ els o f Misrepresentation: On the Fiction ofE.L. Doctorow, Uni­ versity Press of Mississippi, 1991. In this reading of Doctorow’s work, the author con­ siders the theme of the strug­ gle for representation in art from a philosophical stand­ point: How can the writer depict America, or how can the reader interpret its values, when the capacity of language to represent is put in doubt? Howard N. Rabinowitz ’64, The First New South, 1865-1920, Harlan Davidson, Inc., 1992. In the aftermath of the Civil War, white Southerners clung to the hope that a “New South” would arise from the ashes of the old. This book examines the myth and the reality of the period in which the South sought to adjust to the politi­ cal, economic, and social upheavals of the post-Civil War years. Jon Van Til ’61 and Associ­ ates, Critical Issues in American Philanthropy: Strengthening Theory and Practice, JosseyBass Publishers, 1990. In this book, leading authorities in nonprofit research and prac­ tice provide fresh insights into the basic issues confronting philanthropy—legal, ethical, financial, social, and manageri­ al— as more is demanded of philanthropy than ever before. Howard C. Westwood ’31, Black Troops, White Comman­ ders, and Freedmen During the Civil War, Southern Illinois University Press, 1992. Recounted in this collection of essays Eire the often bitter experiences of blacks who were admitted to military ser­ vice in the Civil War but sub­ jected to blatant forms of dis­ crimination by their white commanders. Julie (Biddle) Zimmerman ’68 and Kimiaki Tokumasu, Wish­ ing on Daruma, Biddle Publish­ ing Co., 1992. The Daruma is a Japanese doll that is consid­ ered lucky for granting wishes. This story of correspondence between the two authors begins in their childhood and follows their wish on Daruma that someday they might meet. S W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN N MIRROR, MIRROR Continued from page 6 hensive about what lay in store when she presented her theory to a much larger audience. Would the responses in the packed auditorium ech o the Women’s Studies seminars’? Yes and no. W hile her 50-minute talk was prim arily a restatem ent of the theories outlined in The Beauty Myth [s e e e x c e r p ts , p a g e 6], h er charismatic, no-nonsense style enter­ tained and amused even those w ho would later stand up to question her ideas. Some seminar students contin­ ued to p re ss W o lf w ith p o in te d remarks about the exclusiveness of her theory, but others asked ques­ tions like, “How can w e make fem i­ nism more attractive?” “I thought it was great how she made feminism seem so strong and sexy,” rem arked one young wom an who said she felt “ e m p o w e re d ” by Wolf’s message, though she was still hesitant to be q u o te d b y nam e because o f th e d iffe rin g o p in io n s DEAR A L... Continued from page 19 even a necessary, catalyst for intellec­ tual progress. What would the literature of fifthcentury Athens, that glory of Western civilization, have been had not Thucyd­ ides, Socrates, Euripides, and their compatriots been obliged to confront the different voices— and customs— of the “barbarians”? W here w ould the music of our own century be had not composers like Gershwin, Stravinsky, Milhaud, and Ravel encountered jazz? The canon itself, if it is to remain vital, requires the constant infusion of new voices, each in vigorou s (can on ic!) counterpoint with its earlier voices. This th em e seem s p a r tic u la r ly appropriate to Swarthm ore College, with its long tradition of encouraging diversity and stimulating debate. One of my first courses at Swarthmore was with a p h ilo s o p h y p r o fe s s o r w h o seemed p e r v e r s e ly d e te rm in ed to antagonize us all. H er a p p ro a c h worked: I became so angry that I took MAY 1992 among her peers about W olf’s brand of feminism. “The first-year men and women stu­ dents on m y hall w e re e x c ite d b y what W olf had to say. Th ey’v e been talking about it all week,” Suzy Wang ’92, an RA at Mary Lyon dorm itory, reported later. The debate over W olf’s theory con­ tinued for weeks in The Phoenix, at Sharpies Dining Hall, in the halls, and in seminar discussions. W hile som e students remain angry that their own experien ces are in visible in W o lf’s book, others feel more inspired about fem inism than e v e r b e fo re . Elaine Metherall reports that W olf’s message seems to have been an em powering point of connection for many women on campus who suffer from eating dis­ orders. The whole debate has raised larger questions about feminism in general. W e have learned that w e are never g oin g to agree on e v e ry su b je ct— including our bodies— just because w e are w om en. It is im p ossib le to know how all women on campus feel the beauty myth affects their lives, if in d eed th e y fe el th ey fit in to that framework