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                    <text>Interviewee: Patricia Rubio
Years at Skidmore: 1985 - 2016
Interviewers: Lynne Gelber and Susan Bender
Location of Interview: Saratoga Springs, NY
Date of Interview: April 14, 2021
00:00:00 Header
00:00:33 Born in Valparaíso, Chile; lived in Viña del Mar; attended small, multilingual, private
K-12 school in Valparaíso.
00:01:28 Attended Universidad Católica de Valparaíso - 5 year program for a degree in Spanish
00:02:12 Applied for/received Fulbright Scholarship to attend University of Minnesota
00:03:00 Planned return to Valparaíso to teach, but 1973 military coup changed University
situation and prevented return.
00:03:35 March 1974 joined Juan Carlos in Spain and they married there in June 1974
00:03:50 Lived in Barcelona for a year and a half; applied to graduate programs in Canada;
attended University of Alberta/lived 5 years in Edmonton.
00:04:41 Came to Skidmore September 1980. Juan Carlos taught and Paty completed
dissertation; both applied for green cards; daughter Camila born June 1982.
00:05:35 Because couldn’t return to Chile, had intentionally staggered dissertation completions,
so if 1st MLA search unsuccessful, they could stay in Canada while Paty completed dissertation.
00:06:28 In 1984 Paty taught a semester at Middlebury College, VT. Paty &amp; Camila moved to
VT, Juan Carlos spent weekends there.
00:07:34 Paty applied to positions at Skidmore and Russel Sage. Offered both; chose Skidmore.
00:08:02 Visa and citizenship processes expensive, time consuming.
00:08:53 Now hiring institutions pay the fees; that has helped Skidmore draw foreign faculty.
00:09:39 Taught 101 - 300 level classes in Spanish American literature and culture. 101 is
favorite “because students are a clean linguistic slate and they have a sense that they’re really
making progress throughout the semester.”
00:10:33 The few Hispanic undergraduate students at that time “gravitated towards Spanish.”
00:11:30 The Spanish-speaking students had stronger oral skills than grammatical; therefore
different needs than the non-Spanish speaking students.
00:12:41 Other roles: 1987-1990 coordinated Self Instructional Languages Program (SILP).
00:14:11 In SILP, students develop oral skills using recordings, a curriculum, and meetings with
tutors, most of whom are native speakers.
00:17:00 Also: directed Women’s Studies program, chaired Foreign Languages &amp; Literatures
Department for 5 years; Associate Dean of the Faculty for 7 years, was Acting Dean when
President Phil Glotzbach went on sabbatical.
00:17:50 Helped move Women’s Studies program from a minor to a major, establishing a
curriculum in Women’s Studies.
00:18:31 Goal of Women’s Studies 101: provide overview of the field and current/evolving
issues, so covered wide range of topics - theoretical, historical, sociological, political.
00:19:27 In June 1997 brought National Association for Women’s Studies’ annual conference
to Skidmore. Collaborated with Special Programs and with Women’s Studies faculty to create
program. Great ideas - art exhibits, a film program, a book show, presentations, keynotes, etc.
00:24:44 Challenging, but “I discovered I could do this!” Phyllis Roth empowering influence.

�00:25:30 Also, administrator roles were empowering — could improve things for the
department. Example - stabilizing adjunct courses by making full-time adjunct positions.
00:27:55 Became Associate Dean when Muriel Poston was Dean. Learned to look at things
from broader perspective.
00:30:00 Rubio (from Humanities), Poston (from Sciences) perfect team b/c balanced
qualitative &amp; quantitative. Learned how to put problems in context to see various repercussions
of small decisions for the departments and college.
00:31:32 As administrator, saw Skidmore as a whole Institution,… possibilities, strengths,
weaknesses, places to concentrate, who to talk to, who can help?
00:32:00 “It’s fascinating! … those seven years that I was in the Dean’s office, I liked every
single one. … I just loved every minute of it.”
00:32:38 Interest in diversity arose first with students — realizing how the Latino students
felt… that one of the reasons they came to study Spanish is because they found people like them.
00:33:53 Latino Cultural Society was first Latino student organization - evolved into RAICES.
00:34:17 Another source of interest in diversity was the program itself - Foreign languages …
by definition [a] diverse topic …foreign languages, foreign cultures.
00:34:35 And Muriel Poston herself; the first Black Dean of the Faculty in a mostly white
institution &amp; white community. Had to go to Glens Falls simply to get hair done. When Poston
interviewed at Skidmore, she asked to meet with faculty of color. There were only 5 or 6.
00:35:17 Once Dean, Poston asked faculty to examine department hiring processes to determine
usefulness in attracting faculty of color.
00:35:40 When Beau Breslin became Dean, he appointed [Rubio] Associate Dean for Diversity.
Skidmore hired consultants to improve hiring processes. Success in that effort due in part to great
support from Deans Muriel Poston and Beau Breslin and President Phil Glotzbach.
00:37:35 A position description/ad exhibits “the seriousness of the institution … in terms of
hiring faculty of color.” Hiring processes changed, following consultant’s advice.
00:39:12 Retired 2016
00:41:03 Since retiring, annually travels to Chile for several months to help sister run her
restaurant and to visit lifelong friends; in summers volunteers with Saratoga backstretch workers,
teaching English as a second language; plays golf; on board of Saratoga Film Forum and
Saratoga Chamber Players; passionate about working in yard and garden.
00:43:06 Also reads a lot. “Now I’d rather read than write. Juan Carlos taught me that. …at
some point he said, ‘I’m done with research. I don’t want to write any more, I want to read.' And
that makes sense to me now. It didn’t then but it makes sense to me now.”
00:44:21 END

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                    <text>Interview with Patricia Rubio by Lynne Gelber, Skidmore College Retiree
Oral History Project, Saratoga Springs, New York, April 14, 2021.
LYNNE GELBER: This is Lynne Gelber. I am with Susan Bender. It is April
14th, 2021, and we are interviewing Patricia Rubio for the Oral History
Project. So …
PATRICIA RUBIO: Thank you for having me.
LG: It’s our pleasure and thank you for doing this.
PR: Well, my pleasure.
LG: Patty, why don’t you tell us a little bit about where you were born and
brought up and your early schooling.
PR: Sure. I was born in Valparaíso, Chile, but lived from ages six to 23 in Viña
del Mar. Valparaíso’s twin city. My three sisters and I went to a small
private school in Valparaíso. There were about 600 students between
kindergarten and 12th grade, and most of the instruction in elementary school
was done in German. So, I was introduced to a foreign languages at age 5 in
kindergarten. and graduated from this school thirteen years later with
additional solid instruction in English which was introduced in seventh
grade. I was very fortunate to have had access to that kind of education.
Classes were very small, never more than fourteen to fifteen students; there
were seven students in my senior class most of whom I had known since
kindergarten or first grade. I interrupted my studies in my junior year to
come to live with a family and attend high school in Storrs, CT. in 1962.
This was also an important experience in my upbringing. After high school I
entered college.
LG: In Valparaíso?

�PR: Yes. The college system in Chile follows the European model, which means
that one has decided in one’s two last years of high school the career one
will pursue. From very early in high school I knew that I wanted to teach
and I liked literature and history so I pursued a degree in Spanish. So
Spanish and Latin American literature and culture with a very solid
foundation in syntax and linguistics. It’s a five-year program that included
one year of Latin and Greek, theoretical linguistics, syntax and normative
grammar. The objective of the program was to prepare students to teach the
Spanish high school curriculum which included Spanish, Chilean and
Spanish American literature plus Spanish grammar and writing. I had also
made up my mind while in college, to pursue graduate study, at least a
Masters degree. So, in my last year at the university, I applied for a
Fulbright Scholarship which I received.
LG: And that was at Valparaíso?
PR: Yes, at the Universidad Católica de Valparaíso. In those days, this 1969-70,
Fulbright assigned prospective students to graduate programs at Universities
in the U.S.. In Chile I had begun to pursue an academic career through
teaching assistant positions in Spanish American literature. I was
approached to teach General Literature, and so a degree in Comparative
literature was appropriate. The idea was that I would return from the U.S.
with an M.A. to a position that included General Literature as part of my
teaching duties. But things happened. The military took over the government
in 1973, during my first semester at the University of Minnesota in
Minneapolis. The situation at the University in Chile changed and I never
returned. Instead of Chile, I left for Spain in March 1974, and married Juan
Carlos in June of that year.

�LG: In Barcelona?
PR: In the Barcelona area. We lived in Barcelona for a year and a half, knowing
that it was just a stop in the voyage, and went to Canada to pursue our PhDs
in Hispanic literatures and the University of Alberta. We lived in Edmonton
for five years which despite the extreme harsh winters we really enjoyed.
We staged it so that Juan Carlos would defend his dissertation before I did
so that we would have two possible hiring rounds for finding jobs in this part
of the world. Jobs were not easy to find. Lynne, you were the chair of
Modern Languages and Literatures then and you hired both of us. Thank you
for having done so!
LG: The rest is history! [laughter]
LG: So, when you came here you were not initially teaching but then …?
PR: Well, what happened is that Juan Carlos came with an H-1B visa, which
allowed him to work and I had a visa that allowed me to live in the country
but not to work. We applied for the green card in Juan Carlos’ second year
here, had Camila, and waited patiently for the INS to do its work. The
process was successful, and we became citizens five or six years later.
LG: You came to Skidmore?
PR: We both came to Skidmore in September 1980.
LG: OK.
PR: When we came, I was ABD, Juan Carlos had finished his degree. I had been
awarded a thesis scholarship, which would have allowed us to stay for an
additional year in Canada. In our first year here I completed the dissertation.
I taught at Middlebury College in a one semester replacement in 1984.
Camila, who was a toddler, and I moved to Vermont.
LG: Camilla was born here.

�PR: Yes. Remember
LG: I do remember because we decorated the office.
PR: [laughter] Yeah. Yes, she was born in June 1982. You gave Juan Carlos a
really good schedule according to which he started teaching late on Mondays
and ended early on Friday afternoon so that he would be able to drive to
Middlebury to spend the weekend with us. It was a tough semester. I had
never taught in the US; they had hired me because they needed someone
who would be able to teach Spanish American Culture and Civilization.
Every class was a new prep. I remember spending every Saturday at the
library preparing classes, while Juan Carlos took care of Camila. Sunday
was a family day. After we obtained our permanent visa, I applied for
several positions in the area, including Skidmore. The faculty had changed
the curriculum and passed a foreign language requirement. So the
department needed to hire two additional faculty and, as I said before, you
hired me. I also had an offer from Russel Sage but of course I chose
Skidmore.
LG: Thank goodness!
PR: Either before or after Middlebury, but during the visa process during which I
was allowed to work, you hired me to teach part time: one Spanish language
course each in the fall and the spring. If I remember well, it was
Intermediate Spanish.
LG: As I recall, we were able to use the services of the lawyer for the College, in
Glens Falls.
PR: That was in order to get the renewal of Juan Carlos’ H-1B. We hired a lawyer
from Albany to help us with the application process for the residency visa.
In those days, the Institution didn’t have to pay for the process. After the
immigration law changed, the hiring institution is responsible for the fees

�which are very high. We are fortunate that Skidmore has been able to do that
because it explains in part the success the institution has had in hiring
foreign faculty in the past five years. A good number of the foreign faculty
come with an H1-B visas which is the entry way to permanent residency.
LG: I vaguely remember that.
PR: Yes.
LG: So what courses were you teaching?
PR: Where?
LG: At Skidmore.
PR &amp; LG: [laughter]
LG: Thank you.
PR: That’s O.K. Well you know that in our department, everyone teaches the
whole gamut of courses So I taught beginning Spanish and all the way up to
300 level classes including Spanish American literature and culture.
LG: And what were your favorite?
PR: My favorite? I always liked to teach 101, because students are a clean
linguistic slate, and they have a sense that they’re really making progress
throughout the semester. The more fortunate ones, during Christmas break,
would travel to a Spanish speaking country where they realized that they
could read a menu, could be really helpful to their families in negotiating the
cities, reading signs, etc... This was a powerful experience and they would
come back really energized and ready for more.
LG: How many Hispanic students were there in the undergraduate population at
that point?
PR: Few. They gravitated towards Spanish courses, thinking that being Latino also
meant being Latin American; and some were immigrants themselves. It was
very nice to have, particularly at the upper level, students from diverse

�backgrounds. They contributed points of view and diverse ideas to class
discussion. At the upper level, that is in literature and culture and civ
courses, there were always a number of native Spanish speakers, and that
was also nice. In these classes we read sophisticated materials and they
were able to help their classmates to plough through the texts. Nowadays
Latino students are aware of their identity as citizens of this country. Many
take Spanish classes because they want to increase their language abilities
and learn about their cultural and family backgrounds.
LG: As I recall, those students had an oral knowledge. Is that correct?
Yes, they did. Their oral skills outperformed their ability to write correctly
in Spanish. Often first or second-generation students had the most
difficulties because they were fluent but their knowledge of the language
was not normative; their grammar was not accurate. Our curriculum back
then was mostly intended for non-native speakers and those courses were in
many ways not well suited for students who had leaned Spanish at home
without formal instruction.
LG: And they didn’t have any grammar skills?
PR: Most of them did not. The grammar accuracy was all over the place
[laughter].
LG &amp; SUE BENDER: [laughter]
SB: Spanglish.
PR: [laughter] Well, a lot of Spanglish, like, “How are you?” “Nada mucho,”
which in Spanish means, “he or she swims a lot.” Very difficult linguistic
habits to undo. But this was the Spanish they heard and spoke in their
communities, and it worked for them. Many of them were eager to learn
normative grammar.

�I also very much liked teaching mixed populations of students: US majority
students with Latino students.
LG: So you had other responsibilities in the course of your career?
PR: Yes. it started with the Self-Instructional Languages program. You appointed
me as coordinator in 1987 a position that I held until 1990. Sonja Karsen
had established the program in the seventies and coordinated it until she
retired.
LG: Sonja Karsen, who was the … chair of the department?
PR: For twenty-two years, right?
LG: Until …
PR: Until she stepped down and you became chair.
LG: Yeah …
PR: The Self-Instructional Languages program contributed to the language
offerings of the department. It included,
LG: Arabic and Hebrew.
PR: Yes, Japanese, Chinese, Portuguese and Russian.
LG: Russian, how could I forget?
PR: We then added Korean and Sanskrit. SILP was and continues to be a very
successful program, it allows the College to offer twelve languages, which is
impressive. And it is popular program with students. Years after I had
stepped down and began to chair the department, the program was enrolling
close to 80 students. The SILP languages continue to be a venue for the
fulfillment of the language requirement.
LG: Say one or two words about what the Self-Instructional Language Program is.
PR: Sure. The focus is on developing aural and oral skills. Students meet with a
tutor (most tutors are native speakers), twice a week for an hour. Students
have to have prepared the material before coming to the tutoring session,

�thus the name of the program. At the tutoring session, they discuss and
practice material, and agree on the assignment for the following week.
Tutors guide and monitor students’ progress. During my time with the
program, students had a textbook and tapes as learning materials. They
followed the curriculum developed by the Self Instructional Languages
Association. Tutoring groups are small, not to exceed 5 students per
language section. When the number of registered students exceeded five, as
it often happened in Hebrew, for example, students were placed into parallel
sections. This allowed for ample time for discussion and practice and
ultimately students had more one-on-one time with the tutor than in a regular
class that met three times a week with 15 students.
LG: And the instructor is a native speaker except for Sanskrit.
PR: And Arabic and Hebrew
PR: The person who tutors in Arabic, has a doctorate in Arabic linguistics, and the
person in Hebrew, although she was not from Israel, was very successful and
probably the longest serving tutor in the program. Both were there when I
took over the coordination of the program and remained long after I had
stepped down. I believe that Regina Hurwitz still tutors Arabic.
LG: Well …
PR: At the end of the semester students were tested by an outside examiner. The
SILP Association helped us to identify potential outside examiners when
necessary. The Japanese examiner came from Cornell, the one for Hebrew
from the State University at Buffalo, the examiner for Russian from the U of
Albany, etc.
LG: And what was your role?
PR: As coordinator I met with each student interested in the SILP language before

�they registered in order to explain how the program functioned and what
their responsibilities would be. It was important for them to understand, for
example, that the grade they received in the final exam was the grade for the
course. That they needed to work diligently during the semester even if they
were not being tested periodically for a grade. Any testing given during the
semester was only diagnostic. The program was not open to first year
students. The thinking was that there are too many claims on their time that
could interfere with the independent study of the language. I also
coordinated the tutoring schedules and liaised with the Registrar’s Offic. I
hired the examiners and set the final exam schedule. Examiners often were
not local. I was also the person to go for tutors and students in case of
grievances or problems.
LG: What other roles did you have in the course of your career?
PR: I directed the Women’s Studies program for four years, succeeding Mary
Stange who had been the first director of the program. I thoroughly enjoyed
this assignment. A number of my courses in the Foreign Languages and
Literatures department counted towards the WS minor and the major. During
my time as director, the faculty approved the major. During my time as
director, we expanded the WS curriculum to include one intermediate level
course and the senior seminar. The WS faculty was very supportive of the
various initiatives that we pursued and contributed to various tasks when
necessary. Although the program had existed for over a decade, it cemented
its place among other interdisciplinary programs once the major was
approved. The generation of women faculty that preceded me, and most of
whom were tenured professors before I joined the College in 1984, had
worked hard in building the program. Most of them were very committed to

�enriching and delivering the curriculum, advising students, supervising
theses, and in mentoring incoming women faculty. .
When I stepped down from WS I became chair of the FLL, a position I
occupied for five years. I then became Associate Dean of the Faculty a
position I held for seven years.
LG: What was, do you think, in all those years, your biggest challenge?
PR: Every administrative position brought different challenges; that is what made
each so interesting; everyone presented opportunities for professional and
personal growth. For example, when I became WS director, the program was
ready to move from a minor to a major. The proposal for the major was a
collective WS faculty undertaking spearheaded by Kate Berheide and
myself. Kate, a professor in Sociology, had experience in WS program
design. The WS faculty, had a central role in the discussion and approval of
the final proposal. The process took over a year from start to finish, that is
from when we began to work on the proposal to college faculty approval.
We needed to have all our ducks in a row as we knew that we would face
some opposition from a number of principally male segments of the faculty.
Although the vote was not unanimous the proposal passed by a sizable
majority. It would be interesting to revisit the minutes of that Faculty
Meeting. As a result of the major’s approval, student interest in WS grew so
that it became necessary, for example, to offer two sections of WS 101 every
semester. This was huge because we were able to increase the number of
students interested in pursuing the major or minor. On average, during my
time as director, we majored about 8 students per year, which was not small
for an interdisciplinary program.

�LG: Did you teach the 101 course?
PR: Yes, I did for the four years I headed the program. It loved the course; the
curriculum was broad and interesting; student interest was high and 101
engaged them in a journey of discovery regarding their own identity as
women. Although the majority of students were women, there were one or
two men per year who were curious took it. There were no male majors
during my time s director.
LG: And generally, what kinds of things did you cover in that course?
PR: It included the history of the US women’s and feminist movements; women’s
political struggles and involvement in the fight for the vote, the ERA. Their
participation in the antislavery and temperance movements. We studied
feminist theory; the history of women’s pursuit for the control of our bodies;
the political, social and personal consequences of women’s social roles in
patriarchal societies and in the patriarchal workplace; the intersections
between gender, race, ethnicity and class. We also read literature, notedly
Atwood’s A Handmaid’s Tale; some poetry. The objective of the course was
for students to understand the discipline; the areas of knowledge that define
Women’s Studies. To provide a solid base for the rest of the curriculum.
LG: Now, what do you recall from those years that you were directing the
Women’s Studies program?
PR: I recall many things. I recall the importance for the institution of having a
vibrant, energetic community of female faculty. We built community by
means of, for example, weekly brown-bag lunches, two WS potluck dinners
per year which were open to students and staff as well; faculty meetings to
discuss issues pertaining the program: curriculum, staffing needs, program
objectives, invited speakers, etc. These were always occasions to welcome
and recruit incoming faculty, to learn about each other’s teaching and

�research. Students were involved in several of these activities: they were part
of the Steering committee, and as I have said6 invited to WS sponsored
activities.
In terms of challenges, the four-day National Women’s Studies Association
meeting, in June 1997 was huge. Phyllis Roth, then Dean of the Faculty and
Vice-president of Academic Affairs. was approached by Marjorie Prise, then
President of the NWSA, about the possibility of hosting the 1997 annual
meeting. Marjorie was then Professor of English at the University of Albany,
and I was incoming director of Women’s Studies. Phyllis consulted with
Mary and me, and we decided to accept the challenge. And a challenge it
was!! Mary went on sabbatical and I attended the NWSA 1995 meeting at
the University of Oklahoma, in order to meet with members of the NWSA
leadership, and to observe how the conference was structured and ran. There
were over 500 participants at the Tulsa meeting, and we needed to plan for
similar attendance at Skidmore. It exceeds the scope of this interview to
detail what the planning and organization for the conference entailed.
Suffice it to say that central to its success was the active involvement of the
WS faculty, and the collaboration with Sharon Arpey in Special Programs.
The Women’s Studies faculty and I worked on the ‘academic’ program,
while Sharon Arpey undertook the ‘non-academic’ aspects of the event
(housing, food, infrastructure, etc.). She and I worked closely for two years.
The conference included a film program, a sculpture show in South Park, a
women-faculty art show in Schick Gallery, a large book exhibit in the gym,
dozens and dozens of presentations, several keynote speakers, and a healthy
dose of minor controversies.

�LG: So you were coordinating, what, with the library and with the Tang?
PR: The Tang did not exist back then; we had an exhibit at the library on women
in Skidmore’s history organized by Mary Lynn who, with some of her
students drew materials from the College archive.
LG: OK
LG: It sounds like it was most fun.
PR: Yes, it was. I also discovered that I could successfully work on a large project.
At first, when Phyllis said that it would be my undertaking, I said, “Sure,
why not” and when I left her office I thought, “By golly! What did I just get
into?
LG: Very empowering, isn’t it?
PR: Yes, it was, and I thank Phyllis for having given me the opportunity and for
having confidence in me. Typical Phyllis: she gave opportunities for people
to grow and develop. I remember in my first year chatting with her while we
walked across campus; at some point she said, “Well, you know, in the
future you’ll be chair of the department,” and I thought, Really? Am I
hearing right?
So going back to your earlier question, Lynne, of major challenges, every
one of the positions presented worthy challenges. Chairing the FLL was also
a huge challenge. But by then I had discovered that I could be an effective
administrator and I wanted to be chair. I had also learned that I could work
with various individuals, even with those with whom I was not particularly
simpatico. All of that was very empowering, as you said before, and I
needed every bit of that experience as head of the FLL. You were chair of
the department for a good chunk of time, you know how complicated it is to
head a multi-section department; every section has its needs, the whole is

�larger than the sum of its parts. I always thought that one of the main
challenges in the department was the imbalance of its structure: two large
section, French and Spanish, and four smaller sections, Chinese, Japanese,
German and Italian, three of which were unevenly staffed. So when Chuck
Joseph who was Dean of the Faculty interviewed me for the position, I told
him that one of my objectives as chair would be to stabilize the small
sections. So that they would feel better in the department, not overwhelmed
by the two large sections. It was hard to keep the department engaged in
everything, knowing that colleagues in the small sections, often felt that their
voices were not as strong as those in the large sections. So I said to Chuck
“There are three sections — Japanese, Chinese, and German — that only
have one full time faculty and also adjuncts; it is always a problem in
Saratoga find good adjuncts for those positions. I told him that I wanted to
upgrade the second position to full-time. It would also free tenure and tenure
track faculty to participate in the delivery if the all-College requirement. He
agreed, and we created a second full-time position in German, Japanese and
Chinese. Italian had been stabilized when Giuseppe became chair; at that
point we hired a second person into a tenure track position.
PR: So that objective was realized, and I still feel proud of it.
The other major undertaking was guiding the the self-study necessary for the
10-year review, so once the review was done, I was ready to go. You know?
There were other colleagues wanting to be chair and, who had other ideas
for the department, and that’s important.
PR: Then Muriel became Dean, and after …
LG: Muriel?
PR: Poston. Muriel Poston became Dean, and after her first Associate Dean, Mark

�Hoffman, stepped down — he had only made a commitment for two years,
— there was a call for interested faculty in the ADOF position. I threw my
hat in. Ultimately, Muriel offered me the position which was an entirely
different ballgame. In all the other administrative positions I dealt with
specific, more or less narrowly defined tasks: hiring, the schedule, tending to
faculty needs, mentoring incoming or pre-tenure faculty, connecting to the
DOF, etc. In the Dean’s Office, one gets to see the institution from a very
different venue. It was, like, “Wow, this is really something that I’ve never
done.” Muriel had a broad and deep understanding of US higher education.
She had also worked at the National Science Foundation, was a member of a
number of associations of higher ed, was very interested in educational
policy, in diversity issues. I learned enormously from her. During the three
years that I worked with her she sent me to conferences, encouraged me to
meet other ADOFs from different institutions, to get involved in various
groups and tasks. For the first time I understood how narrowly I had
understood my position and responsibilities at the institution; how little I
knew of the big picture of higher education writ large. This is not just the
department, this is not just my course, this is not just my research, but this is
the institution, nationally.
LG: So … ok, when …oh, alright. So when you are talking about writ large, are
you talking about things like finances and, are you talking about …?
PR: Mmm, I am mostly talking about the academic area. As the ADOF, one of
my responsibilities was academic space: labs, research areas, classrooms,
studios, etc., When we hire, particularly in the sciences, can we
accommodate that person in terms of their lab needs? Finance, not directly,
but most everything that one wishes or needs to do is budgetarily possible or
not. One of my tasks was to try to find the money; talk to folks in financial

�affairs. The same with faculty positions. I was in charge of all non-tenure
track hiring.
Every one of those positions needed approval from Financial Affairs. What
was incredibly interesting fin working with Muriel is that she her
disciplinary training was in the natural sciences and for her data is central.
So, I would bring an issue to her, and she would say, what is your data? We
would discuss it and at some point it became clear that we were interpreting
it differently. She, from a quantitative and I from qualitative perspective.
She would frequently say, “but the data, Paty, suggests that…” and I’d said,
“yes, but not everything is data, Muriel.” Right? “What do you mean?”
“Well, there are ambiguities, you know. Look at the data from this
perspective” And because she was very smart, she would say, “Oh, ok, fine.
Let’s then rethink it.” The process was fascinating. She had the ability of
seeing both the particular and the general at the same time. Discussions
would begin at the micro level and often by the time she was done with it,
we were able to understand the larger implications. I had never worked with
a person like Muriel.
PR: I wanted to help Muriel to understand the culture of the institution. She came
to us from the National Science Foundation. She was an outsider; the only
black woman in the upper administration; she had not worked at a small
liberal arts college before; and she needed help on how to … and so how to
get people to get to know her; she was shy. And I was not always successful
in creating opportunities for her to know the faculty. I mean, you know, I
was part of the administration, but I was unable to solve the problem fully.
So, in that sense, I failed, if you will. My experience in the Dean’s Office,
however, was amazing. For the first time I understood the institutional

�possibilities and the limitations. When Muriel left, Beau Breslin stepped
into the Dean’s position. My job changed in interesting ways as faculty
development and diversity were added to my duties. I had learned much
from Muriel about the importance and need for hiring diverse faculty across
the institution. It would be too long to detail what we did. Suffice it to say
that Beau moved along what Muriel had begun; after four years the profile
of the Skidmore faculty was beginning to change. It wasn’t easy.
Departments were not always ready to shed their old procedures. “We
shouldn’t do it this way”, “We have never done it this way”. But finally,
everyone bought into it. It was fascinating.
LG: Icing on the cake?
PR: Icing on the cake, yeah.
(00:32:25 ) SB: Could I ask a question?
PR: Sure.
SB: Talking about the institution, …
LG: This is Susan talking.
SB: This is Susan talking, yeah. [laughs] We were talking about your Institution
wide perspective in engagement, Patty. I know that diversity was a topic
near and dear … maybe Lynne was heading in that direction, but near and
dear to your heart, and I wonder if you could talk a little bit about the source
of your commitment to diversity and what you believe, over the years, how
Skidmore changed in that regard? What some of the successes, challenges
were and some of the challenges that still remain?
PR: The source of my initial interest was connected to students, really, specifically
to the Latino students. When I came to Skidmore, a steady number of them,
particularly Latinas took my classes, my lit and culture classes mostly. And
as a result, I developed relationships with students, and realized the cultural

�confusion of many of them. I taught language courses and Spanish
American lit and culture. We did not then have courses on LatinX studies
which is what they were really craving for. Mine and other courses in the
department could only partially fulfill their need for understanding part of
their cultural identity. So, with a little bit of guidance they created the
Latino Cultural Society which was the first Latino student organization at
Skidmore; it then became RAICES. It helped then to consolidate their
position at the institution which was and still is majority white. They
brought speakers, organized social and cultural events. They were a diverse
bunch with various backgrounds. And then, of course, came Muriel. Muriel
Poston, again. You know, the first Black Dean of the Faculty in a mostly
very white institution.
LG: And white community.
PR: And white community. In order to get her hair cut she had to go to Glens Falls
… to get her hair done. There aren’t any men or women hair stylists in the
Saratoga area who know how to cut or style African American hair. When
Muriel visited Skidmore, she asked to meet with faculty of color. Chuck
Joseph, then Dean of the Faculty, asked me that morning to put together a
group to meet with her in the afternoon. There were five or six of us in the
room. One of the first things she did as Dean was to ask chairs and program
directors to look at their hiring processes, to interrogate whether it was a
friendly hiring process or, whether that hiring process was useful in order to
attract faculty of color. We had never been asked to include diversity into
our hiring processes.
PR: And, … but things really got working when Beau became Dean.
SB: Beau?

�PR: Breslin. Because Muriel could only take it so far and she was in the office for
five years only. Right? As Assistant Dean of the First-Year Experience,
Beau was part of Muriel’s staff and part of the discussions we frequently had
on diversity. So when he became Dean, he embraced diversity as one of his
agendas. And then when he became VPAA and Dean of the Faculty, he
appointed me as Associate Dean for Diversity. And we hired Pat Romney
Associates, in order to streamline across departments, the hiring process. Uh,
there was a lot of screaming and shouting [laughs], “We don’t want to do it
this way. We’ve always done it this other way. Why do have to do this?” and
Beau was firm. I mean, the success of the diversity agenda is not necessarily
mine. I would never have been able to do anything as Associate Dean
without the Dean really pushing for it. And Phil also was very much on
boar; it became a priority for him.
LG: Phil
PR: Phil Glotzbach, the President. There were budgetary implications. Pat
Romney came to campus twice a year to run a workshop on diverse hiring
that began with “this is the way that the ad needs to be written. The diversity
statement is not at the end, the diversity statement is in the middle.” I mean,
things like that. Because diversity is not an afterthought. Faculty of color,
domestic faculty of color are very attuned to how the ads read. The ad says a
lot about how serious the institution is in terms of hiring faculty of color. I
was in charge of the process, in terms of making sure that every single ad
was appropriately written, that it followed the guidelines; there were also
protocols regarding the selection of finalists, for the campus visits that every
department needed to follow. I was very passionate about this work. It felt so
meaningful. I worked very hard with departments and programs and it was a
job that I loved and it was successful. I mean, look at the diversity of the

�faculty now. It’s huge! And so … but if it hadn’t been, early for Muriel, next
for Beau, my interest would have been just my interest, but it would of not
have translated in real changes for the Institution.
LG: Are there other things that we haven’t covered that we should talk about your
career? When did you retire from Skidmore?
PR: It’s been five years, so I’ll …[laughs] No, it’s in 2015. But really, I retired in
2016. What happened is, I was due a sabbatical which delayed by retirement
date.
It was time. Seven years in the DOF, it was time. And I had to choose. You
both know this well … as interesting as the work is, it becomes a chore, and
the chore for me were the CAPT cases particularly having to read the student
teaching evaluations. One year there was a candidate in the dance
department where most faculty teach only one and two credit classes.
That year I read thousands of student evals. And I knew that the coming
cohorts would be larger. We had been hiring over ten new faculty per year:
too many evaluations. I just couldn’t do it again. It’s like, “Why did you
retire from the English Department, or History, or you name the
department?” “I don’t want to read another composition or essay.” Exactly
that. So it was time for somebody else to do it. And, … so seven years was a
long time. How long were you in the DOF?
SB: Four
PR: Four, yeah.
LG: So, what have you been doing since you retired?
PR: Oh, depending on the time of the year. I go to Chile for three or four months
or sometimes twice in one year. I help my sister in her restaurant in
Santiago. When I am there she can take a vacation; I run her restaurant for

�her; it’s a lot of work but also great fun. Most of the time we work side by
side which I really enjoy. I’ve lived for 40 years in the United States, and
one of the things that I decided when I retired was that I wanted to go back
to Chile a lot to visit my sisters, my family. And, I’ve done that. Also I still
have a number of good friends I have a dual identity.
LG: Friends here or in Chile?
PR: In both places but I meant in Chile. Many of them are school friends. The
classes were small we made life-long friendships. With four or five, we’ve
been friends for what, 67 years?
I also read a lot and I do some volunteering, particularly in the summer for
the Backstretch at the horse racing track. A large number of the backstretch
workers are Latin American. I’ve also taught English there also, in the
summer.
LG: As a second language?
PR: As a second language. Umm, I also play golf. I love the game; I started
playing golf with my father when I was 12.
LG: Oh?
PR: He was a sports person so as he grew older, he gave up tennis for golf. I
started playing it again here in the US after not playing it for about 15 years.
It brings really good memories from my late childhood and as a young adult
in Viña del Mar.
When I retired, I first thought that I would complete some research projects
that were interrupted by the time I was in the administration. But after a bit I
thought: what’s the point? Who will read what I write?

�LG: You’ve turned the page.
PR: Yeah, I mean, I’d rather read than write. Juan Carlos taught me that. You
know, at some point he said, “I’m done with research. I don’t want to write
any more, I want to read.” And that makes sense to me now. It didn’t then
but it makes sense to me now.
LG: Now of course you are on the board of the …
PR: Of course, yeah, well, yeah, and I was on the film board when the Film Forum
existed, and then you invited me to be on the board of the Saratoga Chamber
Players, and that’s been great. And I work in my yard, my garden, which is
my passion. [laughs]
LG: And how does your garden grow?
PR: Oh wow. It does sure grow, when…
LG: This time of year.
PR: Yeah, this time of year.
LG: Anything else we should cover?
SB: Nope.
LG: Good?
PR: Good? Ok.
LG: Alright. Thank you sooo, so much.
PR: Oh, my pleasure, my pleasure. Thank you for having me.
END

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                    <text>Interview with Janet Allan '64 by Emma Griffin '19, COMPASSIONATE HANDS:
Skidmore’s Nursing Program, April 15, 2019.
NOTE: Below is an edited version of the audio interview, some information and details have
been reordered, removed and grammar corrected by the interviewee for ease of reading.
EMMA GRIFFIN [0:00:47]: Where were you from when you decided to attend Skidmore’s
Nursing program?
JANET ALLAN [0:00:52]: I grew up in Roslyn, Long Island and attended Roslyn High School.
EG [0:01:02]: Second question. Did your family have a background in the field of medicine?
JA [0:01:07]: No, no my parents had no medical background...I'm a first generation American.
My parents immigrated in 1930 from Scotland and they left school in ninth grade. They
believed that education was the path to a better life for their children, therefore, they
supported my goal to attend college.
EG [0:01:24]: Gotcha. Third question, what was your educational background before you joined
this program or your work history?
JA [0:01:54]: Aside from babysitting, I worked age 12 until high school graduation as a page in
the town library, The William Cullen Bryant Library (he lived in Roslyn and was a poet
and newspaper editor). I had a social security number from age 12. I worked after school
3 days a week from 4-6 and 40 hours per week in the summer. I was able to save most of
my earnings for college. Though Roslyn was a public high school, it was considered an
academic high school. 95% of my graduating class went to college. If I hadn’t been a
nursing major, Skidmore would have given me two years of college credit for my work in
HS.
EG [0:02:21]: Gotcha, wonderful, wow! Um, let’s see...ok, part two is program questions, what
drew you to the Skidmore program? Why did you want to go?
JA [0:02:44]: When I met with my high school guidance counselor in my junior year, he offered
only two options for female students; nursing or teaching. I was very shy so the thought
of teaching scared me, so I chose nursing. The guidance counselors were woefully behind
the times not only in career options for women but about nursing education. He said,
‘Well, you just have to go to a diploma school to get your nursing.’ I wanted to go to
college and knew there were nursing programs at certain colleges. This goal was
supported by my former babysitter who had graduated from Adelphi University’s nursing
program. She encouraged me to apply to several college programs in the State.
So, I applied to several schools including Skidmore. I didn’t really think I would be
accepted at Skidmore (again my Counselor said that no woman from Roslyn had ever
been accepted) or could afford the cost. I loved Skidmore’s nursing program which had
an excellent reputation but I had no hope of being admitted. Three of us were accepted

�(two nursing majors and an English major). I had only applied to New York State schools
because I had earned a New York State Regents Scholarship and a New York State
Nursing Scholarship, both applied only to New York State schools. New York State
offered a 4-year Regents curriculum to all high schools which required extensive exams
at the end of each year. Long story short, I was accepted at Skidmore with a full 4-year
scholarship as a work study student. I worked in the library as a freshman and in Health
as a nursing aide as a senior. This scholarship and the funds from the Regents
scholarships enabled me to attend Skidmore
EG [0:04:51]: Wow, that was all determination there!
JA [0:04:55]: Well, I was very fortunate.
EG [0:04:59]: Yes. Well, let’s see...you kinda talked a little bit about your sense of the program
before it started, so it was, I would assume, something that you were very excited about
JA [0:05:14]: Yes, I had thought a lot more about nursing and became more excited seeing the
curriculum that Skidmore offered as well as the two clinical years in New York City.
EG [0:05:39]: Fair enough. Um, tell me what it was like in the program, what was the structure
of the program and what classes did you take?
JA [0:05:46]: Okay. Well, it was a totally lockstep curriculum. The first year was nearly all
science with one required Freshman English course. The sophomore and junior years
were in New York City and the courses were year-long with no summer breaks. I don't
know if you've had a chance to go to the, archivist and see the material I sent. This was
the 1960-1964 curriculum.
EG [0:05:50]: Yes, yes.
JA [0:06:00]: Okay. So, freshman year involved a year of chemistry, a year of anatomy and
physiology that including dissecting a cat in a year-long lab, a semester of microbiology
that also included a lab, a semester of psychology and a semester course in nursing
history. Lastly, we had an English course required of all freshman. Our schedule was so
packed that we had little time for extracurricular activities. We had the cat dissection for
3 hours. We kept our cats in plastic bags in large garbage cans. I had a roommate who
was not a nursing major and she wouldn't let me in the room after lab until I showered
because I smelled so much from the formaldehyde, it was a very tough academic year but
successfully completing the coursework made us all proud, totally bonded and beginning
to feel like nurses.
The second year and the third year we were in New York City because of the wide range
of clinical opportunities offered. We were mostly at NYU hospital in our junior year
except for a week at the VA for a TB rotation. In our junior year we rotated to Cornell
Medical for maternity, NY Psychiatric for psych, NYU for leadership and in the summer
Community Health at the NYC VNA (my placement in Little Italy) or the city Public

�Health Clinics. It was a fabulous two years of incredible clinical experiences and the joy
of living and exploring New York City. Grateful patients would leave tickets to the
theater or concerts at the nursing faculty office in NYU Hospital. One could see a play or
attend a concert almost any evening. We mostly didn’t because we were exhausted and
had to study.
EG [0:08:06]: Oh, keep going, yeah.
JA [0:08:09]: I think we were about 30 of us that eventually got through the first year and could
continue into the sophomore year in NYC which began in the fall. That summer, I
worked as an aide at a county hospital on Long Island. It was a good experience and I
learned a lot.
To house us in New York City, Skidmore rented two floors in the NYU medical student
dorm, which was a 12-story building on the East River at 30th and 1st Avenue. We also
housed the NYU female medical students, all 4 of them. How things have changed.
The sophomore 12-month curriculum involved skills lab to learn basic nursing skills and
rotations in adult medicine, pediatrics and a week-long TB rotation at the VA. We had
didactic classes with each rotation. These courses were given in a classroom at the
Hospital. We did all of our clinicals (except TB) at University Hospital on 20th St and
Second Ave. We walked the 10 blocks down 1st Ave, past Bellevue Hospital and the VA
to University Hospital. NYU Hospital was private so we worked with community-based
MDs who were very kind to us. We did have to give them our chairs in the chartroom.
The skills we learned were pretty basic (bed making, bathing, giving injections, changing
a dressing, taking vital signs, and transfer of patients from bed to chair. These seem
minor skills compared to what students learn today. We were at the hospital every day for
lecture and clinical. The hospital allowed us to eat lunch. Since we did not have any
eating facilities at our dorm, we all ate huge lunches and took food back to the dorm for
dinner. In the morning students either skipped breakfast or ate cold cereal and powdered
milk like I did with my roommates. I can’t stand powdered milk to this day.
The junior year 12-month curriculum covered leadership (being a head nurse), maternity,
psych and community health. I was placed at the Greenwich Village office of the
NYVNA (the premier visiting nurse service in the country) and other classmates were at
Public Health clinics. I loved the experience visiting patients in apartments above night
clubs, restaurants or stores. My classmate and I took a 30-minute bus ride from our dorm
to the office. One patient whom I visited lived in a coal cellar. He had had TB and I had
to administer an injectable medicine to him each week. We had a wonderful experience,
wonderful patient stories about living in Greenwich. That summer was exceptionally hot
so the faculty gave us salt tablets to take every day.
At that time, Skidmore did not have Psych and OB faculty. So, we had OB at Cornell
Medical Center with the Cornell nursing students and were taught by their faculty. So, we
were three Skidmore students paired with seven Cornell University students and we did
three months of OB. We had experiences in labor and delivery, post-partum care and the

�nursery. Then we went to Columbia Presbyterian and did the same thing, joining the
Columbia Presbyterian students for three months of Psych. One outstanding experience
was accessing the babysitting service run by the Cornell Nursing program. You could
sign up to babysit any day of the week and we often took care of UN diplomats’ children.
It was a wonderful experience and I had several regular customers, one was a famous
pastel artist.
We all returned to the Skidmore campus for our senior year. We had 30 credits to take to
complete our degree. The courses had to be in the liberal arts (social sciences, literature
and history). We also had a 3 credit nursing issues course. Most of us were hungry to
learn something besides nursing and expand our minds and knowledge. My roommate
and I poured over the catalog and we picked out everything we wanted to take, most of
which were, literature, art courses and American Studies. We ran into problems with
upper division courses that required freshman or sophomore prerequisite courses. We
needed upper division courses and didn’t want to take the lower-level courses. In trying
to convince faculty that we could handle the upper division courses, we found faculty
were very uninformed about the nursing major. For example, great doubt was expressed
that we could handle the courses and I was told ‘well, all you have been doing is
changing bedpans for two years.’ It was pretty shocking, especially what we perceived as
a very pejorative or antiquated view about nursing students. But we persisted and many
faculty albeit reluctantly agreed to let us take their courses and we all did fine. I loved
every course that I took and surprised myself by loving the course on The Romantic
Poets. I still have the books.
I would just make one other comment. It was difficult returning to campus after two years
in New York City. Becoming nurses changed us from girls into very dedicated women.
We missed two years of ordinary campus life and I guess had outgrown putting cottage
cheese in faculty mailboxes and fraternity beer parties. We had seen babies delivered,
walked the streets of New York City providing nursing services in tenements and coal
cellars and stayed with patients who died. We were in New York City, in a dorm and
there was really no college life. You know, we dated some of the medical students, but
there was no real effort on the part of Skidmore to create links with some of the colleges
in New York City so that we could have more of a, more of a college life than we had.
EG [0:16:29]: Yeah, well, it’s definitely not your normal college experience but it sounds like,
wow, transformative.
JA [0:16:39]: Yes, it was transformative. The program was excellent and well prepared us for
clinical practice after graduation. Skidmore was very well thought of nationally. We had
great faculty.
EG [0:17:40]: Well, with that, um, let’s, let’s move a little beyond Skidmore. What was your
path after Skidmore? What did you do?
JA [0:17:48]: My first position after graduation was on the male medical unit in the Bullfinch

�building (birth place of ether) at Mass. General hospital. Because BS educated nurses
have less clinical experience than Hospital or Diploma educated nurses, the Skidmore
faculty urged us all to work for at least a year in a hospital to become more proficient in
technical nursing skills. I loved my first position. Despite jitters about not being a “skilled
nurse” (meaning having done specific skills like catheterizations over and over) and some
mild hazing by the Mass grads, I felt very competent in my skills at the end of a year. The
unit I worked on was housed in one big room, with 16 beds, one private room (for
alcohol detox) and a nursing desk in the middle of the room. This set up was so different
from today’s units. The patients had little privacy. Also different was that most patients
had had heart attacks and were hospitalized for a month. We really got to know our
patients and their families.
One story: A few weeks into working in the unit, a patient asked me what kind of nurse I
was. I was startled and wondered if I had made a mistake. I asked him what he meant,
and he stated that I didn’t have a black band on my nursing cap (all Mass General
diploma grads and the majority of nurses in the hospital had black bands on their hats).
After a year in Boston, I decided to see the country and applied for and was hired by the
San Francisco Visiting Nurse Association. My sister and I trained across country and set
up living in San Francisco. She was a secretary. Because I didn’t own a car, I was
assigned to a walking district in an area called the Tenderloin. It was in downtown San
Francisco filled with SROs, bars, and shabby restaurants and stores. The average age of
my caseload was 85. They were elderly residents living alone on Social Security or
pensions in large buildings of SROS. It was a wonderful experience and I loved San
Francisco.
After three years at the VNA, I decided I wanted to get a master's degree. So, I applied to
UCSF and got a master's in Public Health or Community Health and a post-masters in
teaching (believe it or not). I loved the master’s program and found that I liked teaching.
In 1969 after completing the post-masters, I joined the undergraduate faculty at UCSF. I
was fortunate to be hired on a Division of Nursing Grant with the goal of exploring the
effects of teaching health science students together. I taught CH and Leadership in the
senior year of the 5-year BSN program and had students in an outpatient clinic for CH
and for leadership in many other community agencies. In the clinic, we paired nursing
students with medical and pharm students and tasked them to interview patients coming
to an Internal Medicine clinic. We also organized all first-year health science students
into seminars taught by two faculty from different disciplines. The students were paired
and had to go into the community and interview a person or family about their health.
The students who had such clinical experiences were more positive about
interdisciplinary education and had better knowledge about the other health disciplines.
This was from 1969-1973. Today, we are still struggling with interdisciplinary
education.
In 1975, a PH colleague and I wrote a Division of Nursing grant for 3 million dollars to
start a Post RN (admitted RNs, BSNs and MSNs) Adult Nurse Practitioner program, the
first in California. This was the early days of the NP movement, which was started in the

�late 1960s in Colorado by Loretta Ford (nurse) and Henry Silver (MD). The nurse
graduates were called Pediatric Associates. We were funded for 3 years to develop this
new program. Due to existing prejudice about NPs thinking they were just Junior
Doctors, the UCSF School of Nursing refused to accept the grant. Thus, we were housed
in the School of Medicine for 3 years. The grant was successful. In 1975, there were no
NP graduates to act as preceptors so we had to use MDs. We found many excited and
willing to work with the students. We then wrote another Division of Nursing grant for a
MS Adult NP program. It was funded, and by then the School of Nursing decided to
accept the grant and house us. Since neither I or my colleague were NPs, we decided to
go through our own program and I was certified as an NP in 1978. While a program
director, I continued to teach and practice as an NP in the Primary Care Internal Medicine
Clinic.
I was on the faculty from 1969 until 1982 becoming a Clinical Associate Professor in
1981. I was accepted into the USCF/Berkley doctoral program in Medical Anthropology.
It was a joint degree in between Berkeley and San Francisco in Medical Anthropology. I
was the only health professional in the program and had no background in anthropology.
In a year, I caught up with my much younger classmates. I was 39 when I started the
program. I did my NINR-funded dissertation fieldwork in Austin, TX interviewing 40
women about how they manage their weight. I had great cooperation from the women
whom I interviewed. I completed the PhD in 5 years and was then hired by the School of
Nursing at the University of Texas at Austin as an Assistant Professor. I was able to get
NINR funding again to replicate my dissertation with African American and Mexican
American women. This funding and numerous peer reviewed publications enabled me to
become a tenured Associate Professor in 4 years and Professor in the following 3 years.
Once I received tenure, I applied for and received funding to start the first Family Nurse
Practitioner (NP) program in Central Texas.
The advent of the role of NP changed MS education in nursing forever and NP programs
became the number one major in most MS programs. NPs offered the public a skilled
practitioner who combined nursing and medical knowledge and skills to care for patients
across the lifespan. The public began to learn the value of nurses and their abilities. I
must say that becoming a NP changed the course of my career. Developing NP programs
led to involvement in national NP organizations. I served as President of the National
Organization of Nurse Practitioner Educators (NONPF). My background as a NP and my
publications about the role, led to my 6-year appointment (4 years as Vice Chair) on the
US Preventive Services Task Force. The Task Force developed population-based
recommendations for preventive services across the lifespan. Medicare used the
recommendations to develop polices for funding preventive services.
To finish talking about my career, in 2007, I was appointed Dean of the University of
Texas Health Science School of Nursing. I served as Dean for 5 years and was then
recruited to be the Dean of the University of Maryland School of Nursing in 2002. I
retired in 2013. During these yeas as Dean at two Schools, I served on the Boards of the
American Association of Colleges of Nursing and American Academy. I retired with
over 150 peer reviewed publications.