at all. Looking around the auditorium during W o lf’s talk, one saw only a few wom en of color in a sea of w hite faces. W o lf’s book had le ft m an y out, and m any o f th o s e many had chosen not to include her talk in their daily schedules. W e are left to w onder how w e can acknowl­ edge our differences as w om en and still com e togeth er for an effe ctiv e feminist movement. N aom i W o lf’s v is it rem in d ed us that, in many ways, w e are a divided community, unaware and unsupportive of each oth er’s differences. The black lesbian fem inist Audre Lorde writes, “W e do not have to be identi­ cal to be unified.” Women at Swarthmore com e from many different back­ g ro u n d s and h o ld m any d iffe re n t political views. They continue to dis­ co v e r that there are many different branches of feminism. Learning how th e b ra n c h e s can b e p a rt o f o n e enduring tree is the part w e ’re still working on. her course more seriously than I had ever taken anything before. In retro­ spect, I realize that she knew precisely what she was doing— and I have been profoundly grateful ever since for the intellectual growth her confrontation­ al approach evoked. In a gentler vein, I recall my classics p rofessors rep ortin g new d e v e lo p ­ ments in their field— the first applica­ tio n o f co m p u ters to th e te x t o f Homer, a papyrus discovery that gave us for the first time a complete play of Menander, the recognition that anoth­ er papyrus apparently controverted the traditional dating of A eschylus’ Suppliants, a dating upon which rested ou r w h o le u n derstanding of e a rly Greek tragedy. I recall their ex cite­ m ent o v e r the fact that th ese new d e ve lo p m en ts w ou ld u n d ou b ted ly necessitate comprehensive re-evaluations of accepted theories. I encountered the same openness in Edward Steuermann, a pianist with whom I was studying in Philadelphia (the Swarthmore curriculum was less accommodating in the 1950s than it is today to the diverse ways of perform­ ing musicians). Steuermann had pre­ miered many of the works of Schoen­ berg and his school. He assumed, and taught, that “music is always music of the future”— that just as one’s knowl­ e d g e o f B e e th o v e n sh ou ld in form o n e ’s playin g of Schoenberg, so in turn one’s encounter with Schoenberg and other contem porary com posers should enrich on e’s perform ance of Beethoven. I know that healthy and animated d eb a te w ill flourish at Sw arthm ore and that commitment to diversity will feed the College’s inveterate appetite for self-examination and intellectual dialogue. If th ere are tim es in you r p r e s id e n c y , A1 B loom , w h en y o u secretly wish your college might be a bit less contentious, a bit more pacific (a w ord I w ould not use of Swarth­ more, despite its Quaker heritage), I know that you of all people will recog­ nize in the debate swirling around you one of the pre-eminent virtues of the College, one of the keys to its extraor­ dinary intellectual vitality— and w ill relish your part in the fray. May both you and Swarthmore flourish. David H. Porter ’58 Skidmore College Katherine Cook ’92 is an English m ajor from Cincinnati, Ohio. She is planning a career in journalism. 61 i w— 'Yn- WOVEN WORLD A ^1 » Continued from page 3 ? t ¿U A A H % v r ■ I _ iSu. . M :Y"N m Hk ► ■ g' . l> A m O P e t © r S is a contemporary German cartographer who has quiet­ ly changed the world. He observed that the universally accepted Mercator map (at top) is in fact inaccurate in that it shows a blatant bias toward the northern hemisphere. Not long after Columbus failed to find India, the Flemish cartographer Mercator was reflecting the fledgling concept of Eurocentrism in his maps. Studying a Mercator map, one notices that the equator is off-center in a southerly direction. This gives the map reader the impression that the northern half of the planet, specifically Europe and North America, is physically larger than the southern half. Peters depicted the size of the continents as they actually are (bottom ), not as Europeans five centuries ago might have liked them to appear. Thus, each continent is in proportion to the others strictly according to land mass, and the equator is in the exact center. The difference between the two interpretations is startling. — J. V. 62 in point. If you w ere to ask anyone w hat m aterial was quintessentially American, the answer you would get again and again would be “blue jeans” or “Levi’s.” But if you research the ori­ gin of blue jeans, you w ill discover that denim is a French invention and that Levi Strauss was a German Jew. A lre a d y y o u ’re in trouble, and you haven’t even begun exploring Native American textiles or their representa­ tive significance. Says Brill: “The real debate for me was between a native textile and blue jeans, but blue jeans seemed like the u n ifyin g fa c to r in this; everyb od y wears blue jeans. There was also an elem ent of w h im sy that was really important. There are a lot of serious points being made in this map; there’s a lot to be learned from the way it’s constructed, but it’s in a children’s lunchroom and kids are going to get more excited seeing a back pocket, a Levi’s tag, and a fly than a beautifully crafted Native American piece.” T h e r a p id ly d is u n ify in g Soviet Union presen ted a sim ilar Gordian knot. Brill elected to wrap it in a floral p rin te d babu shka, e x c e p t fo r the Baltic Republics, w hich w ere repre­ sented individually. Brill is often asked if th e fo rm e r S o v ie t U nion w ill be changed to reflect the new political rea lities, but she thinks not. “Any map,” she says, “is a frozen moment in time. This is the w ay it was in the sumtn ero fl9 9 1 .” Faced w ith these dilemmas, Brill found herself in an extremely power­ ful and burdensome position, that of determining “world textile policy.” Is it possible to resolve these issues equi­ tably? Brill’s answer: “I don’t think you could do the project if you tried to deal fully with that question.” No, not without stepping on the toes of one undervalued civilization or another. Parallels with the pitfalls of interna­ tional politics beg to be drawn, and, as Brill admits, “The map is rife with con­ tradictions. I constantly had to make e x e c u tiv e d e c is io n s . I had to just decide that the map was going to rep­ resent folk culture in one country and contem porary design in another and s o m e th in g w h im s ic a l in another. S W A R TH M O R E COLLEGE BULLETIN Sc. > rone ially |get ans” sori)ver and Jew. you itive mta- • me blue : the ody d an ‘ally ious ire’s * it’s en’s » get et, a fully There are pieces of all these different aspects throughout the map. “I had to liv e w ith th e stru g g le because I really couldn’t resolve it. I hope these inconsistencies get people to look at individual situations in the world and not to draw universal con­ clusions.” Sometimes expediency became the deciding factor. Because many coun­ tries co n ta in s e v e r a l— so m e tim e s even d o ze n s o f— d is tin c t e th n ic groups, Brill’s choices for the most representative textile w ere based on demographic proportions or, in the case of less a c c e s s ib le co u n tries, availability of material. One of Brill’s less serious dilemmas was how best to represent Antarctica: “Antarctica was kind of a challenge— it was either Gore-Tex or seal fur.” (Brill settled on imitation seal fur.) Once the textiles had been gath­ ered, they had to be cut and fitted, but not before an accurate outline of the world had been made with all the boundaries in place. This presented a host of new obstacles. T o begin with, ny map is a frozen moment in time. This is the way it was in the summer of 1991. A viet dian loral the presked 1 be tical Any ntin sumBrill werat of ’ Is it squi:you d to , not one :her, ;rnad, as connake just rep■and and Student interns Ronnell Boyd, 13, and Lyn Mackiewicz, 16, piece her. together Antarctica. Assembling the map took three months. .LETINi MAY 1992 there aren’t to o many 13-by-20-foot maps around, so tracing an original was out of the question. Even if there w ere such maps, which was the right one to copy? The traditional Mercator projection map is tried and true, but the new Peters projection more accu­ rately depicts the proportional size of land m asses. Since a c c u ra c y and authenticity w ere priorities from the start, Brill chose to co p y the Peters projection map. Having chosen her map, Brill then had to enlarge and copy it, a painstak­ ing task that she accomplished with the help of tw o high-school interns and an overhead projector. First, they traced the countries onto construc­ tion paper and cut them out. Then, using the p aper as a pattern, th ey traced and cut out the fabric. The final s te p w as fittin g th e h u ge p u z zle together and gluing it in place on the canvas. For those of us (and that’s most of u s) w h o are used to the top-heavy M ercator projection map, the Peters map com es as a shock. Th e conti­ n en ts lo o k as if th e y h a ve b een grasped at their northern and south­ ern extremities and pulled like taffy. The result is a narrowing and length­ ening of the world as w e thought w e knew it. It takes some getting used to (Europe looks truly diminutive), but Claire Brill’s Textile W orld Map is a good w ay to start. The Textile W orld Map is on view in the U n iversity M u seu m ’s c h ild re n ’s lunchroom at 33rd and Spruce Streets, P h ila d e lp h ia . The m useum is open Tuesdays through Saturdays 10:00-4:00 and Sundays 1:00-5:00. A u th or John Vaillant is a free-lance writer and musi­ cian who is working on a first novel. 