�EG [0:25:25]: Wow though, and I noticed that you, you spent a fair amount of time working in
the jobs that you had, but you went back to school a number of times as well. Wow! If I
may say so, you are incredibly accomplished. Gotcha. Well, let’s see...I also, you said
you, ah, graduated in the class of 1960?
JA [0:25:32]: Actually, it was class of ’64. I started in 60.
EG [0:25:35]: Gotcha, ‘64. So, I don’t know how much this will relate to you but, um, do you
have any feelings about the closing of the program in 1985?
JA [0:025:40]: It certainly made me feel sad that the College had to discontinue such a long
standing and excellent major. However, at the time that this decision was made, there
was, believe it or not, a glut of nurses and also a decreasing interest in nursing as a career.
I know that the College made such a decision reluctantly but were impacted by a
declining enrollment and rising costs to maintain the program in New York City. I think
the expansion of opportunities for women to almost any field also had an impact. I don’t
know if having to leave a more traditional college campus experience to live in New
York City for 2 years was a factor in recruitment of students. I do feel sad that many
nursing graduates do not give back to Skidmore because of their anger at the closing of
the program.
EG [0:27:09]: Wonderful. Well, yeah, you actually got my last question in there which was, kind
of, how your education at Skidmore has impacted your life, but it sounds like it changed
your life.
JA [0:27:19]: Many big decisions like where to go to college, where to live or what job to take
often reflect “turning points” in one’s life. Such periods often are inherently risky
because often one choice is to stay the same and the other is to take a risk. For me being
able to choose Skidmore was a big turning point. Instead of living at home and attending
a commuter school near my home, I spent 4 years living in two incredible places, meeting
people from all over the country and making friends who grew up in very different
circumstances than I did. That first big move away from home, enabled me to consider
and decide to have my first post-graduation job in Boston and then to decide that I needed
to learn more about the country, thus the move to San Francisco. My education at
Skidmore well prepared me for my post-graduation positions in Boston and SF. I think
Skidmore provided the background that enabled me to be a risk taker. As I look over my
career, there were many other “turning points,” for example, I was offered to be the VC
of a department in the SON at UCSF versus developing a NP program. The later choice
changed my whole career.
EG [0:28:54]: Gotcha, wow, wonderful! Ok, and then, is there any other, any other memories or
anything else that you’d want to make sure that it’s saved for posterity?
JA [0:31:03]: I loved New York City and had a great time living there for 2 years. One bonus to

�being there was that grateful patients left nearly every day Broadway show or Carnegie
Hall music tickets at the faculty office. So, my roommates and I were able to see some
wonderful shows. In addition, New York City offered amazing and cheap restaurants
featuring food from around the world. I certainly enlarged my Scottish meal palate. Of
course, the museums were free, and offered a do-it-yourself course in art history.
EG [0:32:07]: Yeah, I never would have thought of that! That’s so cool!
JA [0:32:10]: I also sent you some material from my program in 1960-64. The program brochure
featured me and Rory Pond, ’65 (she also was interviewed). It is a blast from the past as
we are in white skirted uniforms and nursing caps. I would have been a junior (1962-63)
and Rory was a sophomore.
EG [0:32:20]: Oh, that was you?
JA [0:32:21]: Yeah, it was me. Did you see that? I'm the taller one. That's me.
EG [0:32:24]: Oh, yeah, I’ve seen that! I’ve been working on the exhibit so I’ve been putting
[unintelligible] Wonderful! Oh wow, wonderful! I think this has been amazing, it’s really
good!
JA [0:34:05]: I have had a great, great career and it all began at Skidmore. Thank you for
listening to my story.

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Marah Frese-Despins [00:00:05] I'm Marah Frese-Despins.
Evan Forrest [00:00:08] I'm Evan Forrest.
Todd Shapiro [00:00:10] I'm Todd Shapiro.
Marah Frese-Despins [00:00:12] The date is April 15th, 2024.
Evan Forrest [00:00:16] All right. So we're going to start with a couple questions about
your childhood. So let's start with an easy one. Where did you grow up?
Todd Shapiro [00:00:25] I grew up in a town called Newington, Connecticut, just outside
of Hartford.
Evan Forrest [00:00:29] And what was your family like?
Todd Shapiro [00:00:32] I am an only child. My father, Norm, was an industrial engineer.
And my mother, Barbara, was a, dental hygienist. And I had a great childhood. No
complaints.
Evan Forrest [00:00:45] Nice. So what was your early education like? Middle school. High
school? And did you like school?
Todd Shapiro [00:00:53] Yes. Liked school very much. Liked elementary. Middle school.
Went to an interesting, I don't know if it was experimental, but it was a middle school that,
had, like, a team structure. So it wasn't the traditional, like, you're in one classroom the
whole day. It was sort of almost like a college campus kind of thing where you change, I
mean, in middle school, we were in sort of, each, each grade was a wing. And you would
you would move between classes. And it was sort of cutting edge for the time in the late
70s, early 80s.
Evan Forrest [00:01:35] That's interesting. So do you remember your first job? What was
that like?
Todd Shapiro [00:01:40] My first and only job. I worked at Newington Bicycle for over ten
years. I started at 15. State of Connecticut said that 15 year olds could work like a certain
amount of limited hours after school. So before I was even 16, I was working in the bike
shop. I'm an avid cyclist. I've been racing since I was, I don't know, 12 years old and
started at this job as a stock stock boy, you know, stocking shelves, sweeping floors and
then eventually worked my way up to be, manager of the store.
Evan Forrest [00:02:15] Nice so you're kind of mixing pleasure with work.
Todd Shapiro [00:02:17] That's right, that's right.
Evan Forrest [00:02:18] Find something you're interested in.
Todd Shapiro [00:02:20] Exactly.

�Marah Frese-Despins [00:02:23] Do you want to tell us about your time in college? What
undergrad school you went to. Graduate?
Todd Shapiro [00:02:28] Sure. Undergraduate, I went to University of Vermont. I did not
go to Brandeis because that's where my daughter is going in the fall. So, undergraduate
was University of Vermont in Burlington. I was a business major with a focus on
productions and operations. So that's everything from, like, statistical process control,
industrial engineering. So, yes, I was in the business school, but it had a sort of an
engineering bend. And while in school, my, Italian teacher mentioned that I wanted to get
into, you know, working in a bike shop and being very into, like, bikes and gear and
outdoor things. I wanted to work in manufacturing for an outdoor company. And in a
conversation with my Italian teacher, my Italian professor, she mentioned that her husband
was the CEO of Nordica, which was the ski company. You know, they made, boots and
bindings and and she could get me a meeting with him. So I met this, head of Nordica, US
in Burlington, Vermont, and I told him, “Hey, I want to work in manufacturing in the gear
industry.” And he was like, “you're not going to do that in the United States.” Like, very little
is manufactured here. It's all distribution. So everything is made overseas, imported into
the U.S.. And then there's these advanced distribution networks that distribute the
products, whether it's bikes or skis or mountain climbing, whatever your hobby is. And he's
like, you should look into operations and start to understand the distribution and how it
works. And that completely changed my trajectory. I went from focusing on like
engineering and manufacturing to, you know, business and operations, and that changed
my, my whole course, changed classes. I took, and then, even after college, what I, what I
ended up doing.
Marah Frese-Despins [00:04:31] Did that affect where you chose to go to grad school?
Todd Shapiro [00:04:35] I moved to Boston after undergraduate. I worked for the Museum
of Fine Arts, Boston. And the Museum of Fine Arts had the largest museum catalog in the
world. And what that means is all these museums sell product, right? They have gift shops
and they sell products. But the MFA had a catalog. We would mail them. This is in the
days of the days of old. You would mail catalogs, paper catalogs. People would read them.
They'd find. Something they liked. They write it down on a piece of paper. Fold it up, put it
in an envelope and mail it to you. To the catalog center. We had banks and banks of
people opening these things. They'd take out your order, they'd enter it. Then it would go
to the fulfillment center, and we'd pick, pack and ship and send it out. And that's how I
started. It was distribution. So I worked there for about six years. I'm in Boston, and I
realize, you know, I want more than just I mean, it was very big operation, but it wasn't like
an L.L. Bean or, you know, a massive cataloger, so I decided to go to grad school. I'm in
Boston. I mean, you got 62 schools to choose from. So I ended up going to Boston
University for an MBA.
Evan Forrest [00:05:51] Were you, part of any clubs or any other organizations where
your time at UVM or in Boston?
Todd Shapiro [00:05:58] Yeah, I was on the rowing team at UVM, so I got to travel all
over the country racing. That was a fantastic experience. And I also got into logistics with
that. I got trained to drive the trailer, so I would drive an 80-foot long trailer CDL, and,
yeah, we would caravan all over the country racing, which was fantastic. And then, I was
also in the Outing Club, got trained as a first responder, wilderness first responder. So I
would drag people off mountains that were injured or hurt. And, my specialty was winter

�camping. I actually love the cold. So. Yeah. So you can see where my love of gear and,
and outdoor stuff, came from.
Evan Forrest [00:06:46] Vermont's a good place to, to do it at. Yeah.
Marah Frese-Despins [00:06:52] Do you think any of those experiences helped prepare
you for your roles in management?
Todd Shapiro [00:06:56] Absolutely. No question. Rowing. You're, you know, one cog in
a, in a massive machine. So you've got to, you got to work to get. I mean, it's all the
classic, clichés. You got to work together. You've got, you know, you're only as fast as the
weakest link. And there's a tremendous amount of finesse and technique in the sport of
rowing. There's, there's, you're so reliant on your equipment, right? So it's not just your
fitness and your, strategy, but it's, you know, does your equipment work? Is it, you know,
is, is the, the machine that you're moving gonna operate efficiently? Is your technique
good? Right? Or is, are your oars going to go too deep or are you not, are you going to
catch a crab and slow the whole boat down? So, I mean, you can start to see how that
translates to a team you're working with, right? If you're on a production line, if you're
working on a conveyor belt and you got multiple people and moving parts, you have to
coordinate all that. And then in the Outing Club, you know, learning to be a wilderness first
responder was just tremendous. I mean, you learn how to not only help people but lead,
right? How do you motivate? And, you know, if you're on a hike and someone is injured, I
mean, you got to get them out of the woods. So you have to encourage and motivate and,
and think creatively of how you're gonna, you know, get this group of people with someone
that's wounded out safely. So yeah, it absolutely applies to day-to-day work.
Evan Forrest [00:08:35] Team player.
Todd Shapiro [00:08:36] There you go.
Evan Forrest [00:08:37] Yeah. So you mentioned starting off after college in kind of a
smaller, less, I don't know, multinational kind of job. Was it your goal to kind of transition
into a larger company with larger duties or.
Todd Shapiro [00:08:56] No, there was never a goal. Like, I never was, like, I want to
work in a catalog. I mean, when I was looking for a job after school, I mean, you went to
the newspaper, you literally opened the newspaper. You looked at the classifieds and you
would circle ads that sounded interesting, and you would write a cover letter in an
envelope. Snail mail, send it. I sent out hundreds of, of letters, and the one that came back
said, “Hey, we'd love to interview you” was the Museum of Fine Arts, and it was a
distribution center for product. And I was like, this is fantastic. So yeah, there was no goal
of like, oh, I want to, I want to work in a catalog center or I want to do this. So that first
step, like each step, whether you're in school or you're playing a sport or you're in a club,
right? These are all things that kind of build your, your background and your experiences.
And they can each send you down a different path. So once I started working at the
Museum of Fine Arts, I was involved in a very large catalog center, and I was like, this is
pretty cool. Maybe I want to, you know, see where this could take me. So I worked there
for many years. And then it started to feel small. I mean, it's 100,000ft², which is a very big
building. There were, I don't know, 5 to 10,000 SKUs which are stock keeping units. So
when you go into a store like Target, you know, there's probably 100,000 to 200,000 SKUs
in that store. Everything from a pen to a razor to a toothbrush that's each got a unique
identifier. So we had about 5000 SKUs at the MFA. And when I started as a recent college

�graduate, I was like, this is unbelievable. How am I ever going to keep track of this? Well,
by the end of a few years, I was like, this place feels small. I know where everything is. I
know how the place runs. So I'm like, what's next? What's next? So that's, that's what got
me thinking. And then I started to look for the next, the next big thing. And I, and I just kind
of progressed. I went from there. I went to Aramark, which was a very large distribution
center, and we did uniforms for every major company. UPS drivers, FedEx drivers, CocaCola drivers, all, you know, every driver needs a shirt, pants, jacket, belt, shoes, socks,
hat, company hat with their logo. We did the embroidery. We would do about 60,000
shipments a day. The MFA was 3 to 5 thousand a day. Aramark was about 30,000 to
60,000 a day. And so, yeah, I started, you know, I wanted bigger, bigger. You know, it was
it wasn't, “I want to go to a multinational. I want to go to something big.” I just I wanted the
next challenge because you start to get stagnant. You start to get comfortable, and you're
like, you know, I gotta. I want to grow. I want to grow. I want to do more.
Evan Forrest [00:11:55] What did your day to day look like? I know you said your you're
shipping off in this specific example uniforms, but what does that mean. So you go into
work and you're just boxing up uniforms and selling them out? Like I can't visualize it right
now.
Todd Shapiro [00:12:08] Sure, sure. So the way I like to describe it is, if you order
something online. So I don't know if you guys ever ordered from L.L.Bean or, let's use
L.L.Bean. That's the best example in the world. So you you go online and you order a pair
of the famous L.L.Bean boots, right? You and 100,000 other people are all ordering this
stuff. So in the morning, when a worker in a distribution center shows up, you have to, like,
start the system up. Right? And so you print the orders and it's called induction. And you
induct this work into the system. So there's stacks and stacks of orders. That are the
picklist. So when you are at home and you go, oh, I ordered these boots, and you open up
your box and there's a sheet in there and it says, you know, size ten duck boots. And if
you look closely, there's probably a little code it could say like, you know, PX-24. Well,
that's a location. It's all done with coordinates. You know, these buildings are like
1,000,000ft². That could have a couple hundred thousand locations. It's essentially
shelves. It's like the library. You've got shelves with books on them. But imagine you're
like, okay, there's a section of all of shoes. There's a section of all the shirts, is a section of
all the tents or whatever that these retailers sell. So you will literally grab a stack of orders
that are printed in by walk pattern. So there's a tremendous amount of math and like
choreography because you have to say, “Okay, Evan, we're going to give you this stack of
orders.” You don't want to walk to the back of the building and grab, you know, a hat, and
then you got to walk all the way up and grab some shoes and then go over it. Now, you
want it efficient so you're assigned a section. You're like, okay, you're going to be in, you
know, section P out of, you know, 100 rows or 100 aisles. And each sheet that you take is
guiding you on a walk pattern, an efficient walk pattern. And so you'll go and just say,
okay, there's a size ten shoes. Maybe for that day you're assigned to the shoe area. So all
you’re picking is shoes. Then your racks are profiled. So yes, you're in the correct aisle.
But the companies do analysis and they forecast what is going to sell the best. And it's
loaded on the shelves in the most ergonomic position. So right here your top selling item is
going to be in a very easy to reach place. The thing you sell like two of a year. That's going
to be up high because you got to get a ladder to get it. So you're not going to make those
picks very frequently. And then what you do is you do reprofiling. So after a couple of
weeks of fulfilling, because these websites are, you know, they have the new spring
lineup. So you reprofile your racks, you load them from the back with this spring's offering
in very efficient locations. Then let's say spring is done and now it's the fall. And it's a
whole different thing. Now coats are popular or whatever, you know, outcome the bathing

�suits are off the shelf. And now the hooded, you know, sweatshirts are in that key location.
So you're constantly reprofiling and readjusting so that you can have efficient pick runs.
And you can, you can, you can get this stuff processed quickly. So you, you pick it all, you
put it in containers and they're on an automated conveyor belt. That conveyor belt will take
it around the building. Then it's got to go to a packing station. So now okay, you pick the
shoes, you threw them in a box, they go down the conveyor. Then there's a station that
might have to put some what's called dunnage or void fill, like bubble wrap or some
crumbled up paper to kind of brace it. Maybe that person request some gift wrap, or
maybe they requested a gift message, or maybe there's a second pick. So you put the
boots in the box. The box heads down the conveyor belt to your area and you're picking,
you know, I don't know, first aid kits, right. You know, L.L. Bean sells everything. So you're
like, okay, “they bought boots. I'm going to put the first aid kit, I'm going to put some
sunscreen in there.” And then it goes down the conveyor to the next area, to the final
station that seals it, puts a label on it, overhead scanner reads it and routes it to one of 50,
60 tractor trailers that are there. So there's some going to the West Coast, there's some
going to the Midwest, there's some going East Coast, South, Southwest, and then they
route them and they drive them deeper into the mail stream to a USPS or UPS distribution
center. So your morning literally starts with, “what am I picking?” Like that's how the whole
process starts. Johnny Jones placed an order online, and that order becomes like a pick
ticket of what you've got to put in the box. I mean, people don't realize this. They're online.
They have no idea what entering that order does and like what that sets into motion to do.
Evan Forrest [00:17:24] It's interesting hearing the other side, logistically, because the
consumer just sees the computer screen and orders that, and then there's just so much
more that goes on to it.
Todd Shapiro [00:17:34] Oh yeah. It's unbelievable. Yeah.
Marah Frese-Despins [00:17:37] What was the working environment like? There was,
was it, were people happy working there? Were you receiving good benefits? That kind of
thing.
Todd Shapiro [00:17:43] Thing? Well, I'll start with the MFA and then I'll go to Target. So
when I was at the MFA, it was a small catalog operation. We probably had 25 to 50 people
in the distribution center. And it was sort of a feeling of like, you're working for a good
cause, like you're supporting a museum and the artwork. And what we sold was supporting
the artwork, right? You would sell prints of Monet or whatever, and the pay was alright,
and the environment was not crushing, meaning you didn't have production standards.
You know, it was look if, if somebody ordered some note cards or a vase, right? You know,
you're not shipping body parts, you're not shipping medical supplies. So, you know, it
wasn't like this huge sense of urgency. I also worked at Target. And Target is another
world that is backbreaking. There are production standards. The pay is not great. Benefits
are okay. And Target distribution centers ship 100,000 packages per shift. So you could be
doing 100,000 to 300,000 or more packages a day in the yard where the tractor trailers
are, there's 4 million cartons that have to be backed up to the doors and unloaded. And
when I got to Target, I thought I made the show. I thought I was in the major leagues.
That's what brought me to this area. I was recruited by Target and I was living in Boston,
and they said, we're opening a new distribution center in Amsterdam. And I thought Target
was going to the Netherlands. And then I learned that it's, depressed factory town west of
Saratoga, where all this industry went out of business in the 1960s, and 30 to 50 thousand
people lost their jobs. However, it's right on Interstate 90. So big distribution centers,
2,000,000ft² can get their goods and trucks right on the highway. So I was recruited to

�open a distribution center that would serve 80 Target stores, came up here and moved up
here with my family, started at the Amsterdam facility. And that's when the fun ended. It
was soul crushing. And this is why your professor probably asked me to come here. So
there's production standards you have to produce. Now I'm in this situation. I'm a manager.
I have a team of people who are pick packing, just as I described, like at the MFA or at
Aramark. But every quarter you have to pick a certain amount per hour. So let's just say,
you've got to do 35 picks an hour this quarter. Every move you make. You are scanning
everything. You scan the shelf, you're going to pick some boots, right? Just like in our
other example, you scan the shelf, you scan the product, and it'll, it'll be, it'll, it'll give you a
confirmation like that's the right thing. If it, if it gives you an error message, it's like, “hey,
you just scanned, you know, a bottle of tide detergent, and you're supposed to be picking
boots.” So you can see how it starts to take the humanness out of it. It's all like, it's all fed
to you. So you have to pick 35 an hour. You got to hustle next quarter, the new production
standards. You got to do 40 an hour. You gotta do like 20% more. So that works when
you're doing like toothbrushes and boots. But what happens when it's grill season and you
got to move a gas grill barbecue? It is. I would literally be going up to people. I'm like, “hey
Tony, you know, it's you got to do 40, 40 an hour.” And he's like, “I couldn't even do 30.
How am I going to do this?” He's like, “it's grill season.” These things weigh 150 pounds.
So, you know, you have to also think of the type of product like someone could be
stationed in, like the dental area where it's toothbrushes and toothpaste. Easy. But
somebody that's over in grills or tool chests or bunk beds, I mean, you know, think about it
like Ikea. I mean, that stuff is just killer. And it was just it, it killed me to press my staff to hit
these production numbers. And if they didn't do it, I'd have to write them up. So I'd have to
say, “you know, Marah. Hey, you know, this week, you know, you've only been doing 26
an hour, and you've got to get to 35 an hour.” And you'd say, okay, we're going to give it,
you know, the rest of this week, I need to see some improvement. And off you go. And you
do it. Now, what happens if you're rushing and you damage product? What if you're using
a forklift and you take down the pallet of goods to pick and you dump it and you just
dumped, you know, however many grills or whatever, and they're damaged. Now that
comes off of a your, off your, you know, productivity report. And I would just watch us
break people, literally break people. And then we would track their whereabouts during the
day. So you'd say, okay, “you did. You did 26 an hour. You have to do 35. But I've noticed,
you know, every day around 11, you're missing for 12 minutes” and you're like, “oh, I, you
know, I had to go to the bathroom” and it's like, well, we've tracked this and it should take,
you know, an average person about 3 to 4 minutes to go to the bathroom. You know what I
mean? It's this unbelievable, like the conversations you have to have with people. And the
only thing I can think of is if you want to walk into a Target or a Walmart or Amazon and
you want to spend $4 for, for a shirt or a product like you, you know, the American
consumer says, “I want this for five bucks.” Well, where are you going to get that margin?
You're going to squeeze it out of your staff, right? You're going to get more efficient. You're
going to get faster. You're going to hire less people. You're going to automate. And that
was the only thing I could reason with myself to be like, “this is why we're pushing people.”
But I eventually left. I could not stand it. I could not stand seeing what we did to people and
how we broke them. And I mean, can you imagine having a conversation with someone
about how long they spent in the bathroom?
Marah Frese-Despins [00:24:21] It'd be horrible.
Todd Shapiro [00:24:22] It's horrible. It's horrible. And, you know, here at the time, I have
a master's degree, and I'm like, I'm walking around this thing just, like beating people over
the head. Yeah, it was terrible. It was terrible. And, yeah, I left.

�Evan Forrest [00:24:38] Were you, I assume, perceived as the bad guy or was it like a
don't shoot the messenger type thing? Like did they understand that you were just the
manager, and...
Todd Shapiro [00:24:48] I mean, it's very interesting. Target and Walmart and all these
places tend to hire in these roles people that are fresh out of college, fresh out of the
military, where they can be molded. Right. I had already been in the in the workforce for 12
or 15 years, kind of running facilities and learning how to manage people. So I developed
a very good relationship with my staff, and they realized, “hey, Todd's just doing his job
and we get it.” But a lot of the new people that did not have real world experience just
drank the Kool-Aid, delivered these terrible messages, and were perceived as the bad guy.
They were like, “wow, this this kid's rotten. Like, this is awful.” You know, I had a little more
empathy for these people. Like, these people had families, these people, you know, this
was a good job for these people in this area. And, yeah, it was, it was tough. It was tough.
Evan Forrest [00:25:54] And I assume that there's just managers that were just like you.
All over the country as well.
Todd Shapiro [00:26:01] There were 26 distribution centers. Target runs 26 distribution
centers. Each distribution center employs a thousand people. So there's 26,000
employees just in product distribution. And the facility is run with about 30 managers. So I
was in charge of warehousing and distribution. Somebody might be in charge of inbound
freight. Somebody might be in charge of outbound freight. Somebody might be in charge
of like high value. So about 30 managers in the building runs 24 hours a day, 365 days a
year. I worked Thanksgiving. I worked Christmas, I worked, you name the holiday I have
worked it, and I would do 80 hours a week. And it was, yeah, it was, It was soul crushing. It
was awful. Awful.
Evan Forrest [00:26:48] Were there ever talks with your employees about unionizing or
things to increase their happiness?
Todd Shapiro [00:26:57] I was trained, Target trained all of us in union busting. So here
these people would start to organize, and we were trained as management on how to
dissuade them and sort of scuttle it. You know, you couldn't say the word union, but there
were techniques and phrases that we were trained to use to sort, you know, change the
topic, change the, the thing. And Target was very successful. Very, very successful in, in
squashing and, you know, union votes and that kind of thing. I mean, it was, it was eye
opening, eye opening for me and it, yeah, yeah. It's, and Target is one of the more
progressive companies. I mean, if you look at Walmart or Amazon, I mean, these places
are brutal. Brutal.
Marah Frese-Despins [00:27:56] How did working at Target and having those tough
experiences, affect, like, your family life and personal life?
Todd Shapiro [00:28:04] It was extremely difficult. My wife and I were newly married, and
I was working 80 hours a week. I never saw her. And to this day, we refer to that as the
Dark Ages. Target sold me on, they said you're going to work four days on, three days off.
You'll work four, ten-hour days, and then you'll get three days off. I was like, “this is
unbelievable.” They said, “you'll start at like seven. You'll get out at three.” And that's
awesome. That never happened. I worked, pretty much every day I would start, I would get
up at 3:30 in the morning to be at the facility at 5 a.m. to do production control. So that
description of the pick tickets and everything, you have to sort of orchestrate the printing

�and the dissemination of all of that. So you have to kind of figure out your pick runs and
things. It's called production control. So, in a facility like a Target, because they have
Sunday fliers or they have TV ads, that product has to get to the front of the line so it can
get in the stores. Right. Like, imagine they do a big ad campaign and the distribution
center forgets to, like, send something. So I was getting up at 3:30 in the morning to drive
to Amsterdam, 45 minutes, to do production control at 5 a.m., and I'd work 12 hours. I'd be
home at 5 or 6 and I would just, I was a zombie, I would collapse. And then, my wife was
pregnant with our daughter, and my daughter, Zoe, was born. And I remember taking off
two weeks from work. It took, like, an act of Congress for me to get time off. And I
remember holding her. She's an infant, and I'm like, I am leaving this job. I'm never going
to see her. Because you work all day getting up at 3:00 in the morning. You can't do
anything when you get home. You know, you can't see your family. You can't. You don't
even have energy to make dinner. So it was just get up, work, come home, collapse, do it
again, do it again. And then having these horrible experiences at work, you would bring all
that home. So the conversation was just like, this is, this is ridiculous. So yeah, it really
affected, you know, and at least in my experience at Target, extremely high divorce rate,
extremely high depression rates in management. I mean, these people are just, everyone
is broken. Yeah.
Evan Forrest [00:30:39] You mentioned a little bit the comparison between MFA, and
Target and that there were production... what did you call it, production...
Todd Shapiro [00:30:50] Production control or production standards.
Evan Forrest [00:30:54] Standards. Is that what, that's what made the difference between
Target and MFA, why Target was so much more soul crushing than MFA?
Todd Shapiro [00:31:01] Yeah. Yeah. MFA was more of a familial or, I guess you could
call it kind of a family atmosphere because the volumes were lower. It wasn't a Fortune
500 retailer, you know, it's this little museum in Boston. It's a big museum, but there wasthe pressure was not there. You know, there weren't shareholders. There wasn't, you
know, there weren't Sunday fliers. There weren't, you know, because we were a cataloger.
That's the other thing is you sort of launch these catalogs into the mail or nowadays on the
internet, and you just pack your warehouses with the product for that season. So you're
kind of like, all right, we're good. We got everything in the shelves are loaded. Let's just fill
the orders. But at a Target, it is like 24 hours a day inbound and outbound. And so it's like,
it's like sweeping the ocean. It's just, you are never going to catch up. And they know that.
And that's on purpose. And it's just to keep you under the, under the thumb and you can
never catch up. So you're always like going, going, going, going, going. And that also does
not allow you time to think and unionize because you are so slammed. It's, I really feel, it's
very strategic in how they build and designed and, and kind of feed these places, so, you
know.
Marah Frese-Despins [00:32:41] Where did you move next? Like, how did it get better?
Todd Shapiro [00:32:45] Great question. So, I was hating Target, and, my wife was on
Craigslist. That shows how long ago it was, 20 years ago. So I come home one day and
she's like, “hey, I saw this ad in Craigslist. There's a little software company in Saratoga,
started at the RPI incubator, and they're looking for people that have retail supply chain
experience.” I was like, “huh?” So in all of my jobs, from the MFA, actually going back to
the bike shop, to Target, I was always very involved in systems. You cannot run a facility
of this magnitude without software and systems to, to manage it and track it. And I mean, it

�is, it's mind boggling how much. So when I was at Target, they were installing $80 million
worth of equipment and software to take the people out of unloading trucks. And so I
started to become a super user. Right. You know, think of any jobs you've had or, you
know, whether you're working at a grocery store or you're working at a bike shop or
whatever, like there's, there's always a system, right? And you've got to get good at using
that system. So in all of my jobs, I tried to become a subject matter expert to like,
understand, I would train others and I would learn how they work. So my wife found this
thing. She's like, yeah, “this little software company started in some kids dorm room. They
built multi-channel retail software.” And so what it is, is it I mean, today you could laugh at
it, but 20 years ago it was, “hey, we can run your inventory for your website, for eBay, for
Amazon, for take your pick of a couple others.” But it's centralized inventory and it's all
done online because years ago you'd have a website, you'd have a brick and mortar store,
you'd have everything. Each one of those held the inventory differently. So if you sell hats,
maybe you have ten in stock. Well, what if there was a run on them and the store sold
them all? The website still thinks there's ten, eBay still thinks there's ten, Amazon still
thinks there's ten. But the store sold them all. What these kids did is they centralized it in
one single database and did it online, which people weren't doing at that time, so that the
store, the website, eBay, whatever your channels were, they could draw on one central
inventory master so that if you ran out of stock, it would automatically take it down from the
other sites. Conversely, what if a shipment of more hats came in - automatically push them
up. So I went to this interview and I had no idea what to expect, and I met with this
software team over on High Rock near the farmers market, and they explained that they
have built a multi-channel retail system, but they don't know retail. And, you know, do I
know how retail works in the backend? And I was like, “wow, this is a match made in
heaven.” And so I ended up working for them for three years. It's called Core Sense.
They're down on High Rock still. And I learned how to implement software, and I brought
my retail expertise. So I became sort of a product manager slash consultant. I helped them
build out the system, improve it so the real world could use it. What they built in their dorm
room was good, but it wasn't ready for prime time. And then we started to install it. And so
I would go to a client site. I could speak the language of retail, at least backend retail, like
how do you fill and operate? And I would consult, I would gather requirements. And then
these guys taught me about software, I taught them retail, they taught me software, and
we went and installed systems all over for this, this new multi-channel retail system. And
that's what got me into software. So I've been doing software for 20 years now.
Evan Forrest [00:36:52] That's awesome how you could use your, all of your experience
to kind of transform yourself into a different role.
Todd Shapiro [00:36:58] Yep, yep.
Evan Forrest [00:37:01] So going back to kind of, management, we talked about a couple
of the bad effects and some of the more unpleasurable experiences. Do you have any,
rewarding parts of working in management and having a team that you kind of work with
closely?
Todd Shapiro [00:37:23] Oh, yeah. When you can manage and create a well-run machine
of people, there's no better experience. It's fantastic. Like where I am now. I mean, I
consider this group I work with, I've been there for ten years, like close friends, which is
extremely rare in the working world. We are such a tight unit. We know each other's roles
so well that you almost don't have to talk sometimes. And you can figure things out, get
through problems. Solving work problems efficiently and with, with a great team is just an
extremely rewarding experience. Yeah. Not having drama like, when you guys get into the

�work world, you'll realize, like, there's politics and there's backstabbing, you know, all that,
all the stuff you read about. But when you can find yourself working with a team that
supports each other, has each other's back, is challenging work, rewarding work. There is
no better experience than that. And it's, it's rare, you know, you may only find it once or
twice in your career. But when you do, you know, you realize how special it is and how
much, dare I say, fun, it can be to, you know, work on this stuff.
Evan Forrest [00:38:47] So in an ideal world, if you're working at Target, how could you
make that environment better?
Todd Shapiro [00:38:57] You can't, you can't, you can't. The machine is too big. At one
point, I thought I could, I was like, “oh, I can bring my experience from the working world to
Target.” And, you know, I was, I was squashed essentially, like upper, upper, upper
management, you know. You know, they're, they're controlling the managers too. Like, it's
not just me as a manager controlling the front-line staff, but the executive team is putting
the kibosh on the managers because they dangle the carrot for us. So they say, “okay,
there's 26 distribution centers. Let's say there's 30 managers. You know, it's like 500, 600
people. We've only got ten slots at corporate in Minneapolis.” These are coveted, coveted
roles to run a department in Minneapolis. And they're like, “okay, we're going to, we're,
you're all competing with each other.” So no longer are you this unified team to like,
improve the distribution center and make it better. It's like, “oh, my coworker, now I'm
competing with you because there's only ten slots. There's 500 of us. There's only ten
slots. I got to show my stuff, and I got to step on anybody I can to get that.” You know, it's
not we rise or fall together. That's how it is with a good team. But in Target, it's step on
your coworker to get, to get your opportunity. And, yeah, it's no way you cannot change it,
it is too big. There's too much money involved. And, yeah, it's, it's, it's not for me. It's not
for me. Some people might like it, but, yeah, you can't change it.
Evan Forrest [00:40:50] It almost sounds like there's just so many levels. And then at the
bottom, all the levels are kind of just weighing down and creates kind of that toxic work
environment where you really just can't be successful or happy.
Todd Shapiro [00:41:06] No, no, you can't, you can't. And everyone. So I had like a cohort
when I started at Target, and 16 of us had previous real-world experience in that field. The
other half were fresh out of military, fresh out of college, and all 16 of us left within three
years because we knew life is much better on the outside. And since many of those that
stayed have also left and, yeah, it's, yeah. But you know, when you read about Amazon or
you read about Walmart, I mean, the stories are true. It's really like, to give you an idea,
when we opened the facility, we needed to open with a thousand workers, the building's
2,000,000ft². You need a thousand workers to run it 24 hours a day, 365. Guess how
many people we interviewed for those slots?
Marah Frese-Despins [00:42:09] Like 5,000, I don't know.
Todd Shapiro [00:42:12] Close.
Evan Forrest [00:42:13] Well, I was going to say way less.
Todd Shapiro [00:42:15] Okay. 8,000. We interviewed 8,000 people. So we opened the
back of the building. It was like an airplane hangar, and we would assign people a slot 24
hours a day. We flew in Target. People from all over the country put them up, and we had
teams of two and long lanes of, of interviews. And so you'd have a table with two people.

�One person would ask questions, the other would notate. Then you'd switch off. 8,000
people and we only hired 700. We didn't even hit the thousand. So what does that tell
you? Yeah, you can have a crushing work environment. That guy falls down. You can't hit
the production standards. There's 8,000 more willing to come in right behind them. And, uh
yeah, it's just it's just an ocean of people. People need jobs, and it's like we'll just churn
and burn. And. Yeah, it's awful. It's awful.
Evan Forrest [00:43:20] How did those teams of two, like, adequately, evaluate a
candidate when there's so many different teams?
Todd Shapiro [00:43:31] You have a set list of questions. Again, it's highly organized and
choreographed. You have a set list of questions, and, you know, they're leading questions
like, you know, if you're, if you're a good worker and you're, you know, trustworthy and all
of this, you know, you can sorta tell by the answers. That's why it's two people. Because
while you're asking, the other person is taking notes, but they are watching for, like, a tell.
You know, could they be lying? Could they, did they get the dates wrong? Like, did they
mess up, you know, and then you're like, “okay, this is a, this is a made up resume.” And
yeah, it, it's got to be in teams because you're going to miss something like, you know, I
could be reading the sheet asking the question, and he's like, you know, they're spacing
out, doing something else, or, and then it's all noted. It's stapled in a box and then the next
one, and then you got to process 8,000 applications and answers. So there's two boxes.
There's like, you know, call them back for a second. Don't call ‘em. So you're sort of
making a split-second decision on that. But you can tell I mean, you know, a lot of times
it's, it's very apparent. But if you're, if you're not sure, if you're like, hey, maybe, call back
for a second, let another team evaluate it and, and do it.
Evan Forrest [00:44:56] Sounds like you've gotten pretty good at reading people
throughout your years.
Todd Shapiro [00:44:59] Yes, yes. Yeah. When you're managing people in, in, in a very
physical environment, you really get, you learn people, you can read them. You know if
they're having a bad day. You know if they're having a good day. You know what
motivates them. You know what de-motivates them. Yeah. It's, it's the only way to survive
and get better is to really learn how to work with people. Which is why in this new world of
ours, you know, everything is remote. And, I mean, I work in a remote world now. I mean, I
implement software at some of the largest retailers in the world, and we do it with teams all
over the world, and we've never met in person. I mean, it's just, it's unbelievable. And I feel
that somebody knew, like, for example, the two of you, once you graduate, if you were to
go to a software development firm, you gotta go to an office. Like, how on earth are you
going to learn or whatever your field is. If you're at home staring at a monitor like you need
mentoring and you need like, interaction. I mean, I really feel for, for younger people that
are starting jobs, like, during Covid or soon after. It is hard. Like you've got to do it in
person, learn how to work, learn how to interact with people, and then when you become
more senior in your positions, then go remote. But to start off that way is, that's crazy.
Marah Frese-Despins [00:46:28] Overall, are you happy to have had that experience at
Target, even if it wasn't always great or happy to bring those experiences in the future?
Todd Shapiro [00:46:36] Yeah, it's, it's I'm definitely glad I went through it. And look,
having that logo on your resume, that opens doors, there's no question. I mean, I could
have been a janitor, but people see the red thing on my resume and they're like, oh, you
worked at Target. And it's like, yeah. And it's unbelievable how that alone can open doors

�and, and change the conversation. And I'm glad I went through it. I mean, I, I would have
always wondered, right, like, what is it like on the inside because you think, wow, this is a
big, amazing company, you know, everybody loves going into a Target. But had I not done
it, I always would have wondered, and I'm very glad I did.
Evan Forrest [00:47:20] So going back into time, if you could go back, would you change
anything about the way you approached college? Your field of study, knowing what you
know now? Or if you could give advice, what would you what would you say? I know you
gave the advice of going to an office and getting that human relation, and, but, would you
go back and change anything about the way you approached it?
Todd Shapiro [00:47:46] No, I, I thought I had a fantastic undergrad experience. I'm super
happy I studied business, and I didn't, you know, I didn't go, like, the finance track. I didn't
go, you know, the accounting, you know, the classic business stuff. You know, I stuck to
what I enjoyed which was operations. And I'm super glad I did. But I will say you can
always change. And a quick story. So in the 1990s, right. That's when startups and the
internet and all of this was starting to take off. And here I am, an operations guy. Right.
Physical product, kind of like a factory. And I remember, starting graduate school, going
into the career office, like my first week and saying, hey, “I want to get into IT.” And they
laughed at me. They laughed at me. Can you believe that? The career office at BU was
like, “what is your background? No! You can't. You're ,you're in like, operations. Yeah. You
can't.” And I was just like, “oh my God, I have to get into IT.” And so I graduated in 2002.
So 20-something years later, I am so deep in IT, it's not even funny. So I would say, don't
ever think you can't change or maneuver. You just got to kind of take stock of what you've
been working on and say, “oh wow, what I'm doing now, could I apply this to the area of
interest that I've got?” And, and you can do it just because I'm like, “wow, we use systems
every day in product distribution. So why couldn't I be on the other side of that?” So
whatever your interest is or whatever, there is always a way to figure out how to, how to
get to what you want to do. And don't let anybody tell you, you know or laugh at you that
you know, you can't make that change. So. Yeah.
Evan Forrest [00:49:55] What does the future look like for you in your work environment?
Do you just continue to do the same thing or...
Todd Shapiro [00:50:02] Good question. That's a good question. I work in a very stressful
environment, now, if you must know. Big websites, very big budgets, and very tight
deadlines. Our projects run from a year to 18 months to spin up a, you know, a big
website. We can have anywhere from 20 to 50 people working on it, developing it,
integrating it. I enjoy the work. I enjoy my team. But. Yeah, I'm curious what's next? It's
like, okay, you know, am I just going to keep building these things? And, yeah, I almost
want to go smaller again. I almost want to get back to that, like MFA bike shop kind of
thing. Like more entrepreneurial, you know. It doesn't always have to be big and fast and,
multinational, multi-bazillion dollars, you know. It's like maybe do something a little smaller
that, you know, a little slower pace where you can have more creativity. Because when
you implement these big things, whether you're at Target or you're implementing a website
for a major, major retailer, like, you have to fit their standards, right. You know, there's,
there's margins. It's nice when you can put your own creativity and spin on something. So
if you're doing your own thing, if it's entrepreneurial or it's a smaller company, you can
wear a lot of hats and you can try different things and you can make suggestions and get
creative. Right. And that, that is where I think it's going for me, is trying to get back to that
entrepreneurial, a little more creativity, not pedal to the metal all day long, every day.

�Marah Frese-Despins [00:51:47] I think we're about done. Unless you have any more
questions, Evan? If there's anything you want to add.
Evan Forrest [00:51:54] Not for me.
Todd Shapiro [00:51:55] Okay. That was.
Evan Forrest [00:51:56] Great.
Marah Frese-Despins [00:51:58] See? Other.

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                    <text>Interviewee: Karl Broekhuizen
Years at Skidmore: 1981 - 2005
Interviewer: Lynn Gelber
Location of Interview: Saratoga Springs, NY
Date of Interview: April 18, 2019
00:00:00 HEADER
00:00:27 Born and raised in Holley, New York; 52 people in high school graduating class.
00:00:54 Undergraduate - University of New Hampshire; MBA - University of Massachusetts.
00:01:17 As undergrad, worked in UNH controllers office in a junior accountant position.
00:01:37 Interest in working with new automated information and data processing plus
management of not-for-profits, particularly colleges and universities.
00:02:50 Upon completing MBA, hired for a new position at U Mass supporting the graduate
school in budget development and administration.
00:03:51 “The graduate school at U Mass at that time … mirrored … what a small college and
university would be.”
00:04:26 Between 1967-1977, worked as Business Manager for U Mass Graduate School, U
Mass Associate Budget Director, and Assistant Dean of Education (chief business person).
00:05:53 Next 5 years as Treasurer at Colby College, then to Skidmore.
00:06:42 On campus interview with, “… a group of thousands.”
00:09:03 One appeal of Skidmore: “…relative to the competition, Skidmore was a very young
institution … opportunity for someone with a different perspective…”
00:09:58 Upon arriving September 1981, ”… annual audit had not been yet completed.”
00:12:11 Initial tasks included “…get to know the place and do some staffing.”
00:13:25 Also upon arriving, plans for a sports center were two-thirds done.
00:14:28 In 1981 the college was used to being under-resourced.
00:15:10 “Skidmore became what it was, and what it is today … because they were all invested
in … the vision of this institution…”
00:16:15 “One of the things that we were able to do early on is … try to move our construction
program up a notch or two in terms of quality, design, location.”
00:17:10 challenge of “…limestone ledge not very far below the surface. And most, if not all, of
the early buildings are three feet higher in the air because it was less expensive to go up than to
blast and go down.”
00:17:40 Range of building projects included a residence hall, Harder Hall, Starbuck Center and
Barrett conversion into offices, Tisch learning center, the Tang, the Northwoods apartments, the
Zankel, and additions to the library and the Case Center.
00:19:19 Changes were “a function of … recognizing a change in how curriculum was
developed and delivered.” Also, “tremendous growth in terms of the number of employees.”
00:21:07 Worked with Joe Palamountain, David Porter, Jamienne Studley, Phil Glotzbach.
00:21:34 “Joe, in my opinion, saved this college … saw what needed to be done in terms of
bringing this campus in this location to a meaningful presence, and I think he surrounded himself
with … a great team, and was able to move forward.”
00:24:36 “[Joe] described … his leadership style as sort of a team approach or what he called a
matrix management style … the president’s staff … met weekly around a table and discussed
whatever the important issue was in each of our divisions, and decisions were made
collectively.”

�00:25:45 “…he would recommend to the board the hiring or appointment of the chief academic
officer or the chief business officer or whatever, but the appointment was by the board. Deans
were not. They reported to board appointed officers, and that worked well, I think, for the times.”
00:26:39 “…one instance … I needed fifty thousand dollars more than the preliminary budget
figures … We all talked about it in the room and Dave Long, VP for external affairs, said, ‘I can
help you with that. I’ll give you fifty thousand dollars out of my budget.’ No great hassle, no …
infighting, we were part of a team.”
00:28:05 David Porter’s priorities were faculty and academic programming. “We would still
have president’s staff meetings. He, pretty much, continued with the matrix style of operation…”
00:28:58 Phyllis was interim president during construction on the Tang. “I remember very
clearly Phyllis being on the top of an excavator with one of the construction team’s people,
coming around a grove of trees, in a hard hat…”
00:29:35 "Jamie was very different … it was much more one-on-one … more decisions got
made in her office than in the conference room … different styles, and different times, as well.”
00:32:29 Phil “…was interested in knowing, housing-wise … of some of the things that we were
doing in terms of bond issues, for instance, and things of that nature.”
00:33:19 Through his years at Skidmore, Broekhuizen appreciated the eclectic nature of
Business Affairs. “I mean, we had dining services and post office and bookstores and computing
centers and so forth and so on.”
00:33:44 “In terms of construction, the design process of the Tang was the most interesting to
me.”
00:34:56 “… a teaching museum. It would be integrated into the curriculum of the college …”
00:36:38 Search committee narrowed field to three architects for Tad Kuroda and Broekhuizen
to visit. “Traveling with Tad … was just an absolute joy. Both in terms of focus on the questions
we were asking of the architect …, but also spending free time together. We went to a baseball
game out in Los Angeles, for instance … I was the only white guy there. And Tad just tweaked
me … ‘What’s it feel like to be a member of a minority group now?’ [laughs]. And it was all said
in fun you know, in jest and so forth, but it was just a positive experience.”
00:38:41 Then each architect came to Skidmore to give presentations. “…we had a site picked
out …Predock said no … if you want this to be integral to the campus you need to have it on a
path where students go, they’ll be forced to go by it or better yet through it. And so he selected
this site, made his point, and talked about it growing up out of the ground and it would have this
limestone-like exterior and you could go through it or you could go over it, and it was just very
very exciting. I mean, he had clearly done his homework.”
00:40:45 “When the search committee came to make its final recommendation, I think it was
Predock hands down. I mean I cannot remember a dissenting voice there. And working with him
and his colleague, the vendor contractor, was just a joy.”
00:42:12 Another high point was hiring Barbara Beck as the Human Resources officer. She
created “… a comprehensive Human Resource function that helped department chairs and
faculty with leadership issues and problem solving.”
00:43:21 Restructuring after Dave Marcell left led to the Computing Center reporting to
Broekhuizen. Some had suggested it “…be split between academic computing and administrative
computing … I kept saying, ‘No, we want one person to be responsible for both areas so there’d
be better coordination and articulation of their vision and their role… I just did not want
essentially the same general function, computing, … vying for the same resources…’ ”
00:47:00 Skidmore community well served by Business Affairs senior directors.

�00:48:03 “…Bob Jarvis, who did a wonderful job, … when he retired … ultimately, I decided to
outsource the leadership to …Sodexo… I understand they are doing a fantastic job.”
00:49:55 “I have said … ‘Skidmore College could afford to do anything it chose to do. It could
not do everything it wished to do.’ ”
00:50:25 “One of the greatest privileges of my life, to work at Skidmore.”
00:50:31 END

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                    <text>Interview with Karl Broekhuizen by Lynne Gelber, Skidmore College
Retiree Oral History Project, Saratoga Springs, New York, April 18, 2019
LYNNE GELBER: Today is April 18th, 2019 and I’m here with Karl
Broekhuizen and Sue Bender and this is Lynne Gelber. And we are happy to
see you, Karl, after some time. Why don’t we start by having you tell us
where you were born and raised and then maybe how you got to Skidmore
eventually?
KARL BROEKHUIZEN: I was born and raised in Holley, New York, which is
about 25 miles west of Rochester, a small town of about eighteen hundred,
primarily agricultural. I went to a small, a relatively small school system;
there were 52 of us in my graduating class. When I left Holley to go to
college, I went to the University of New Hampshire in Durham, New
Hampshire. After that I went to the University of Massachusetts to get my
MBA degree. I decided between undergraduate and graduate school that I
thought I wanted to be more involved in the administrative side, financial
side, of higher education. I had worked for the controller’s office at UNH
and got a taste of that.
LG: Excuse me, that was as a graduate student?
KB: No, an undergraduate.
LG: As an undergraduate?
KB: Yes. A junior accountant type job. But I noticed, and this was in the early
‘60s, that at the time automated information and data processing was
becoming, was coming on the scene. Most of the folks, the senior folks at
UNH with whom I worked, were either retired military folks or faculty
members who’d left the faculty to come into administration. And they felt,
my observation was, they did not, were not fully embracing some of the
nascent information processing age, and I felt there might be room for
somebody in that arena. Also, somebody who had a somewhat different view
of how not-for-profits, in particular — in general, and colleges and
universities, in particular, ought to be managed and operated. At the
conclusion of securing my master’s degree at U. Mass., the treasurer, who
was the Chief Financial Officer at U. Mass. at the time, created three
positions to report jointly to him and the dean of a particular college. To help
serve, support the Dean in the academic college, administratively,

�particularly financially, budget development and administration, but as I say,
reporting jointly to the dean and to the treasurer. I was the first one hired in
this role, as it turned out my classmate and roommate, apartment-mate, was
the second one hired. My posting was to the graduate school, his was to the
school of business. The graduate school at U. Mass. at that time had about
52 hundred students, had its own admissions operation, registrar’s operation,
the University academic computing center reported there. The associate dean
for research was in that office, so it was a very eclectic kind of arrangement
and mirrored, in many regards, what a small college and university would
be.
LG: How long did you stay there?
KB: I was there from 1967 to 1977, and throughout that I was the Business
Manager in graduate school, then became Associate Budget Director for the
University, and subsequent to that there were financial problems and the
chancellor requested that I become the chief business person at the School of
Education. And I was an Assistant Dean of Education at the time. I had an
opportunity for a career change; I took the opportunity. U. Mass. had grown
very much when I was there. When I first went there it was twelve thousand,
five hundred students, when I left in 1977 it was twenty-five thousand
students. With no disrespect to anybody, but the faculty had unionized, it
was very different and it was very much political — part of the state,
Massachusetts higher education system, it was very difficult to get things
accomplished, both in terms of bureaucratic processes and scale. I applied
for and was appointed Treasurer at Colby College in Waterville, Maine,
which had about sixteen hundred students at that time. And had more control
over its own destiny, not that there aren’t campus politics but about two
layers was removed. And I was there for five years and then had the
opportunity to come to Skidmore in September of 1981.
LG: How did you hear about the Skidmore position?
KB: I think I probably read about it in the Chronicle of Higher Education.
LG: And you had an on campus interview with whom?
KB: Well in the Skidmore tradition it was a staff of, it was a group of thousands. I
mean it was a day and a half or two days on campus. Joe Palamountain was
the president at the time, so I met with him, I met individually with Dave

�Marcell, who was the provost, Eric Weller, who was the dean, Dave Long,
who was the VP for … development, I think, at the time. Business Affairs
staff, Steve Harran and Ted Butler. Claire Olds was the personnel director at
the time. Some students, many faculty. Mark Gelber was on the faculty, was
a member of the, a faculty member of the search committee. Mary Lynn was
on that group at the time. I can’t remember most of the others. Had a very
good, a pleasant session with my predecessor’s predecessor, Jim McCabe,
who was a former Vice President. But anyway, it was quite an experience.
LG: [laughs] So, and that was what year, again?
KB: That was in June or early July of 1981, when the college was using, … I
don’t know whether, I guess she was a friend, Nancy Martin Archer, Archer
Martin was her name, and she was the search consultant.
LG: So when you started work in 1981, what challenges did you face?
KB: Well, I was not here, I guess I would say thankfully, in one regard, in the bad
old, real bad old days, but I was here when days weren’t so good, either,
particularly financially. Let me step back for just a second and say one of the
things that appealed to me about the Skidmore opportunity was that it was,
relative to … I won’t call them Skidmore’s peers, at the time, but relative to
the competition, Skidmore was a very young institution and did not have 200
years of hidebound procedures, legacies, histories to have to deal with, and I
felt, and Joe Palamountain reinforced the notion, that there was an
opportunity for someone with a different perspective and some energy to
come in and accomplish things, without having to be a slave to, again, as I
say, 200 years of “the way we always did it.”
KB: So coming to Skidmore in September, the fiscal year was June 30th, I was
surprised, among other things, that their annual audit had not been yet
completed. And so, Joe’s team and the board didn’t have much of an idea
about how the college stood. And this was, you know, we were less than ten
years into co-education, enrollments were a challenge, Louise Wise, the
Director of Admissions at the time, was scrambling to fill beds. That year, in
particular, the college had what it characterized as an “over-enrollment,”
against what they had planned, or they had imagined, I think might be a
better word than planned, would be the enrollment, and were renting spaces
downtown, in School 7, the Van Dam building, and the community motel,
for students. And how do we deal with that thing, that arrangement? We

�were running busses, anyway, to Moore Hall, this was two, at least two,
more stops. How do they get services, how do you arrange for them to get
meals and so forth. So that was a challenge. The board had made the
decision, either the previous February or May board meeting, to build a new
sports center, which was seen at the time to be an addition to the Lodge. So,
that was my first construction project on this campus. And very interesting,
very … very different from the style of architecture elsewhere on campus, I
would point out.
The big job was to get to know the place and do some staffing. The area for
which I was responsible at the time was called Business Affairs; it was not
adequately staffed. The, then personnel function, now Human Resources,
was essentially two people: Claire Olds, former Dean of Students, former
Dean of Women and then Dean of Students, and Marianne Castelot and it
was very clear that that area, given what was happening in society and on
campuses, that area needed to be beefed up and needed to have somebody at
its head who was more experienced, professionally experienced, in
employment law, among other things, and good practices.
LG: So had the architects and plans already been done for that sports center?
KB: They were two-thirds done, I mean it was … one of the things I found,
coming to Skidmore, and understandably so, was that the college never had,
up to that point, sufficient resources to build buildings, design and build
buildings that had sort of a common theme, and so forth. So what we
needed, the college needed at the time for its dance program, athletics, et
cetera, was space. And they couldn’t afford to, yet, to pay for the kind, the
amount of space, they needed, with … wrapped in a finer quality skin, if you
will, than we had. It was something that, you know, one of the realities of
life. When I came to Skidmore, when we finally got the audit for the year
ending June 30, 1981, the market value of the endowment was 7.3 million
dollars, and the comprehensive fee was ninety-four hundred dollars. So the
place, the college, was used to being under-resourced. And, I would say, I
said back then, I would say at least up until the point in time that I retired,
Skidmore became what it was, and what it is today, in terms of what I would
categorize as the middle of the top tier of institutions, independent of the
largest colleges, on the backs of the faculty and staff, trustees and students.
Everybody uniformly put their shoulder to the wheel and pushed because
they were all invested in what this … what the vision of this institution was.
They gave fringe benefits rather than salaries, because it was less expensive

�to do so. And people were very grateful for that. So, the … whatever story
there was behind the now Williamson Kettering Williamson Sports Center,
was a function of, “we need the space for our programs; it can’t be a pretty
space.”
One of the things that we were able to do early on is … and I would, I had, I
made the case but I had a lot of support from the academic leadership of the
college and ultimately the president and trustees, was to try to move our
construction program up a notch or two in terms of quality, design, location.
Much of what I know of the early development of this campus comes from,
you know, other people … people like Joe and Jim McCabe, Dave Marcell,
Erwin Levine, Mark Gelber, and so forth. I didn’t experience it all myself
but I observed the results. One of the early things that the college had to deal
with was when they acquired this property there was a lot of a limestone
ledge not very far below the surface. And most, if not all, of the early
buildings are three feet higher in the air because it was less expensive to go
up than to blast and go down. [chuckles].
LG: Were there any other buildings that you were involved in?
KB: Oh, there was a whole range. Ahh … what did we do, we did a residence hall,
we did Harder Hall, temporary space [laughs]. Ahh … we renovated a large
space, took Starbuck Center, which was a student social space, at one time,
converted it into offices and so forth. Did the same with Barrett, that was in
process when I first arrived, but Barrett was another student lounge, student
center, at the time. We did Tisch, a learning center. Umm, certainly we did
the Tang. I was involved in the planning process, design process, for the
Northwoods apartments, the same with the Zankel. I was … I retired before
they were, the Northwoods were just about completed when I retired, the
Zankel was, we were still seeking funding as I recall. We did the library,
additions on this library, during that tenure. We did the big addition to Case
Center.
LG: A lot of change!
KB: Well yes, and the change was a function of, I think, the growing reputation
and acceptance, acknowledgement of the student population, potential
student population, of what Skidmore was and could be. It was a change,
recognizing a change, in how curriculum was developed and delivered. The
other thing I would comment on is that there was tremendous growth in

�terms of the number of employees. When I came there were maybe 250,
possibly 300 employees — faculty and staff. When I retired there was over
600, and now I understand its up over 800. But that’s a function of legal
requirements; Title 9, in terms of women’s athletics, greater use of
delivering … a need for counseling services, computing services, athletic
teams, balancing mens and women’s teams, in terms of offerings, new
additions to the curriculum, there’s a lot of new majors and so forth, greater
health services, more staff for that.
LG: In the course of your years, who were the presidents of the college? You
started with Joe …
KB: Joe Palamountain hired me, and then retired after six years. The college then
hired David Porter, for almost 12 years, Jamienne Studley for four, Phil was
here two years, when I retired.
LG: You’ve really seen everybody after Val Wilson. Umm …?
KB: I mean I, yeah, and I’d like to comment about that. I think Skidmore, this
college, is today, is what it is today, in a large part because of Joe
Palamountain’s presidency. Joe, in my opinion, saved this college. Val died
prematurely, and Joe, who had little institutional experience, he had been
provost at Wesleyan, came and saw what needed to be done in terms of
bringing this campus in this location to a meaningful presence, and I think
he surrounded himself with a good, a great team, and was able to move
forward. I think when he chose to retire and the board hired David Porter, at
the risk of seeming immodest, I think David was able to do what he did best,
which was faculty interaction and support, because he inherited a very good
support team. Dave Marcell and EricWeller, Dave Long, … I was part of the
team, whether history will decide whether I was a major contributor or not
[chuckle]. But that meant that David could rely on those folks to take care of
daily operations, doing the stuff that needed to be done, so that he could visit
faculty in their offices and focus on his vision for academic and
programmatic growth of the college.
LG: You were here at the point when Phyllis Roth took a year, two different
times,
KB: She, Phyllis, was acting president when David took sabbatical, and that was

�for like six months, and then in the interim period after David’s retirement,
in December, she completed that fiscal, that academic year and the first
portion, I think it was, of the following.
LG: From your point of view was that seamless?
KB: Yes, yes.
LG: You might comment on, aside from their different interests and talents that
the various presidents brought, in what ways did their interactions with your
area change … or grow?
KB: Well, Joe was fairly hands off. He described, when we had our first or second
interview, he described his leadership style as sort of a team approach or
what he called a matrix management style. Which meant that the president’s
staff, which at the time I think it was six of us, met weekly around a table
and discussed whatever the important issue was in each of our divisions, and
decisions were made collectively, and if … Joe was the referee to the extent
that one was necessary, which it rarely was, and by the end of the
conversation if, in fact, we couldn’t reach a conclusion, which we often did
in one sitting, we all knew what the marching orders were, I mean, Joe
would say, “yes, let’s do that,” or “let’s take some more time,” or whatever.
And he said, at the time, and there is, in trustee minutes or board books or
somewhere, that the president and the vice president, presidents, were what
was called board appointed officers. That is, he would recommend to the
board the hiring or appointment of the chief academic officer or the chief
business officer or whatever, but the appointment was by the board. Deans
were not. They reported to board appointed officers, and that worked well, I
think, for the times.
Oh, I was very, very impressed by one instance that I can recall very clearly,
that I had, and this was during budget development time. I had an issue, and
I can’t even remember what it was, it might have been in the computing
center, where I needed fifty thousand dollars more than the preliminary
budget figures required. We all talked about it in the room and Dave Long,
VP for external affairs, said, “I can help you with that. I’ll give you fifty
thousand dollars out of my budget.” No great hassle, no … what I would
characterize as infighting, we were part of a team. And we would all meet, I
think it was bi-weekly, one-on-one with Joe, just to talk specifically about
things in our areas. Rarely, unless they were personnel, there was rarely any

�decision made — it was more information exchange and obtaining
perspectives, one to the other. But really the decision making was collective.
I think, erroneously, many people thought that that made Joe sort of aloof
from the operations. He wasn’t, it was just his style.
When David came, again I think he set his priorities as the faculty and
academic programming. We would still have president’s staff meetings. He,
pretty much, continued with the matrix style of operation and the recognition
of a differential between board-appointed officers and other senior members
of the community. There were, to the best of my recollection, no major
personnel changes during the period between David’s retirement and Jamie’s
coming on board that Phyllis had to deal with, in that regard. Essentially it
was, the time when, it was time to go to construction on the Tang. And I
remember very clearly Phyllis being on the top of an excavator with one of
the construction team’s people, coming around a grove of trees, in a hard hat
and leading … But that was what I remember as the most visible nonacademic activity that Phyllis got involved in, I mean new activity.
Jamie was very different, in my opinion she … I don’t know quite how to
phrase it, she didn’t pay as much attention to the notion of separation of
board appointed officers and their roles and responsibilities and others. The
size of the president’s staff increased, Don McCormack was added to the
group … and …
LG: And Don was, at that time?
KB: Don was Dean of Special Programs — had been, for a great long time. But,
not but, his reporting relationship was to Dave Marcell, as Provost, or
whoever the chief academic officer was, as Dave had left at that time to go
to Rollins. But anyway … things, from my perspective, got much more
centralized in the office of the president. She was very hands on, involved in
lots of decision making. …
LG: So the president’s staff had less of a voice?
KB: As a collective, yes, it was much more one-on-one. It was like a wagon
wheel, with Jaime as the hub, the rest of us were spokes, more decisions got
made in her office than in the conference room. I had been at the college for
whatever it was, eighteen or twenty years at the time, had my relationships
with various trustees, that gave me a level of independence that a newer, less

�tenured, not in terms of tenure, but in terms of time, other officers might
have. So like the Vice president for Development or even the faculty, at the
time. So, I mean it was just different styles, and different times, as well.
LG: And what about Phil?
KB: Well we worked together for two years and he was getting his feet under him,
again. He was interested in knowing, housing-wise, I guess, of some of the
things that we were doing, in terms of bond issues, for instance, and things
of that nature. That was the level of his engagement in the Business Affairs
area.
LG: So Karl, in all of that, tremendous amount of change, what was the most
exciting for you, the most pleasant, let’s say?
KB: Well I think in terms of Business Affairs, at the time it was a very eclectic
kind of division. I mean we had dining services and post office and
bookstores and computing centers and so forth and so on. But certainly, in
terms of construction, the design process of the Tang was the most
interesting to me. Again, many members of a community that views itself as
being very inclusive and so forth aren’t aware, I guess, of what’s included in
the bylaws of a non-profit organization. The bylaws of Skidmore, at the
time, and I’m sure they haven’t changed much, said that the Business
Affairs, the vice president for Business Affairs, under the president, is the
one responsible for the design and construction of the buildings and the
facilities. So, I, when David and the faculty, particularly the art faculty,
decided that we should have a museum, and the trustees were not enthralled
with that notion, at the time primarily because their vision of a museum was
a place where you showed artwork, paintings and sculptures and so forth,
and Skidmore couldn’t afford that, given all the other challenges and desires
that it had, and David, working with, must have been Bennie Wise, Phyllis at
the time, and other faculty, determined that this would be a teaching
museum. It would be integrated into the curriculum of the college, and take
advantage of the college’s reputation in the arts, “art” arts, but make sure
that students were there, involved in that facility, as part of their experience,
their Skidmore experience, not just to go and view masterpieces and so
forth.
And so the board authorized us to do a teaching museum, I convened a
group, with recommendations from Phyllis as to faculty members and who

�would be there. We got alumni involved in it, trustees involved, and staff,
and we had a search committee for an architect. And Tad Kuroda was
intimately involved in that and working with Tad was just an absolute joy.
We ended up with Antoine Predock. His name was surfaced by Jim
Kettlewell, who was on the search committee. We winnowed ourselves
down to three architects, the finalists, and Tad and I visited them in their
studios. Antoine Predock, Frank Gehry in California, Predock in New
Mexico and Robert Venturi in Philadelphia. And traveling with Tad, and
these were typically two day visits or whatever, was just an absolute joy.
Both in terms of focus on the questions we were asking of the architect and
so forth, but also spending free time together. We went to a baseball game
out in Los Angeles, for instance, and that worked out very good. Tad was a
baseball fan, a big fan. And we watched the Dodgers play, I can’t remember
whom, but we were up in the cheap seats because we got tickets last. And
the Dodgers had an Asian, Japanese, I think, pitcher who was lightening, he
was just very very good, and we ended up in these upper bleachers and … I
can’t tell you how many, but I bet you there were at least 25, maybe more,
folks there all Japanese or Japanese American. I was the only white guy
there. And Tad just tweaked me … “What’s it feel like to be a member of a
minority group now?” [laughs]. And it was all said in fun you know, in jest
and so forth, but it was just a positive experience.
We then had each of these three architects come to Skidmore, make
presentations in the Surry, and I kept playing my role, and part — one of my
roles was, “We’ve only got six million dollars to fund, to spend. How can
you bring your vision in for six million dollars?” Gehry said, “Oh, it might
be a little more than that,” but he wouldn’t give us a number. Predock came,
and he came at least one, maybe two, days early, met with us and he spoke
with faculty. One of the faculty members who we asked to take him on a
tour of the surrounding area and of the campus was Ken Johnson, head of
the Geology Department at the time. And Gehry was very much into designs
that were organic to the site, and we had a site picked out and a facade that
would blend very much, with colonial kind of construction and it was up
closer to the campus. Predock said no, you don’t … if you want this to be
integral to the campus you need to have it on a path where students go,
they’ll be forced to go by it or better yet through it. And so he selected this
site, made his point, and talked about it growing up out of the ground and it
would have this limestone-like exterior and you could go through it or you
could go over it, and it was just very very exciting. I mean, he had clearly
done his homework. Gehry and Venturi were older guys, whose reputations

�were more well established. Predock had a reputation but it wasn’t on the
same scale. They came in, did their dog and pony show and left. And I
believe, if my recollection is correct, when the search committee came to
make its final recommendation, I think it was Predock hands down. I mean I
cannot remember a dissenting voice there. And working with him and his
colleague, the vendor contractor, was just a joy. One of … Predock would
do these clay models and so forth and I remember looking at one that he
brought up, … and talked about these sloping roofs, “and we’ll plant grass.”
And I said, “no, we’re not going to do that. [laughs] I understand what
you’re trying to do, but I’m not going to ask the physical plant crew to be
mowing roofs. And this in wintertime and so forth and so on.” But just, and
from my, now more just in perspective I think that both the structure, the
museum structure, and the teaching aspects of it and the way it helps to both
inform and deliver the curriculum and students academic experience has just
been a remarkable success. It was a joy to have had a role in that.
LG: Anything else that you want to add?
KB: Well I would say … hiring Barbara Beck as the Human Resources officer
who took, what was really, with no disrespect to her predecessors, sort of a
paper processing operation into a comprehensive Human Resource function
that helped department chairs and faculty with leadership issues and problem
solving. Did a great job in terms of contract negotiations with, seven, at the
time, unions.
LG: Were you involved in her hiring?
KB: I hired her.
LG: Ok.
KB: With some faculty dissent who thought that the person from corporate, GE,
couldn’t be successful in an academic environment. Not true.
LG: Ok. Anything else that we haven’t touched on that you have been thinking
about?
KB: Well, I think that … I can’t quite remember the circumstance, I that that, I
guess when Dave left, Dave Marcell, yes, the range of the number of
divisions that reported, yes, we were going to do away, they did away with

�the Provost title, and it became Vice President for Academic Affairs and
Dean of the Faculty; Dave’s and Eric’s function was combined. There were
then questions about whether, since that sort of had a less diffuse focus in
terms of divisional areas of responsibility, more focused on the faculty and
academic program, what would happen to the various divisions. And Dave’s
was … David Porter said Dean of Faculty would continue to report to the
Academic Vice President, though I think it was Associate Dean at the time,
and the Director of Admissions would report directly to David, Dean of
Special Programs…
LG: David Porter?
KB: David Porter. Dean of Special Programs would report to David Porter,
umm…, oh, Dean of Student Affairs would report to David Porter.
Computing Center would report to me. And one of the things that I argued
vociferously for, in opposition to positions that Michael Arnush and others
took, was, … who was suggesting that the Computing Center be split
between academic computing and administrative computing, with academic
computing reporting to the Chief Academic Officer of the College. I kept
saying, “No, we want one person to be responsible for both areas so there’d
be better coordination and articulation of their vision and their role with
directors of academic computing and administrative computing.” Ken
Hapeman was there at the time, Leo Geoffrion, and Stan McGaughey, and I
said, “I just did not want essentially the same general function, computing,
vying for resources, vying for the same resources. I want one person to make
the case, to be … if they were going to report to me, and ultimately to the
president.” And so we did that and I think that worked out very well and it’s
still the case today with Bill Duffy, and formerly Justin …, I can’t remember
Justin’s last name, being an attendee at the Dean’s staff meetings. So that
portion of the loop was better represented, I guess. I think that, it’s not just
me, it’s the team that was in place with the support of Joe and David in
particular, that the professionalism at the College, in terms of … well the
areas in Business Affairs, and not exclusively, but elsewhere, have just come
leaps and bounds. And I would say, I have said and I would repeat, again at
least for the time that I was privileged to be at the college, that most
members of the Skidmore community have … had no idea how well they
were served by the senior directors in Business Affairs. The Ken Hapemans,
Barbara Becks, Phil Cifarelli, Chris Kaczmarek, umm, we ran into some
turmoil for a bit in facility services but got that squared away…

�LG: Who was running that?
KB: Well when I came it was Bob Jarvis, who did a wonderful job. Colonel
Jarvis! [laughs] So when he retired, which many have said that was the
worst thing he’d ever done, we had some trouble just getting the right focus
and coordination. And ultimately, I decided to outsource the leadership, to
Marriott, which became Sodexo, and so forth, but I understand they are
doing a fantastic job. We insisted that the employees, the … unionized
employees, would remain Skidmore employees, but the leadership would be
on Sodexo’s payroll. But they were every bit as much a Skidmore employee.
If they had to make a choice between what was right for Sodexo and what
was right for Skidmore, Skidmore had to be it. And they were not to wear
their Sodexo uniforms on campus.
LG: So what was Sodexo’s responsibility, again?
KB: Well Sodexo’s role was the leadership of facility services. The professional
staff, the foreman and assistant … director and assistant director, but the line
folks were our …were Skidmore employees. But I would say, you know, all
… and I would take great credit for, well I would take some credit for this in
terms of, at the time, the Business Affairs staff, their professional growth
and leadership and management style all in service of the academic and
student affairs programs at Skidmore College. I think it’s grown; I think the
college is well served by it, not without challenges. I would say, I have said
to, particularly to David Porter when he showed up, when he arrived, and I
said the same to Jamie and I’ve said the same to Phil, shortly after he
arrived, “Skidmore College could afford to do anything it chose to do. It
could not do everything it wished to do.”
LG: And with that, thank you. That was a wonderful ending.
KB: A great privilege. One of the greatest privileges of my life, to work at
Skidmore.
LG: Excellent. Thank you so much.
KB: Well you’re very welcome.

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                    <text>THE SARATOGTAN. SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1923.
JL

*M^™t' i m W P W — ^ - f

Map and Description of Proposed New Zoning Plan for City
Public Invited to Attend
Meeting of Council for
Discussion Moday Night
Th» City Council, to enabl* Beratogiaaa to obtain * elea r idea. Of the
propped ordinance to son* tha city
of Saratoga Sprinf s has prepared the
map plated on this page of The Saratogian.

RwWwU o' tho city i r t requested
hi tie apuajli *Bd members ©r tho
SSepinj aotsiniUee to ear#mUy study
till m%» and to ho present At tho
couaell posting Monday night when

are concerned. None of these buildings, however, shall be more than
three stories in height.
Zoo* C include* hotels, boarding
house*, fraternal home*, e t c , in addition to ton buildings allowed under
the two previous mentioned sones.
Zone D is unrestricted. It include*
the outside tax district, the principal
business section of Broadway and
virtually all that section of the city
between tho Delaware «c Hudson ratif
road on the west and Henry street
on tho east.
Section 6 of the proposed ordinance provides for the continuation
of any business regardles* of its location which may be in existence at the
time the ordinance is passed.
"A nonconforming use existing, or
authorised by a !***« in writing duly
executed," the ordinance states, "at
the time of the passage of this ordinance, may be continued. But such
non-conforming use shall not ho extended, nor shall a structure designed, arranged or intended for nonconforming use, In whole or in part,
be enlarged, except for a conforming
use."
A penalty of a fine not exceeding
$100 and in case of non-payment of
the fine a jai) sentence of ten days
is fixed by section 8 of the ordinance.

the m*tt#* will »*« dUjeuseod.
Tho *eqia.g OFdinanoe, oa« of tho
ntempera of tho committee said today,
i!j Jar the purpose of regulating and
Fdltrjetiag tho lpesMan at trades nod
industries, ao4 ths lQCftUOB Of bttlW'
lags designed tor special uses.
The city under the proposed ordinance is divided into four zones
4Ho«m OQ the tpap ann" shaded to
[co.FreiBoa.d. v'th the table PflBtod holow.
Jfone A. Indicated In light shading;
'Zone B. indicated in heavy shading;
[ l M # S» i d e a t e d in Wack; Zone D,
(indicated, in vh»to.
Zona A-^J-TD Zone A no building or
premises. sk&amp;U be used and »0 build*
iag shall be eFeeted, whieh Is *?•
fASff4. iptJiadOd 6P designed to he
used except for one or pore of the
following uses.
(a) Ope family dwellings not exceeding tferep atopici in height, inProposals Explained
chidin?: tho office of a physician, surExplaining the proposals, the zongeon, dontiit, lB*yeH, civil engineer
ing commission made the following
or architect residing; therein.
statement" todayfW t!fcutrehe*.
•The Zoning O w a i i i l W l tried to
(8) Callages, libraries Qr publiv
make the plan submitted to the counmuseums.
(d) Private garage or stable for cil meet the special needs of our city.
*&gt;9t more than five vehicles, or five The plan calls lor four zones. FIRST,
a one-family residential district, the
horses for prjvato pr family use.
iooation of which is but a small part
Zone B—TQ IRooe S PO building or of onr city and in which only onepremises shall be used, and HO build family residential houses are permit
Jpj5 Shall b n erected, "which is arrange ted. The district roughly being both
od, intended or designed to'be used. sides of North Broadway and over
accept for one or more of the uses to D. &amp; H. railroad track and north
permitted in Zpne A. except for pri- of the p. &amp; H. railroad track and
vate dwellings for one or more fam* north of Van J&gt;am street, also from
•lies apt fiicodiug three stories in Union Avenue to Lake Avenua out to
jPeight^ Including apartment bouses the city limit*. 8BCOND, a two family apartment house, residential disjlOjr private families.
,
trict, the location of which is on th*
Zone C-^-In Zona C no building or east sida of B. &amp; V, railroad track,
iptemises shall be used and no build- soQtk to Crescent rtreet and south o(
4mg ehall be exacted which i l arrang- Van Dam stret and west of the D. &amp;
ed, intended pr designed to bo uaed H. railroad track with a few excep.
jeiscept for on* ei&gt; more of tho uses tions along the Adirondack railroad
f por»itted in Zones A and B. and ox* track which is reserved for business.
f&amp;pt for hotels, boarding houses, sani- THIRD, the section adjacent to the
tarium*, phtianthropie. fraternal or Reservation and south of Congress
oleomosynary uses, or institutions street, which is a one-or two-family
residential district with apartment
Other than correctional.
and hotels and
disZone D—Zone D js unrestricted, ex. houses reserved running a larsesouth
trict is
to the
oept for any business that may be- corporation line. FOURTH, business
tome a nuisance.
diatrtct or unrestricted district which
Business, generally, under pro- is roughly between the rt. &amp;
vision* of *ho proposed city ordinance M. railroad and the D. £ H.
to zone the city of ^Saratoga Springs railroad including land south of ConWill be confined to its present loca- gress street and west of the D. &amp; H.
tions and to future development in This district permits all business, except slaughter houses and occupa
the ootside tax district of tho city.
Tho mala business section of the tions prohibited by law, can be mainCity, under the proposed zoning ordi- tained and also any kind of houses a*
nance will be confined to that section loDg as they comply with the fire law.
"In following
four divisions,
Bounded on the east by Henry street you will- notice these the residential
that
and on the west by tho Delaware «c district will be protected by restricf
Hudson railroad track*. It will ex- tions which increases their value and
tend north in Broadway as far as does not interfere vdth the value of
*o* railroad tracks and south to any property therein.
(Washington street, when it will take
"The hotel district is taken care
*a south and west* direction to Oak of, and the race track is protected
street and than south west again to by leaving the land south of Crescent
street adjacent to the track open open
Use outside district.
so that the race track can maintain
Business already located In tho
oity will be unmolested by tho pro- all the stables there. The business
section is left with room on each side
posed Ordinance.
so that the natural growth will be
Hotels, bearding houses, sanitar- taken care of for quite a few years.
wns. fraternal building* and other inThe committee has tried to protect
stitutions, unless already erected the special interests of ail the propwill be confined to those sections of erty owners and zoned according to
the city south of the City Park, west the needs of the city* and in a simple
of Circular street ahd east of the manner and submit the plan for apIt. &amp; H. tracks. That section of the proval or such suggestions as the
city east of Bryan street, north of council and the people may deem
SStst avenue and west of Maplo ave- wise."
The zoning commisailon consists of
nue Is plso open for the construction
Walter P. Butler, chairman, E. D.
Of buildings of this nature.
StarbUCk, Harry W. Leonard, W.
Under provisions of the rules gov- Frink Ingham and Benjamin Wallemln*? Zone A, North Broadway, bridge.
Union avenue, that section of the
'
I
III I H I
tlQ I
city east of Circular street snd between Lake and Union avenue and a
largo section of the city referred to
on the map as Zone A is restricted
to one family dwellings, and other
buildings of a setni-business character
Zone B which in nearly everv Jnce adjoins Zone A in addition to
St. f^ouls, April 21.—Despite his
the buildings allowed in Zone A is noble last minute effort which veterunrestricted insofar as dwellings for an billiard enthusiasts declared wae
on* of more private families ana the most remark able performance
apaxtsrwnt nouses for private families they evar had Been under the condiI
tion*. Albert CntJw of New Tort rnliaauiahed hie short eto» 18.3 balk
line billiard championship to Charles
C. Peterson of St. Lonis here last
night. At the end of their last 400
point block, the local wizard was on
the long end ef an 80A to 784 score.
It took Peterson twenty-three innings
to complete his 400.
•' ssp* m
m

CUTLER LOSES GAME
m FIGHT WITH CUE

I0THER OF
URGE FAMILY
•

•

mmtendft Lydia £ . Pinkft Vegetable Compound
to Other Mothers
Minn.—"I wax so run-down
good for nothing. I wax to
become the mother
of my ninth child, and
1 thought I did oot
have the strength
to go through with
IL I took Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetabie (^wpoTOtl, and
it has surely done all
1 could ask it to do
nod I am tatting all
ray frtenda about it.
I haven nice big baby
_Jgirl and am feeling
may use this letter to help
bther Idefc mothers. ** — Mi*. C aV.
if osom, Bos 634, Window, Minn.