63 deprive us, along with gay men, of our few and miscella­ neous civil rights. Rather, it is because A - f i f l a B B f l f t * w e recognize that it is not only our plea­ TJ2ÊWZZz sure but our respon­ sibility to work for the life of our com­ munity, and that Make AIDS a priority now, only in this way can w e survive. not years from now Both gay men and lesbians have T o the Editor: organized to find ways to keep our It was with mixed feelings that I community strong and supportive, to read the February B ulletin’s request insist on respectful legislation and bet­ for information about the impact of ter health care, and to find construc­ AIDS on the lives of Swarthmoreans tive avenues for both our anger and [Letters, Feb. 1992]. I’m pleased at the our love. The NAMES Project quilt is prospect. What troubles me is an one. Another amusing but telling omission or mistaken assumption that example of the creativity involved: In may underlie the admittedly brief over 400 years, nobody managed (or request. What is missing is this: AIDS bothered) to eroticize the use of con­ has already had an impact on all of us. doms as much as gay men have in the Every one of us already has stories to last 10. This is a lifesaving effort, wor­ tell, even if we don’t yet know it. thy of emulation. As an astute friend pointed out to The community at large also needs me recently, we are all AIDS-affected. to create strategies for coping with Yes, I know and work with and am this disease. Gay men are no longer the fastest-growing risk population. friends with people who are HIV posi­ tive. But even before the disease Not only will other groups’ incidence entered my life in these personal, of AIDS continue to grow as the dis­ anecdotal ways, I was (and all of us ease spreads, but as w e learn more were), in a very real sense, living with about AIDS, we will find that many AIDS. I didn’t know it yet, but AIDS had more people are already infected (and already changed my life. I mean by affected) than w e now know. When this not only that in the future people I the Centers for Disease Control’s clini­ loved would becom e ill or die, and not cal criteria are expanded to include only that the character of gay life the symptoms and disease constella­ would be affected, but that as a nation tions by which AIDS is typically mani­ and as a world w e would need to think fested in women, for example, there hard about what it means to be a com­ will be a sudden jump, not in AIDS munity and how best a community cases, but in AIDS cases w e recognize. can serve its members. Unfortunately* some of us are going to I know the gay community best, recognize ourselves. and I think that w e are approaching AIDS needs to be a priority for all of this crisis in some useful and essential us, now, not years from now. I cannot ways. I know that it isn’t realistic to stress it strongly enough: Everyone is speak of a unified, singular “gay com­ affected, and the nature of our society munity.” Nonetheless, the gay people I is affected. Justice, respect, compas­ know have already had a few years to sion, and community need to be prior­ think about and deal with AIDS. Most ities for everyone. Years from now, striking to me (and I freely admit my you will probably need your energy to bias) is that lesbians, the group whose create, and comfort, and mourn, and sexual behavior is least likely to lead live. You will have urgent emotional to infection, participate energetically needs and will not feel like writing a and consistently in the political letter to a politician whose election action, writing and speaking, and the you didn’t oppose, or arguing with an mental and physical health care that insurance company representative, or AIDS makes necessary and urgent. I fighting for your eroded civil rights. don’t think that this is just because we W e all need to be generous and neigh­ borly now. fear that homophobic legislation will 1iiyylri' iPPrall 64 I don’t want to be unduly pes­ simistic or alarmist. I do want people to understand that when they hear anyone’s story about AIDS, they hear their own as well. I don’t want to write about my own experiences with AIDS just yet. They are central to my life these days, and acute, as I learn of still more friends, acquaintances, class­ mates, co-workers, clients, friends of friends, and others who are testing positive or becoming symptomatic, or who have just lost someone dear to them. In time I will tell my stories. But for now, to write about my own complicated emotions, and for you to read, seems a little too insular, removed from the larger context in which these tragedies occur, almost a little too cozy. Instead, for now, my wish is that everyone think about his or her own life, the impact AIDS has already had on it, and the implications of the present for our mutual future. No one will lack a story to tell when, after reflection, we speak. I hope all of us