My First Child
Glen Aflem, Alabama^-"! ^ j J ^
Ma's Vegetable Compound for
bearing-down feelings and pain*. I was
trouMM in this way for nearly tour
rears following the birth of my first
M,and at times could hardly Stand en
^ H H f c A neighbor recommended the
beoeftt ft has nlisvsd my pates and
give* wje strength. I WKsosniaand it and,

PINK' GARDNER
INJURED IN BOUT

MIDDLE GROVE

COLLEGE BASEBALL

April 20.—The Ladies' Aid Society
— — - -* i
met with Mrs. Grover Dake at ltock
Yesterday's Results.
At State College, Pa.—Backnell, 4;
City Falls Thursday of this week.
Fenn State. I,
It was an all-day meeting.
At Washington—Harvard, I; Uni*
The Rev. Elw/a Baker 6f Sloahs- verslty of Maryland, 0.
Pete Gardner of Schenectady won vllle is expected to occupy the pulpit
At Springfield, Mass.—Dartmouth,
THE ARCTIC OCEAN
the first fall and was forced to with- as a candidate at the "Baptist ehuroh S; Spriugtield college, ».
The Arctic ocean is aatd by Scien- draw from the match after three
Today's Games.
tists to be getting appreciably Warmer. more minutes of wrestling.
next Sunday.
At Albany—Uuion vs. State Teach*
"Pink" Gardner of Schenectady lost
A doraiuo social will be held at the ers' College.
to Joe Turner of Washington, in the home of A, J. Deyoe Saturday eve
At. Troy—Stevens Institute
VI.
feature wrestling match staged last ding of this week baginQlng at %:'3Q Rensselaer Poly.
night in the Schenectady ftrirtOry. o'clock. All are invited.
At New York—Wesleyan vs. New
Gardner was injured when he lost
Tho music PlaSS Is practising ft play York University.
both from Joe Bausch of Albany in to he given in a lew weeks,
At New Haven —Yale vs. Dart*
the semi-finals.
Dake Brothers have purchased a mouth.
At WllUamatown—Williams
vs.
new truck to carry milk from their
farm to the ice c e a m plant at Kings. Norwich.
At Boston—Boston College vs. VerMiss Gladys Blowers and Miss
All Over Face, Hands and
mont.
Carolyn Kyctechymer of Ballston Spa
At Annftpolts—N.lvy vs. William
' were home the first parr of the week
Armsi Cutlcura Heated.
and Mary.
| and attended the music cits*.
At Priuceton—Princeton vs. Penn"I Suffered badly with pimples all
Mrs. Flora Rhoadea nnri Mrs. Wilmy fact, hands and arms. The
liam IMowers were Ball^tou Spa visi- sylvania.
yknpks festered and
Art New York—Tufts vs. Ford ham.
tors SattirflAv.
itched and burned, causAt Easton,
Pa.—Lafayette
vs.
Baltimore, April 21.—Outfielder J.
ing me t6do much scratchSR'arihmore.
J. Jones and Pitcher Matt lCirley of
Irif. My face was disfigAt West Point—Army vs. Catholic
UNION ATHLETES RETIRE.
the Syracuse International league
ured and ! could not put
Sehegectady, April lt.~«ftoxei Paw University.
club, have been sold to the Binghammy hand* In water or do
At Ithaca-*Cnrnvll vs. Columbia.
ton, N, Y., olub. Manager SUaugh- terson of New York, captain !&lt;nd
my regular work. I lost
Crack quarter miler man or tit^ UnAt Washington—Georgetown VS.
nessey of the Syracus* team, anSteep every night because
ion College track team, has been Johns Hopkins.
nounced hero today,
they bothered aae eo.
forced to give up his arses woik oa
At Wllllamstown—Williams
va,
— •
TTI- - I X Q J t
I, ,|
"I save Cudcure Soap and OintI
account or illness and will not be Connecticut Aggies.
ment advertised so purchased some,
able to corape*e In the opening meet
TRIAL ADJOURNED.
Al New Brunswick—Rutgers vs.
and after using three cakes of OutiSt. Joseph, Mich., April 21.—(Bj with Trinity here, May S. Kirk wood Ursinufi.
cura Beao and two boxes of Cutieura
.••"mi-Hi
i n
The Associated Press.)—The trial of Persouius of Klmira, another last
Ointment I wee completely heeled."
Charles E. RuLhenburg of Cleveland, man in the quarter, is out for th«
(Signed) Miss Congetta Oaetaoo.
TO MEET IN GQUVBRNtU*.
charged with criminal syndicalism remainder of the season a* a result
511 Eagle St., Utice, N. Y.
Oswego. N. Y., April 21.—The
Elinef Q. Northern Methodist Episcopal conferwas In recess today to eootene again Of a nervous breakdown.
Use Coneure for afl t©fl*t purposes.
Monday when, the state has anaounc- Oliphant, director ef physical educa- ence in session here today roteo to
ed, Francis Morrow, department of tion and coach at rhi trae* team, is hold the 1924 confertnea la the
Justice operative K-17, Will tAke the endeavoring to develop new material First Methodlat Episcopal chunh, of
I for thf tostttr mil*
stand.
I Gouvaiaeuf, N. Y.

WITH PIMPLES
i'

Wl—I

»

•

.

* &gt; • ! • • • II

•

I

SYRACUSE PLAYERS
GO TO BINGHAMTON

Ii

FRUIT A TIVES' SAVED
HER LIFE

Medicine Made from Fruit Juices and Tonics
Relieved Serious Stomach Trouble
8H07 Sncto Ave., Sacramento, Cal.
1 had Stomach Trouble for about
ten years; at last, it was so bad 1 got
Stomach Cramps two and three times
aweek. I trirdall kinds of expensive
medicines without rcsulU. After a
year of Stomach ('mm ps, I read about
•'Fruit-s-lives" and sent for a hot,
writing yonr firm that if MFruit-a
tires" did not help me, I would hava
to die. After the trial box* I felt
relieved so I kept on using "Fruit-at i v e s " for Several years and am
thankful to say that "Fruit-a-tives"
saved my life, Mrs. F. S. STOLZ.
"Fruit-a-tives" gives suchexoeileat
results in all cases of StomachTrouble
rmeauso this medicine is made from
the juices of apples, oranges, tigs and
prunes combined with tonics. It tones up and I n s t a t e s the.sternach
rauHTlM, increase* the supply of gastrlojuirn: and, at the same I tme, relieves
theConstipation and Bilious Headaches, from which so many Dysnephc* suffer.
60c a b o i T e for $3.50, trial sise 2.5c. At ail dealers or sent postpaid on
receipt of price by
11

FRtrrr-AynvKS LIMITED,
Ottawa, Can

SOOOEVPB!

London, Eng.

OGDENSBTIRG, N.Y.
Cnristchurch, tf.Z.

HAVE YOU READ THE GLASSKIIO k W

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                    <text>THE SARATOGIAN
nnd 1 he Saratoga Sun, Newt and BalUton Spa Daily News.

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y., MONDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1923.

THREE CENTS

NEW

S E R I E S , VOL. 64, NO. 288

Twelve

ZONING LAW ENACTED AGAIN FOR PROTECTION OF CI
Commissioners Favor Completion of Casino—Two Hurt in Acciden
COUNCIL MOVED
BY MENACE TO
LOCAL PROPERTY
Prominent Re.id.nt, Threaten
to Leave City if Not
Protected.

FOUND DEAD ON ROAD
Corning, N. Y., Dec. 24—Considerable
mystery
surrounds
the
death of William M. Cornell, 68, of
Tioga, Pa., near here, who
was
found dead along the Tioga highway after being s t r u c k supposedly
by a car last night. E r n e s t Miller,
of Corning, who w a s found in his
a witness
^ f S . " £ &amp; I"Tioga

TO TEACH NATIVES TRADES

INSPECTION OF
BUILDING BRINGS
DECISION TO ACT
Knapp, Leonard and Sherman
Make Visit to Structure.
TO COMPLETE CONTRACT

New Measure Will Permit the
Erection of Two Family
Houses.

PROTECTED AGAIN
EDITORIAL
T h e City Council ..cted wisely today in r e e n a c t i n g t h e zoning
o r d i n a n c e for t h e p r o t e c t i o n of p r o p e r t y in S a r a t o g a I p r i n g s .
D u r i n g t h e brief i n t e r v a l since t h e law w a s r e p e a l e d by t h e council
t h e r e h a v e been d e v e l o p m e n t s h e r e which m e n a c e d e v e r y p r o p e r t y
holder.
T h e r e h a s been evidence in s e v e r a l d i r e c t i o n s t h a t w i t h t h e prot e c t i o n a s s u r e d by t h e zoning l a w removed, p r i v a t e i n t e r e s t s i n t e n t
only on t h e i r own selfish e n d s , — a n d c a r i n g n o t h i n g for t h e city,—
w e r e m a k i n g moves f r a u g h t w i t h d a n g e r to e v e r y p r o p e r t y o w n e r .
^That t h t s m a l l e r p r o p e r t y o w n e r a s well a s t h o s e m o r e h e a v i l y
i n t e r e s t e d financially w a s e n d a n g e r e d is e v i d e n t from a d e v e l o p m e n t
on S p r i n g S t r e e t , opposite t h e City P a r k , w h e r e w o r k on a s h a c k
h a s b e e n s t a r t e d t h a t c a n n o t fail t o be a d e t r i m e n t to t h e city.
E l s e w h e r e t h e r e w e r e a c t i v i t i e s i n d i c a t i n g t h a t c e r t a i n i n t e r e s t s int e n d e d to t a k e speedy a d v a n t a g e of t h e o p p o r t u n i t y offered by t h e
r e p e a l of t h e law to build a n y k i n d of a building in any locality.
A s t h e city existed u n t i l n o o n t o d a y t h e r e w a s n o t h i n g to prev e n t a n y p e r s o n from building a g a r a g e or a g a r b a g e s t a t i o n in any
s e c t i o n of t h e city adjoining t h e m o s t a t t r a c t i v e r e s i d e n c e s .
T h e Council is to be c o n g r a t u l a t e d t h a t i t h a s a c t e d t h u s speedily
in t h e public i n t e r e s t .

CAROLS TO BE
SUNG TONIGHT
AT WHITE HOUSE
Grounds Will Be Thrown Open
For Participation by
Public
MAKE

PLANS

ABROAD

Seattle. Dec. 24—Equipped a s a
model floating school, the auxiliary
Preliminary Observance at the
power schooner, Boxer, will
sail Ritchie Brothers Will Go On
Vatican—Anglo-Saxon
from Seattle W e d n e s d a y on a novel
With Work, If Auexpedition for S o u t h e a s t e r n Alaska,
Day in Paris.
thorized.
At a special meeting called for where her officers will u n d e r t a k e
t h a t p u r p o s e a t noon today a t t h e to teach the n a t i v e s various t r a d e s
W a s h i n g t o n , Dec. 24—All
gates
Three m e m b e r s of the city counhome of Commissioner of A c c o u n t s including wireless telegraphy a n d
of the W h i t e H o u s e grounds will
Michael J. Mulqueen, t h e City navigation, ! t is announced by J. cil which will a s s u m e office J a n be t h r o w n
open tonight
while
they
Council r e - e n a c t e d a zoning o r d - H. W a g n e r , supervisor here of the u a r y 1, 1924, today stated
C h r i s t m a s c a r o l s a r e sung a t the
were in favor of completing
the
inance, which, according to A c t i n g U. S. b u r e a u of education.
north end of t h e mansion.
repairs and a l t e r a t i o n s to the CaMayor R i c h a r d J. S h e r m a n , e x —
«j a
sino building.
Mrs.
Coolidge, wife of the P r e s i p r e s s i n g the sentiment of the C o u n dent w a s the m o v i n g spirit In h a v Mayor-elect C. H . Knapp, Dr. A.
cill, will protect the property o w n ing the old c u s t o m revived a n d t h e
J. Leonard, commissioner of p u b e r s of the city "until such time a s
public will t a k e p a r t in the c e r e lic safety
and
R. J.
Sherman,
t h e Council can a p p o i n t a new
commissioner of finance, during an
monies.
c o m m i t t e e on zoning to go over t h e
inspection of the building
this
local s i t u a t i o n and frame a
new
The vested choir of the
First
morning, s t a t e d they were in faordinance."
Congregational church, where t h e
vor of a bond issue to complete
President a n d M r s . Coolidge w o r W i t h its publication today,
the
the Ritchie B r o t h e r s contract and
ship will lead t h e singing.
Muo r d i n a n c e will be offective i m m e d i an additional a p p r o p r i a t i o n of $13.sicians from t h e m a r i n e b a n d will
a t e l y . I t will be similar to
the
000 next y e a r to complete
the
assist.
ordianco w h i c h w a s repealed s e v r
work.
C h r i s t m a s in Vatican.
e r a l weeks ago, w i t h the exception
Public W o r k s Commissioner H e n Rome, Dec. 24—There were p r e t h a t it opens the w a y for t h e e r e c - Claim Capture of Cuernavaca,
ry M. Carr a n d Commissioner M.
liminary
Christmas
observances
tion of two-family houses in p r a c Forty Miles South of
J.. Mulqueen were a b s e n t .
Henry
tically a n y section of the city.
within t h e V a t i c a n today.
Capitol.
E. Ryall, who h a s been named a s
The g a r d e n e r s of the V a t i c a n
T o d a y ' s m e e t i n g w a s called
at
deputy commissioner by Mr. Carr,
gardens p r e s e n t e d the Pontiff w i t h
t h e r e q u e s t of President J a m e s B .
HEAVY
FIGHTING was present a t t h e inspection, but
W h i t e of the C h a m b e r of
C o m - NO
a t r i b u t e of flowers a n d fruit. L a t e r
stated he w a s u n a b l e to make any
m e r c e w h o w a s present, a d d r e s s P a r i s , Dec, 24«—(By T h e AssociP a r i s , Dee. 24.—Avalanches were all the m e m b e r s of the Sacred Coling the board on the zoning q u e s - Deny Evacuation of Puebla— s t a t e m e n t for the commissioner.
ated P r e s s ) — H e n r y M. Robinson, reported t o d a y from m a n y points lege w e r e received a n d tendered
The a l t e r n a t i v e c o n t r a c t with the l a w y e r a n d b a n k e r of Los Angeles, In Switzerland a n d in t h e P y r e n e e s . t h e i r good w i s h e s , t h e Dean of t h e
tion.
Federals Lay Claim
Ritchie B r o t h e r s provides for r e - h a s been selected a s the t h i r d A m "There h a v e been p e r s i s t e n t r e T h r e e snow slides o c c u r r i n g in college, C a r d i n a l Vanuetelli, delivto City.
decorating the i n t e r i o r of the din- e r i c a n to serve on the e x p e r t com- quick succession did considerable ering a n a p p r o p r i a t e address.
p o r t s , " Mr. W h i t e said, " t h a t since
ning room, r e n e w i n g the plaster m i t t e e s which are to I n v e s t i g a t e d a m a g e a r o u n d the hotel in Leisyn,
t o n i n g restrictions were lifted, c e r Pope P i u s responded with
ImV e r a Cruz, Dec. 24.—(By
The ceiling and sidewalls,
refinishing the .condition of Germany's finances Switzerland.
t a i n real e s t a t e dealers h a v e been
p r o m p t u r e m a r k s , ending by
exforce? and polishing
the
floor
a n d u n d e r the auspices of the r e p a r a m a k i n g a n effort to sell
s e v e r a l Associated Press}.—Rebel
Several of the open a i r clinics tending t h e C h r i s t m a s hope
that
properties in North B r o a d w a y a n d m a d e their n e a r e s t a p p r o a c h to strengthening the b a y windows. A tion commission.
for lung p a t i e n t s w e r e d a m a g e d God m i g h t b e glorified and p e a c e
board a n d
certain
o t h e r residential sections of
t h e Mexico City so far w i t h t h e c a p - new switch
T h e other two A m e r i c a n m e m - and some of t h e S i s t e r s of Mercy and good will prevail on
earth.
of
Cuernavaca, changes in the lighting system a r e b e r s previously selected a r e Charles were injured. S e v e r a l c h a l e t s w e r e
city, to p e r s o n s who intend to u s e t u r e y e s t e r d a y
C h r i s t m a s g r e e t i n g s in g r e a t v o l t h e m a s boarding houses, a n d t h a t forty miles s o u t h of t h e capital, also included in t h e Ritchie a l t e r - G. D a w e s a n d Owen D. Young.
carried off.
u m e a r e r e a c h i n g the Pope from
eome of these deals, including t n a t it w a s s t a t e d in a revolutionary native c o n t r a c t w h i c h totals a p Mr. Robinson, who is president
An a v a l a n c h e n e a r
C h a m b e r y all over t h e w o r l d .
of t h e E n o property, N o r t h B r o a d - communique issued here. T h e a d - proximately $12,000.
of t h e F i r s t National B a n k of L o s buried a m a n whose body h a s n o t
A n g l e - S a x o n Day in P a r i s .
vance, it w a s
said, w a s m a d e
way, have been practically closed.
The r e m a i n d e r of the w o r k in- Angeles and prominently identified been recovered.
Paris. D e c
24—The
Christmas
u n d e r t h e c o m m a n d of General F l - cluding t h e h e a t i n g p l a n t a n d a l - w i t h o t h e r financial
Institutions,
T h e s n o w which
covered
t h e celebration in P a r i s this y e a r will
"A n u m b e r of N o r t h B r o a d w a y
terations in the k i t c h e n building w a s a m e m b e r of the s u p r e m e econ- -Paris district h a d dropped today
r e s i d e n t s , " M r . W h i t e ealjSf "live In gueroa:
The forces a d v a n c e d from their which will fit it for a public libra- omic council a t the P a r i s peace In* t h e w a k e of d a m p woathel* With have a s t r o n g Anglo-Saxon flavor
S a r a t o g a S p r i n g s only b e c a u s e t h e y
Judging from indications today.
like tte city. It would be m o r e position in the s t a t e of Giuerrero r y will total a p p r o x i m a t e l y $13,000. conference in 1919. H e also r e p r e - a drizzling rain still falling.
Owing t 0 t h e favorable e x c h a n g e
m |&gt; *
mentoned sented the United S t a t e s a t t h e
convenient for t h e m to live e l s e - into Morelos of which C u e r n a v a c a The three councilmen
r a t e fully 75 per cent of the t a b l e j
conferw h e r e for their business in
n o t is t h e capital. N o h e a v y fighting above stated they w e r e in favor of first International J a b o r
reserved a t t h e city's leading r e s here, a n d they s t a t e t h a t t h e y will w a s repprted. T h e general s i t u a - a bond issue to cover the cost of ence.
taurants and brightest
Christmas
tion is u n c h a n g e d except for the the proposed work.
H e w a s created a Chevalier of
c h a n g e t h e i r place of residence if
resorts h a v e
been reserved
by
nearer a p p r o a c h
to the national
t h e y a r e not given protection."
Ritchie B r o t h e r s
today
stated the Legion of Honor in 1920. Mr.
English s p e a k i n g visitors, a m o n g
capital.
they would c a r r y out their origin- Robinson will be named a m e m b e r
In discussing the question m e m whom A m r i c a n s predominate.
Puebla has
not been evacuated al figures regardless of the t w e n t y - of t h e commission to e s t i m a t e t h e
b e r s cf t h e Council s t a t e d
that
For all of t h e m the supply of
they h a d noticed t h a t the chief a n d according to t h e rebel s t a t e m e n t five per cent increase in masons, a m o u n t of German capital abroad.
traditionally s u i t a b l e food promises
which a d d s t h a t the i n s u r g e n t s are bricklayers' a n d p l a s t e r e r s ' fcvages
All t h e delegates of the P o w e r s
p r a c t i c a l l y only objection to t h e
to be a m p l e . Owing to the glut in
%
f r e p r e s e n t e d on the r e p a r a t i o n comold zoning ordinance w a s the r e - engaged in h e a v y Jfighting w i t h fed- effective here J a n u a r y 1.
turkeys
N o Information p e r t a i n i n g to the t h e Lo'ndon m a r k e t for
mission have notified Colonel J a m e s
s t r i c t i o n it placed on the erection eral forces in the s u b u r b s .
identity of the m a n who called a t m a n y h e a v y consignments destined
An official g o v e r n m e n t bulletin
A. Logan, the American r e p r e s e n of two-family houses on the e a s t
issued from
Mexico City s t a t e s
t a t i v e t h a t they will a t t e n d a plen- t h e off ice. ef Dr. M. E . V a r n e y F r i - for E n g l a n d n e v e r go further t h a n
Bide of t h e city
that Puebla was captured Satura r y session of the commission to d a y n i g h t for t r e a t m e n t t o a g u n - Boulogne or C a l a i s a n d w e r e r e " T h i s , " said Commissioner
of
inexhaustible
be held shortly a n d Join In e x - s h o t w o u n d in his j a w h a s been turned i n s u r i n g a n
P u b l i c Safety A r t h u r J. L e o n a r d , day and t h a t one t h o u s a n d prisoners were t a k e n by federal forces
t e n d i n g the invitation to Mr. R o b - obtained, according to police r e - supply of food.
" w a s w h a t defeated the o r d i n a n c e
p o r t s . M r s . Varney,
who
was
———~~—m*m •»
" '•«
inson. v
w h e n the recent referendum
w a s in the e n g a g e m e n t .
alone in the office, informed the
The a t t a c k on the rebel s t r o n g taken."
police of the m a n ' s visit. T h e pohold w a s begun by t h r e e a i r p l a n e s
This w a s the general opinion of
lice s t a t e d they h a d been u n a b l e
which dropped b o m b s on the fort h e Council m e m b e r s a n d after t h e
to find a n y t r a c e of the m a n at
tresses of LOreto, S a n J u a n and
r e m o v a l of this restriction
had
Dublin, Dec. 24—(By T h e A s s o - either of the hospitals In t h e city
Guadalupe, a c c o r d i n g to Secretary
been a g r e e d upon, the a d o p t i o n of
ciated P r e s s ) — T h e F r e e S t a t e g o v - or in a n y physician's office.
of W a r S e r r a n o .
a new ordinance w a s moved
by
Erection of the new St. P e t e r ' s e r n m e n t today announced the r e "Immeditaely forces belonging to
Commissioner Leonard,
seconded
Gun Battle.
Marthe column c o m m a n d e d by Gen- parochlal school a n d parish house lease of Countess Georgina
by Commissioner George .W. A i n s is assured, the Rev. F a t h e r P a t r i c k | kievicz, one of the leading w o m a n
W a s h i n g t o n , Dec. 24.—The DelaA n o t h e r b a t t l e between men s u p w o r t h , being unanimously c a r r i e d . eral Martinez a d v a n c e d u p o n the
town a n d a t 11 o'clock advices r e - F. Scully a n n o u n c e d on Sunday at Republicans, who w a s a r r e s t e d here posed to be bootleggers a n d hi- w a r e &amp; H u d s o n railroad asked t h e
S a r a t o g a Springs h a s h a d only ported occupation of the city" the all of the m a s s e s in t h a t church. N o v e m b e r 27.
commission
j a c k e r s occurred n e a r the Lincoln i n t e r e s t a t e commerce
Blight experience with a
zoning General s t a t e d .
T h e government also announced
"The e n e m y w a s He stated t h a t t h e drive for funds
ordinance.
After consulting
a n defeated after fierce battling, gov- of the school h a d been completed t h a t between December 1 a n d Dec. b a t h o u s e out B r o a d w a y e a r l y F r i - today for permission to a b a n d o n a
d a y night. According to residents 13-mile b r a n c h line in N e w York
expert, a committee a p p o i n t e d by e r n m e n t forces t a k i n g
n u m e r o u s a n d announced final donations of: 22 political prisoners to the num. In the vicinity, the supposed liquor extending from C a n a d a
Junction
t h e council formed a zoning o r d i n - prisoners w i t h c a v a l r y sent in pur$500 from J a m e s A. Leary; and ber of 3,841 had been liberated.
Grand
car, escaped by u s i n g t h e roads to a connection with the
a n c e t h a t w a s adopted l a s t s p r i n g . spit of the forces c a p t u r i n g m a n y .
$100 each from Mrs. Mary Graul,
Canadian
winding
over
the
Reservation Trunk R a i l w a y on the
At this time Mayor J a m e s D. M c - The importance of t h e rebels deand William O'Erien.
border.
property.
N u l t y suggested, a n d the Council feat will be k n o w n w h e n t h e comF a t h e r Scully expressed his g r a t i Several shots were fired b y men
agreed, t h a t the question be s u b - m a n d e r sends detailed report."
tude to the m e m b e r s of the parish
In both c a r s . T h e
pistol battle
m i t t e d to the t a x p a y e r s l a t e r . C o n who had contributed so generously
s t a r t e d when the t w o c a r s were
forming to this promise to the t a x to the school and parish house.
d r i v i n g west over Cresent street.
p a y e r s , a referendum w a s
taken
Biddeford, Me., Dec. 24.—Wladek
When t h e
drive
was
begun.
T h e leading car drove
across
r e c e n t l y a n d the zoning o r d i n a n c e
Zbysko, the w r e s t l e r in a s k i n g for
F a t h e r Scully, instead of having an
B r o a d w a y a n d a r o u n d in r e a r of
w a s defeated.
outside director come in and take
the Lincoln bath house. T h e sec- a divorce, c h a r g e s t h a t his wife,
The defeat of the ordinance w a s
charge, conducted t h e drive perond c a r evidently lost the "scent" Amelia, h a s subjected him to cruel
flue, It w a s shown by the p e r s o n s
F r e n c h dirigible DIxmude
late sonally and m a d e a house to house
a s it r e t u r n e d north a few m i n u t e s and a b u s i v e t r e a t m e n t .
who voted, to the lack of a c t i v e l a s t n i g h t w a s hovering o u t
of canvass of his parish. This meant
The case is on trial list for t h e
later.
i n t e r e s t on the p a r t of persons w h o control over Foura
T a t a h o u l n e , a great deal of labor and
Chicago,
Dec.
24.—Christmas
J a n u a r y t e r m of the York county
hard
should h a v e been most i n t e r e s t e d , t h i r t y miles
south
of
Medinln,
this y e a r is unique in t h a t for the
Supreme C o u r t . Mrs. Zbysko Is a
a n d the activity of those w i t h a Tunis with fifty officers a n d men work on his part, a n d w a s a great first time in 300 years a l m o s t all
little over five feet high a n d of
saving for the P a r i s h .
personal interest in its r e p e a l w h o aboard, P a r i s a d v i c e s s t a t e .
slight build.
F a t h e r Scully s t a t e d yesterday It of Christendom in theory will celsucceeded in rounding u p a suffl&lt; a&gt; •
e b r a t e the day on Dec. 25.
would be possible t o ' build
both
ient n u m b e r of t a x p a y e r s to d e Chicago, Dec. 24—
This, m e a n s t h a t 125,000,000 conMystery s u r r o u n d s w h e r e a b o u t s school and parish house, now, w i t h feat the m e a s u r e .
W H E A T — May $1.06 1-8;
July
of alleged list of prominent persons out burdening the church for years nected with the E a s t e r n Orthodox
national church of which t h e Greek $1.04 7-8.
conected w i t h bootlegging a n d 200 to come. A complete a n n o u n c e Casper, W y o . , Dec. 24.—Late
CORN — May 72 l - 2 c ;
and Russian are chief, will Join In
July
persons reported to
be listed, ment will be m a d e later,
last n i g h t v o l u n t e e r firemen had
the occasion with the o t h e r s of 73 5-8c.
b r e a t h e more freely, W a s h i n g t o n
the Christian world.
O A T S — May 44 l - 2 c ;
July b r o u g h t u n d e r control a fire t h a t
dispatch s a y s .
t h r e a t e n e d to destroy the entire
U n t i l this year, m e m b e r s of those 42 l - 8 c .
tqwn of L a v o i e in the oil fields
c h u r c h e s h a v e followed the J u l i a n
Mrs.
Margaret
aver, a r r e s t e d
forty-seven miles north of h e r e .
c a l e n d a r which caused a g a p of
in B i r m i n g h a r
S a t u r d a y on
BANK OPEN T O N I G H T .
The loss is e s t i m a t e d at $114,000.
fourteen d a y s between C h r i s t m a s
an indictment
.jring her with
as observed in E a s t e r n a n d W e s The Saratoga
National
Bank
being an accc
before the fact
tern c h u r c h e s .
will remain open between 9 a n d 10
In the slaying t»» William S. CoNow the Gregorian calendar of o'clock tonight to receive deposits
J o h n Uveges, 39 C h u r c h street, burn, Ku Klux Klan a t t o r n e y deW e s t e r n church h a s been adopted. only.
New York, Dec. 24.—Benjamin
c h a r g e d w i t h operating a n a u t o m o - cides not to fight extradition and
Adler,
a
shoe
manufacturer,
bile w i t h o u t a license, waived e x - goes to A t l a n t a where s h e is deJumped to d e a t h today from the
a m i n a t i o n in City Court t h i s m o r n - tained.
fifth floor of his small Sixth a v e ing a n d w a s released in $200 bail
Through the
quick
work
of
nue factory. M e m b e r s of his f a m to a w a i t the action of t h e g r a n d
N e w York clergymen in Sunday George R. W r i g h t , aged ten years,
ily said he h a d been worried about
Jury. Uveges, according to police sermons conform
to a p p e a l In
his business.
of 108 Jefferson street, Tony Penreports, w a s driving an automobile Bishop M a n n i n g ' s diocesan letter
• «•»
which collided w ' t h ono driven by for a " C h r i s t m a s truce," in
the nell, aged six, of 284 Jefferson
T O R E - S U B M I T NAMES
W. Frlnk Ingham at
B r o a d w a y controversy between modern and street, w a s saved from drowning
W a s h i n g t o n , Dec. 24.—Resubmisa n d W a s h i n g t o n street, S u n d a y af- conservative factions.
sion by P r e s i d e n t Coolidge of the
In Lake Lonely S a t u r d a y
afterternoon.
The Ingham a u t o m o b i l e
A r t h u r H a s k n s , fifteen, 40 V a n degree a s s a u l t . He w a s paroled In nomination of Frederick I. T h o m p noon. According to young W r i g h t
„ w a s badly damaged. N o one w a s
Zev a n d G r e y L a g h a v e
been
D a m s t r e e t was accidently s h o t in the custody of Ritchie B r o t h e r s , his son of Mobile, Ala., and B e r t E.
Injured.
Oregon
as
nominated by their owner, H a r r y F. he and the Pennell boy a n d two
employers, until T h u r s d a y morning Haney, of P o r t l a n d ,
Uveges* chauffeur's license
w a * Cinclair, to r u n In Ascot gold cup others were walking out the trolley the neck yesterday afternoon by a a t 10 o'clock.
members of the shipping board, w a s
j bullet fired from a .32 calibre rifle
revoked by City Judge M. E. M e - race in E n g l a n d next J u n e b u t it
Cooper, F r e e m a n a n d Gailor, a c - Indicated today after Senator Mctracks to the lake and when they
I held by William Cooper, a 1 6 - y e i r - cording to police r e p o r t s , were ex- Nary and S e n a t o r Rtanfleld, R e T y g u e last August. He w a s w a r n e d Is probable Grey L a g will be the
at t h a t time by the c o u r t to r e - only one to compete due to Zev's arrlved at L a k e Lonely, Tony, when old companion. The accident oc- a m i n i n g the rifle which they be- publicans, Oregon, had conferred
s t r a i n from opt r a t i n g a u t o m o b i l e s m a t c h e s . with
E p i n a r d , F r e n c h trylng to kick a hole In t h e thin | c u r r e d in the home of A r t h u r F r e e - lieved to be empty when one of the with the executive on the shipping
until after J a n u a r y 1, 1924.
horse, in this c o u n t r y later In the coating of Ice on the lake fell into m a n » 4 1 V a n D a m s l r c e t shells exploded. The bullet struck board question.
•
I I I
-m
summer.
Dr. David C. Nolan, the a t t e n d i n g the H a s k i n s boy a s he walked
the water. Upon seeing his comTO R E N E W C O N T R O V E R S Y
panion s t r u g g l i n g for life in the physician, today said X - r a y p i c - t h r o u g h the doorway leading Into
MULDOON W I L L RETIR4S
u
N e w York, Dec. 24.—Indications
New York, D e c
24.—William
Cost of living Increases 2.1 per water the W r i g h t boy dove Into the ' tto r e s would be taken this afternoon the living room.
I
locate the bullet which is b e were today that after t h e " C h r i s t - cent between J u l y 15 and Nov. IS lake and rescued him.
R e p o r t s in a morning newspaper, Muldoon, c h a i r m a n of the New
The boys lay on the shore until | l i e v e d ' to be lodged in the fleshy to the effect t h a t Cooper fired at York s t a t e a t h l e t i c commission will
m a s t r u c e " in the P r o t e s t a n t E p i s - a n d dollar is now worth 60.5 cents
H a s k i n s , who ^ w a s playing burglar, retire from office with the expircopal church the controversy b e - a s compared w i t h July, 1914 value. they regained s t r e n g t h enough to j r a r t of young Haskins* neck.
industrial
conference j return home. They contracted no [ Cooper w a s arrested late yester- were denied by the local police to- ation of his t e r m on a n u a r y 1, he
tween modernists and c o n s e r v a t i v e s National
was quoted a s saying t o d a y .
*
board states.
i serious illness from their m i s h a p . | d a y afternoon charged w i t h second day.
would r a g e with renewed vigor.

REVOLUTIONISTS
APPROACH NEARER
TO MEXICO CITY

LOS ANGELES MAN AVALANCHES IN
THIRD AMERICAN ALPS RESULT IN
ON COMMITTEE GREAT DAMAGE

UNABLE TO FIND
WOUNDED MAN

NEW SCHOOL AND
PARISH HOUSE
IS NOW CERTAIN

D. &amp; H. ASKS TO
ABANDON LINE

COUNTESS' SET FREE

ALL CHRISTENDOM
WILL CREBRATE
DAY TOMORROW

ZBYSKO SEEKS DIVORCE

GRAIN MARKET

TOWN SAVED FROM FIRE

DRIVER WITH NO
LICENSE IS HELD
FOR GRAND JURY

BOY, TEN, SAVES
COMPANION, SIX,
FROM DROWNING

JUMPS TO VlS DEATH

« • - * • • • -

•'

' -

•

-

•

i

,.

,

Boy Shot in Neck by
Accidental Ballet

MADE RAID IN ULSTER
Belfast, Dee. 24—Members of the
Ulster c o n s t a b u l a r y yesterday r a i d ed a m e e t i n g in Londonderry a n d
a r r e s t e d eight p e r s o n s present, including a
Nationalist
election
agent.
F o u r of the prisoners had r e t u r n ed n o r t h recently from Imprisonm e n t in the F r e e S t a t e . The homes
of the c a p t i v e s were subsequently
searched.
The r a i d is said t 0 have been a
sequel to r e c e n t a r r e s t s a n d the
c a p t u r e of d o c u m e n t s and it is intimated t h a t s t a r t l i n g developments
a r e expected.

HOWARD LEON;
IN HOSPITAL,
BADLY INJUR]
i Adee Escapes With
Hurts as Automobile
Tree.

BRIGHT SUN FOILS
WHITE CPSTMAS
IN THIS VICINITY
Light

Snowfall Last Night
Fades Away Under
Heat.

CHILLY

DAY

FORECAST

Bite in the Christmas Morning
Air Predicted by Weather
Bureau.
T h e r e w e r e p r o s p e c t s of a W h i t e
C h r i s t m a s in S a r a t o g a
county
w h e n snow b e g a n falling last n i g h t
following a drizzle of rain. U n d e r
the w a r m s u n today, however, t h e
slight covering
of snow rapidly
disappeared a n d b y nightfall t h e r e
r e m a i n e d only a s c a n t t r a c e .
Bite in Air Forecast.
W a s h i n g t o n , Dec. 24.—No "white
C h r i s t m a s ' is In prospect, b u t t h e r e
will be a bite In t h e air C h r i s t m a s
m o r n i n g in m a r k e d c o n t r a s t to t h e
conditions of t h e l a s t few
days
when summer-like weather prevailed over a w i d e area.
L i g h t frost i s predicted b y t h e
w e a t h e r b u r e a u for tonight a s f a r
south a s extreme Northern Flori d a . , I n d i c a t i o n s a r e for generally
faff w e a t h e r t o n i g h t and t o m o r r o w
in t h e Middle Atlantic, South A t lantic, E a s t Gulf s t a t e s , Tennessee,
the Ohio Valley a n d
the lower
L a k e region.
T h e only snowfall
probable Is
predicted for portions of N o r t h e r n
New E n g l a n d a n d N o r t h e r n
New
York a n d t h i s m a y t u r n to local
rains.
T o n i g h t t h e t e m p e r a t u r e s will be
slightly lower in the Middle A t l a n tic s t a t e s b u t they will rise slowly
in the N o r t h Atlantic states d u r i n g
C h r i s t m a s day.
Slight Fall in West.
Buffalo. N. Y., Dec. 24.—Transportation a n d communication lines
in the vicinity of Buffalo were only
slightly affected by the first snow
of t h e season w h i c h lay in a fourinch m a n t l e over the city
this
morning.
Trolley senvice w a s slowed u p
slightly today b u t no
schedules
w e r e curtailed.
Railroad officers
reported practically all t r a i n s east
and
west
bound,
through
on
schedule.
F e w w i r e s w e r e down although
the fall in outlying districts w a s
Some
heavier t h a n in the city.
wires e a s t a n d w e s t of the city
were carried down by weight of
snow hich encrusted t h e m a s it
fell, b u t lack of wind a c c o m p a n y ing the s t o r m w a s said to have
minimized t h e d a m a g e .
s m »
—

ARREST FATHER
OF DEMPSEY
Salt L a k e City, Utah, Dec. 24.—
H i r a m ' Dempsey, father of
Jack
Dempsey,
world's
heavyweight
boxing c h a m p i o n is free on bond
of $300 after a r r e s t on a charge
of violating t h e prohibition laws.
The elder Dempsey was a r r e s t e d
in a local cafe S a t u r d a y night by
a policeman who confiscated a
flask from which Dempsey is said
to h a v e been pouring liquor for
highballs.
A y o u n g woman also w a s t a k e n
Into custody b u t she was released
and police declined
to give her
name.
The police said t h a t It had not
been decided w h a t to fio in the
Dempsey case b u t t h a t it w a s p o s sible federal officials would p r o s e cute.

SKIDDED

"FROM

Automobile Turns Over!
Foot of Milligan's
Hill.
H o w a r d M. Leonard, l i s
street, a former member of
S a r a t o g a Springs police
del
m e n t , is in the S a r a t o g a he
in a serious condition w i t h
ies sustained yesterday after
a t 3 o'clock when the autoz
he w a s driving turned over a t
foot of Milligan's Hill on the
toga-Schuylerville highway.
J e s s e F . Adee, a n automobile
chanic, who w a s riding w i t h
ard, sustained minor injuries,
er t r e a t m e n t a t the S a r a t o g a
pital, Adee was allowed to
to his home.
Dr. A. J. Leonard, t h e a t t
physician, said H o w a r d M. .
a r d ' s injuries ar^KJnostly lata
H e said he did not believe
juries would prove fatal. T l
j u r i e s , the physician said, see
b e centered around Leonard's
a n d in his stomach.
T h e accident, according t o ;
formation obtained today, o«
w h e n the car, owned by
skidded from the r o a d w a y
s t r u c k a tree.
T h e two injured men were!
covered by Joseph B. Viele,
carried t h e m into a nearby
house
They were t a k e n teK
S a r a t o g a hospital in a n a m b i
T h e automobile w a s badly
aged.^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^B

BEIEVE CRISIS
PASSED IN CI
Canton, Deo. 24—(By h V
elated Press)—he critical situl
which has prevailed here for n |
t w 0 weeks a s a result of-tB§
m a u d of Dr. Sun Yet Sen,
China leader for s u r p l u s CUI
revenues, is believed to h a v | |
passed and it is hoped in i
circles that the s t a g e will
reached a t which t h e vigil
t h e foreign Powers r e p r e s e n t
nearly a score of g u n b o a t s
ed off Shameen. the foreign
of the city, where the a d m i n !
tive officers of other n a t i o n s
cated, may be relaxed a n d the*
eign warships w i t h d r a w n .

TO CHOOSF." ENTRANTS
Minneapolis,
Dec.
24.skiers and a bob sled t e a m
r e s e n t America in t h e OlJ
g a m e s In F r a n c e next month,,)
! b e selected here December '
J a n u a r y 1.
The four winners a u t o m a t
will become the United S t a t t
t r a n t s in the bob sled compe
•,.„.,-

,

,-i

i

.,'„, •

...,„

i

In observance of Christmas'.
The Saratogian will not be put
ed tomorrow.

THE WEATHER

SAKT"f \
Do YOUR STOW

¥

&amp;'

PARIS SUPPERS EXPENSIVE
P a r i s . Dec. 24.—-It will t a k e a fat
purse to p a r t a k e of one of the t r a ditional C h r i s t m a s eve suppers at
a n y of the t h o u s a n d and ono r e s t a u r a n t s in P a r i s tonight.
The h u m b l e s t
cafe
is asking
twenty-five francs for meagre feast
with wine e x t r a . Those establishm e n t s t h a t advertise Jazz music
are a s k i n g 200 francs for repast.
t h e chief f e a t u r e of which is a
portion of t u r k e y , unaccompanied
by c r a n b e r r y o r a n y other sauce.

fdttk

Forecast.
F a i r in south a n d clc
north portions tonight a n d '
d a y ; possibly local snows « •
in extreme north portion, tfj
w a r m e r in north portion t&lt;
a n d in south portion Tna
diminishing northwest winds,
coming west Tuesday,
— —
"
*-• &lt; i &gt;
The S u n .
C H R I S T M A S PARDONS
27
W a s h i n g t o n . Dec. 24.—Christmas Sun today . . . . . . . . . . . .
pardons and
commutations
for Sun tomorrow
3*
eleven men serving terms In fedTemtersture
1 eral p e n i t e n t i a r i e s were announced High
| today by P r e s i d e n t Coolidge.
| Low
|

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*

i
iTHE SARATOGIAN, TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1924.
ass

Seek Stolen Booze
FOUR TROOPERS EIGHTH WONDER OF
WATCH HIGHWAY WORLD SUBJECT
DURING NIGHT OF ROTARY TALK

are now
lost to posterity.
The
world would be just t h e s a m e a s it
is today if it, together with the
other six, had never come Into being.
"Coming down to m o r e modern
times the progress a n d t h e a d v a n c e
of the h u m a n race is m o r e noticeable for it is no longer t h e custom
to count as wonders of the world
things material.
"Although Mr. Knoeppel said he
never heard them so classified, he
presumed one might s p e a k of the
seven virtues a s e n u m e r a t e d
by
Saint Augustine as the seven wonders of the m a t e r i a l i s t s of the old
world, namely Faith, Charity, P r u dence, Temperance, C h a s t i t y and
Fortitude.
"If you ever sat down to e n u m erate what, to your own m i n d would
be the seven wonders of the world,
from ancient times to
modern, I
presume that no two m e n would
agree," Mr. Knoepple said.
"The
materialist of today would probably say that the seven wonders
of the modern time a r e the s t e a m boat, steam engine, electricity, the
phonograph (the telephone, telegraph and radio), t h e s u b m a r i n e
and the aeroplane. B u t no
one
seems to have e n u m e r a t e d them.
"The seven wonders of the old
world are a mystical a n d symbolic
number and SD over all t h e ages the
seven wonders have been permitted, mystically and
symbolically,
to stand until today w h e n a young
man makes bold to look you in
the eye and to tell you t h a t
the
eighth wonder has come into the
world, not made of m a t e r i a l s u b stance, but everlasting fiber, born
in understanding, developed In love
and enriched with t h e
spiritual
growth t h a t has come in our time.
'I hardly need to s a y t h a t the
eighth wonder of the world is the
spirit of service as applied by a
R o t a r y club, t h a t t h e e i g h t h wonder in its application is a Rotary
club
told h o w he asked Ballston
He

SUPPER AND SOCIAL

in
122 CONTRIBUTE TO CARS DAMAGED
COMMUNITY HOUSE IN COLLISION ON
HARRISON HILL

Charlton, May 13—The Ladles Aid
Society of t h e P r e s b y t e r i a n church
will hold a social and s u p p e r at the
academy hail T h u r s d a y
evening,
May 15, Supper will be served from
5 to 9 o'clock, new time.
George Casebone w a s elected
sohool t r u s t e e in district 1 and h a s
engaged the services of Miss Florence Dropper for teacher. Albert
Chalmers, trustee in district 2,^ajid
J a m e s H. Arnold h a s been chosen
trustee in district 8. H e h a s a p pointed
Miss Edith Annibal
of
Galway, teacher. Miss J e a n Teller
la expected to teach in district 6
this coming year. F r a n c i s Baker is
trustee in the village district.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Suits of Schenectady spent Sunday a t the home
of J a m e s Suits.
George Lee recently p u r c h a s e d a
work horse of H a r r y Cavert of Scotia.
Owing to t h e rainy, cold weather
very few have sowed their oata.
H e n r y Conde expects to work on
the country road this week.

^ S p e c i a l to The S a r a t o g l a n )
Ballston Spa, May 12.—The list
Ba!l»ton Spa.,
May 13.— Last
of individuals, 122 in d u m b e r , w h o evening about 8.80 o'clock a Ford
have contributed to the s u p p o r t of touring car owned a n d driven by
(Special to The Saratoglan)
(Special t o The Saratoglan)
the Community House in P l e a s a n t Loren Downing of G a r r e t t Road
Ballston Spa, May 13.—At a most
Ballaton
Spa, May
18.—Four
street for the year April 1, 1924 to while coming n o r t h on the Ball• t a t * t r o o p e r s were
stationed a t enthusiastic and well attended meet
April 1, 1925, was announced t h i s ston Spa-Schenectady state highRotary
the Ballaton Spa Knitting Com- ing of the Ballston Spa
way, collided with a Chevrolet coupe
morning a s follows:
Club at the Community House in
pany's mill in Saratoga avenue last
Clarence Glatt, Winslow Llllie, owned and driven by Garry Jordon
night w a t c h i n g for a fleet of five Pleasant street yesterday, District
B u r t Gardner, J. B. W h i t e Motor of A'. Corners, j u s t south of the
hooch
laden
automobile
trucks Governor Raymond J. Knoeppel, of
Corp., M. Sterghi, Louis Holden, bridge at the foot of Harrison's
the twenty ninth Rotary district,
whloh h a d been stolen in ElizaH. E. McKnight, J o h n L. T r a c y . Hill.
made his official visit and gave a
b a t h t o w n earlier in the day. The
According to the story as told by
most impressive speech on "The
Hiro Settle, Sidney Buchdahl, Mrs.
c a r s , confiscated by federal agents,
Eighth Wonder of the World."
W a r r e n Streever, Fred S. S t r e e v - Mr. Jordon, he w a s driving toward
were being held a t Elizabethtown
er, Walter Diamond, Nelson A n d e r - Schenectady at t h e r a t e of about
After the routine business of the
when a g a n g of alleged bootlegs
son, Mrs. E r w l n Frey, Roy A b e r - twenty miles an hour, when, sudheld u p t h e federal officers
and elb was taken care of by President
«».»
.
, •-&gt;
t h e Downing car
nathy, Morgan E. Welsh, R o b e r t denly he s a w
William A. Andrews and the lunchmade off w i t h the trucks and their
coming down H a r r i s o n ' s Hill and
L. Carter, George I. Yost, A. C.
valuable cargoes of wet goods. So eon completed, Mr. Knoeppel was
Wheeler,
Miss T.
C u n n i n g h a m , before he realized w h a t had h a p far a s could be learned the trucks in troduced as a man with a w a r m
heart and good, strong, and effiDr. W. E. Wells, Irving W . W i s - pened the Downing car struck his
did not p a s s through here.
car on the left side, tearing off
Middle Grove, May 18.—All voters
cient character by the president.
wall, C. H .
Brownell
a n d Co., the front and rear fenders, the r u n To Confer Degree.
H a r r y Castle, J o h n J. Tracy, Est., ning hoard, bending t h e front axle, of school district 17, town of GreenDescribing briefly
his
official
T h e Royal Purple degree will be
M. E. Raymond, Inc., C. M. S m i t h , breaking t h e wishbone and causing field are requested to a t t e n d a specconferred on a class of candidates visits to the Glens Falls, Saratoga
•4a&gt; meeting to be held in t h e school
Charles Grose, Lenge Clapp, E l e a - other minor damage.
Springs, Mechanicville and Grana t t h e meeting of Milton E n c a m p TEDDY KICKS ABOUT GUNS
building S a t u r d a y evening, May 17,
nor Grose, William Rooney, C. H .
ment, I. O. O. F., tomorrow eve- ville Rotary Clubs Mr. Knoeppel
Mr. Downing's car w a s also b a d Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt
told of his speech before the Rotary
Grose, Jr.,
Feeney Bros., Slade ly damaged ,the Impa'-'t tearing one at 7 o'clock, s t a n d a r d time, to t a k e
ning In dd Fellows' hall. All m e m Brothers, E. C. Welch, Miss Ma,ry front wheel off and bending tho action on propositions, t h e first the (right) is discussing questions of battleship gun elevation with
bers a r e requested to be present. Club in New York City on August
2, 1923 which was the first time
Murphy, C. P .
Haskins,
J a m e s wish bone. No one w a s hurt, for- leasing of land from t h e cemetery
Repairing Store Building.
Representative Thomas S. Butler of Pennsylvania, chairman
he ever spoke on "The Eighth W o n Gilligan, S. C. Schaeffer, E d w a r d tunately, and w h e n t h e two men association for a sohool play ground
The building in Milton avenue, der of the World," the Spirit of
and the second, t h e proposed erec- of the House Committee on Naval Affairs.
British guns out*
S. Coons, Dr. Thomas G. D u n n .
reported to Traffic Officer J a m e s tion of a shed In the r e a r of t h e
formerly occupied by Nelson A n - Service as applied by the Rotary
J. W. Tyler, Mrs. Frederick V a n Connor this morning h s told them school building. •
shoot ours at least three miles and Japan's maybe still farther.
derson's Jewelry repair
shop, is Club," this speech being based on
—
Troy, E d w a r d Grose, Harold "Van to settle the m a t t e r between thembeing renovated and within a short the seven wonders of tho old world.
* ma
•—
Arnem, L o u i s Schwarz, The S a r a - selves. The two cars were taken
time will be
occupied
by
t h e H e told of receiving the invitation
westerly to a point one hundred of Greenridge Cemetery and Greentogian, George A. Betor, George G. to OelWge Kemp's garage in Church
Oneida Creamery Company
of to speak before the New York city
twenty-five feet easterly from Jackson ridge Cemetery Annex* to the north
MIDDLE GROVE
Wilson, J a m e s J. O'Brien, Clarence avenue this morning.
bounds of
Cemetery
Malta avenue.
May 13.—Mrs. Boucher and two Street; thence southerly parallel to nex ; thenceGreenridge alley west AnRotary Club in honor of the fourJackson Street to Wright Street;
to an
of
McElwain. Oscar Fillmore,
Miss
After the collision, the Ford t u r n - children and
Mrs. L. T a b o r
of thence easterly along Wright Street Greenridge Place and running northHad Mishap.
teenth anniversary of the founding
Marjorie Bates, W. H. Lillie, W i l - ed completely around in the road Mechanicville were recently g u e s t s to Nelson Avenue; thence southerly erly along to Lincoln Avenue; thence
A Chevrolet touring car owned of Rotary in New York State and
liam Lawrence, M. A. Schwinler, and landed in the ditch on the left of Mrs. O. W . Barney.
along Nelson Avenue to Crescent along Lincoln Avenue to Whitney
a n d driven by Walter Mcintosh wondering what he would speak on,
thence westerly
Crescent
thence north along Whitney
B. D. Esmond, Slayman H a n n a h , side of the road, headed northward.
Mrs. Alice Gailor a n d Charles Street; to a point which along continua- Place; to an alley leading west of
collided
with a Crevrolet
coupe gazed out of his window a t one of
Street
is
Place
Mr. Downing had his Avife and Gailor visited relatives In Glens tion of the east side of the aGreetirldge Whitney Place; thence west along
Merberry Hotel, Charles Butcher,
driven b y a Saratoga Springs man the large hotels in Chicago, partly
W. L. Lord, Dr. a n d Mrs. R. B . three children with him while Mr. Falls Sunday.
Cemetery; thence north along said said alley to where it turns; thence
his
In Church avenue Saturday eve- overhanging Lake Michigan,
lots
Post, E. H. H a y w a r d , Donald S t e w - Jordon was accompanied by three
ning. N e i t h e r car w a s damaged. mind steadily becoming concenThe Ladies Aid will meet w t i h line and the easterly line of Green north along said alley to said of J.0
ridge
to
lands
art, Rivett and Donohue, Dr. R. B . persons whose names could not be Mrs. Royal B a u g h T h u r s d a y after- thence Cemetery alongLincoln Avenue; Gaffney and west along
trated on the seven wonders of the
A Cadillac coupe driven
by a
westerly
Lincoln Avenue of Gaffney to Circular Street; thence
learned.
Castree, Mr. E. H a n n a h , Wendell
to the west line of Greenridge Ceme- along Circular Street to the lands of
noon at 1:30 o'clock.
w o m a n left the road
near
the old world. After thinking for some
tery; thence southerly
along
Townley, E d w a r d Rood,
Myron
decided he would
Mrs. Elizabeth M c N u t t
la t h e of said Cemetery to the along the line tho old Congress Park and northBroadScotch c h u r c h Sunday afternoon time he finally
north bounds the lands of Congress Park to
Strobeck, George Raykway, E m a n guest of Mrs. J. Chase a t North Mil- of Greenridge Cemetery Annex ; thence way ; thence north along Broadway to
a n d landed In a swampy field a t use these wonders as an example
westerly ahMtg the north bounds- t&gt;t the place of beginning.
uel Adler, C. S. Fonesteel, J o s e p h
ton.
t h e roadside. She claimed she w a s of his own wonder which he called
Cemetery
Annex
past
Sweeney, R a y Vrooman,
Howard
crowded off t h e road by a passing the eighth wonder of the world. K J
J o h n Chatfield of I t h a c a le v i s - Greenridge Place to an alley west of
Zone D Indicated in WHITE, and
Greenridge
motorist.
iting friends in this place.
Greenridge Place; thence northerly described as follows:
"The first wonder of the world tepa to make plans for a n executive Armer, Dr. C. J. Higley, H a r r y J .
Being all tho land in the Inside and
Mr. a n d Mrs. H o m e r D e s h a w a n d aloag said alley to Lincoln A^vemie;
Gaffney, A. J. Clayslean, J o h n C.
Surprise Party.
was the Pyramids of Egypt, seventy meeting and how he expected
to
tho City of Sarachildren of C a n a d a
are
s t a y i n g thence easterly along Lincoln Avenue outside District inplaced in Zones A.
Glass, Mrs. A g n e s - B u n y a n , M. W .
A very pleasant surprise p a r t y of them, all different sizes,
the receive a negative a n s w e r ,
toga Springs, not
but
with Mr. and Mrs. R o b e r t Morris. to Regent Street;thethence north on B. or C.
Rood, George Wilson, Jr., H a r r y
w a s given for Richard
Tallman tombs of the monarchs of Egypt when he received a t e l e g r a m s a y Regent Street to
place of beginBurnt Hills-Ballstc • Lake, May
&gt;
Henry Menshausen is moving his ning.
Section 2—Zone A. In Zone A, no
.last evening a t his home, 51 South who flourished from the fourth to ing they would do so he w a s over- Cull, W. M. Eagen, Dr. T i b b e t t s , 13.—Those who
renumber
"Mr. family from the Chatfield flats to
Also, starting at what would be the building or premises shall be used,
M. O'Neil, Louis J. Benton, C a l l
street. T h e young m a n was a g r e e - the twelfth dynasty. The Pyramids, joyed with the e n t h u s i a s m
which
and^/no building shall be erected
Bob" will smile over the recollecpo'int between
a b l y surprised, when nineteen of solid mounds of great skill and a r - Ballston had shown.
Wooley, William Morrissey, J . S. tions and be s u r e to wish to see a p a r t of his b r o t h e r ' s house In Intersection Wells Street and the con- which is arranged, intended or detinuation of
the conlower Main street.
h i s y o u n g friends visited him, • it tisanry, were made by men who for
Wooley.
tinuation of Vermont Street; running signed to be used except for one or
the annual play, " T h e Time of His
H e told of the need of practice
Lew Rhodes is driving a new five easterly along said continuation of more of the following uses:
being t h e event of his
fifteenth many years toiled to complete this
E d w a r d , Morley, Mrs. S t e a r n s , Life,'' directed by
Miss
Gladys passenger car.
(a) One family dwelling not exVermont Street to Woodlawn Avenue ;
b i r t h d a y . Music and dancing were great feat of the ages. Yet, today of one of t h e R o t a r y " slogans "He Mrs. A r t h u r Norse, Mr. a n d M r s .
ceeding three stories in height, Inthence
Mr. a n d Mrs. O. W. Barey a n d Avenue southerly along Woodlawn cluding the office of a physicianv s u r enjoyed a n d refreshments
were practically nothing is left of them Profits Most W h o Serves Best" and William J. Hayes, Mr. a n d M r s . Teahan and presented by the senior
to an alley running
east;
class of Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake Mr. and Mrs. F. W. McAuley v i s the strength a n d foundation which
served.
thence along said alley to where it geon, dentist, lawyer, civil engineer
to show they permanently advanced is necessary for t h e building of a Alfred Simmons, Mrs. F . J. S c h u t t s , High school in the
High school ited friends in Argyle Sunday.
t u r n s ; thence south to the D. &amp; H. or architect residing therein.
Mrs. T a l l m a n and Mrs. A r t h u r or influenced the ages which were strong race a m o n g m e n and the Louis P a s t o r e , Mrs. R. Mac W i l - auditorium, T h u r s d a y and Friday
(b) Churches.
Miss R u t h Callenius w a s out of Railroad Company land ; thence along
Denn served the refreshments.
to follow," according to the speaker. betterment
(c)
Colleges, libraries or public
16 a t 8 school l a s t week with a severe cold. said D. &amp; H. R.ulroad Company to
of
conditions.
He liams, Mrs. H . C. Fuller, Dr. F . J . 'evenings, May 15 a n d
Walton Street; thence westerly along museums.
6
Those present were the Misses
"The seeond wonder of the world recommended the book, "Mind a n d Sherman, J o h n Scarce, P . L i s t e r , o'clock, daylight saving time.
G. H. Myers of E a s t Orange, N . Walton Street to the west bounds of
(d) Private garage or stable for
Kathryn
Seeley, Louise Rendo, were t h e P h a r o a s of Egypt which the Making" by Robinson, which Van R a a l t e Co., A. C. A c k e r m a n ,
the Saratoga Coal Company's land; not more than live vehicles, or five
In the words of Shakespeare, "If J. is at his home here.
M a r y , Maroszky,
Marion Glass, Alexander the Great had connect- should be read by all R o t a r i a n s . J a m e s Connor. D. M. Lockwood,
thence southerly along
Saratoga
Mrs. D. O. Hulse h a s r e t u r n e d Coal Company's lands to the alley be- horses, for private or famiily use.
an
M a r g a r e t "Waring, Dorothy Sher- ed with Alexandria by the H a p t a - He also said the co-ordination of Floyd S c h u t t s , J. M- Beverley, you have tears, prepare to shed
Section 3—Zone B. In Zone B no
the i now." Not t e a r s of grief but from a visit a t Yonkers.
tween Church Street and
Walton building or premiseg shall be used,
man, Dorothy
Denn,
Burdella stadium, or Seven Furlong Mole.
head and h e a r t which, if well de- George Cull, J. E d w a r d Bush, J o s - tears of l a u g h t e r
for those in
Mrs.
Helen Viele a n d
g r a n d Street; thence west along said alley and no building shall be erected,
Mitchell, Dorothy Tallman
and This it is believed w a s about 400
eph W. King, Mrs. J o h n T h o m a s , charge of the play say it promises daughter and Miss Hazel Boutelle to Lawrence Street; thence southerly which is arranged, intended or deMessrs. J o h n Glass, Jr., Karl Sher- feet high and lasted 1,600 years. veloped, give better service.
along Lawrence Street to Church
everyone from of S a r a t o g a Springs recently v i s - Street; thence westerly along Church signed to be used, except for one or
"Sweet things should be handed E d w a r d Tracy, P . H. McDonough, a good time for
man, Douglas
Saunders,
Nelson A fire was constantly kept lighted
of the uses permitted in Zone A
Serotta F u r n i t u r e Co., Mrs. D u n s - Start to finish.
ited at t h e home of I. Lewis.
Street to West Harrison
Street; more except for private dwellings for
and
joy and
Forbes, Charles Wyman,
Alfred a t it's summit and w a s believed to your fellow men
thence southerly along West Harrison and or more families, not exceeding
more, John H . Hennessy, Mrs. P o s t ,
The cast follows:
W y m a n , J a m e s Albertine,
L a w - be visible for forty miles but h i s - p r o s p e r i t y ' of the world should be
Street to Thomas Street; thence east one
including
Mr. Bob Grey,
a model h u s - hundred twenty-five feet easterly from to Clinton Street; thence north to the three stories In height,
rence Denn and Richard Tallman. tory tells t h a t after the time of taken care of by each a n d every Mrs. H. Massey, Mrs. R. jWakefleld.
apartment houses for private famiband, R a y Clagston.
one with love, s t r e n g t h , faith in
the east side of Jackson Street; thence southerly line of G. F . Blackmor &amp; lies.
S u n s h i n e Circle to Meet
Caesar it relapsed again into it's
Son's lands; thence east to the D. &amp;
Mrs. Bob Grey, his model wife, northerly parallel to the east line of H. Railroad Company's lands; thence
Ensign J o h n s o n of Church a v e Section 4—Zone C. In Zone C no
T h e May meeting of the Sun- original condition as an old fish- life, honor and a smile which when
Jackson Street to Lincoln Avenue;
thence easterly along Lincoln Avenue southerly to Division Street; tnonce building or premises shall be used,
shine circle will take place a t the ing station. This, as is seen, had used will be like a m i r r o r In life nue h a s r e t u r n e d from Springfield, Rosemary Meyer.
Tom Carter, M r s . Grey's flippant to Nelson Avenue; thence northerly wer*erly along Division Street to 'ark and no building shall be erected
"RoWe of Mrs. William Merrill, 45 nothing to do with the future of reflecting back to g r e e t you," the Mass., w h e r e he attended a c o n or
along Nelson Avenue to an alley Street; thence northerly along Park which is .arranged, intended,
speaker said.
vention of Methodist
Episcopal brother, K e n n e t h Walker.
Grove street, Thursday afternoon a t t h e world and left little t h a t h a s
of Union
west- Street to
Mrs. P e t e r Wycombe, a real per- south along said Avenue; thence Union erly alongChurch Street; thence west- | designed, to^ be used, except for^ one
Mr. Knoeppel concluded his talk men, having been the
2:30 o'clock. Mny are expected to permanently advanced or influenced
delegate
erly
alley south of
Church Street to the Adl- or more of the uses permited in
sonage, Helen Swatling.
Avenue to Regent Street;
thence rondack Railroad ; thence south to an Zones A and B, and except for hotels,
b e present. The scripture word for the generations which were t o come. by saying every m a n who h a s a from this district.
Mr. Peter Wycombe, Prince of southerly along Regent Street to Lin- alley; thence west to Beekman Street; boarding houses, sanitariums, philt h e meeting will be "power."
"The Hanging Gardens of Baby- good, sound constitution a n d lives
P a t r i c k Miller of Malta .was a
westerly along
Pessimists with a digestion, WI1- coln Avenue; thence Whitney Place; thence southerly along Beekman street anthropic, fraternal or eleemosynary
up to his ideals of life will always local business caller today.
Obituary
lon
possibly constructed by Queen
Lincoln Avenue to
to Cherry Street; thence east to Wal- uses, or institutions other than corthence northerly along Whitney Place worth
Charles H e n r y Askew, five-year- Semiramis or seven centuries lat- prosper and. one good law to abide
street;
thence
southerly rectional.
Miss KatherJne Gaffney a n d Mrs. « | » D ^ n t y .
Dorothy Landon, a regular flap- to an alley going westward from to
Section 5—Zone D. Zone D Is unreOak
street;
t h e n c e
old s e n of Mr. and Mrs. Charles er by Nebuchadnezzar, who is said by in life is "The Golden Rule."
J a y Baker visited friends and r e l a Whitney Place ; thence westerly along
stricted, except for any business,
per, Helen Ketchum.
After much a p p l a u s e President tives in Mechanicville S u n d a y .
westerly along Oak Street to Birch trade or use that may become a nuisto h a v e made them for the g r a t i Aakew of Main Road, died a t his
said alley to its t u r n ; thence northMr. J a m e s Landon, temper per- erly along said alley to the south Street; thence southerly along Birch ance, provided, however, that nd one
h o m e y e s t e r d a y about 10.30 o'clock. fication of his Median Queen, a r e Andrews called on J a m e s BeverGeorge E a t o n of West Galway sonified, John Davey.
bounds of the John E. Gaffney lot; Street to Ash Street; thence westerly of the following businesses, trades
T h e child h a d not been sick long the third wonder. The gardens a r e ley and P a s t P r e s i d e n t Robert L. was in town a few hours yesterday
along Ash Street to tho west lnie of
Carter, committee appointed
by
Uncle Tom, a real black negro thence along the westerlyto bounds of the inside District of the City ; thence or uses shall be established in said
a n d death c a m e as a shock to his said to have formed a square covthe J. E. Gaffney lot
Circular
on business. 1 ,
Zone, except upon the consent in
butler, Henry H e a t o n .
Street; thence north along Circular southerly along the west line of the writing of the Commissioner of Pubering an area of about four acres him to select a gift for the district
parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Hodsoll
Street to Caroline Street; thence west- inside District of the City to West lic Safety, and provided, further,
governor and Mr. C a r t e r presented
Officer Hogan, the Irish policeCharles is survived by his p a r e n t s rising in terraces curiously conerly on Caroline Street to Hodgman Circular Street; thence west along that whenever an application is made
of H a r t f o r d a r e visiting Mr. H o d - man, George Ogden.
$ a n d several sisters and brothers. structed with stone pillars, s u p - Governor Knoeppel w i t h a made
Street; thence north on Hodgman West Circular Street to West Avenue ;
Commissioner of Public Safety
In addition to the play
Miss Street to Lake Avenue; thence east thence north along West Avenue to to tho consent, to establish any of the
fountains, to measure sweater m a d e a t the soil's brother, H e n r y Hodsoll, and
l"he funeral will t a k e place a t plied with numerous
Church Street; thence,
along for a
Catherine Schauber will give vocal on Lake Avenue to the place of begin- Church Street to the west east of the said businesses, trades or uses or In
t h e A s k e w h o m e Thursday after- groves and avenues of t r e e s and Ballston S p a S w e a t e r shop in family! of N o r t h High street.
line
ning.
Miss M a r y Quinnlin and
Jack solos between a c t s . £
The gift w a s not
duty
noon a t 3 o'clock. The Rev. E r n e s t parterres of flowers. W h a t has this Ralph street.
of George Ostrander and run- the said Zone D, it
Also, bounded on the east by Frank- lands along the west line of the lands of the Commissioner shall be theSafety
of Public
F C ' - T r i p p , pastor of the Methodist left t h a t has permanently advanced only an apreciation of his visit Butler of S a r a t o g a Springs have
lin Street, south by Cherry Street; ning
hearing
Richardson, A. to
west by an alley; north by Division of George Ostrander, and L. C. Put- saidhold a publicupon such upon the
Episcopal church of Ballston Spa, or influenced the oncoming ages. but a token by which he could a l - returned h o m e after a short visit
application
notice as
Harris Ide, Carleton
ways remember Ballston Spa and with Mrs. F r a n k P l u m m e r of West a n n o u n c e m e n t made by the Rev. Street and Franklin Square.
will officiate burial will be in t h e
"The Temple of Diana at Ephesus
properties
CorporaExcepting however, the following: nam line thence to the north north cor- ho shall deem proper, and to dispose
Charles McCaffrey. This will mark
east on the
of such application within 30 days
Ballston S p a cemetery.
w a s the fourth wonder of the old remember t h a t the Ballston Spa High street.
Commencing at the northeast corner tion
the lands of AdironMr. and M r s . Albert W a t s o n and the second time t h e Sanctuary boys of George Street and. Court Street, poration line to thence southerly along after the same is made .
Church Meeting
world. The temple a t Ephesus w a s club will always r e m e m b e r him a s
dack Railroad;
1
1. Livery or boarding stable.
T h e Chancel Guild
of
Christ a magnificent structure, 220 y e a r s the one who p u t t h e m on the map, family of Church avenue visited have sang the entire mass in running easterly along George Street the lands of the Adirondack Railroad
to Nelson Avenue; thence southerly Company to the soith hounds of the
2. Grease, fat or tallow rendering
Latin.
c h u r c h will have it's annual meet- being necessary for the completion Mr. Carter said. T h i s , Mr. Carter friends in Corinth Sunday.
to an alley between George Street and land belonging to the G. F . Harvey or refining.
P l s n t y of Rain.
i n g t o n i g h t a t 8:30 a t the P a r i s h of this great masterpiece. I t w a s added, w a s just a m e r e rememUnion Avenue; thence easterly along
William
Springer of
Galway
3. Storage or curing of raw hides,
thence easterly
F a r m e r s in this section of the said alley to the west bounds of lands Company; land belonging to alongG. the or skins.
h o u s e In H i g h street. Election of 425 by 225 feet, covering more than brance and t h a t w o r d s could never called in t o w n this morning.
bounds of
the
F.
now owned by J. C. Harris on East
their
appreciation
and
officers will take place and all two acres, supported by 127 col- express
4. Merry-go-founds, ferris wheel
Mrs.
Donald
McPherson
and county are greatly handicapped by Avenue; thence along the west bounds Harvey Company to "Wells Street;
m e m b e r s a r e asked to be present. u m n s of white marble 60 feet high, t h a n k s .
the continual rainfall. The fields of said Harris lots to Mitchell Street; thenee easterly along Wells Street and or similar amusement device.
daughter,
Catherine, of
Amster5.
Garage for more than five
continuing on Wells Street to the
Miss Miller to Wed
which weighed 150 tons and were
Mr. Knoeppel then briefly t h a n k - dam, called on friends here yester- in most cases a r e wet and soggy thence westerly along Mitchell Street place of beginning.
motor vehicles.
1
thence along Case
Mr. a n d Mrs. Robert G. Miller kings.
a n d spring plowing and planting to Case Street; Street; thence east
6.
ed the R o t a r i a n s for t h e gift say- day.
Street to George
Also, commencing at the northeast yard. Coal, coke, lumber or wood
of Brookline announce t h e marriage presented
by a s many different ing it was altogether unnecessary
Street to George Street; thence east- corner of George Street and Court
Thomas B e t t s has resumed his is two weeks behind time.
7. Carpet or rug cleaning estabof their daughter Alina to F r e d erly on George street to East Ave Street, running easterly along George lishment.
"On the night of the birth of to give him the p r e s e n t a s he had
nue;
thence northerly along East Street to Nelson Avenue; thence
e r i c k Morris Savage of New York Alexandria it was fired by an o b - already taken a liking to Ballston studies a t R. P . I., after spending I
K. Slaughtering of animals.
the week-end with his parents, Mr
Avenue to an alley between George southerly to an alley between George
ORDINANCE NO. LXXXI
City. After a short wedding trip scure person for the main purpose Spa and called it his "pet hobby
9. Any -ether business, trade or
Street and Madison Avenue; thence^ Street and Union Avenue, thence
and Mrs. C. W . Betts, of E a s t High
Mr. a n d Mrs. Savage will reside a t of securing immortality
Be it ordained that Ordinance No. westerly along said alley to Nelson* easterly along said alley to*" west use t h a t Is or may be noxious or
for his After
complimenting
the
Past'street.
W e e h a w k e n , N. J.
LXXTX be and the same is hereby Avenue; thence northerly along Nel- bounds of lands now owned by J. C. offensive by reason of the emission
name a youth who believed t h a t presidents, I. W. Wiswall, and R o b son Avenue to Spring Street; thence Harris on East Avenue: ther.c» along of odor, dust, smoke, gas or noise.
Slayman H a n n a h of Milton ave- repealed.
Personals
by an act of vandalism he would ert L. Carter and
Section 6. Amendments, Alterawesterly along Spring Street to Court the west bounds of said H a r r i s lots
1
the
present nue was a Schenectady
By the Council,
business
B u r t o n T h o r n of Round Lake call- outlive in fame the pious who built
Street; thence southerly along Court to Mitchell Street; thence " westerly tions and Changes. The City Council
MICHAEL, J. MULQUEEN,
president, William A. Andrews, he caller this morning.
tod In t o w n today on m a t t r e s of it. It was later rebuilt but again
Commissioner of Accounts. Street to the place of beginning, along Mitchell Street to Case Street; may from time to time, on petition,
opened his gift.
hearing,
thence along Case Street to George after public notice and
which property is in Zone "B.
business.
Miss Eleanore Grose of Church
destroyed by the Goths. The p a s Second Exception. Esceptlng also Street; thence easterly along George amend or change the regulations and
Those present from o t h e r clubs avenue w a s the Sunday guest of
ORDINANCE NO. LXXXII
Charles Bishop of H a n n a m street sion of men today are the same as
the property commencing on the west Street to East Avenue; thence north- zones herein established. Whenever
were E. K. Thomas, a n d Robert Miss Dorothy Emmel of Albany.
Zoning Ordinance of the City of
celled o n friends in Glens Falls those olden days.
side of East Avenue a t the north- erly along East Avenue to an alley the owners of 50 percent or more of
Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
Fisher, Mechanicville; H e n r y Peck,
S u n d a y evening.
west corner of an alley between Union between George Street and Madison the frontage on any block front and
J a m e s S h a w of Galway w a s i s Be it Ordained :
"The fifth wonder
of the old of Schenectady; George E . Adee,
Avenuo; tfcerce westerly along said
It. shall
Avenue
Mitchell
Mr. a n d Mrs. Thomas C. L u t h e r world was the statue of Zeus built
Section 1. For the purpose of reg- j west on and west line Street running alley to Nels -n Avenue ; "thence north- the block front facing signed, to pretown on business yesterday.
the
of
the
ulating and restricting the location of Harris property; thence the J. C. erly along Nelson Avenue to Spring sent a petition duly
a n d d a u g h t e r , Margaret, of White by Phidias which marked the g r e a t - A. J. Pierce, N. R. Thompson and
north
to
A. C. Tyler of S a r a t o g a Springs trade! and industries, and the location !
City Council requesting an amendRulph«r S p r i n g s called on friends est sculptor of ancient Greece. This President Benjamin K. Walbridge called on local trade yesterday.
along
Mitchell Street; thence westerly to Street; thence
of buildings designed for special uses. Case Street; thence northerly on Case Street to Court westerly thence Spring ment, alteration or repeal of the
of the S a r a t o g a R o t a r y Club. The
i n t o w n recently. '
the City of Saratoga Springs is hereby i Street to George Street to East Ave- erly along CourtStreet; to the south- regulations prescribed for such block
was a collossal statue for the OlymMiss M a r g a r e t Connely of East divided into four zones shown on the I
Street
place front, it shall be the d-ty of the
E d w a r d Whalen of H a n n a m street pium of Ivory and gold. Surely, Mr. serving committee for next week
Council to vote upon y- 1 petition
accompanying map, which Is a part nue ; thence south to the place of be- of beginning.
,*ra* a social visitor in Glens Falls Knoeppel said, "the fifth wonder as appointed by P r e s i d e n t Andrews High s t r e e t had Miss Lois Sawyer of this ordinance, and thereon indi- ! ginning, which property is In Zone
Also, starting at the northeast cor- within 00 days after tl, filing of
of SkRlmore College as her week"D."
ner of Henfy Street and Caroline tho same by the petit i&lt;
S u n d a y evening.
Frederick
J.
rs, with
cated as follows:
of the old world has left little if is Edward Welch,
Third exception.
Excepting alio
• Oeorge G r a b e of Galway n u m b e r - a n y means t h a t h a s advanced or Wheeler, and I. W. W i s w a l l . The end guest.
Zone A indicated In Diagonal | lots facing the south side of the all«y Street and running thence easterly to tho Council. If, however, i protest
Circular Street and thence south to against such amendment, alteration
Squares, and described as follows:
I. O. O. F . Lodge Meets.
ed a m o n g those from out of town, influenced the ages following.
speaker committee
for
the r e Henry
leading
Starting at the northwest corner of I Harrisonfrom Circular Street tobeEast Spring Street; thence west toCaroline or repeal is presented signed by the
w h o t r a n s a c t e d business here y e s Except for the a p p o i n t m e n t of a Broadway and Fourth Street and go- |
Street, which shall
In Street; thence north to
owners of 20 percent or more of the
"The sixth wonder, or the tomb maining p a r t of May and all of
Street.
terday.
frontage in the rear or directly opC. ing westerly on the north Corporation Zone B.
of Mausolus at Halicarnassus, one J u n e a r e Thomas Kerley a n d Ralph committee headed by Vernon
Also, the frontage of the block on posite
Fourth exception. Excepting also
H. Davison. During t h e luncheon Bremer to m a k e plans for Mem- Line to the easterly side on the Adi-I ..---'«,:." rnTTV.Wt nf T^t "**&gt; "Taction the west side of Broadway extending altered, the. frontage proposed to be
ings Tonight.
of the most magnificent monuments
such amendment, alteration
rondack Division of the Delaware and I ]«2 • reas i o feet of Lot Z5, pecuon
T h e following meetings are sche- in the world, probably many years Robert L. Carter read a telegram orial day service *bn J u n e 0, only Hudson Railroad Company. thence ! ' Block C, being the lot on the from Church Street to Walton Street. or repeal shall not. be passed except
Excepting, however, the following: by the four-fifths vote of the Council.
Jumel Place and
duled for this evening.
later was destroyed by an e a r t h - from Edward Rusemore, secretary r o u t i n e . b u s i n e s s was transacted at southerly along the easterly side of northeast corner of lot being 60 feet That property in the. rear of the State
East Avenue, said
Section 7. Set Back Line.
No
Kayaderossera* the D. &amp; H. Railroad Company to a front on East Avenue and 163 feet Armory bounded on the west by the
W o m e n ' s Relief Corps, card party quake, as all t h a t Is left are the of the New York city R o t a r y club, the m e e t i n g , of
point which Is the north line of the
Boston and Maine Railroad, on the building shall be erected and no
t o follow meeting.
old marble steps recovered by ex- expressing his t h a n k s for the In- Lodge, 270, I. O. O. F., last even- continuation
of
Vermont
Street; deep on Jumel Place.
building shall
he constructed
or
Zone B indicated
In
Vertical south by the Armory, on tho east by- altered so R3 to project in any wise
thence easterly to the intersection of
P r o t e a n s' regular meeting in their Vavation. This, the sixth wonder vitation extended him a n d his r e - ing.
lots facing on Circular Street: and on
Squares and described a s follows:
Woodlawn
Avenue:
thence south
Bible Class Meets.
r o o m s in the Balmuth building In of the world, so far as known, h a s gret t h a t he could not be present.
Starting at the northeast corner of the north by an alley which is a con- beyond the average set hack line
along Woodlawn Avenue to the bounds
observed by the hulldings on the
Catherine Street and the Delaware tinuation of York Avenue.
Personals.
had no influence on the generation
Front street.
Mrs. R. L. DeLong of Maple ave- of an alley running easterly from and Hudson Railroad Company, runZone C indicated in Diagonal Lines samo side of the street, within the
John Newman of Milton avenue nue was hostess to the Fidelis Bi- Woodlawn Avenue; thence easterly ning north on Catherine Street to and described as follows:
W o m e n ' s club banquet a t H a r - which were to come.
block front, at the time ** the passaid alley to
and
"The seventh and last wonder of made a trip to Schenectady early ble Class a t the regular monthly along the along said alley its turn north First Street; thence westerly on First
m o n y hall, c a r s to leave CommunBounded on the north by the north sage of this ordinance. Where there
southerly
to the
are existing buildings at the time of
Street to Bryan Street; thence north
west by
i t y H o u s e in Pleasant street
a t the old world was the Colossus of this morning.
meeting a t her
home last night, bounds of Van Dam Street; thence on Bryan Stree f to East Avenue; corporation line ; East Avenue;Bryan the passage of this ordinance on only
Street; south by
east
easterly along the north hounds of
Rhodes representing Phoebus, the
William Weinberg
of
Galway the meeting having been postpone.! Van Dam Street to Broadway; thence thenee east on East Avenue to Maple by Maple Avenue.
6: tO o'clock s h a r p .
one side of the street, then the set
B a i t L i n e Social club meets with national delay of the Rhodlans, transacted business in town yester- from F r i d a y night until last even- northerly along the west bounds of Avenue; thence northerly on Maple
Bounded north by Cherry Street; I hack line on th e vacant side shall be
Avenue to the City limits; thence east west by an alley south by Washingthe D. &amp;
ttwrfe
Y o u n g to rehearse the two formed of metal over a period of day.
ing,
Only r e g u l a r routine busi- Catherine H. Railroad Company to on the north line of the City limits to ton Street and east by Franklin the same as the a v e r s e set back line
Street; thence northerly
twelve years. It was probably 90
of the, improved aide of tha atreet
Mrs. Carl S, Wooley of Milton
Marlon Avenue: thence southerly on Street.
p l a y s t h e club will give In
the
feet high and was destroyed by an a v e n o t !• visitiftf friends in New ness was conducted and the next along Catherine Street to first Street; Marlon Avenue to the D. A H. RailBounded west by Franklin Street; within the block.
near future.
meeting will be with Mrs. Acker- thence westerly on First Street, to road Company: thence westerly on north by Franklin Square; east bySection 8. An non-conformlnf use
earthquake quite a few years later. York city.
Street;
man a t 35 Chapman street. Mrs, Bryan Street tothence northerly along the D. &amp; H. Railroad company's land Delaware and Hudson Railroad Com- existing, or authorized by a lease in
This, together with the other six
Bryan
the north Corporation
to the place of beginning.
Mrs. Joseph LeGallis of West DeLong treated her guests to depany ; south by Washington Street. writing duly executed, at the time of
O r e r l a n d Sped $598 and u p dellv- wonders,of the old world, built by
Bounded north by Lake Avenue: tho passage of this ordinance, may
Also, starting at the comer of
Milton shopped in town yesterday. licious refreshments consisting of
Vlao, starting at the northeast cor.
tored a t t h e Milton Avenue Garage men, fired with enthusiasm of their
But such non-consouth by Caroline Street; west by he continued.
Mrs,
John Corning of
Blood sandwiches, salad, cake and cof- ner of Circular Street and Lake Ave- ; Henry Street and Lake Avenue, run- Henry Street; east by Hodgman forming use shall not he extended,
B a t t e t o n Spa.—adv.
I t . undertaking of temporary heauty.
nue running along Circular Street to ) ning easterly along Lake Avenue to Street.
street has returned home after a fee.
nor shall a structure designed, arthence
northerly
the alley north of Lake Avenue: (Mrcular Street;
Starting at
bounds of
visit with her daughter. Miss K a t h thence along said alley to East Harri- along Circular Street to an alley be- Broadway and the west Street; run- ranged or Intended for a non-conAppointed Deputy Sheriff.
Congress
forming use, in whole or in a part,
son Street: thence easterly parallel to tween Circular Street and York Aveerine Corning, of Troy.
Sheriff Snell has appointed Har- the North line of Lake Avenue and nue : thence easterly along said alley ning along Congress Street west to be enlarged except for a conforming
Hamilton Street; south along Hamil- use.
to East Harrison Street; thence eastold Van Aernem a special deputy one hundred feet therefrom, to the in- erly parallel to the northerly line of ton Street to William Street ; west
Section
Tha Ina road running from the
sheriff and has assigned him to the tersection of Maine Railroad to Union T.ake Avenue and one hundred feet along William Street to Union Street; validity of 9. Invalidity. provision
any section, or
Boston and
running south along Union Street to of this ordinance shall not Invalidate
duty of cashier at the terms of Avenue, connecting with the end of therefrom to the road leading to
the Boston and West Circular Street; wast along any other section or provision therecourt.
This position was
fllle I the Speedway; thence southerly along Union Avenue andCompany;
thence West Circular Street In Aletta Street,
said road to Union Avenue; thence Maine Railroad
many y e a r s by the late
Wlllar'l westerly along Union Avenue to the north along said road to the north south along Aletta Street to South of.Section ffl. Penalties and Enforcewest along
northwest corner of Spencer Trask's line of the City; thence southerly Street or llincoln Avenue ; Avenue to ment . The violation of any proWagner.
TON1GHT—.715-9.00
fj
or Lincoln
place on Union Avenue : thence south- along the, said line to the eaat line of South Street the L&gt;elaware and Hud- vision of this building zone ordinanr*.
C. D. of A. to Mwt.
erly along the west line of Spencer the Inside District of the City of Sara- the lands of
shall Subject the offender to a fine of
ft, Mary's Court, 826, Catholic Trask's place ; thence westerly to tb,e toga Springs; thence northerly to son Rlalroad Company to the Geyser not exceeding one hundred dollars,'
—AT—.
TOMORROW—2.45, 7.15, 9 0 0
—
Excelsior Avenue; thence westerly to Crossing on Ballston Avenue ; north and. In case of nen-payment to a
Daughters
of America, will have east line of the Saratoga Racing As- Marlon Avenue; thence southerly to along Ballston Avenue to th« south
not exceeding ten
line;
northerly along
the
the City; term
MAPLE HALL, West Milton ft regular meeting this iVtHing at soeiatton line ofthence Saratoga Racing , the Boston and Maine Railroad line of east inside District of line of the days, fn Jail of day on which such
the aast
the
and each
along
CORINNE GRIFFITH in
8 o'clock in the K n i g h t s of Colum Association to Union Avenue; thence ; thence southerly along th* Boston and t&amp;enc*, District of the south to a point violation continues shall constitute
Inside
City
easterly along Union Avenue to the | Maine Railroad to the place of be- which Is in a line the the continuation a separate offense,
»
bus rooms in F r o n t street.
of
Music by
east line, of the Inside District of the i ginning.
violation mm- n!so
of the east line of
To Sing Mats.
City of Saratoga Springs; thence
Also, starting on Regent Street at Cemeterv continued the Greenridge at Any suit of th« City. he enjoined
Dennis Murphy's Orchestra
south: thence
the
The seventy-four s a n c t u a r y boy* southeiiv along the east Tine of the a point where an alley In the rear of north to the iViuth line of Greenridae
Section II, Thin ordinance shall
Inside District to Nelson Avenue: m t o n Avenue runs easterly
Mary's
th«
effect
Nelson Ave south line thence west
The public is invited. A good of St. of Saint church will sing late thence, northerly along Nelson Avenue ; along th* said alley to along Neisnn Cemeterv ; of Greenridge along the t&amp;keBy the immediately.
along the
Cemetery
Council.
mass
Dominic at the
nue ; 4hen&lt; afj southerly
MICHAEL J. MULQUEEN.
to Writht
westerly' nue; t to Lincoln Avenue; thence and following tha south and weat line
time is assured.
mass next Sunday, according to an iJong WrightStreet; thenc*point one- Avenueh e n c f southerly along rseison
Street to a
••"•s-2*. Commissioner of Aooouata,

SPECIAL SCHOOL MEETING

SENIOR CLASS TO
GIVE ANNUAL PLAY

Capitol Theatre. Ballston 9 SOCIAL DANCE

Every Saturday Night

"BLACK OXEN"

Untitled Document

Thomas M. Tryniski
309 South 4th Street
Fulton New York
13069

www.fultonhistory.com

�</text>
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                  <text>Mapping Saratoga Springs</text>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Map</name>
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          <name>Abstract (&amp; Historical Note)</name>
          <description>Natural language description of the map itself, providing a general summary of the map and noting significant features. &#13;
&#13;
This is the place to introduce keywords and proper names that might be of interest to researchers, but do not warrant a separate subject heading of their own. Inset maps should also be described here, with their full titles given.&#13;
&#13;
Whenever historical or explanatory information is available, it should be included here as well. This includes information about items or events that are larger than just the map itself; for example, information about cartographers, a description of the map's historical significance (for example, "This is the first printed map of Saratoga Springs"), notes on the laws leading to a map's creation, descriptions of changes in state or county lines, information about the organization that created the map, how often maps were updated, and information about the map's creation and publication. Many State Archives maps have historical information in the catalog record -- that should be captured in this field.</description>
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              <text>In 1923, the City Council adopted its first zoning ordinance dividing the city into four types of district—(1) residential single family; (2) two family; (3) hotel and boarding house; and (4) unlimited use.  In an April 23 City Council meeting, Mayor James D. McNulty noted that the City had ordered a map made and published in The Saratogian “to give taxpayers and citizens an idea of what is to be done.”  After addressing individual requests, the council provisionally adopted the ordinance. After defeat in a November referendum for failure to allow two-family homes on the city’s east side, a revised ordinance was adopted in December to prevent apparent plans to turn some North Broadway homes into boarding houses. </text>
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              <text>Zoning maps</text>
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          <name>Theme</name>
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              <text>Property and Development</text>
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                <text>[Zoning] Map, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.</text>
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                <text>April 21, 1923</text>
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                <text>Map and Description of Proposed New Zoning Plan for City</text>
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                <text>The Saratogian</text>
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                    <text>Interviewee: Sandra “Sandy” Welter
Years at Skidmore: 1984 - 2017
Interviewer: Lynne Gelber
Location of Interview: Saratoga Springs, NY
Date of Interview: 4/21/2022
00:00:00 Header
00:00:28 Raised East Haven, CT; 1st in family to attend college. After Elmira College
graduation in 1971, married &amp; moved to Ballston Spa so husband could work at Skidmore.
00:02:05 Next, earned Masters in English &amp; a permanent teaching certification (SUNY
Albany).
00:02:30 Then, taught Saratoga Springs Jr. High/7-9th grade writing to atypical students;
developed a creative curriculum featuring special projects — unusual at that level in 1970s.
00:03:25 Paused teaching to have 2 children; wanted to return to teaching part time, but the
public school administration was “… just not there yet in terms of …” the job-sharing concept.
00:04:19 Therefore, became curriculum developer and director of the Beagle School and created
programs for the public schools Gifted and Talented program while also caring for young sons.
00:04:49 In early 1980s was recuperating from a stroke when friend Bob Miner invited Welter
to observe his class at Correctional Facility in Comstock, NY, part of Skidmore’s University
Without Walls program. Welter loved it; Director Bob Van Meter invited Welter to teach.
00:08:57 The Comstock students were “intensely interested … they were connecting what they
were reading in ways that … I was not used to with younger students. [I] found it extremely
stimulating and I thought, ‘I think I could make a difference here. I think I can help.’ ”
00:09:55 Program expanded to include a second correctional facility, over 40 faculty, classes
four nights a week, almost 200 students involved, many graduates.
00:10:30 Welter’s role expanded to include advising on curriculum, helping develop final
projects, running a skills lab in math, writing and reading, and then being the Director.
00:11:15 Gov. Pataki (elected 1995) removed all of the funding; Welter still ran program for
nearly two years, with volunteer teachers and extra books, but then it closed.
00:12:33 Welter stayed on as a UWW advisor for regular, on campus, students.
00:13:00 New Masters of Arts Liberal Studies (MALS) program created, in 1997 Welter joined.
00:13:40 Skidmore, one of earliest MALS programs, attracted students from all over the world.
00:15:30 In the early 2000s, greater pressure on faculty to publish and serve on committees led
to decline in faculty participation in MALS, so MALS closed.
00:18:28 Welter granted administrative sabbatical to go to China; “Taught English composition
to junior level university students who were being trained as English teachers in China.”
00:19:08 Skidmore had a formal arrangement with the University of Qufu for many years.
Initially established by Murray Levith; Skidmore graduates and faculty went to teach there.
00:19:48 “A wonderful year experience. Incredible. And lifelong friends — I’m still in
communication with several of my students there and a couple of the faculty who I taught with.”
00:20:04 Welter taught English composition (103, 105) for last four years working at Skidmore.
00:20:30 Skidmore was “… an institution that always seemed to be able to look outside the box,
and I am an educator who was always looking outside the box.”
00:20:56 Because Welter ran programs, biggest challenge was nurturing faculty interest in
them.
00:21:43 “Murray left the China program and I took on the directorship until it closed.”