will know what w e are hearing. SHOSHANA KEREWSKY ’83 Providence, R.I. Editor’s Note: Ms. Kerewsky’s eloquent letter is the only response so far to our call for m aterial for an article on AIDS and Swarthmoreans. We would appreci­ ate hearing further from readers whose lives have been impacted by the dis­ ease, o r who have particular insights about AIDS and the community. Threats and insults only increase enem y’s hatred To the Editor: The Swarthmore students who made a Croatian nationalist rap song [Feb. 1992] are ingenious, committed, and angry. They end their song with an obscenity directed at the Serbian leader. In the Discourses (11,26) Machiavelli writes, “I hold it to be a proof of great prudence for men to abstain from threats and insulting words toward any one, for neither the one nor the other in any w ay diminishes the strength of the enemy; but the one makes him more cautious, and the other increases his hatred of you, and makes him more persevering in his efforts to injure you.” DUNCAN WRIGHT 72 New York SWARTHMORE COLLEGE BULLETIN ALUMNI COUNCIL ar rite )s Maralyn Gillespie ’49 Honored on Retirement sonal attention and involvement. The excellent staff currently work­ ing in the Alumni Office provides addi­ still tional evidence of her leadership and ^ A 37-year era en ded February 28 organizational skills. David Allgeier ’86 fA w it h Maralyn Orbison Gillespie’s will serve as acting director of alumni , or retirement from the position of associ- affairs until the C ollege appoints a > [ ate v ic e p resid en t fo r alumni rela ­ n ew a s s o c ia te v ic e p r e s id e n t fo r tions, publications, and public rela­ external affairs. Applications for the wn tions. W e shall miss Maralyn in many t p o sition h ave been r e c e iv e d from to ways. Her gracious style, personality, many well-qualified individuals. The College hopes to name Maralyn’s suc­ loyalty, d e d ic a tio n , and a b ility to interact effectively with all kinds of cessor by Alumni Weekend. M aralyn G illes p ie’s ou tstan d in g ta people have benefited the College and its alumni for nearly four decades, service has been recognized by the is Most individuals have found it vir- College in several ways. M ore than ; tually im possible to say no to Mara- 200 friends attended an all-campus recep tion for her in T a rb le on the ons lyn. Her incredible knowledge of the afternoon of February 28. That same alumni b o d y and the interests and evening the Board of Managers hon­ i, strengths of individuals within it have of allowed her to enlist the help of tal­ ored Maralyn at a dinner held at Ash­ ented alumni to assist the College in ton House. T h e C ollege has esta b ­ lished tw o funds to honor Maralyn. ’83 » many ways over the years. In addition R.I. to her nationally recognized leader­ N eil Austrian ’61 announced at the reception that members of the Board ship of this magazine, she has been ent closely involved with the Alumni Col- of Managers will contribute $10,000 to initiate the Maralyn Orbison Gillespie ir lege A b roa d , Sw arthm ore C on n ec­ ’49 Faculty Travel Fund, w hich w ill ts tions, Alumni Weekend, Homecoming, provide financial assistance for facul­ eci- ! and numerous oth er program s and ty travel for research purposes or for ise events. Each of these activities has benefited from Maralyn’s close per­ attendance at alumni events or pro­ « id, i i ;lli at nd ’72 ork ETIN fessional meetings. A second fund will benefit the Scott Arboretum in recog­ nition of Maralyn’s love of gardening. Alumni are encouraged to contribute to either of these efforts. he Alum ni Council fu rth ered its efforts to educate students about its a c tiv itie s w hen it s p o n s o re d a bru n ch fo r th e s e n io r class. A lan Symonette ’76, one of our two Council vice presidents, spoke to the seniors about what it means to be a graduate of the College and how a continuing association can benefit both the Col­ lege and its graduates. More than half of the class attended. Tom Simkin ’55, chairman of the Committee on Athletics, invited Neil A u stria n to be th e sp ea k er at the annual spring sports banquet. Austri­ an excelled in athletics at Swarthmore and has contin ued to a ch ie ve in a superior manner since graduation. He currently serves the College as chair­ man of the Board of Managers and is p re sid e n t of the N ation al F ootb a ll League. Frank M. Jeunes ’57, president, Swarthmore College Alumni Association T till a few cabins left for the next Alumni College Abroad S Sept. 11-27,1992 Cruise the Rhine and Mosel rivers with Professor Constance Cain Hungerford and Centennial Professor Emerita of Classics Helen F. North aboard the 90-passenger Swan Hellenic Rembrandt van Rijn. Side trips will explore the culturally rich cities of Zurich, Basel, and Amsterdam. Call the Alumni Office for details at (215) 328-8402.