�00:22:07 “When we first started, there were … no Western influences in the Chinese university
system. … By the time we left, the universities were able to train their own teachers to come
back and do the work that we were doing, and very well, actually.”
00:23:10 “I actually had thirty three years of bliss! [laughs] I hardly had any problems at all
other than struggling to make sure that we had interesting and new and exciting faculty always
working with our students.”
00:23:32 Fondest memories? “Mostly center around the students. … Because I dealt with so
many different kinds of students at Skidmore.”
00:23:55 At end of Skidmore career, teaching in the English Department was also a positive
experience, “…wonderful to watch them come into their own…”
00:24:15 Had ESL experience so worked with international students &amp; HEOP students.
00:25:12 Taught Summer Institute for many years, teaching extra skills to prepare students for
Skidmore. “So I guess the students were, are kind of my central focus.”
00:26:15 Also had wonderful colleagues at UWW, MALS, and in the English Department.
00:28:14 “Skidmore went co-ed right when we arrived. And so the men who were at Skidmore
[explained in counseling that] their problem was that they were not getting enough food. So Bob,
my husband, had to go to the dining services and explain to the little old ladies who were
working in the dining facilities that they needed to give the boys more food!”
00:28:55 “And that seemed to me like such an innocent kind of kind issue to be dealing with in
the early days at Skidmore” compared to the complicated issues students face now.
00:29:40 Dining was not buffet; was served family style, but not enough for the men’s appetites.
00:30:10 Also, the beds were too short! Led to sore backs and hurt knees “because they were
scrunched into these little beds.” “Growing pains” that Skidmore needed to address.
00:30:55 In 1971, classes had moved up to the new campus, but students still lived on the old
campus in town, including Moore Hall, “the big ‘Pink Palace.’ ”
00:31:44 A years-long transition process for the old Skidmore campus. Many buildings, now
homes and apartments, still have the Skidmore names. Empire State College also owns some.
00:33:20 First experience of Saratoga Springs was so dreary, Welter hoped her soon-to-behusband would not get the job, but he did, and “…here I am 50 years later, very, very happy.”
00:36:51 Welter arrived in China in August 2001, so was teaching in China on 9/11. “I didn’t
come back at all during the whole time I was in China; … A year later [I] found that, coming
onto campus, … I was going through what everyone went through the year before.”
00:38:28 Different presidents … Joe Palamountain, David Porter, Jamienne Studley, Phil
Glotzbach. “David … he was one of the most remarkable human beings. … He always
remembered my name. … He came to every department … and sat in everybody’s office and
wanted to talk to you. And he came into my teeny little closet of an office in UWW and wanted
to know all about it, with huge enthusiasm, and caring and kindness!”
00:40:00 Over the years, faculty regularly raised questions about curriculum, issues of diversity
and inclusion, the role of a liberal arts college in the world, how to stay relevant — “I was glad
that Skidmore was asking those questions, … I think it kept Skidmore viable and fresh and … I
was always impressed with their sincerity and seriousness about our role, our job, as educators.”
00:41:35 END

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                    <text>Interview with Sandra “Sandy” Welter by Lynne Gelber, Skidmore College
Retiree Oral History Project, April 21, 2022, Saratoga Springs, NY.

LYNNE GELBER: This is Lynne Gelber for the Oral History Project of the
Retirees, and I am with Sandy Welter. It’s April 21st, 2022, and … Sandy,
why don’t you tell us a little bit about where you grew up, and …

SANDY WELTER: Sure. Thank you so much for inviting me to this exciting
project! I grew up in southern Connecticut, outside New Haven, in a small
working-class town called East Haven. My Mom and Dad were factory
workers, I was the first in my family to go to college. So, it was a big deal
when I went off to Elmira. I went as far as I possibly could from my
hometown — I was accepted at Conn College and at U Conn and several
other closer colleges and universities, but I really was a … had wanderlust,
and I wanted to get as far away as I could, because we never really travelled
very far. So I went to Elmira, out in the western part of New York State, got
a very, very good education. Went junior year abroad, so I studied at the
University of Leicester in England. Met wonderful international students
there, was planning on returning to England to do graduate work in
linguistics. But, when I returned to Elmira in my senior year, I met my future
husband, who was teaching at the college. And so, after I graduated in 1971,
I immediately got married and he got a job as the first Director of the
Counseling Center at Skidmore College, so my … the day after I was
married, having no honeymoon, we actually came to Saratoga Springs and
moved into our apartment in Ballston Spa. My husband at the time started
his job, and I applied to the graduate program at SUNY Albany, and I got in.
And that started my future here in Skidmore.
LG: And the graduate program was in …?
SW: I was in English and Secondary Education. So, I did a masters in English
with a focus in Secondary Ed — so I got both a Masters in English as well as
a permanent teaching certification. So, the first seven years after my
graduate degrees at SUNY Albany, I taught in the Saratoga Springs public

�schools. I was in the Junior High School. I taught 7th, 8th and 9th grade, and
I taught writing, most particularly. I also taught more — I taught both, two
extremes. I taught all of the Junior High School kids who were kicked out of
all their other English classes, ended up in my class, and I also taught all the
gifted kids who were bored in their classes. So I developed a journalism
class, we developed a newspaper in the journalism class. This was all stuff,
in the early ’70s, that didn’t happen. It didn’t happen in the Junior High. We
did music analysis, we did a newspaper, we did … you know, we did all
kinds of things. And so, I had a lovely five years in the public schools, and
then I had my children. I tried to go back to the Junior High because I was
very happy teaching in the secondary school. I was tenured at that time public school tenured. But I only wanted to work part time because I had
two young children at home. And that was early 1978, ’79, and the
administration in the public schools were just not there yet in terms of being
able to figure out how one could job-share. I was suggesting, there must be
another woman — again, very sexist, but it was — well there must be
another woman who wants to job share, so I would work part time and this
person would work part time and we would cover all of the needs of the
institution. “Nope.” So, I said “fine” and I walked away from my teaching
position there. I then was a curriculum developer and a director of the
Beagle School, which was an independent nursery school and kindergarten. I
worked for the Gifted and Talented program in the school district, the whole
district, and I developed programs there, all the while taking care of my
younger … my growing sons.
Um, in early … in the early ’80s, a friend of mine approached me. I had had
a serious medical problem. I had actually had a stroke. With two young
children. And I was recuperating at home and quite depressed because I was
afraid to do anything. And this gentleman came in to visit and he said, “You
know, I think that you should come up … there’s this program that I just
started teaching in at Skidmore. You might be really interested - you could
be, I think you would be great at this,” and it was …
LG: Who was that?

�SW: That was Bob Miner, and he was suggesting that I come up and observe his
class at Comstock. And he wanted to know if I would be interested in
teaching in the Skidmore prison program through University Without Walls.
And I, at that point, was looking for a new lease on life, really. I was looking
for a new focus. It was one day a week, you know I thought, “This is perfect
for me.” It was getting me involved. I had been doing some part-time work
for the University Without Walls with many of their adult learners — I was
doing prep, composition prep for many of their international students. They
had Qatari businessmen who were coming to get their UWW degrees, and
when they came to Skidmore they were working on their final projects, and
so I worked, I did a lot of work with them in terms of editing and writing
and communicating and helping them to get a more academic spin on their
final projects in writing. So, I was …
LG: Who connected you to UWW?
SW: Um, I think … hmm, who connected me? Maybe, um, Mark Gelber? Maybe
Barry Targan, maybe … I mean, these were all friends I knew through Sam
and Bev Mastrianni, and so they were people in the community but they
were also very Skidmore connected. And then I met Bob Van Meter and he
heard that I had been doing work with writing and remediation with writing,
…
LG: At the prison?
SW: At … well, in the community. I was doing some community work, and he
heard that. And then when Bob Miner recommended me, he said, “Oh I’ve
heard of this person.” And I went and I met with Bob Van Meter …

LG: Who was, at that time?
SW: He was, at that time, the Director of UWW. And then met Larry Ries, who

�was the Assistant Director, and Ken Klotz who was the … um, Director of
the Prison Program at the time.
LG: When was this?
SW: Early … it was, um … 1988 maybe? Something like that.
LG: Ok.
SW: As it turns out, I … actually went up with Bob Miner to observe his class at
Comstock, at Great Meadow, the maximum-security prison, and I loved it. I
came back and said …
LG: And the guys must have loved it too.
SW: Well, I mean I sat in the back of the room, didn’t say a word, I just watched,
and it was … I thought, this … because these … these inmates, these
students, were like sponges! They wanted to know everything, they were so
intensely interested in everything they were reading and everything they
were writing. They were connecting — because they were adults, they were
connecting what they were reading in ways that were so unique, that I was
not used to with younger students. And I just found it extremely stimulating
and I thought, “I think I could make a difference here. I think I can help.”
So, I went back and I talked to Bob Van Meter and he said, “You want to do
a comp course?” And I said, “Sure, I’ll do, I can do a basic comp course, I
can do a second, you know, like the 103 and the 105, equivalent to what we
were doing on campus.” And I did that, and, in fact, we expanded during the
next ten years into Washington Correctional Facility and so we had two
programs, we ran faculty up to the prisons, those prisons, four nights a week.
We had over 40 faculty hired every semester to teach up there. We had, you
know, more, almost 200 students involved in the program, many graduates
each year, and it was a really dynamic part of the Skidmore community.
LG: And your role expanded?

�SW: It did. So I went from teaching just the comp courses to becoming a full time
advisor up there. So I was doing advising on curriculum, I was helping
develop final projects, I was running a skills lab and we set up a computer
lab up there so I was doing a lot of basic skills in math and in writing and in
reading. And eventually I was asked to take on the Directorship. And so, the
last four years of the program I was the …
LG: This would be…?
SW: Around … we closed the prison program because of lack of funding. If you
remember, Governor Pataki came on board and the very first thing he did
after he was elected was to close down all of the college prison programs in
the state of New York. So, he removed all the funding, closed all the
programs down, said this was not, you know, “state TAP money and federal
Pell money was not going to educate inmates.” And so, he pulled all of the
funding, and because of that, we ran our program with volunteers. Our
faculty went up there voluntarily. We had extra books that we could use
until they all ran out, and I ran the program for almost two years after that,
on a voluntary basis. Um, we weren’t giving credit because we couldn’t, but
we were up there still involved with the students who were our students,
until we couldn’t any more. And that was between the years of about 1988 to
1998. I think we closed the prison program in about 1998 or 1999.
So, then I’m … now I'm at Skidmore, having spent 10 years in UWW, not as
much, certainly not much time on campus, I spent most of my time up at the
prison. Um … and the question was, “What now?” And so I stayed on as a
UWW advisor for regular students for a couple of years, and then, the
masters program conception was being developed through Larry Ries and
the state of New York and a variety of other people. Lots of support, I think
…
LG: That’s the Master of Arts in Liberal Studies?
SW: That’s correct, thank you Lynne, a Masters of Arts in Liberal Studies. It’s an

�interdisciplinary degree so the framework of this graduate degree was to, in
fact, bring in at least two disciplines in to the, sort of, core curricular
components. And that was unusual at the time. There were several MALS
programs across the country, we were one of the earliest and we were also
part of the national organization, the Consortium of MALS programs, and
that’s in two thousand and something … um, no, I don’t have the dates, but
we hosted the national convention here in Saratoga, at Skidmore. We housed
everybody at the Gideon Putnam, we had our sessions there … we couldn’t
have them on campus because there wasn’t enough room … It’s a national,
we had a lot of people coming in. We had several hundred people here, so …
. And we had keynote speakers and we had themes and, you know, so it was
a … Skidmore was very involved in the Master of Arts in Liberal Studies
movement. We had graduates who came to us through the UWW program
but also from other places, so most of our MALS students were graduates of
other institutions from around the world and around the country. And they
had a residency, but it was only a one month — a one-week residency —
and then another two or three days at the end to have their final projects
approved. So, they didn’t have to be on this campus, so we had students all
over the country, and the world, actually.
Um, so that was a great next step for me at Skidmore. MALS was a great
deal of fun, and it grew into a very viable program. Um, the fabric of the
college began to change in the early 2000s. And faculty who used to, either
because of a need, a desire to, explore pedagogies with other kinds of
students other than 18 to 21 year olds, or, because they had particular
interests that were not necessarily — did not necessarily fit in to an
undergraduate curriculum, they were really very interested in teaching at the
UWW and the MALS program. They loved to teach there, they liked the
kind of students, they liked the diversity of subject matter, they liked the
depth of inquiry that happened at the graduate level. But … and for many, in
the early days, it was a very helpful bump in their salaries. I mean, we did
pay well and we paid in addition to their Skidmore salary and in the early
days of Skidmore, you know, people, faculty, didn’t make a lot of money, so
it was a good way of supplementing. By the time the programs were, the
UWW, closed and MALS was still involved, faculty had a different agenda.

�They really needed to publish, they needed to publish, publish, publish, they
needed to be on committees here on campus. Um, more so, I think, than
maybe in the past. I don’t know because as an administrator I didn’t, I was
on committees but I didn’t have the requirements of that. So, it was more
and more difficult to get faculty to help, to be faculty advisors, to supervise
independent studies, to oversee final projects or theses, and it got to the point
where, I think, Larry Ries, the Director, and some of the later Directors of
the Masters’ Program, had to ask, is this really now the mission of the
college? And I think eventually the answer was, “No.” It was not. So, the
Masters’ Program closed, um …
LG: Do you remember the year that it closed?
SW: Oh, you know, I … I don’t. I came into the Masters’ Program in 1997 and I
retired from it … so, whenever … (uh no, I didn’t because they closed)
before I retired. Because then I went on to the English Department and I
taught in the English Department full time. So, yeah, and in between there I
went to China! [laughs] I nearly forgot to tell you about China!
I took a sabbatical, I took an administrative sabbatical, and …while MALS
was still running, but when it was struggling, and I was feeling a little
frustrated and working very hard and not being able to get much support,
and I finally decided, “I think I may need a break.” So, I asked for an
administrative sabbatical for a year, I was granted one, and through Murray
Levith, I went to the University of Qufu in Shandong Province in China, and
I taught English composition to junior level university students who were
being trained as English teachers in China.
LG: Now did Skidmore have a formal …?
SW: Yes, we had a formal arrangement with the University of Qufu, for many
years. Initially established by Murray Levith and then we had graduates of
Skidmore as well as faculty who went to, over, every year, to teach there.
Doretta Miller taught there, Murray Levith taught there, I taught … I think
Marty Canavan in the Business Department taught there, and probably

�several other people. Lots of graduates of Skidmore College went over and
taught as well. So that was a wonderful year experience. Incredible. And
lifelong friends — I’m still in communication with several of my students
there and a couple of the faculty who I taught with. So. Yeah, so I actually
retired … after UWW and MALS and China, I went to the English
Department full time, at the very end of my career, and taught composition,
English 103, English 105, for the last four years of my Skidmore career. So
… and that was great. So I was, I kind of came back to a very traditional
academic environment. I’ve had a very storied experience at Skidmore and I
thank Skidmore for that, because they were an institution that always
seemed to be able to look outside the box, and I am an educator who was
always looking outside the box.
LG: So, what do you think your greatest challenges were? During all those years?
SW: Hmm, well, probably … because I was in the administration, per se, having
always done, had to run a program, whether it was UWW or MALS or
China, I think it was just … nurturing, my biggest challenge was always
nurturing support from the faculty. That was a big job of mine, always. Um,
new faculty — I would go to new faculty receptions all the time, introduce
them to the MALS program, to the University Without Walls, to the China
program, because, again, that was where, possibly, faculty would be
interested — I was, by the way, Murray left the China program and I took on
the directorship until it closed. The Universities were now, Universities in
China were, now having, had enough of their own graduates who could then
come back and teach in their institutions. When we first started, there were
very few Western, - no Western influences in the Chinese university system,
so … we were kind of on the, we and Yale were the two institutions,
Skidmore and Yale were the two institutions that were in China at the very
early days. Umm, before Tiananmen, you know, during that period. By the
time we left, the universities were able to train their own teachers to come
back and do the work that we were doing, and very well, actually. So, I
guess my biggest challenge was always nurturing faculty interest in these
kinds of — I don’t want to ever use the word marginal, but certainly the
more peripheral … not necessarily the central mission of a small

�undergraduate liberal arts college. I was always doing work in areas that
were slightly, um, different in definition of that core mission. So that was
my major struggle. I actually had thirty-three years of bliss! [laughs] I hardly
had any problems at all other than struggling to make sure that we had
interesting and new and exciting faculty always working with our students.
LG: So, what are your fondest memories?

SW: Ah, fondest memories … mostly center around the students. I mean, I …
because I had, because I dealt with so many different kinds of students at
Skidmore — I mean, I dealt with the traditional, you know, 18 to 21 yearolds at the very end of my career at Skidmore, when I was teaching in the
English Department, and those students were fabulous! I loved them! I
always taught freshmen … freshmen or sophomores, and so they were
always a little green and they were always a little bewildered and it was
always wonderful to watch them come into their own, because they would
stop in my office four years later, as seniors, and here were these fabulous
grown-up young men and women who made me proud! I worked with a lot
of the international students at Skidmore, so …
LG: What did you do with them?
SW: Again, ESL work. I did a lot of personal, my own personal ESL training, and
then brought that to some of my writing courses. So, I did a lot of work with
the international students and a lot of work with the HEOP [Opportunity
Program] students, who were coming to Skidmore from, um …
underprepared, underpreparing High Schools. They were very smart men
and women, very, very smart, but their basic skills were not as strong as the
kids coming out of, like, Country Day School, you know, or some of the
great prep schools that our students come from. So, these young men and
women needed a little bit of a leg up, and I taught in the summer, to the
…yup, I taught in the HEOP Summer Institute for many years.

�LG: That’s the Higher Education Opportunity Program.
SW: That’s, thank you, it is the Higher Education Opportunity Program, of which
Skidmore had, still has, I’m assuming, a very important program, a very
important branch in the both state and federal level of Higher Education
Opportunity Program. So, I taught in the Summer Institute for many years,
doing a kind of “Boot Camp” with them so that when they came in
September they would be prepared, more prepared than they would have
been had they just spent the summer at home and then gotten out of their
high schools and come to Skidmore. It would have been a bit of a, not only a
culture shock but an intellectual shock for them. So, they were able to, we
would do, you know, reading skills and study skills and some of the basic
cultural experiences of what it was like to experience college in the
classroom as well as in the dormitory. So, I did all of that, as well, in the
summer. So, I guess the students were, are kind of my central focus. I had
wonderful colleagues, both at UWW and MALS, and in the English
Department. Again, that was a plus as well.
LG: Ok. Are there other things that we didn’t cover?
SW: Let’s see, talked about China, my sabbatical, umm, … I don’t know, I mean,
it feels like I, … I mean I had such a rich experience at Skidmore, and I …
LG: You talked about some of the changes…
SW: Yeah, I mean there’s …
LG: Can you expand on that?
SW: Yeah, sure. When I, I mean … this will be a story that will be interesting to
consider what, in terms of change … When I first came to Saratoga, I was
not involved. I mean, I was in graduate school, my then husband was the
Counseling Director at Skidmore. And, of course, I didn’t … and I met lots
of Skidmore faculty through that, we were the young couple, you know, the
new young couple at Skidmore, back in the day when those — they were

�new young couples who would show up every year and we were it. So, we
went to lots of parties and met with lots of faculty, all of whom were
extremely warm and very welcoming. I was in graduate school so I didn’t
have a lot of connection to Skidmore, but my husband would … of course,
being in the Counseling Center, couldn’t talk about his discussions,
although, at one time he did share something, which I thought was classic.
And, of course it was because he had to share it with the larger Skidmore
community, and he said, “Well, Sandy, the boys…” This was when
Skidmore went co-ed. Because Skidmore went co-ed right when we arrived.
And so the men who were at Skidmore had just started to arrive, and they
were in classes, and they would come to the Counseling Center and they
would sit down, and, in the Counseling session, their problem was that they
were not getting enough food. So, Bob, my husband, had to go to the dining
services and explain to the little old ladies who were working in the dining
facilities that they needed to give the boys more food. And Bob said, that
seems to be the major problem [laughs] that I’m dealing with in the
Counseling Center right now is that the men are not getting enough to eat.
And that seemed to me like such an innocent, kind of kind issue to be
dealing with in the early days at Skidmore. And when I think now about all
of the issues that our students face, the complicated issues of, you know,
relationships and gender identity and issues of drugs and alcohol and all the
stuff that face our students now, it seemed like that was an awfully innocent
time when I first got here, to be thinking that these poor men needed to get
more food. [laughs]
LG: This was at a time when there were not, it was not buffet, in the dining hall.
SW: No, they sat and they had to be given food, that was not buffet, absolutely.
This was early days when you sat — dressed, you got dressed — and you sat
in the dining hall and the food would come and it’d be in family style and
there’d be a little bit, and by the time the men got the food, there wasn’t
anything left! And they were being, you know, they were starving! [laughs]
So …

�LG: Were there also complaints about the beds?
SW: Oh, the beds were too short! Beds were much too short, and now the … every
guy was like, walking around with a sore back and hurt knees because they
were scrunched into these little beds. Yeah, there was all these things that
Skidmore needed to … there were growing pains, that’s…
LG: Did they hang out the sheets? Out the windows, to complain?
SW: Oh, I don’t remember that! Oh, I don’t remember that, no, that must be
somebody else’s story. All I remember is the story about the food.
LG: Yeah, the trustees were on campus.
SW: Oh, no kidding! Oh, that’s funny. Yeah. Um, so, you know, I think that’s,
just the … and of course, when we first came, when I came to Skidmore, we
were still on the old campus. There were still half of … the busses were still
going from Moore Hall, the big, the “Pink Palace,” from Moore Hall to
Johnson Campus, because there were still classes going on down in the old
campus. Which, that, within two or three years … well, not, no, not the
residences… . Classes moved, almost always, all up to the new campus, but
the residence halls, Moore Hall, still used, still was functioning, for many,
many years, until they finally built enough dormitories for all of the students
to …
LG: So, did that impact what you were doing?
SW: Um, no. No, it did not. I mean, I just, it was just an interesting transition and
it was one in which, for someone who was also involved, because I was
teaching, I knew the community, the Saratoga community, having been a
teacher, I was very involved in many of the Saratoga projects. I worked on
the Art in the Park project and many of the other kind of community-based
projects for kids in town. It was interesting to see what Saratoga was going
to do vis-a-vis the Skidmore, old Skidmore campus. And that was an
interesting conversation for many years. Actually … well, not anymore, but

�was for many years, as to what to do with those buildings, how to best
repurpose them, were we going to tear — should they be torn down? Et
cetera, et cetera. Verrazzano College, which no longer exists, bought most of
the old campus …
LG: That was Verrazzano?
SW: Yeah, that was Verrazzano, and they set up a college, just where the old
Skidmore campus was, but they did not last, and therefore many of the
buildings were sold to private individuals. And so, we now see that, if you
go on the east side, many of the old Skidmore buildings, even with the
Skidmore names on them, are now either private residences or apartments, et
cetera. And now Empire State has taken over many of those buildings, those
buildings as well. So, there’s been a lot of change. When I, the day that I
came to Saratoga, … in 1970, March … no, March of 1971, I was not yet
married, I was engaged to be married in July, and my soon-to-be husband
was up here for an interview for this job at the Counseling Center, and I
came up to see what, if we got this, if he got this job, where we would live
and what would be, where I would be. And it was March! And we all know
what Saratoga looks like in March. It’s muddy, it’s gray, it’s dirty, there’s
old snow everywhere, and in 1971, three quarters of Broadway was
barricaded. There was … no stores. They were papered over … there was
the Church Street News, the Farmer’s Hardware, Glickman’s Store, General
Store, and that’s about it. There was very, very little, in terms of …
LG: How about antique stores?
SW: No, that was Ballston Spa that had, I mean, we had a lot of just open store
fronts, barren open store fronts. Um, and I sat in the Red Barn, I don’t know
… you won’t remember the Red Barn. The Red Barn used to be where
Fingerpaint is now, which used to be where Borders was. While my soon-tobe husband was in his interview with Claire Olds and, …
LG: Who was then Dean of…?

�SW: She was Dean of the Students, because he had to meet with her regarding the
Counseling Center, and then he met with President Palamountain and he met
with Dr. Mastrianni, who was doing partial counseling work at the time. And
I sat in the Red Barn and was looking … thought, well I could go up and
down Broadway, I could go in the shops, I can see what’s going on …
Hmmnn. [laughs] Nope! There was nothing! It was freezing, it was cold, it
was dreary, I sat in the Red Barn drinking a cup of very bad coffee thinking,
“Please don’t get this job! Please don’t get this job! This place is horrible!
Oh, my goodness!” And he came out of that and he got the job and here we
are, here I am 50 years later. Very, very happy. Happily, Skidmore was a
huge part of that happiness, and I raised my two children here and they had a
fabulous education in the public schools and went on …
LG: What year did you retire?
SW: I don’t remember! I have no idea. In fact, I was going to ask you that because
it’s not on my piece of paper! You must have it on a [laughs] I can’t
remember what year I retired! Four years ago? Maybe? I don’t remember.
LG: I’ll check on that.
SW: It’s terrible, I … really, I’m sorry. I’m sure you know what it could have …
um, twenty … it was December of, I retired mid-year, so it …
LG: Was it 2000…?
SW: No, oh no, no, because I was …
LG: 17
SW: 2017, that makes sense. Yes, 2017. Because I was in China, teaching at the
University, in … on September 11th. And … I had just gotten to China. I
had gotten there two weeks earlier. I had gotten on the plane and gone over
at the end of August and I taught in China from 2001 to 2002 and then I
went back in 2004 and 5 to follow up on some things that I had started over

�there. But my teaching year was ’01-’02, and I’d been there, and three weeks
later, 9/11 occurred. And, I came back after a year, I didn’t come back at all
during the whole time I was in China, I was back a year later and found that,
coming onto campus, I was … I was going through what everyone went
through the year before. And it was fascinating to watch me. I watched
myself, I’m going, “Why am I so emotional? Why am I having all these
feelings about this?” Because I wasn’t here. I wasn’t there, I didn’t see
anything. And they had the anniversary and I was there and I was … you
know, Skidmore did some wonderful things during that period for their
faculty and their students, so … Anyway, what else? Anything else?
LG: I was about to ask you.
SW: Oh, I’m very sorry! I think … anything else? I don’t know. I’m sure that
when I’m done with this, I’m going to think of twenty things that I wanted to
tell … I wanted to talk to you about. Um …
LG: So, you saw a number of different presidents?
SW: Yes, I did. I came in under Joe Palamountain, and then, … was it
Jamienne…or, …
LG: David?
SW: No, Jamienne…? Oh, David was first. Ok. And David, oh! Whom I adored,
adored, adored. He was one of the most remarkable human beings. And he
remembered my name, and there’s no reason why anybody should ever
remember my name, I was kind of a small cog in a very big machine and he
always remembered my name, always came … he was the president, if you
remember, he came to every department. He came around and sat in
everybody’s office and wanted to talk to you. And he came into my teeny
little closet of an office in UWW and wanted to know all about it, with huge
enthusiasm, and caring and kindness, oh! He was a wonderful man. A great
loss for us, for every… for the world, actually. And then, Jamienne Studley

�had her short tenure, and then President Glotzbach, and now President
Conner. So, yes, I’ve seen a lot, through many, many. Um …
LG: Lots of changes in the administration …
SW: Lots of changes. It’s interesting. You know, again, as someone who was
totally invested in Skidmore College but I didn’t have a part, I was invested
personally but I didn’t own anything because I was always in these programs
that were kind of um, different, aside from the main mission of the College, I
couldn't really … I had an interesting perspective and I kept watching every
five or ten years or so, the same questions — that the faculty were raising
the same questions again and again, about curriculum again, about issues of
diversity and inclusion, about the role of a liberal arts college in the world,
and how were we going to stay relevant. These are all questions that we
went around and around for many, many years in different iterations, and I
think they’re still valid, I was glad that Skidmore was asking those
questions, because it kept them, I think it kept Skidmore viable and fresh and
… I was always impressed with their sincerity and seriousness about our
role, our job, as educators.
LG: Thank you so much!
SW: You’re welcome. This is my pleasure, and thank you for inviting me. And I’ll
call you up when I have five more things to tell you! [laughs]

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                <text>The given photo tells the story of a single tent resting on the bank of Raquette River, the third longest river entirely in the state of New York— running at about 146 miles long. The personal significance of this photo goes no further in terms of its history but rather begins to tell a story through the depiction of trees and a single tent. I often see trees as being, like humans, incredibly flexible while being extremely fragile. They are strong yet graceful, they can bend but break under certain circumstances, yet stand tall and proud. The tent speaks to getting outside and appreciating what nature has to offer. As Edward Abbey so eloquently states, “wilderness is not a luxury but a necessity of the human spirit, and as a vital to our lives as water and good bread.” Often times we don’t realize what time in the wilderness can do for us and mean to us until we fully immerse ourselves in it. </text>
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                    <text>Interviewee: John Cunningham
Years at Skidmore: 1967-2017
Interviewer: Lynne Gelber
Location of Interview: Saratoga Springs, NY
Date of Interview: April 4, 2022
00:00:00 Header
00:00:39 Grew up in Greenwich, CT; uncle, who was painter, lived with family, normalizing
notion of career as artist.
00:01:21 As child, always interested in creative projects, science, &amp; math.
00:01:38 Earned Bachelor’s degree in Physical Chemistry from Kenyon College (OH).
00:02:12 In senior year at Kenyon, took first painting class - discovered the excitement of
art:“every mark was unique.” Subsequently decided to apply to Yale to study art.
00:03:24 Kenyon painting teacher Joe Slate supported decision &amp; helped get Yale interview.
00:04:45 Yale interviewers thought it “cool that a scientist …wanted to be an artist.”
00:05:45 Cunningham had no sculpture experience before Yale, though his uncle had studied w/
Jackson Pollock.
00:06:20 “I really loved college! …I didn’t …get all As. I got As in those kind of things that
interested me, mostly the strange things that everybody else flunked [laughs].”
00:06:55 Two degrees from Yale: BA in 1963 &amp; MA 1965.
00:07:10 Chemistry background led to job in Yale Geology department neutron activation lab.
00:09:12 After Yale, worked for kinetic sculptor George Rickey; physics knowledge helpful.
00:10:42 A couple of years later began to seek teaching positions &amp; hired at Skidmore (1967).
00:12:18 “At that point, Yale graduates …[were known for creating] teaching experiences that
produced … extraordinary results … individuals with just staggering skills.”
00:14:16 In early years at Skidmore, there was a lot of socializing between faculty &amp; parents
and faculty &amp; students. When Cunningham interviewed w/ Alice Mosher, she mentioned some
faculty who had married students. That wasn’t shocking then.
00:15:55 Also, there was a strong collaborative working atmosphere among the art students.
00:18:20 When Skidmore all women, much student travel; after men began to attend, less travel.
00:19:45 In first few co-ed years, the women voted the men into the offices/leadership
positions.
00:20:47 Before became fully co-ed, male RPI &amp; Colgate students attended Skidmore courses.
00:21:02 One Colgate medical student, Ben Cohen, also interested in art. Cunningham insists, “I
did not flunk him! [laughs] … He was a really great guy.”
00:22:55 “I was absolutely staggered by the accomplishments and skill of the women at
Skidmore… stunned at how high the board scores were… impressed by the accomplishments …
and still am, actually.”
00:24:45 The Great Race: originated with donation of huge amount of styrofoam; realized it
would be great for making boats, opened up community contest to make boats out of anything
and then race them across a pond out in Greenfield.
00:29:12 The old campus had problems with security. New campus building is beautiful, but we
lost the faculty studio space, which had been a focal point of student-faculty activity.
00:31:04 During planning for new building, Cunningham spoke to architect and suggested a
way to expand his office without expanding costs, so ended up with huge office!

�00:32:56 While at Skidmore, “I started my own business, I had patents, I kept going on my
scientific pursuits, I published in Nature magazine, … and I was very involved with my teaching
… I just generally loved my teaching. My students were great, absolutely great.” “My goal was
to present students with really exciting and interesting materials and circumstances where they
could really just fulfill themselves, and my goal was to help them do that.”
00:34:41 In 1967, Skidmore art dept. didn’t even have a drill press. By 2017, had 3-D printers.
00:35:33 Upon starting, ordered many tools and taught students to use them. The existing
faculty didn’t think it appropriate for women to use tools like bandsaws and compressors.
00:36:52 While sculpting one day, discovered method for craning force; published &amp; patented.
00:40:19 Started company that built Seicon isolator, a device to absorb vibrations.
00:41:10 Started the business because he had presented info about the isolator to Caltrans, who
offered to support a bridge project if he could raise $ for it.
00:41:47 No bridge, but raised over $3 million, learned a lot, enjoyed science and art combo.
00:43:12 After the business, time writing about conceptual art. Not yet published, but might.
00:44:41 In retirement, enjoying beach driving and fishing. Also doing 3-D printing sculpture.
00:45:38 To do 3-D art, one must know how to draw well. … “I’m having a lot of fun with it.”
00:47:05 Unlike riding a bike, the software is challenging to get back to after being away.
Overall, the CAD (Computer Aided Design) software is “more difficult than you’d think."
00:49:00 “I regard myself as an incredibly lucky man.” I don’t …recall actually having a boss
… I came from that generation where faculty would shout and argue with the president at faculty
meetings.” Remembers one meeting where “Somebody took a swing at somebody else!”
00:51:30 On introducing students to using computers in the creative process, started
incrementally.
00:52:56 Once when there was difficulty getting budget approval for supplies, met with Dean.
“He was just so amazed at what I was showing to him … we got some neat stuff, really
wonderful stuff.”
00:55:42 “It was just an extraordinary privilege. I had a lot to do! You know what I mean? I had
a lot to do!” [laughs]
00:56:08 END

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                    <text>Interview with John Cunningham by Lynne Gelber, Skidmore College
Retiree Oral History Project, Saratoga Springs, New York, April 4, 2022.
JOHN CUNNINGHAM: This is harder than I thought it was going to be. [laughs]
LYNNE GELBER: This is Lynne Gelber. It’s April 4th, 2022. I’m here with John
Cunningham, retired from the Art Department, and our wonderful helper
Susan Bender. And John, welcome. It’s really nice to see you after so many
years. I just want to ask you to tell us where you grew up and how you came
to be at Skidmore. So why don’t we start there.
JC: Ok. I grew up in Greenwich, Connecticut. My uncle was a painter and he lived
with us for years. So, when I was small, growing up, the smell of oil
painting, like, just filled the house, and one of the things about it was, I
guess when you grow up that way, you know, the idea of being an artist is
just truly a real thing. There’s nothing odd or strange about people being
artists — it’s just a thing that people do. I also wonder about the oil fumes. I
always kind of feel, looking back on it, who knows? I could have been really
intelligent [laughs] if it weren’t for those fumes! And I guess I was always
interested in what I thought to be creative stuff. I did lots of projects when I
was younger, and I was very, very good at science, and particularly
mathematics, and so when I went off to college, at Kenyon College in Ohio,
I was a … physical chemistry was my speciality. And I was … [laughs]
actually, looking back on it, I tell my students about this and they feel it’s a
little bit sick… I was remarkably good at it. I was remarkably good at the
math. I could walk up to a blackboard in those days, and write out —
actually I needed two blackboards — and write out the proof of the

�Heisenberg uncertainty principle. And … I didn’t think of it at the time, I
look back and I don’t even think my professors could do that.
My senior year in college [laughs] I took a painting course. And that’s when
I discovered that being creative really had nothing, necessarily, to do with
science. One of the things about science I always thought was interesting,
that for a thing to be real, for a thing to actually be considered to have
happened, it has to happen more than once! [laughs]. If a thing happens just
once — well I guess the Big Bang happened once, so I guess we have to
accept that — but if things just happen once, scientists just assume it just
really didn’t happen because it must be duplicable and be observed by
others. And, and then I discovered art. Did that, you know. You reach out to
that canvas and you blot your brush to that surface, every mark was special,
every mark was unique, and I discovered that being creative had nothing to
do with putting on a lab coat and mechanically reproducing experiments that
hundreds of other people had done before. So, I took that one painting
course and …
LG: Was it the professor or people in the class who inspired you, or … the
material?
JC: It was me. Oh, and I had a great teacher, very imaginative, Joe Slate, very
imaginative and…
LG: What was his name?
JC: Joe Slate. Joseph Slate. He was a Yale graduate, and one day in the spring of
my senior year, Joe said to me, he said, … no, actually, I started it, because I
said, “Hey Joe,” I said, “You know, I’m thinking of changing from
chemistry and maybe focusing on art.” Joe goes, “Really?!” He says, “You
know, I was going to ask you about that,” he said, “but I didn’t want to

�change your opinion. I didn’t want to be forward,” he said. He said to me,
would you like to go to Yale?” [laughs]. So I said, “Yeah, sure I’d like to go
to Yale!” Because at that point it began to dawn on me that being creative
was something far more exciting than just donning a lab coat and
mechanically reproducing events that were well known and experienced
before, but rather there were aspects of being creative that were
tremendously exciting, really, really unique, and I was sure art was one of
them.
LG: So, you went to Yale for an MFA?
JC: Yeah, and, with … but I went to Yale. Well first, Joe Slate set me up with an
interview at Yale, see — because I had taken no art courses to speak of!
[laughs] This one painting course! And I was applying for entrance at Yale
Graduate School! But Yale in those days offered a BA and a BFA, and so I
went up for my interview and the people there thought it was so cool — this
was the old days, you could never get away with things like this nowadays
— they thought it was so cool that a scientist person wanted to be an artist. I
went up there, met a bunch of people, walked around, talked, and they said,
“Okay, you’re in.” [laughs] And for the next 3 years I thought I was a
special student, you know, but I wasn’t! I was just a student but I was a
student who had absolutely no art experience whatsoever and I was in
graduate school, see.
LG: But you had had experience with oil painting?
JC: Well, I’d done a little bit of, yeah, a semester of oil painting
LG: But with sculpture?
JC: No, I had no experience at all. Although my uncle, my uncle did study with
Jackson Pollock at the … at the Munson Arts Institute in New York. He was
a student with him. He said that the most intelligent thing he heard Jackson

�Pollack ever say was “Gin is a great cathartic.” Now, I knew what gin was,
I’m not sure, even today, I know what a cathartic is, [laughs] but it sounded
really funny at the time. So, anyway, I loved … actually, looking back, I
have to say, even when I was at Kenyon studying science, I loved college! I
really loved college. You know. Although I have to say I wasn’t, I didn’t
certainly get all As. I got A’s in those kind of things that interested me, the
strange things that everybody else flunked. [laughs].
LG: John, what kinds of … well let me ask you, when did you get your degree
from Yale?
JC: Well, I have two degrees from Yale. Let me see, one was, I think, in ’63, to
my surprise, they gave me a BA, and then in ’65 I got my MA from Yale.
Actually, when I was at Yale I got a job — most of my fellow students at
Yale got jobs in the Geology department doing, you know, drafting work in
the Geology department. And so I went to the Geology department and said,
“Hey, all my friends are working here. Have you got a job for me?” But I
knew nothing about drafting! And they said to me, “What can you do?” And
I said, “Well I know something about chemistry.” Turned out I knew a lot
more about chemistry than anybody in the Geology department [laughs] who
were accustomed to studying rocks! So, they put me in charge of a neutron
activation lab, because that was my speciality when I was in college, and I
was really very good at it. And, as a consequence of that — neutron
activation is when you bombard a molecule with neutrons, and you create an
unstable isotope and that emits radioactivity that’s proportional to the
amount of that material in a substance. And we were working on processes
where if you took a tablespoon of alcohol and mixed it in Lake Superior, we
could measure it. [laughs] But, during the process I got very radioactive, and
after my third … third, no second year, or so, my son was just born, the chair

�of the Geology department called me into his office and he said, “John, I
have to tell you something. You’ve just recorded more radioactivity than
anybody else has ever recorded at Yale university!” [laughs] So, that was
…I used to think it was funny, I brought my friends to the lab and I would
wave my hands in front of the Geiger counter and I always thought it was
funny. But you know in those days, who knew! We didn’t know. I always …
I wondered a little bit about what the effect was on my health, but here I am
at an advanced age and I seem to be doing alright, so! [laughs]
LG: Ok, so when you left Yale, what year was that?
JC: I think that was in ’65. But I went to, after I left Yale, I got a job working for a
sculptor, a kinetic sculptor by the name of George Rickey.
LG: And how did you meet George?
JC: George sent a letter out to all of the graduate schools saying that he was
looking for an assistant. He was looking for somebody who could weld, who
could solder, who could do metal work and all these other things, and I
could do those things so I responded. And, George and I, we had the most
amazing relationship because George was an incredibly educated man,
classically educated, and what we would do, he was a kinetic sculptor —
kind of think of Calder, in a way, things that balance, you know, center of
gravity, period functions, things like that — and we would sit around
George’s table, right, in the morning drinking coffee, and on a napkin
George would talk physics to me, back and forth, and he would draw these
things out on a napkin and then I would go out into the studio and I would
make them. And I was very good at the science part of it. One of the
problems with George, he had other artists who were assistants and these
were people who could make things but they never understood the science of

�it, and so I was the first person he ever worked with who understood, you
know, things like center of gravity, movements, you know, and so forth.
LG: So how come … you only stayed with him … one year?
JC: I worked with him for about three years, and at one point, I guess I walked in
and I realized it was time for the little bird to fly the nest, you know? And I
could easily see that I was getting too comfortable. And so what I did …
[laughs] talk about, you know, well luck, talk about luck, and maybe that’s
the secret to life, is luck, and being ready to act when that coin flips your
way, you know. So, I sat down and got a map, and I was living in a house
where, fortunately, we were paying very little rent, and I drew a circle on
that map of commuting distance, right, and
LG: And where was that house?
JC: The house was in Chatham, NY. And … big circle of commuting distance,
and within that circle were three colleges with significant art departments.
And one was SUNY, one was Williams and one was Skidmore. And, so I
just fired them off letters, saying, “Are you looking for a sculptor?” [laughs]
And all three of them were!! Can you imagine that? And…
LG: Well there was also a significant Yale presence here at Skidmore…
JC: Oh yeah, but that wasn’t necessarily a welcoming thing in those days.
LG: Oh?
JC: Oh yeah. Oh boy, there were politics involved in that decision. Everybody was
amazed at Skidmore that they hired me because those other three Yale guys
[laughs] were very controversial. And yet, here again, they hired a fourth
one, you know! Although I have to say I was a little bit of an outlier.
Although come to think about it, I’m thinking … at that point, Yale
graduates, with Josef Albers sort of background and direction, flooded the
country with ideas about design and creativity that were aesthetically

�magnetic, and these people put together very, very teachable experiences
that produced just extraordinary results, just extraordinary results! There was
a horrific flaw in the entire process, though, … and early on I kind of, I
knew exactly what it was, because these people believed, truly believed in
their heart of hearts, that they had defined creativity! They truly believed
this. And, of course, if you just think about it for a second, the moment you
define what being creative is, it ceases to be creative. I can’t understand why
more people didn’t see that, you know? Although, as far as a teaching
vehicle goes, they were able to produce individuals with just staggering
skills. People who could manipulate color and form. We produced students
who could draw with skills that you just don’t see nowadays. Our students
could sit down with an H pencil and sketch you while you sat and talked to
them, you know, they were that skilled. And …
LG: So now are you talking about Skidmore students?
JC: Skidmore students … well I’m talking about the Yale courses that were
developed all across the country. And, of course, I was a part of that, so in
that kind of context, I’m probably, as far as a teacher goes, more attractive,
you know.
LG: So, what courses did you teach when you started here?
JC: Well, I taught …
LG: And you started here in, again, 19…
JC: ’67. 1967. It was an all-women’s school… it was an all-women’s school…
Oh, can I tell you …? Okay, so, my very first interview with the chair of the
department, Alice Mosher, who was this wonderful, wonderful, brilliant,
brilliant woman. So, she sits down and she’s talking about the department
and she’s, “Well…” and she describes the department and the faculty, and
she’s “Oh, four or five of the faculty,” I can’t remember how many,

�“married Skidmore students.” I said, “Oh really,” I said, you know, “That’s
interesting.” [laughs] You know, didn’t think anything of it! “That’s good, I
guess,” you know? Years later, I can remember talking to my student
assistant and I said, “Yeah, when I came here it was really interesting, in my
first interview the chair of the department said there were a number of
faculty that married Skidmore students,” and the guy went, my assistant
went, “What!?” He was horrified! He was shocked! And I, when he was
shocked, I was shocked! I thought, “What did I say?” You know, “What did
I say?” [laughs].
To make a long story short, there was a period when we started, Lynne, you
must remember this, the faculty and the students were really, really close.
Really close. The faculty were also close to their parents, the parents would
come visit on the weekend, we’d have them over, we’d have Bloody Mary’s
on a Saturday afternoon, you know, the drinking age was 18. We had “beer
crits” [laughs] every Friday afternoon at 4 o’clock in my studio. And … it
was an exciting time. Oh, another thing about it that I thought was
interesting, as opposed to my view of artists today, is that we all shared. It
was a sistership, it was a brotherhood, it was like, we were all engaged in
this wonderful, exciting venture together, you know? Nowadays it’s every
man or woman for yourself, you know? There’s not that sense of sharing and
communication that existed then.
LG: I think that may have been your department.
JC: And, oh yes. Yeah, in particular.
LG: Not all departments were like that.
JC: I think that’s probably true.

�LG: There was considerable sharing across departments, by individuals, though.
JC: Yeah. No, I think you’re probably right on that. But it was also because, that
Yale background, we had this project, we were all engaged in this dream,
pursuing this dream, it was truly magical, looking back at it. There was a
soul to our involvement with the class, and with teaching, that I think sort of
evaporated over the years, you know? I feel privileged to have been able to
be a part of it.
LG: When you interviewed, did you interview with anybody besides Alice
Mosher?
JC: Oh yes. Edwin Moseley, who was Dean of the College, and uh, this was
funny, so Edwin says to me, in our first interview, he says, “John, have you
ever been to Skidmore before?” And I said, “Yeah, yes I have.” Well, I had
because my brother’s girlfriend called me up at Kenyon once, I think I was a
junior, called me up, this was my brother’s girlfriend, and she said to me,
“Would you like to come to Skidmore’s dance weekend with me?”
JC: I said, “I’m in the middle of Ohio, I have no way of getting there. Although I
have a friend with a car. Can you get two or three of my friends dates and
we’ll all drive up together?” And she said, “Sure.” So, we threw a case of
beer in the back of a car and drove up to Skidmore. And,
LG: Now this was a time when you could drink at 18 in New York but not in
Ohio, is that correct?
JC: Well, that didn’t slow us down in Ohio. I look back on it now, Kenyon was an
all-male school, okay, so all we had to do was drink, you know? Skidmore
was an all-women’s school and all they had to do was drink, I think, looking
back on it. Davis, Tom Davis, was the chaplain. He told me once, he did a
survey at Skidmore, probably a little before I got here, and he said,

�“You know, we did a survey and discovered that at any given time, 50% of
the girls were at other schools” because it was not that much fun to be, you
know, all by yourself alone here at Skidmore, “and the other 50% wanted to
leave but couldn’t!” [laughs] And while I was at Skidmore that changed, I
have to say. We got co-educational; all of a sudden it was really, really
rewarding, it was fun to be at Skidmore.
LG: What difference did it make in your department to have men in the
undergraduate classes?
JC: Well, I have to tell you the first men were really kind of … chancy [laughs].
You ask yourself, Skidmore goes co-educational, what kind of guy would
make that choice, right? So, our first candidates weren’t that strong, looking
back on it. And I’ll never forget one of my good friends saying to me,
“Boy,” she said to me, “You know, you really know when you’re hard up
when those poor guys start to look good to you.” [laughs]
And the first few years, you’ll remember this, the Skidmore girls voted men
into all of the offices — do you remember that? That was also, I thought,
really very revealing. But anyway, over the years things sort of evened out.
It was a rough time for the college, but I think for those of us struggling
through, it was a tremendously exciting time of flux, experimentation, and it
was very, very alive. I’m not the only one looking back and feeling
privileged being able to participate in that experience.
LG: When … before we became a fully co-educational institution, there was four
one-four, and, do you remember that men from Colgate would come over?
JC: Four-one-four, I think, happened after we were, I’m pretty sure it did, we were
co-educational, I think, by then. No? No. Because I was active … yeah,
four-one-four.

�LG: Because guys from Colgate would come over…
JC: Yeah, and I had classes where guys from Troy came over, too. Troy — RPI.
Yeah, I had a huge bunch of guys from RPI who would come.
LG: Because one of the people who came from Colgate was a medical … well, he
was studying to become a doctor, and his name was Ben Cohen.
JC: Oh, I remember Ben Cohen! Oh my God, Ben Cohen was this … Ben, oh, it’s
annoying, because Ben Cohen, Ben Cohen told the whole world that
Cunningham flunked him! [laughs] in three dimensional. And I, here’s my
chance to publicly set … I did not flunk Ben Cohen. [laughs] I gave Ben
Cohen a permanent incomplete! [laughs] But, ah, no, I remember Ben Cohen
very, very well.
LG: And I remember Ben Cohen (*see note) because his father said he could not
…um, he would not underwrite his college education if he left Colgate and
decided not to be a doctor. He wanted to be an artist.
JC: Yeah, yeah.
LG: And I just am remembering that he then went into UWW instead.
JC: Yeah. And I remember Ben Cohen at parties. We used to have student faculty
parties, and I can remember on occasion stepping over Ben Cohen [laughs]
at parties. But, I did not flunk him! He, actually, that was published in the
magazine! I was shocked to see that published! [laughs]. But, no Ben was a
great guy, though. He was really a great guy.
LG: What were some of the other highlight moments of becoming co-educational?
JC: Uhh… I will say this, that when I came to Skidmore as a young man, I grew
up in a family with… I have two brothers, I went to Kenyon — it was all
male, you know, and so when I arrived at Skidmore I was, as far as women
go, I was I think rather shy, and I was absolutely staggered by the
accomplishments and skill of the women at Skidmore. I remember going

�through their college board scores as an advisor, and I was stunned at how
high the board scores were — just absolutely stunned. And, that took me a
long time … I got over that shyness, you may have noticed that [laughs]. But
I was very, very shy. So, I started from a point of view where I really was
impressed by the accomplishments of women at Skidmore, and still am,
actually. And I think the guys came to Skidmore and ,all of a sudden, the
college environment became whole and healthy, and men brought a very
different sort of an attitude toward it, and we all grew, sort of, accordingly,
but I have to say, looking back on it, some of my best friends today are
women that I met, kind of back then as a consequence of shared activities,
you know, and stuff… and men, too.
LG: John, what are some of the other highlights from your experience at
Skidmore?
JC: Well of course we did the Great Race. Do you remember the Great Race?
LG: Oh yeah! Why don’t you explain it?
JC: Well in those days, see, if you really wanted to get a big crowd of people, all
you had to do, since the drinking age was 18, was to get a keg of beer and a
huge crowd would show up, see? So, if you had a project [laughs] that you
wanted to do, getting it off the ground was really easy! So, about the time we
started this I had arranged with — what is it, Monsanto? One of the big
chemistry companies — to donate to Skidmore a boxcar full of Styrofoam.
And, you have to see a boxcar to really understand how much Styrofoam
that is! It’s a huge amount of Styrofoam! And I hadn’t considered how much
it was. So anyway, the boxcar arrived at a siding and we had the Skidmore
grounds people to take it … the only place we could put it on the old campus
was in the steam room, the steam house, where they packed it in there in this
great big industrial space and you went in there and you could just barely get

�through and all the rest was Styrofoam! So, for years we made Styrofoam
stuff. So, there we were in class one day and we’re thinking, “Hey, we’ve
got all of this Styrofoam. It’s the perfect stuff to make boats. Let’s have a
race!” [laughs] So it started in my class. So, we put posters up and I went
and I talked to this guy Braim, who’s a local lawyer who owns — actually
there’s a street named after him, and it’s Braim’s Pond; it’s up here in
Greenfield, I think. And he gave us permission. In fact, he actually went and
hired himself a master of ceremonies, which I thought was really kind of
funny, but he really supported us. So, I put signs up and my assistant put
signs up, and … I can remember my assistant, at that time, Mary KeatingLeahey, is her name now. So, we got a couple of kegs of beer, we put the
kegs of beer on the side of the road where this pond was, and we sat there
wondering, “is anybody going to show up?” [laughs] Feeling a little bit silly,
but then, again, we had a couple of kegs of beer, at least we could drink beer
[laughs] and then all of a sudden, at one point down the end of the road, we
saw this car driving around the, it was an old dirt road, driving around this
corner with this strange contraption strapped to the roof, and we knew we
were good. And all these people showed up! And the pond, a week before,
had been frozen, so the water was really, really cold. And so, for a series of
years we held the Great Race! And we … what the hell was the prize? I’m
trying to remember what the prize was. There was a whole series of rules,
and the last rule, I think, was the best — the last rule was that you could
cheat! [laughs] We made it very clear.
LG: So, the idea was to make something with Styrofoam?
JC: With anything. With anything! And the idea, we had a course laid out, see.
And one time, since you could cheat, some guys from RPI came in wet suits
and, in the middle of the night, and they laid a rope from one end of the lake

�to the other, see, [laughs] and they had this contraption that they then tied
the rope to and then when we said “start” the people on the other were like
pulling on the rope!
LG: Now did that ever continue on the new campus?
JC: We did it for a couple of years and then I, you know, I … I thought that it was
inappropriate for me to continue to be the prime mover of it and I just sort of
tried to encourage the student body, just to take it over and sort of step out of
it and it did happen, gosh, it still may be on the calendar, The Great Race,
and they put this little notice up, I don’t think anybody shows up! But for
years they would do this…[laughs].
LG: Let’s talk about the move to the new campus and how that affected you, how
you adjusted to new space.
JC: Oh well, the old campus was just a horrible, horrible thing, and the art
department was the last to move. And we had terrible problems down there
with security, so moving up here was a, just a wonderful opportunity. And,
of course, the new building was beautiful. But, there were lots of things that
we gave up. On the old campus, because you had all these old buildings, all
the faculty had their own little studios. Now, the studio wouldn’t necessarily
be a room any bigger than this, but it was your place to work. It was on
campus. And, it was very funny, the plans always, always included faculty
studios, as part of the future, and it’s sort of remarkable how, over the years,
that was just forgotten. But I have to say, one of the things I greatly missed
was the fact that my, our studios, the faculty studios, became just a focal
point of student-faculty activity, on the old campus, and that we ended up
losing. Our colleagues, outside of the department, always kind of … they
would look at our building and see the teaching studios we have and
somehow assume that those were our spaces, you know, but, really, they

�weren’t — we couldn’t create our own work in the spaces reserved for
students, and with supplies reserved for students, either. So, in the end I
created my own studio, and many of the other faculty did, which meant that
activities that used to — professional activities that used to involve
Skidmore and my students ceased to exist because I was, you know,
elsewhere. So that’s a price we paid.
LG: Did you have any role to play in the planning of …?
JC: Oh yes, oh yes. [laughs] So, my office was designed between ceramics, and
there was another wing that was sculpture. And there was this little space, in
between part, was my office, and I remember talking to the architect, “Hey
look, do you realize that you could take that front wall of my office and
move it forward another 20 feet [laughs] and all we have to do is just pay for
a little bit more ceiling [laughs].” I said, “Furthermore, we can cut the
expense by not putting any ceiling in, just leave the pipes open,” and so
forth. So, I ended up with, I think, the biggest office on campus. In fact,
Palamountain came to visit once and he’s looking around this brand-new
building and somebody says, “Yeah, and this is John’s office” and
Palamountain sticks his head in and then he goes, “How in the hell did
Cunningham get this big space?” [laughs] I just happened to be there talking
to the architect. [laughs]. But no, it was a beautiful space; I loved my office.
And, in fact, when I retired I … for 50 years, I had a place on campus, you
know, for 50 years, and it was always there. And that’s …
LG: And you retired in what year?
JC: I retired in, when did I retire … 2017? Yeah. Is that 50 years? Yeah.
Something like that, yeah. So, I miss that office. I really do. Any place in
Saratoga, I always had my office. And go hang out, go read, you know. But,

�in fact, I haven’t been back to my office. It would make me feel sad. I’m
hoping John Galt is in there….laughs]
LG: So, were there other highlights that, you know, special moments for you, in
the course of those 50 years?
JC: Well, I think that, as I was saying before we started the formal part of the
interview, I think …for me, I was really involved in doing things. I started
my own business, I had patents, I kept going on my scientific pursuits, I
published in Nature magazine, … and I was very involved with my teaching,
I mean I just generally loved my teaching. My students were great,
absolutely great. Wonderful, wonderful people. And, as I got older, I became
very selfish, as I may have said, and if I could be on a committee and I
thought I could make a difference I’d be on a committee. Otherwise, the
hell with it. I think much of the stuff the faculty has to do involves jumping
through hoops and I had already jumped through 50 years of hoops, so I just
pursued my own heart and what I saw to be my students’ best interests.
One of the things with my discipline, by the way, is that, as opposed to my
friend who taught Physics, where much of the time he had to regretfully
inform them that they just got a C minus, and hence their career as a doctor
[laughs] was in question, you know, and suffered terrible phone calls from
angry and hostile parents, my goal was to present students with really
exciting and interesting materials and circumstances where they could really
just fulfill themselves, and my goal was to help them do that. And at the very
end I got heavily involved in three-dimensional printing, you know —
computer processes. And, in fact, if I would be …one of the things that
disappointed me a little bit about retiring is that in the three or four years just
before I retired I was really able to bring sophisticated technologies like 3-D

�printing to the Skidmore sculpture area, and just as we were getting off the
ground I sort of left. [laughs] But I guess it’s ongoing now. In that same
respect, when I came to teach at Skidmore the sculpture area had … like, a
drill press [laughs]. No, wait a minute, it didn’t have a drill press! When I
came, I ordered a drill press! I think they had a hand drill, you know! And
that was the only tool they had.
LG: So, you had to teach the students how to use the tools?
JC: Yeah, oh, and that was … oh I remember the existing faculty were very upset
because they didn’t think women should be … it was appropriate for women
to use tools like that. Especially when I was ordering things like bandsaws
and compressors. So, anyways, usually what I did was, I kind of outfitted
Skidmore the way my own studio was outfitted … with like, well, in the end
plasma cutters, welding equipment, woodworking stuff. My kind of work
sort of spread over a variety of interests. Here is the interesting thing,
though, my studio is bigger than my house at home and it has all of the kinds
of stuff that Skidmore has, and now that I do 3-D printing, I don’t need any
of it. [laughs] I don’t need any of it! I sit down in front of my computer, you
know, and I create these drawings — which, by the way, is much harder than
it sounds — hit a button, and a couple of weeks later a big box arrives on the
front porch. And … I’m thinking that’s the future. That’s the future. That’s
sort of the next step that I would have loved to have been able to see.
LG: You mentioned that you had patents?
JC: Yes.
LG: Do you want to talk about that a little bit?
JC: Uh, one day I was … I said that science sort of followed me around … I was
making a piece of sculpture, right, and so I was reaching down my hands
and had these little screen parts and I’m pushing them around, and, all of a

�sudden, I saw a way of creating force that I knew nobody had ever seen
before. I also knew for [sure-ity] certainty how the pyramids were built, how
Easter Island was built, how Stonehenge was put together, and … but it
seemed to be such an abstract, difficult thing … I was invited to be a guest
lecturer at a Mensa convention once, and I brought all my models and things
and at that point I hadn’t figured out the mathematics of it and I invited all of
these intelligent people to look at this and see if they could help me kind of
figure it out. You could see how it worked! You could see how you could
lift something HUGE with a minimum of force, but mathematically I wasn’t
able to see the picture until, [laughs] and every time I always say “whatever
you do,” I say to my students, “Don’t throw away your old physics book.”
[laughs] So I took my old college physics book, put it down, and discovered
that I could figure out the math. And in those days, I don’t know if they still
have the program, but NYU, which had a “premiero” physics department,
had a relationship with the art department, or with the school, with
Skidmore. You could go down to NYU and they would give you library
services and stuff and help you do research and I went down there with the
physics department at NYU. I sent them all my papers about how you could
generate, or magnify, force using this principle, and I sent them all my
mathematics, and I went down there. And I’ve since discovered that Larry
Spruch, who was chairman of the department, was a world famous … world
famous physicist! So, I went down to see him and I went in his office and
there were four or five guys, and Larry Spruch was sitting in his office, and
so I went down there and they were interviewing me about this process. And
Larry, who by the way, had the deepest, strongest, most powerful voice of
any human being I’ve ever met, he said, “John,” he says, “We’ve looked at
your materials,” he says, “and John, it’s just garbage!” he said, “And,” he

�said, “we almost just threw them in the trash!” and he actually threw them in
the trash! [laughs] So I stood there … and … actually, looking back at all
my projects and things, I always had … knock on wood, because there’s
always an end to the story, you know, knock on wood, … I always had an
ability to know what I didn’t know. Some people don’t have that ability at
all, but, so far, I’ve always had that ability, you know, to know what I didn’t
know. So, Larry … I’m going, “Yeah, but Larry, you see, you go like this,
you go like this,” I go with my fingers, “and it’s an equilibrium and you …
that is forcing that…” And Larry goes, “He’s right! He’s right!” [laughs] He
says, “John,” he said, “you’d better publish this. We’ll help you publish it in
Nature,” he said, “because if you don’t publish this idea,” he said,
“somebody else is going to steal it.” That’s what they told me then. So not
only did I publish it, but I also patented the constructions derived by it to
build seismically isolated bridges and so forth. And I started a company —
we marketed, for years, a device that would … absorb all the vibrations from
your washing machine, you’ve got a washing machine it goes [wobble
sound] like this. Our device would just totally solve the problem. In fact,
Consumer Reports tested it, and they said, “We tested the Seicon isolator,”
the washing machine isolator, “and it’s the only one we’ve ever tested that
actually works!” [laughs] they said. But then they said, “but it’s very
expensive!” [laughs]. Which pissed me off, you know?
Caltrans … I went and made a presentation at Caltrans. Caltrans said that if I
could find the funds to build a bridge, they would supervise it and they
would test it, and I made arrangements to do that, but I had to raise the
money to build the bridge. And not being a scientist, I didn’t have access,
you know, to it. If I’d tried to write a grant proposal ,I didn’t even have the

�vocabulary, you know, to do it. So, I decided to start a company —
hopefully, my idea was, that we’d earn enough money to do the necessary
research, but we got sort of sidelined … involved in other things. But
anyway… Learned a lot being a businessman, though. Raised over three
million dollars, actually, as part of the project. It was always funny, it’s like,
people … I can remember prospective freshmen coming into my office, and
usually, often, the father would be openly contemptuous of art as a future
…[laughs]. The conversation would come up, “What do you do? What are
you doing?” And at one point my company was invited to Bath Ironworks to
see if we could apply the isolation system to the drive systems of Navy
warships. So, I would say, “Yeah, this is what I’m doing.” [laughs] Only to
get an angry letter from this guy saying that I’m supporting the military
[laughs] establishment, see! I think it’s really cool, warships are really cool
things! Oops! Anyway, so the science things, I sort of, I guess I never did
separate it from my other interests, you know.
LG: So, does that company still exist?
JC: No, it sort of faded … faded out. It faded out. Well, when I was running it, it
was going really well, but then I sort of lost interest in making money, and
… I had other things to do. I’m really, super glad I did, too, you know,
because I think I did … I ended up doing some really, really interesting
things that I never would have done otherwise.
LG: Like what?
JC: Ah [laughs], well a lot of writing that hasn’t been published, okay. For
example, I have written, I think, a staggering article about conceptual art,
you know, based upon many of my experiences. And one of the things about
getting older that I find really interesting, I have lots of things like this that I

�haven’t published and I think they’re really, really important — it’s like my
article for Nature, you know.
LG: So where are you publishing?
JC: I haven’t. It’s just living on my computer. Oh, little bits of it, little bits of it
kind of go out into the world. But again, since I’m an artist and a sculptor
and I didn’t come from a world that published, and things, and I think as a
consequence I suffered from that. And I often think that since I’m retired
now, I should be taking these efforts and I should be … because I may be
gone [laughs] and it will all be forgotten and nobody will care! There’ll be
this ton of stuff, nobody will even go through it, they’ll just put it in the
garbage. [laughs]
LG: So, what have you been doing since you retired?
JC: Well, I just bought a brand-new Jeep Gladiator so I could really do substantial
beach driving and fishing. [laughs] Okay. And I’m doing three-dimensional
printing. I just ordered a work that’s done in stainless steel. It’s sort of an
interesting process, it starts off with a powder, a bed of powder, and this
laser fuses the powder, that’s how it makes it. And the interesting thing,
since it’s in a powder, the form is supported so you can do delicate things,
and I’m really interested to see that you could do stainless! It’s a modest
size, it’s only about this big, and I’m really looking forward to seeing that.
Although, this is interesting, I have, maybe, alluded to this earlier — I truly
believe this — I look at the things I make, and they’re made with computer
aided design programs, right, which are horrifically difficult to learn, you
know, but to use any of these programs, to do them well, you have to kind of
know how to draw, alright? And if you don’t know how to draw, you’re
forced to lean on clip-art, and other methods, right? And so the quality of the
artwork takes a huge hit. Nobody knows how to draw anymore. The people

�teaching drawing don’t know how to draw any more. [laughs] Very, very
few artists today can draw a flower pot and make it look like it’s sitting on a
table top, for example, you know? And that’s one of the things that we used
to do at Skidmore incredibly well, years ago. So, even with threedimensional printing, I have a feeling that the kind of work you’re going to
see coming out of it is going to be limited, you know, in a way, because you
are going to be limited by the innate skills of the creative minds making it.
But, I’m not — it sounds like I’m discouraged, I’m not discouraged, I’m
having a lot of fun with it. I should have brought some to show you,
actually.
LG: Will the artists have to learn code?
JC: No, no, and I think that’s a huge mistake. I think people think they’re taking
the off-the-shelf processes and using them, but they’re devilishly
complicated. One interesting thing about software, I remember it being said
that you never forget how to ride a bicycle, and that’s kind of true. You
never forget how to ride a bicycle, but software, you forget how to do!
[laughs] And one of the people my company was doing business with, one
of the engineers remarked — he worked for a very large engineering firm —
when their designers, when their people who worked with CAD programs,
went on vacation, there was always a couple of weeks of down time for them
to get back into the drawing because you forget! There’s something about
the nature of using the software that, even if it’s sort of intuitive, it does not,
it doesn’t stick with you. It’s very, very hard to do. And it’s funny because
they have, Skidmore has started the, what is it, the Makerspace? And I
always laugh because the people putting the Makerspace together haven’t
really been doing three-dimensional printing or using the technology, and
the biggest problem with the Makerspace is going to be how are you going

�to get somebody to give you a drawing, a CAD drawing that’s adequate to
create significant objects. And, I’ve never had a student come to me with
those skills. So, it’s very, very... it’s much more difficult than you might
think. Anyway, so that’s what I’m doing now.
LG: We have about five more minutes left, so I’m curious to know if there’s
anything we should include that we haven’t touched on, or that I haven’t
asked about.
JC: Well, no. Otherwise I should say, I may have said this already, I regard myself
as an incredibly lucky man. That I’ve spent my whole life and I don’t think I
ever recall actually having a boss, [laughs] you know? Surrounded …
LG: I wonder how people like David Porter or subsequent art department heads
would [laughs]…
JC: I came from the, you know the generation. I came from that generation. I came
from that generation where faculty would shout and argue with the president
at faculty meetings. Do you remember that? You know? And, life has
changed. Life has really, really changed. So, I always, I just assumed those
prerogatives. It was a wonderful, wonderful opportunity. And, uh, I have to
say I …
LG: Whom did you shout at?
JC: What’s that?
LG: Who remains in your head that you shouted at?
JC: Oh, I remember one of our colleagues. Were you at that faculty meeting?
There was this fight and this argument and I was looking at this sea of
people, you know, and all of a sudden over the crowd I saw this fist go up in
the air! Somebody took a swing at somebody else! I don’t know who was
the swinger and who was the swingee! [laughs]

�LG: What was the topic? I mean what was the controversy? Do you remember? I
don’t.
JC: Do you remember that Sue? It was when we were meeting in …
LG: Was it Filene?
JC: No, that hall over here in, what’s its name,
LG: Palamountain?
JC: No, no down, where are we here …
LG: Starbuck?
JC: No, no, Starbuck, yeah. One of the, uh …. no, not Starbuck, in, let’s see…
LG: Oh, on the new campus? Originally, we were meeting in Filene and then we
were meeting in Palamountain.
JC: But in Starbuck isn’t there, there’s a big, big meeting room that was big
nough for all of us and we were in that room.
LG: I think it was Filene,
JC: No, no, it wasn’t Filene, for sure, I remember. Anyway, oh tempers! And it’s
funny, I have seen a change. When, I think the faculty used to say they were
the college and I don’t believe you can say that now. I’m not sure it was a
healthy thing to say that, or believe that, but nonetheless I think they, we
thought that in those days.
LG: Anything else we should ask, Susan?
SUSAN BENDER: Yeah, I’d be interested — when did you start introducing
students to using computers in their creative process?
JC: I started … oh, I actually gave a talk, one of those alumni talks, recently, and I
showed some of the work my students did, and, so I started, oh my gosh,
eight or nine years ago? But I started off gently. Now, of course, I send off a
file and this beautiful finished thing comes back. But we started off with
doing things like, um, we have a plasma cutter and you can program that

�plasma cutter to cut two dimensional shapes out, okay? And you can create a
virtual three-dimensional object and you can cut slices through it, threedimensionally, and with that plasma cutter you can cut out these cross
sections. And, you can then — oh the plasma cutter you could cut out your
signature, I mean, it does a beautiful, clean job — and, you can weld them
all together. So, I got into, we got into the computer thing kind of
incrementally, to the point where I am now, where it’s like, yeah, I do the
whole CAD program and I will do a three-dimensional thing, and like, little
by little by little. Oh, there was one thing, it was about four years ago, where
I would submit a budget for the supplies, and nothing would happen, you
know, and I was getting so frustrated because it’s like, time was passing and
we were missing out, and so I decided to make an appointment with the
Dean, and I would bring the Dean all the stuff…
LG: Who was that?
JC: I probably shouldn’t say. [laughs] Anyway, so, I went into his office, right?
And, you know he knew me and I knew him and we’d seen each other
around and I would speak up and stuff, and finally I said “Ok, listen, I’ve got
to talk to you about … this is who I am and this is what I’ve done.” I showed
him my Nature publication, I told him I was a scientist and … he was
horrified! He was just shocked. Because his attitude towards artists was that
artists just simply weren’t that intelligent. I just got that sense. He was just
so amazed at what I was showing to him, because like out of the blue this
guy comes up to him and says “Hey, listen this is what we are doing and this
is what I want to do with it.” I was saying to him, you know? And I have to
say he picked the ball up. He picked the ball up and we got some neat stuff,
really wonderful stuff. And then I had to retire. [laughs]No, I didn’t have to

�retire, but I did step down at … I’d like to think at the height of my game.
[laughs]
SB: Get out while the getting’s good?
JC: I think I did, yeah.
LG: John this has been a delightful hour to spend with you, thank you for sharing
some of your stories.
JC: I have to say that the entire experience, I think it was staggeringly significant
in that it also had a lot to do with people and personalities, it had to do with
the times. I know a lot of people, I remember, who was it, the Dean, ahh,
what’s her name, … I remember asking her, why so many people retired
embittered? So many of our colleagues, I thought, would retire, kind of …
just embittered, angry, you know? And I vowed I just wasn’t going to do
that. And she said, “Oh well, the student evaluations,” you know, all these
sorts of reasons. I never felt that way. I just … it was just an extraordinary
privilege. [inaudible] I had a lot to do! You know what I mean? I had a lot to
do! [laughs]
SB: Thank you John, this has been delightful.
JC: Well, you’re welcome, you’re very welcome.
END
*NOTE- Ben Cohen started Ben &amp; Jerry’s

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                    <text>Interviewee: Ken Hapeman
Years at Skidmore: 1981-2005
Location of Interview: Scribner Library, Skidmore College
Date of Interview: April 5, 2017

00:00:1:09 Born in Hudson New York, 1944. Grew up in Hudson and went to Hudson High School.
Father and grandfather were both from there.

00:00:1:25.00 Upon graduating high school went to RPI College. Brought an artifact from college- a
slideroom. Example of how the times have changed. 1962 -no calculators no computers.

00:04:02.00 Graduated from RPI with a degree in psychology. This was unusual, therefore were only
seven people in the department. Then went to work in Albany. Got a job right out of RPI at IBM and
worked there for 7 years. Then worked at state university of NY then moved onto Skidmore.

00:0:08:05.00 Had the opportunity to go to SUNY to be a technical specialist. Was there for 6
months in this position until the boss left and offered him his job. 60 people were working for him for
7 years. This is where he got management experience. In the end he couldn’t handle this working
evirornment so looked at want ads. Skidmore popped up.
00:11:11.00 1981 arrives at Skidmore. As a new employee the college’s endowment was in bad
shape. Skidmore received an annual audit saying you might want to consider bankruptcy. Then the
campus was given as a donation. At this point everything was basically moved from downtown-few
classes maybe still downtown.

00:14:06.00 When coming to Skidmore he was attracted by the thorough interview process. He met
everybody and thought it feels like a family. Very easy to make his feelings known and make
recommendations. “Closeness is what attracted me to the college.”
00:12:46.00 Thinks Palamountain is a wonderful speaker. “Very commanding and inspiring leader
but not sure if he was the best managerial leader.” Extremely likeable which was important to the
college at the time. “In the chaos, he was grounded and the right man for the times.”
00:17:22.00 1962-1981.“Times have changed so much.” Only two computers on campus. One
supporting academic activities- newly installed in 1980. Data sheets were sent out to Springfield,
Mass to be analyzed by consultants. Reports then came back to Skidmore for alumni to look at.

�Hapeman controlled both of these computers.
00:21:19.00 The college was in its infancy. “Task was to take all the stuff and put it into a reasonable
computing environment for the college” There were computers around the size of a washing
machine with 20mg of data – very small amount. At Skidmore there were two small computers and
few people had access to them- everyone else had nothing.
00:24:47.00 – His position was director of computer services . It was the first IT position that the
college had.

00:27:05.00 Hiring people was important- getting support was helpful. Needed to make it so more
students can interact with the computer at the same time. He and others did a thorough investigation
to find the right software- in the end they bought a new computer.

00:31:25.00 Everybody was squeezed in. Staff space was in inadequate offices and conditions but
eventually things changed.

00:33:20.00 in 1983 AMES came to campus- academic information management system. The
administrative system wasn’t perfect but they modified it to fit Skidmore’s needs and hired additional
programmers to help out unify the system.
00:36:15.00 David porter- wonderful man – “felt his humanity when you talked to him” “great punner”
In the faculty unrest he helped unify them.
00:41:09.00 Interacted with students who worked with him – students who ran the computer system
for the high school- amazing kids, used them for lab assistance. Had a “small sampling.”
00:42:29.00 1st half of the 1990s – personal computer started to show up “rocked our boat in many
ways.” Everybody wanted a mac but didn’t have the budget. The faculty and staff just began to have
their own computers in their offices--- first presence of this technology was in offices.
45:37.00 “Technology was booming of course…” the source of all knowledge resided in the
computer center in the 80s and in the 90s that spread to be somewhat of common knowledge. This
was a difficult transition psychologically.

48:53.00 By 1995 everything had changed- online registration - nothing is really done by paper

�anymore. All automated.
52:52.00 Started with a new system. Banner- works well with an institution like Skidmore – but he
doesn’t like banner. It’s successful to be on the same page as other institutions/colleges.

55:47.00 Since leaving Skidmore still converts things from AMES to banner, still has his technical
connections here.

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                    <text>Interview with Ken Hapeman by Max McDermott, Skidmore College Retiree Oral History
Project, Saratoga Springs, New York, April 5th, 2017.
Max McDermott: Hello, this is Max McDermott interviewing for the Skidmore retiree memory
project. I am with Ken Hapemen in a study room. Study room 126 in the Scribner library on a
Wednesday April 5th 2017.
Ken, Hello How are you today?
Ken Hapeman: I’m good how about you?
MM: Now to begin our interview, I’d ask if you could tell us- just to be able to get a bit of
context of where your story began -could you tell us where you were born, a little bit about
that and if you don’t mind, when?
KH: Sure, (cough) no I was born in Hudson, New York which is about 30 miles south of Albany in
1944. So I’m 72 years old right now. I grew up in Hudson, um I went to Hudson high school and
uh my parents had lived there. My father at least had lived there his whole life so we had deep
roots in Hudson. I believe his father had lived there as well. Upon graduating high school, I went
to RPI to college. And, actually, brought an artifact with me today maybe this is the time to
show it. How things have changed. Of course, this won’t show on the interview but I brought a
sliderule. Because as a freshman in engineering at RPI we had to all purchase a sliderule. And
we look at the high tech equipment today- the equipment I’m sitting here talking to you with
which is made available to you. We had to buy these things. They weren’t that expensive. I
think it was 50 or 60 dollars but this was as close as you could come to something that would
do a lot of complex math. And these things, you could do a lot with these things. You could
multiply, divide - you know logarithmic kind of computations and so this thing which I bought
for say 50 dollars back in 1962. I haven’t used it in a long, long time. It sits in my room I pull it
up just to bring it up as an example as how the times have changed.
MM: Wow, looking at this um I’m seeing I mean I am a complete layman in terms of anything
mathematical, anything to do with calculations. I’m seeing a ruler. I see a piece in a middle that
slides…
KH: Right, yup, and different…
MM: I can’t even begin to guess how it works.
KH: Well let’s do something really simple. Let’s say you want to multiply 3x2…. It can do a lot of
stuff. You put the one over the 2. So that’s the kind of thing it can do. It does a lot of
computations. (laughs) So this was the tool that all engineering students had to use. There were
no calculators, no computers; this was it. And so, we bought this. I was an engineering student
for a few years. I changed majors eventually and so this has sat unused. I really never used it
beyond a few classes. And now it’s an artifact. (laughs)

�MM: Wow
KH: So that’s me. I got to school at RPI. I graduated from RPI. I went to work in Albany. So I
spent my whole life in the capital district basically.
MM: Ok ok. And you always had an interest in mathematics. Sounds like engineering.
KH: Right I went to RPI as an electrical engineering major. I decided along the way that
engineering was not for me. I actually would have become a math major. I was very interested
in math, but as an engineering major we had to take something called engineering drawing.
Which is essentially what you can do with a CAD program today, but we had to do a long hand
with a big T-square and a giant board which we also had to buy. And because I spent 2 years
taking engineering drawing classes I didn’t take what would have been required to be a math
major at RPI which was two years of German or two years of Russian. (laughs) And so there was
no way to make that up. So, I switched out of engineering and actually graduated from RPI with
a degree in psychology. So, I was unusual, I was about one of seven people in the department
at that point. Um hmm it was unusual anyways. And so, I got a job right out of RIP with IBM in
Albany and worked there for about seven years. Then I went to State University of NY and
worked there for about seven years and then I came to Skidmore.
MM: Wow. Before we move onto Skidmore I just want to briefly ask. Could you sum up- what
did your experience teach you? From IBM from SUNY Albany?
KH: SUNY Central actually
MM: SUNY Central, right
KH: Um right. This is the office that administrates for all the SUNY colleges and all their
campuses.
MM: Right, right
KH: It’s not on a campus; it’s a central hub. It did a number of things- like centralized
application processing at that point and probably still today. If you are going to apply to SUNY
you filled out a common application and that was sent to SUNY central, the staff at SUNY
central, with data entered the common app and send it to the colleges you said you were
interested in. So, we did that service along with, you know, a bunch of other stuff. We ran some
site contracts we had a contract with a national library in Memphis to run something called the
Medline system, which was a very early search and retrieval service for medical information.
And a couple of other things. So, we did that. But anyway, my experiences when I graduated
from RPI, again, computing was in such an early phase that while I was at RPI I had taken one
course in digital computer design and one course in Fortran programming and that was it. That
was my total IT exposure.

�Most employers at that point in ’67, when I actually graduated, were looking for students in
various engineering majors, which I didn’t have, so I agreed to interview anybody who would
talk to any student. I really wanted a job I did not want to go to grad school. So, IBM was one of
those companies and I interviewed with them and a couple of others, got offers, decided to go
with IBM and they immediately sent me off to 16 weeks of training, which really taught me
everything that was the base of my knowledge of computing of IT. It was great. We did
programming at a machine level which meant we were actually writing machine instructions for
the computers at the time, which were IBM system 360s - big refrigerator like boxes - many of
them. And 3 months of that I went back to work for IBM. I was assigned to an IBM customer
site, where I had to help them install systems and that taught me again a great deal more. After
7 years things had changed in the IBM working environment so an opportunity to go to SUNY
came along and I went as sort of a technical specialist. And I had been there maybe three or
four maybe 6 months, I don't know, and my boss the person who had hired me left and
recommended me to take his job. So, suddenly I was in charge of this computing center in SUNY
central without really ample good experience to do it. But I muddled along and I had about 60
people working for me at that point. And I did that for about seven years. So that taught me a
lot about management. I had no management experience. I had a good technical background
but I didn't have the management background. About 1980 or so I started warning my bosses at
SUNY that the National Library of Medicine contract that we were operating was in danger. We
were going to lose it, and the computer center that I ran was built on a structure that depended
on funding from a variety of sources, one of which was the National Library of Medicine and
was a couple hundred thousand dollars. It was a chunk of money, a significant piece so we lost
that contract. And despite the fact that I had been warning my bosses about it, that we had to
restructure the financing of the computer center, they told me in 1980 when that contract went
away that I had to fire 12 people who didn't deserve to be fired. Who were doing good work,
but the money was just not there, so I did my job I fired 12 people. and I immediately started
looking at the want ads. That was too much. I could not remain in that environment. And I
hadn't started looking more than a month when an ad for a position at Skidmore College came
up. I made the jump.
MM: You made the jump
KH: Yeah
MM: Alright, so that's how you came to Skidmore.
KH: mhm
MM: So you arrived at Skidmore this year is 1981
KH:Right, yup

�MM: Ok now I want to know exactly the history of Skidmore from your point of view. Now,
aside from technology, aside from any computer science, just as new employee - I'm wondering
how you saw the college. As I understand that at this time the move from the old campus was
still ongoing. The college had put itself in financial danger from that project and when Leo
[Geoffrion] was talking to me he remembered President Joseph Palamountain announcing
proudly that after an ambitious fundraising campaign the College could boast an endowment of
12 million dollars. Can that be right? I mean today i looked it up. Today we have an endowment
of 330 million could we really have been in a state that far away?
KH: Well actually, I really don't remember the number but I know the general feeling was that
the colleges endowment was grossly inadequate. So, the number’s probably right. It’s certainly
in that ballpark. The college was in bad shape before making the move. They had received an
annual audit. A what was it called… let me see if I can come up with the terminology… there’s
an auditor's term for this… a non…um, uhh gee I'm not going to come up with it.
MM: I’m hoping you're not about to say bankruptcy…
KH: No, no, but you know it’s..what it is, it’s a letter from the auditors that says you don't really
have the structure to be a successful business and you want might consider, you might want to
consider bankruptcy. So it was pretty serious stuff. And the college had a few breaks at this
point. They got this campus as a donation I believe from J Eric Johnson and his family. And by
the time I came here actually the move was really complete. The only thing that remained
downtown were a few students and a few dorms but basically everything was…and I guess
there were a few classes taught downtown... but everything basically was here, most of the
campus was in place and complete.
MM: Ok. Could you tell me about your impression of the school when you first arrived as a
place to live and work?
KH: Yeah its interesting because where I had been at SUNY central; well, let’s go back to IBM. In
IBM I worked in an office in a huge corporation and the layers of bureaucracy above me
appeared endless. You know, I knew the people in my office but I didn't know anybody else.
When I went to SUNY it didn't seem quite so big, but it did seem extremely bureaucratic.
Everything had to go through a process; everything kind of ground to a halt every time you tried
to do something. Nothing was easy to do. So, when I came to Skidmore one of the things that
really attracted me, on the days that I interviewed here, were first of all the thorough interview
process. I met virtually everybody including the President, all of the deans, the department
heads of significance. I met everybody, and I felt, wow, this is a place which will feel to me more
like a family or a unit I can feel close to. In the sense that I’ll have some contact with everybody
from the top down and that was really my biggest impression at the time. It’s a smaller, tighter
unit than what I had been in and that I would work.… If I wanted to do something I could
explain it to my boss who was at the time was the Provost. It was a position that was done

�away with but he was a provost; but essentially, he was the Vice President for Academic Affairs.
And his boss was the president. I was two layers down from the top, so it was very easy to
make my feelings known and get recommendations and put action on it. Not that the
recommendations were always accepted, but many of them were, and I always felt I had a say.
So, that feeling when I came here of closeness was really what attracted me to the College.
MM: Excellent; happy to hear that. I'm wondering for more documentations of landmarks in
Skidmore history. As for President Palamountain whether Skidmore was heading in the right
direction under his presidency. Did you have an opinion on him?
KH: Yeah well, I had some opinions about him. He was a great speaker so he was very
commanding when he stood up in front of a group and talked and so that was inspiring. I would
say he's an inspirational leader I'm not sure if he was the best managerial leader. If you get my
opinion.... He uh spent a lot of time dealing with data and minutia. He was very interested in
data, so well we would get calls to his office because he was working on an old electric
typewriter- metal electric typewriter a data entry machine and had a problem with a word
processing machine. So, you wouldn't think he would be involved with that level of detail but
he was. But I liked the man. He was extremely likable and he was extremely inspirational which
was important to the College at that point.
MM: That’s good, so he kind of kept everyone together as the chaos was going through. It
sounds like it took a lot of effort to move that campus
KH: Right yeah I think he was the right man for the time.
MM: Now I'm gunna move on. Now your first impression of Skidmore as a computer scientist.
where did we stand in 1981. Were we up to date?
KH: Well, you know up to date is a funny way to think of it because the times have changed so
much. You know, as I brought my little slide rule with me from 1962 (when I bought that slide
rule) to 1981, there was a lot of change, but computing and information technology was largely
main frame systems with terminals tied to them. When I came to Skidmore what I found was
there were two computers on campus. and I was going to be in charge of both of those. One
supported academic activities; one supported administrative activities. The one supporting
academic activities had been newly installed in the past year, I would say, so 1980. It was a
Texas Instruments 990 which was a very inappropriate computer for academic activities,
unfortunately. So, the choice I think had been influenced by JR Johnson as head of TI who had
given the college so much land. I don't know exactly how that happened, but at any rate they
had a computer that they had high hopes for - the academic side of the house- and it was not
really doing the job. I would say it was pretty inadequate.
On the other side of things - in the administrative computing arena there was a Sperry Univac
System 3, which was about half the size of this table were sitting at. It was funny-shaped; it

�might have been almost as long as the table but not as deep. So, you know, 5 or 6 ft long by 3 ft
wide. It had sort of a desk built in and it was being run by a consultant so there were no
employees there except a part-time clerk in the business office. There was an IT consultant who
ran it for the college, and they had three or four, maybe five, terminals up in the business office
in Barrett Center and nothing anywhere else, and the rest of administrative computing like the
Alumni Office and Registrar’s Office, all of which have big needs, were relying on external
consultants. The Alumni Office would mail data sheets to Springfield, Massachusetts where
there were data entered by the consultant on their computers in Springfield, Mass. and then
the reports that came out of the computers came back here for the alumni staff to look at. So,
it was pretty slow pretty crude. The Registrar’s Office had a similar kind of arrangement with an
external consultant arena. So, the administrative computer only served Barrett Center and it
only had about 5 or 6 terminals.
The academic computer was located on 3rd floor Palamountain Hall. I just walked by it today to
see what it looks like up there and it actually looks remarkably similar. There are offices in the
area where there were some computer terminals and there’s a closet that has a computer
that’s still sitting there, so things don't look that much different up there. The terminals were
two four, I believe, CRT display terminals and a couple of typewriters hooked up to this machine
that was it. On the wall there were still a couple modems that were used apparently prior to
that purchase to connect over to Dartmouth, which is the way they used to get their service.
So, the College was in its infancy to say the least. But you know to say that things were so
different..., nobody had an iPhone; you know, nobody had a personal computer.Tthere were no
such things; they didn't exist. So, my task was to take all that stuff and try to figure out how to
grow it into a reasonable computing environment for the College.
MM: Ok for the sake of having images. I always loved having images in my head. I'm a very
visual person. When I hear computer, I'm picturing a screen with a keyboard and I type and
letters appear on the screen no.… were talking heavy bags of chips and wires. a lot of things
that would seem pretty incomprehensible to the average person.
KH: Right, yup. The TI 990 was sort of a rack monitor machine that looks like a tall version of
that thing behind you, and it had a disk drive which was I believe 20 meg of disk, which is an
insignificantly small amount, and it was roughly the size of a washing machine.
MM: And uh compared to IBM I'm wondering and SUNY Central, or where else you saw, how do
they compare?
KH: The IBM environment that I left behind at SUNY Central had a huge computer room; it was
probably 300 x 300 ft. And it was huge and it was full of large IBM machines each one of which
was about the size of a refrigerator and there probably were 20 or 30 boxes the size of a
refrigerator that made this up. Some of them were tape drives. They had huge tape drives;
some were big disk drives that look like washing machines again and some were the computer
itself. The machines back then were huge and they provided time sharing services only. That

�was it, if you had a computer terminal hooked to one of these computers with a video display.
That’s was the best you were going to get. A lot of people did what was called batch
submission. They didn't have a computer terminal if they wanted to do something; they had a
program that would do it for them. They would write data that were instructions on a key
punch sheet and would give it to a couple of girls in the department I was working at at that
point, which was the Department of Motor Vehicles. That’s where IBM had assigned me. They
had two women who were full-time key punch operators. All they did was take the sheets from
programmers and others and type that stuff up on punch cards which would get fed into the
computer through a card reader. So, that environment would also be crude by today’s
standards. Very extremely. But it was huge. But with Skidmore the difference was it was tiny.
You know it was (laughs) two small computers, um virtually you know there was no key punch
operators there was no card reader there was none of that. Few people had access to the
computers and everyone else had nothing.
MM: So, I’m happy to hear you say when you arrived at Skidmore on the personal side it did
feel very welcoming. It did feel very friendly so that’s nice but as for the computer science side
you said, well I have a lot of work to do. So, you were head of what is today known as the IT
Department and was then known as Computer Services.
KH: Right. It was known as Computer Services when I was hired. The position I was hired into
was called Director of Computer Services. And, it was new in the sense it was the first IT
position that the College had. The academic computer had been operated by two part-time
faculty members who probably got a little course relief for doing the work they did. I'm not sure
that was it or if they were still teaching too.
MM: I’ll interrupt you here. Leo mentioned the name Margeret Riper is that…
KH: Guider it was Guider. She was a math professor and the other professor who spent quite a
bit of time on the equipment was someone named Robert Jones who may still be here in the
Economics Department. He was here last I knew.
MM: Ok, ok ok; and just before moving on Leo also… I haven't confirmed with you what Leo
said in the basement of Barrett there was a Burrows B800.
KH: No, it was a Univak system, 3 system 80, that was the administrative computer. That was
the one being run by consultants. There were two full-time people there from the consultant.
Really one full-time person who came and went a lot, was there quite a bit in the basement of
Barrett. Thats how we started. When I was hired it was just me that was it. I was the first
person and I shortly thereafter hired Leo [Geoffrion], who mostly worked with the academic
computing side of the house, and another person Sam McGaughey who worked on the
administrative side.

�MM: Alright excellent that was what my next question was going to be. So what were the first
actions you took as head of Computer Services and would you be making those hires? What
else comes to mind of the first steps …
KH: The hires were important. I realized very quickly that one person wasn't going to be able to
do the job, so I worked to hire those guys which helped a great deal. Another thing was looking
for where the weaknesses were in the current system and trying to figure out a preliminary
plan for moving forward more effectively. Even before hiring the staff, I knew first of all with
the academic computer that we needed to have more terminals hooked to it, so that more
students could interact with it at the same time. It was four terminals in the first year (I was
hiring Leo at the same time), so I don't exactly know the sequence or anything but within a year
we had that four up to 12 ,which was helpful. The computer wasn't particularly good for the
jobs it was asked to do or could do, but at least people could get at it. That was the best we
could do as sort of a first wave and we did do that.
On the administrative side, I didn't like the whole plan cause what they were doing was they
had spent probably a couple of years by the time I got there developing software for the
Business Office, the accounting software. Written it from scratch and their plan was to once
they finished that to move on and go to the Registrar’s Office and write a registration system
from scratch for the Registrar’s Office then move to the…. The experience I had in software
development at that point told me that that was going to take them 20 years. You know it was
just not going to get done, and perfectly adequate software was available for purchase and so
right away I decided I was going to press for elimination of the contract for the consultants.
Scrapping the work they had done which was going to be a hard sell because there were a
couple proponents in the Business Office that believed in it. And buying a set of packaged
software that would serve the entire administrative college environment. That was a struggle
that took a lot of time for the first couple of years. I did convince my boss that continuing on
the way you were going was not good. He put together… he had me put together a committee
of people to go out and look at software and make a recommendation, and we spent a year
maybe traveling around to different colleges talking to people who had package software
installed already and doing those investigations. We did a thorough investigation and we
terminated the agreement with the consultant, bought a new computer, put system on it, and
moved forward from there.
MM: Wow sounds like some bold moves. It’s what needed to be done, I guess.
KH: It felt like it did. You know and they were fairly bold, I think.
MM: Ok, well you had the experience now. Now we know a bit more about your projects. I'm
wondering about these first years 1981, 1985, I'm wondering more about what daily life would
look like ,...where was your office.

�KH: I moved around a fair amount. My office was originally on the end of the little corridor I
referred to earlier on the 3d floor Palamountain. Basically, if you took the center steps of
Palamountain where you come in the front door facing west, I mean north, I mean you go up
the big stairs turn right and go down into the first corridor that goes to the right. My office was
down that corridor around a corner. I don't know who’s really now. It’s mostly English
Department, I think.
MM: Yeah, that’s right.
KH: And as you go down that corridor you see some very funny shallow offices.... Those are the
area we had our computer terminals in those early years. So, that was that. We were in that
location for a few years. I'm not sure quite how many, for a few. The other area was the
basement of Barrett center. I never had an office down there but once I hired Stan and we
began and transition of system from the consultant to our new software, Stan’s office was
down there and he was actually… (LAUGHS) he was in a totally unacceptable space. But he
didn’t complain. I mean, literally, you go in the basement of Barrett Center; there was an office
there. There was also a step up and a door that led to a totally unfinished basement. That was
his office and you know it was unfinished concrete pipes hanging down all kinds of weird stuff.
MM: Any windows?
KH: But no windows; no windows. It was a total cave. The only window was out in the hall on
the door and that was it.
MM: It makes me wonder, do you feel like the administration respected the work that you did
as a computer scientist? Were you important to them?
KH: I never thought of it as a reflection of our importance; it was a reflection of growing pains
and lack of space. The college campus in general was very crowded everybody was squeezed in.
You know, there were numerous buildings that didn't exist at the time. So, a lot of staff was
squeezed into space that was inadequate, so we kept it. We took it and we lived with it. And
you know as I said what I don't remember is how many years it was but eventually things
changed and we moved along.
MM: So, correct me if I'm wrong but it seems like we have a picture of the early 80s. I wonder if
it’s time on our timeline now to move onto to around 1986 from what I understand is that
when AIMS came to campus?
KH: Actually it was 1983 that AIMS came to campus..
MM: Ok..., AIMS, for those listening, Academic Information Management System. This is the
computing system that you brought to campus. This is what you brought to campus to have
everyone run on.

�LH: To replace the UNIVAC that was running the administrative application. It didn't do direct
academic support at all. It was all administration stuff, but it was it was a very all-encompassing
administration system. It included an alumni development software area, a registrar’s system, a
student affairs, business office, pay roll personnel. I mean it really every major administrative
area to the college had a module that came with AIMS. They weren't all perfect with Skidmore’s
operation. As something general never could be, so we modified it a bit to meet Skidmore’s
needs in certain areas. Some areas needed more modification than others, and we added a
number of modules on our own. It had a nice tool kit that came with it, so along the way I had
hired a couple of additional programmers. I'm not sure I could tell you the years that happened.
In administrative computing we had a couple of extra people who began modifying the system
and enhancing it to meet Skidmore’s needs.
MM: I’m hearing that you gave administrators, department heads they each have their own
computer units?
KH: Well, it was an integrated software system but there were modules- I guess that’s a better
way to put it - AIMS itself was an umbrella that had a dozen modules perhaps. Each module
supported a different administrative area. And they were all consistent in terms of the user
interface. They all looked the same, operated the same way, shared the same set of data. One
of the things that AIMS had that was kind of important back then, that a lot of systems did, was
called people files. You entered data if it was an alumni request to enter somebody’s
information, it went in the people file. The basic demographic information was kept in a
common database and then more sensitive information was attached separately. It was a
unified system which was helpful.
MM: Ok, ok. We’re going to hit another landmark around here. Around July 1987 we got a new
president, President David Porter.
KH: Wonderful man. I love David Porter. He was great. He wasn't the sort of stand-up
inspirational kind of person that Joseph Palamountain was, but he was a wonderful human
person. He was just an average guy, an everyday guy. He was funny. He would sit up in front of
the faculty, he punned -he was a great punner. He was important because there was some
faculty unrest and the kind of thing that was not unusual in an academic environment and he
helped unify the faculty. Made the faculty happier than they were perhaps. I might be
overstating it, but David Porter was a wonderful person. I have great respect for him. He was a
tremendous intellect and a sad loss actually I… we lost him recently and it’s a great shame.
MM: That was one of our first assignments for interviewing class..to practice what a good
interview was. This same project interviewing him …sounds like a great guy.
Moving on let’s wrap up the 1980s. So, at the end of this decade-I mean when we started this
decade-the administration seemed kind of like a mess. You're telling me that the administration
and registrar work was contracted outside companies. Campus wasn't doing a lot of its work on
its own campus.

�KH: No, no - almost none of it.
And again, the times were different you have to keep in mind that by installing AIMS we at least
started to get around that problem and bring everything in house and by the mid 80s we had
accomplished that. We had also Leo and his staff, we had a couple of extra people there by now
too. Realized that the TI990 was never going to do the job for academic support that we
needed on that end of things and most of our sister institutions were using digital VAX
machines. And Leo no doubt talked to you about this, but sometime in the 80’s we managed to
jettison the TI990 and replaced it with a couple of digital VAXes that were much more
appropriate to academic computing. There was software available that had been developed on
other colleges that you could get that did things that our faculty wanted to and students
wanted to do. It was a great move going to those digital VAXes. I thought by that point, by
probably the late 80’s we were well aligned with where we ought to be. We still might have
been behind in sense that we had a lot of catch-up work, but we were going in the right
direction. Also, somewhere along the way we moved. You asked about space. We kept the
space in the basement of Barrett but, at some point, we moved our operation down to the
library walkway area which was rehabbed to hold us. There was a merger with telephone
services somewhere along in there too. The dates are really hazy for me. But I took over
running the telephone system, which was essentially a computer. There was virtually nobody
else who had that experience so we moved in the telephone switch that was down in that
basement area. We moved the computer center in there and my office and most of the other
offices wound up there as well.
MM: Ok, ok
KH: That was probably in the 80’s well it might have been 1990 I'm not sure.
MM: I don’t know if you were in touch with student body. Student culture was like, what the
spirit of campus was, if things were more optimistic than they were?
KH: Well, I don't know. The biggest exposure we had to students was the students who worked
for us, and we always managed to find a good group of students. There weren't huge numbers
interested in technology at that point in time, but there were a few. There were amazing ones,
students who had in their high school run a computer system for the high school, and we
managed to hire them as they came along and use them as a lab assistants and so forth. So, we
had that kind of experience with students, but it was a small sampling. From my perspective, I
think there’s always a certain amount of turmoil on a college campus - as there should be. I
think a college campus without turmoil wouldn't be a college campus. I don't think it was all
that different, but my world was smaller.
MM: Ok. I wish we didn't have to go through things so quickly but we do have 20 minutes left
till we reach our 1-hour mark. So, I'm going to ask about the first half of the 1990s. What were
you working on at this time?

�KH: Well somewhere along the line personal computers started to show up and that really
rocked our boat in many ways. Everybody wanted one. Everybody wanted a Mac or actually
even earlier ones. Because we had established relationship with Digital for our VAX computers,
Digital was going to come out with an early IBM PC clone called the Rainbow and we agreed to
purchase a bunch of those. And it was a serious error. The Rainbow never sold. It was not
successful. And I don't think we purchased more than a dozen or so, but that was not successful
at all. So, we backed away from that. We were sort of stumbling and fumbling with what to do
with this because we didn't have the budget to get everybody a new Apple 2 or whatever the
early technology had been or even a Rainbow. We did what we could. We got some out there;
we tried to adapt and bring in new ones. So that was kind of a turmoil for us, getting from a sort
of time-shared environment with a central computer and bunch of terminals to one where
people had on their desktops personal computers that were a little imitation of what we have
today.
MM: You were talking about faculty and staff having their own computers in their offices?
KH: Right, that was just starting. Students were still probably getting most of their computing
time through labs that we had set up. You went to a lab, you used a computer or a terminal
that connected to one of our VAXes, and that was your academic support, but faculty were
eager to get the micros: Apples, whatever. So I’d say the first presence of that kind of
technology on campus was in various offices. The administrative computer stayed kind of a
time-shared system too, so we weren't doing that in administrative areas.
MM: Ok ok and so first the computer took up a lot of time. What else is going on any updates
on AIMS?
KH: Well actually have to go back to the 80s to go back to AIMS. The company we purchased
AIMS from went out of business, so we committed to continuing with the software and
modifying it to meet our needs, so it really satisfied 80-90% of our needs. We figured we could
keep it up to date; we could modify it and go forward from there. We modified AIMS we kept it
going and in fact it ran through the 80’s, 90’s until 2005, so we got wonderful service out of
AIMS and uh yeah what can I say. (laughs)
MM: Any other the pace doesn't have to be as aggressive. Are there any special incidents or
stories that are coming to mind that you feel like you have to share to give us a good picture of
what this time was like? Anything special?
KH: Hm that’s a good one. um
MM: You don't have to have any stories, but if so they're good to like…
KH: Odd things happened. You know, we…
MM: what odd things?

�KH: We had a…technology was booming of course. And Xerox, I think it was, came out with a
wild photographic printer that was; I'm not sure if it was Xerox but I think it was. It was
supposed to be wonderful, and we managed to get a grant to get one of those. So, we got it
and we opened it up, set it up, and really could not figure how to make any decent use of it. So,
we boxed it up put it away and about 2 years later one of the faculty members of the art
department came over and asked about it. And they were incensed that we had stuck it away
and not used it. We had that kind of stuff that was going on; we were adapting to technology
and learning new things just like everybody else and in some cases. What was interesting was
the source of all knowledge on both computers resided in the computer center in the 80’s, and
then as we got into the 90’s knowledge spread, and so there were people out there in faculty
departments who in a particular narrow area knew more about computers than we did. So, it
was a difficult transition psychologically for us to do that.
MM: I’m curious, what did the arts faculty member want with that computer?
LH: He thought we could have done something with it. And didn't really realize we had it. I think
it was a question of the thing just got lost in the shuffle. He thought it could have been useful.
We couldn’t make anything good out of it but that was the kind of thing that was happening,
cause expertise was popping up in faculty areas and usually in a very narrow disciple. But
nonetheless, it was expertise, and as computers got more and more capable by definition
everybody knew a little bit less about certain areas. So, it was that kind of a conflict. Some of
that was going on in that point in time as well. There was a faculty member who was into Next
computers. They were kind of a black box. A Steve Jobs company that got kicked out of Apple,
and we decided that we didn't think those were in the best interest of the college but there was
a faculty member in the music department who did. There was that kind of conflict that
happened periodically it was about growing pains and direction and a variety of things of that
sort.
MM: We’re at 1995 now, when you arrived Skidmore was in the era of doing everything by
paper. Course registration you know, you get called, every department has its table, you have
an index card to pick which class. You pick them all up hand it to the registrar that was your
schedule admissions; everything all the records for all papers. By 1995 how much of this
changed?
KH: By 1995 it had all changed. I wouldn't say i think they might have still been doing the area
registrations even though the software we have was capable of doing online registration. They
had a variety of reasons for that. They hold onto things for a long time, but virtually everything
else was moving forward with online support. Admission was done greatly in an online
application.
But , you know, the data entered it when it got here and from that point on was pretty much
handled online. The alumni office had all their records online. So, by 1995 everything was really
greatly different than it had been in 1981. Running a lot smoother and much more automated.
Yeah.

�MM: Alright now I'm asking about this particular time 1995 because there is a big change here I
want to ask about. As Leo has informed me, his story goes that the school decided that AIMS as
a system by mid 90’s the administration, as Leo tells me, our old custom system that’s not really
sustainable, We need a standard system that’s more universal. They started talking and decided
to phase out AIMS looking for something else. Leo tells me that you approved that and that was
as the director of the computer science department. Do you have anything to day about that?
KH: No, you know, it wasn't a sudden thing. AIMS, we were supporting AIMS, it was doing the
job but technology was changing as technology does, so AIMS at its heart was a time-shared
system where terminals provided access to a central computer. To change that so that it fully
integrated desktop technology, desktop computers, would have been definitely a major
rewrite, and we weren't doing that. What we were doing was supporting it if the registrar
needed to be able to have a report of students that was not a standard report, we created one
for them. If an office needed to be able to do a process differently this year from the way they
did it last year, we would make that change. But the change would always be within the
limitations of the technology. Which meant there was time-share with the terminal access.
When people started saying I want to put my MAC on my desk, and I want to have it do this and
integrate with the system, that was another ball game. It was a really big technology ball game.
So, we could see the handwriting was on the wall…you clearly had to...we could keep AIMS
doing things that people needed, but in a way that was very old fashioned. So, I agreed that it
needed to be done. And we all did what Skidmore does best, form a group, went out and did a
lot of time looking at alternatives. Spent quite a bit of time looking at ways to go. At that point
in time, we decided to become… affiliate with Oracle on a pilot project, which again was in
hindsight a mistake, but Oracle up to Larry Ellison was committed to education as a
marketplace and we would on the ground floor helping the software develop. So, we did that;
we jumped in and that was actually…the seeds of that may have begun in 1995 but the actual
conversion from AIMS to oracle occurred in 2005.
MM: And to continue that particular storyline as for computer system…turns out Oracle didn't
really do the job because people…?
KH: Larry Ellison’s commitment turned out to be not as strong as one would have thought. He
basically said he was committed to education no matter what. He bought People Soft and said
this is our solution. People Soft at the time and he looked at it thought it’s too big it’s
something that’s meant for hugeness … Oracle was, too; I think that’s part of the mistake there.
We need to start from scratch we need to take a look. And the system that the college wound
up purchasing, Banner at that point was one we had looked at numerous times in the past. It
was a system of old. It had been around a long time, but they had a big staff. They set it up to
date they modernized it. There are merits to being in an environment where similar institutions
are using the same piece of software.

�MM: We’re not done yet. I just want to just come to the modern day. We’re still on Banner,
aren’t we?
KH: Banner is what we’re in. I assume we'll be on Banner for a long time. Now we’re committed
to it. Banner is a product that is successful in the marketplace and therefore gets updated. So. I
think the College will use Banner for a long time. It’s not a perfect product by any means, but it
does seem successful, and one thing I've done since leaving Skidmore is worked on a consulting
basis to convert a lot of that old AIMS data into Banner. Especially the student data. So much of
the data going back to 1983, and in fact some that was converted earlier back into the 60s, is
now in Banner.
MM: Have you still been coming to campus?
KH: I come up here. I come up to walk my dog up here a lot. I do some consulting as I said. So, I
come up periodically to meet with the staff in the IT department. I do some software
development, mostly data conversions stuff at this point. I support a couple of systems that I
wrote in the days before I left Skidmore. So yeah, I still have technical connections here and i
still love the place. I still come up here and walk around. Skidmore was very good to me and I
love the place.
MM: Ok, so we’re going to be around modern day, so I'm going be asking about some of the
reflections you have. One thing, what made you decide to retire when you did?
KH: Um one of the things that we had to do in the late 90’s, again we were still supporting AIMS
even thought the idea of moving beyond AIMS was there at that point; that was still 5 years
out. And as we approach the year 2000 there was tremendous pressure about computer
systems failing. A lot of people thought it was going to be a disaster. Many systems only stored
a 2-digit year and once you got to the year 2000… It got an amazing amount of press but there
were issues there and in AIMS in particular there were some Y2K issues, as they were called att
that point. So, my staff and I did a tremendous amount of work in that last year trying to get
AIMS ready for Y2K, and it involved changing programs throughout the system, and while we
were doing that we also had to keep up with the flow of requests for new things. Everybody
always wants something new or different, and one of the things the College wanted was to
develop a new purchasing support system. All this was happening at once. So, it was a
tremendous amount of work through 1999 and into 2000. I felt burned out quite honestly. I
decided i was ready to retire. So, I stepped down and was convinced by my boss to work an
extra 5 years on a part-time basis. Which was very nice for me and I helped get some things
done for the college.
MM: when that time did come to retire, you left the campus a whole college than when you
first found it?
KH: I do believe so

�MM: Alright and you deserve some credit for changing that.
KH: i do (laughs, oh yes
MM: I’m wondering how you changed over those times. Did your relationship change to the
college? Did you remain static the whole time you were here?
KH: No, I had different bosses. My unit got moved around a little bit. I inherited some areas. like
I mentioned - telephone services and those things. So, my experience grew. I learned a lot of
things; I learned to work for different people. When I came I worked for the Provost, who was
the Academic Vice President, so i was connected to the academic side of the house, but I
always had to balance this administrative computing and academic computing things. Initially I
reported to the Academic Dean. Somewhere along the line I was transferred to work for the
business operations, so suddenly then my boss was the Vice President for Business Affairs. I had
great working relationships with both those people. So, working for an academic dean there
was a lot of concern about academic computing issues. Working for the business vice president
there was a lot more concern about administrative issues. So, I watched that kind of shift occur
and adapted to it as I went. I actually enjoyed it; it gave me some different perspective. You
know, an academic institution like any institution has to have a structure to support it to keep it
going. The administrative stuff can be mundane. You have to have a human resources
department; you’ve got to have an accounting department. Those things are mundane, but
without them, they're the structure of the institution, without them you don't have an
institution. On the other hand, the main purpose of an institution is an education so the
academic side of things is very important. So, I got a nice view of that from different working
arrangements with different bosses in different departments.
MM: Nice so, sounds like you definitely had to learn a lot. You look back often to think about
the things you would have done different knowing what you know now?
KH: Well certain things. Might not even have gone with AIMS, given that their company was
going out fairly quickly. I mean the product worked; we can’t complain. It worked from 1982 or
3, when we purchased it, up till 2005. That’s a tremendous lifetime for a software product, but
we would have committed to something that had ongoing support so that’s a decision. I guess I
would say I would do differently in hindsight; I knew what was going on. The other one was
going with Oracle. We definitely shouldn't have done that; that was a mistake. So, those two
big administrative things were different. In terms of academic computing i don't know that i
would have done a lot differently. I mean moving from the TI990 to the digital VAX computers
was a good decision, and it was important. And we did the best we could to deliver the
onslaught of computer interests and I think we did that fairly well. So, my regrets were few I’d
say. I think we did well.

�MM:Alright, sounds like an excellent career I mean when you did step down from head of IT,
did you meet the next head of IT? Did you have any advice?
KH: I did i don't have the feeling he was interested in any advice, but I did meet him and we
chatted occasionally. I would go talk to him at least once a week, and he was very different
from me. His style was very different and his interests and so forth were very different, so i
can’t say I agreed with him but that’s to be expected. Things change when you get a new
leadership.
MM: Advice in general as a computer scientist do you think there’s things the IT department
remembers from your time?
KH: Well, I think the biggest thing in an environment like Skidmore is listening to your
constituents, go out and talk to them, that would be my advice to today’s IT staff. Get as much
input as you can. Meet with people. Set up little groups, perhaps, of people with special
interest and commonality. Meet with them. Stay in touch with thinking at the academic
department level. uhh and in administrative computing I don't think that…it sort of happens by
itself; it’s more of a structured environment. The academic environment can be very
unstructured. Faculty departments can be little fiefdoms in a way, so they can kind of go off on
their own. You really need to keep in touch and bring people together as much as possible.
MM: i just realized, actually, that sounds a little bit familiar. It’s kind of the same you first found
when you came to Skidmore. Think you'd help continue that and do you think it’s still around
today?
KH: It’s a little hard for me to judge, I guess, but i think so. I think the place is hugely different
from the way it was. There’s always certain amount of dissent again, but a college environment
should have that. I think the place is pretty similar.
By the time you're retired you do see some changes, though. The building of the Tang, the
building of Tisch and a lot of other … a lot of student body got more diverse, a lot more
prestigious. It still pretty much feels the same. From my limited perspective it seems very much
the same. A lot of people turnover has been really great, but very few of the people who
represent the old Skidmore to me in terms of leadership aren't around anymore. So, it’s all
different people, some of whom I don't know. But it still feels the same when I come up here.
So, yes, i think it hasn't changed a lot.
MM: We’ve reached the end of our hour. Before we go I’d like to ask is there anything in our
quest to create a good portrait of your career contributions, Skidmore from your eyes, is there
anything we've missed in creating this portrait?
KH: I think we really covered it pretty well. I mean, I think i came to Skidmore at a time of great
change in the technology industry and in Skidmore, so it was an interesting moment in time.
The college needed a lot more computing. Students were expecting it, clamoring for it, and

�computers were changing dramatically. So, I came here at the start of something. It’s one of
those things that always meant a lot to me. I was able to get in on the true ground floor. I was
the first IT, so I participated in hiring. By the time I left here in 2000 I had participated in hiring
everybody who worked for IT at Skidmore, and that would be it I’d say.
I think we covered it very well.
MM: Ken, thank you so much for coming in today.

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                    <text>Narrator: Eileen Sperry
Interviewer: Sophia Delohery
Location of Interview: Saratoga Springs, NY
Date of Interview: April 7, 2023
Sophia [00:00:01] Today's date is April 7th, 2023. My name is Sophia Delohery.
Eileen [00:00:11] I'm Eileen Sperry.
Sophia [00:00:12] And here we go. So, Eileen, can you tell me a little bit about where you
grew up?
Eileen [00:00:18] I grew up in upstate New York. I'm an upstate New York native. I grew
up in a small kind of rural farming town called Harpursville, which is about halfway
between Oneonta and Binghamton.
Sophia [00:00:29] Oh, cool.
Sophia [00:00:30] That's awesome. And can you tell me a little bit about where you, just
your school experience, like, beginning school and then secondary school.
Eileen [00:00:41] Mm-hm. Started school in a sort of more suburban school district. Then
my family had moved out to Harpursville, and so I went to this, the local high school all the
way through the local public school. It's a really small school district, and so it was really
intimate. My graduating class was sixty-three people, many of whom I'm still friends with,
right. So it was a very small, kind of tight knit community growing up. And I went there all
the way through high school. I went to NYU for my undergrad. I was, I had had enough of
living in a small kind of rural town, and I, like, desperately wanted to get out and live in the
city and sort of be in a big school environment. So I moved to New York and I went to
NYU.
Sophia [00:01:29] Yeah, that's definitely a big transition.
Eileen [00:01:31] Yeah.
Sophia [00:01:33] That's nice that you had like a good community, though. Uh, but did you
find that going to NYU, like, changed that for you? Like, was it easy to find community
there as well?
Eileen [00:01:44] It was. I gravitated towards other people who I think had similar
experiences like my, my kind of close group of friends ended up becoming, you know,
people who had been in a similar place of like they had grown up in smaller schools or
they had grown up working class. They had grown up in, in poorer communities who like
all like me, really loved being in the city and really loved being at the school, but who also
felt moments of estrangement, like not part of the kind of rich kid crowd or the private
school crowd, like feeling both belonging and a kind of sense of being an outsider.
Sophia [00:02:24] Yeah, that makes sense. I think that's, that's an experience that a lot of
people go through making that transition, and it's nice that you guys, like, gravitated
towards each other then to find that community.
Eileen [00:02:35] Yeah.

�Eileen [00:02:36] Yeah. I think that that was that was one of the things that really
sustained me.
Sophia [00:02:39] Yeah, that makes sense. And so what were you studying at school?
Eileen [00:02:45] I was studying, I initially thought that I was going to be a major in a
program that NYU had at the time called Language and Mind, which was a combination of
linguistics and psychology and neuro linguistics. And then I remember that I was not great
at math, and it was a lot of math. And I had taken an English class my freshman year as
well, and I fell in love with the English major. And so I declared early on and I stayed an
English major for the rest of my time there I minored in linguistics. I had a real love for the
linguistics program, just not so much the psych in the stats and the hard science. Yeah.
Sophia [00:03:21] Yeah, that's very valid. So did you go to school at any place post-NYU?
Eileen [00:03:29] Mm-hm, I went from NYU, I did my master's degree in English at
Binghamton University, and then I did my Ph.D. at Stony Brook University out on Long
Island.
Sophia [00:03:39] Oh, nice. So a lot of staying in, like, at least the New York state.
Eileen [00:03:44] Yeah. You know, my, my now husband, my boyfriend at the time, he and
I started dating in high school, and we both went to separate colleges, but we sort of
stayed in the same geographical area as a way of staying connected to one another. I still
had really close connections to my community and to my family, and I sort of never was
possessed with the desire to, like, run away to California or move across the country. I
wanted to stay relatively close. I also had a recurring summer job at a summer camp back
near where I grew up, and so I would go back there for the summers, so it was nice to be
able to stay relatively close.
Sophia [00:04:19] Yeah.
Sophia [00:04:20] So it sounds like you are someone who's, like, really rooted in
community then, like, it seems like you've, like, sought that out in the different places
you've gone.
Eileen [00:04:30] Yeah, I've been thinking about that a lot recently, actually. That I think,
especially from those early moments in high school that we, you know, it was not I never
had a schooling experience growing up where you were always sort of encountering new
communities. You know, I had heard from friends who had gone to bigger schools that,
you know, you could sort of abandon one friend group and find another one or you were
transitioning schools. And for us, it was the same. It was the same people the whole way
through. And so I became really attached to these ideas of, like, forming deep bonds and
deep community. And then that has extended, I think, to a lot of other places in my life that
I've, like, privileged forming these big communities and sort of these deep relationships.
Sophia [00:05:10] Yeah, that's interesting as you kind of move into the topic of labor
organizing, I think community comes up a lot when people talk about that kind of stuff.
Eileen [00:05:18] Yeah.

�Sophia [00:05:20] But kind of in that same vein, was there anything in your, like, schooling
or growing up experience that kind of portended, like, an interest in labor organizing for
you?
Eileen [00:05:30] My, my freshman year at NYU, we arrived. I had been there maybe four
or five weeks, and the graduate students began a union campaign. They had filed for
unionization and they were working towards, I believe at the time they were working
towards their first bargaining agreement. And so they went on strike. And so many of my
classes, because it was a big university, many of my classes were taught by graduate
students or I was in a big lecture and the recitation session was taught by a graduate
student and they all went on strike. And many of my professors were incredibly supportive
of their graduate students and so refused to cross picket lines. And so as a freshman, you
know, I had one class that moved to like the Marxist community school organizing space
like halfway across Manhattan. So like every week I had to, like, grab my backpack and
trek twenty blocks away to go to class. But it was this really early exposure to like labor in
academia, right? Like seeing and hearing the graduate students say really clearly, I love
my job, I love the work that I do, I love my students, but I have to be able to, to live here. I
have to build to support myself and have a life, and that's equally important. And seeing
the solidarity from other professors who were saying like, yes, our graduate students are
important. They're one of the things that make this university work. It doesn't work without
them. We have to be in support of them. And so seeing how much that was an early
reminder or an early moment for me, where it became really clear the kinds of work that
were necessary for a university to function and the way that, like, different elements, had
to come together to support the fight for fair working conditions.
Sophia [00:07:15] Yeah, wow, what a cool, like, experience to have, right going into
college too.
Eileen [00:07:19] Yeah.
Sophia [00:07:19] That sounds awesome.
Eileen [00:07:23] My dad pulled the most dad move ever and he was like, I'm just you
have to go to -- I'm going to email the college president. And I was like, Dad, you cannot
email the college. And he did. And he, like, had several emails with the college president
about like labor rights.
Sophia [00:07:36] Oh wow, that's awesome.
Eileen [00:07:37] It was really sweet.
Sophia [00:07:38] So are your parents kind of interested in this as well?
Eileen [00:07:42] Yeah, to a lesser extent. My mom was a public school teacher as well
growing up. My mom was a public school English teacher and so she was always a
teacher's union member. She was never really involved on the organizing end. But I
always remember being kind of conscious of that as just like an element of her job or that
she was tapped into this bigger community.
Sophia [00:08:00] Yeah, that makes sense. The teachers union, I think like starts a lot of
stuff for a lot of people, like growing up around that.

�Eileen [00:08:06] Yeah.
Sophia [00:08:08] So kind of shifting this to, to the Skidmore experience, can you tell us a
little bit about the non tenure track faculty union just and your involvement with it so far?
Eileen [00:08:22] Sure. I began working here part time last year. I had been at the College
of Saint Rose before that and Saint Rose during, during the period of COVID, although it
sort of had its roots much furtherbefore that. They had a mass faculty layoff. They laid off
thirty-three tenure track faculty, and then they let go of eight contingent faculty members.
And I was one of the contingent faculty members. I had been there for four or five years on
this rotating one year contract, and I always knew that it was not a secure contract, but I
had become part of the department. I had, you know, built relationships, built community
there. And my department fought really hard to save my position and just just couldn't.
Right. Like the tide had turned. And so I arrived at Skidmore in this part time position
because I had been job hunting. I had found some other work. I was sort of cobbling things
together. But I had just come off this experience of, of a layoff, of seeing what happened at
a college that, like, was unionized and still had a really tough set of working conditions for
many of its faculty, was in terrible financial straits. And so I was at this point in my
professional life where I was thinking about, like, what's the kind of security that I want?
What are the sorts of things that I want to work for? What's the kind of working
environment that I want to choose for myself going forward? And I had friends already in
the English department through just, like, local research groups and other connections.
And as I arrived, I started talking with some of the other contingent faculty members about
some of the things that were going on and was able to find out that there was this kind of
growing union movement. And I was enthusiastically, like, sign me up, give me work to do,
like, I want to help out however I can. It helped that, you know, the organizing process was
happening in conjunction with SEIU, which is the union that I had been part of at Saint
Rose. And so I knew Sean Collins, the lead organizer. I knew him through other, other
interactions, and I liked working with him. And so I was just sort of like enthusiastic to, to
dive in and contribute.
Sophia [00:10:39] Yeah, that makes sense. So like your, your previous job experience
kind of propelled you into this current union experience and motivated you.
Eileen [00:10:52] Mm-hm.
Sophia [00:10:52] Yeah. Can you speak a little bit more to like, how how it feels to be on
that, like, kind of tenuous contract and be working and how it affects, like, job experience
and performance.
Eileen [00:11:03] Yeah. From a really concrete standpoint, the academic job market
requires a lot of work to sort of be on the market, you sort of have to prepare a set of
materials every year. This can be upwards of, you know, fifty pages altogether of cover
letters and syllabi and teaching statements and course evaluations and diversity
statements and all these sorts of things. And so maintaining a current dossier of materials
takes a lot of work. It takes a couple of weeks every summer. Then the application
process. Applications would go up every fall. You'd spend time combing the listings,
submitting things, interviewing, doing campus visits, making all these decisions. And all of
that time was time that I wasn't spending on teaching or wasn't spending on students,
right? I would find myself sort of saying no to things that I really wanted to be doing
because I needed to sort of always have one foot out the door. It also affected the way that
I was making decisions about the kinds of things that I would teach. Right? I was sort of

�not in a position to be as experimental as maybe I would want to be, or that I was thinking
about, like, how to build a CV that, like, would make me attractive to other jobs rather than,
like, allow me to excel at the job that I had. And so that, just the time spent on being kind
of one foot out the door, having to always sort of search for other jobs and the cognitive
load of like always sort of thinking elsewhere and not thinking here. Both of those have
affected in previous positions my ability to just like kind of be at home in a place and really
dedicate myself to the students that are in front of me.
Sophia [00:12:46] Yeah. And kind of circling back to the community aspect, like, it, it just
kind of alienates a whole group of people working here who are supposed to be a part of
the community and helping, like, build it and everything to yeah, to have them feel so
unsettled the whole time while they're working here.
Eileen [00:13:05] And I think that that distinction is often, you know, it's not visible to
students because these job distinctions are sometimes they're not really clear and
students don't know if I'm here permanently or on a temporary contract. And so, you know.
This past year, I've had students who have asked me to serve as their advisor, and I can't,
you know, I can't in good conscience say yes because I might not be here next year. I
can't sort of support them all the way through to degree completion. I don't know if I will be
a stable presence for them. And so it prevents me from building those kind of long term
mentoring relationships as well.
Sophia [00:13:41] Yeah, that makes so much sense. And that's interesting to, to move
into, I just want to ask you what you think like the student perception of the union has been
or your experience, like, with what questions students have been asking you. Do you feel
like they're kind of aware of what's going on?
Eileen [00:14:02] I think they're becoming aware. I think that it's something that has, you
know, the last few years have been this really incredible time for labor organizing. I think
that students are seeing the ways that unionization can affect jobs at every different level.
Right. The faculty are attempting to unionize or have unionized. But also the local
Starbucks is unionizing or, you know, the Trader Joe's is unionizing, thinking about how
this is a tool for workers kind of across the spectrum. I think that has also helped students
understand that maybe the popular perception of, like, what a professor is and what that
lifestyle or job security looks like that that's not actually the reality for most of their
professors. My, I predominantly teach freshman writing and these are often themed
courses. And one of the themes that I use that I taught this past year was on the
philosophies and economies of higher education. So, like, how does college work? How do
our decisions about what college means to us, how are they shaped by our desire for
money, for wealth, for happiness, for knowledge? And one of the things that came up in
that class was this conversation about, you know, what do you think professors are
making? What kind of class position do you think professors are holding? And I think a lot
of students assume, because this was the case, you know, twenty years ago, forty years
ago, that all of their professors are, like, making six figures and, like, own their own homes
and are these, like very comfortable middle class lifestyles when that's not necessarily the
case anymore.
Sophia [00:15:34] Yeah, that must be that must have been a crazy conversation to have
because yeah, I'm sure a honestly me before kind of getting more involved in this world
and learning more about it, I also think I safely assume that, like, oh, my professors are
definitely just making, like, stable money, stable jobs. They all kind of are on the same,
like, professor is the one position you can be in kind of thing. And yeah, learning more

�about this faculty union has been really interesting. And I was wondering if you could
speak a little bit more to, like, what stage the, the union is at now.
Eileen [00:16:14] We're currently in the negotiating process for our first collective
bargaining agreement, which is, it's a really exciting place to be because it's just, like, a
place of possibility. But so the election happened this past fall. The majority of non tenure
track faculty voted in favor of unionizing. And so now I'm on the negotiating committee,
along with several other faculty across departments, across different job roles. And we're
in the process of putting together our bargaining proposals. So, you know, what do we
want our contract to look like? What are the sorts of things that we want as terms of our
employment and bringing those to the college to then negotiate with college representation
about, like, okay, what can we make happen? What can we both agree to? What can we
put in stone in the language of the bargaining agreement?
Sophia [00:17:03] Yeah, wow, that's very cool.
Eileen [00:17:05] Yeah, I, we, I, in fact, just before this, I spent an hour on a Zoom working
meeting to look at some language about benefits and, like, who has access to health care,
which of our faculty have had access to health care. What would it look like to try and
widen that scope a little bit more to include maybe part time faculty or other faculty in that?
Sophia [00:17:25] Yeah. And just for the record, on the, on the recording, if you could talk
a bit about like what the main goals are of the union.
Eileen [00:17:38] Through the organizing conversations and through all of the other
conversations we've had with the full bargaining unit,that's all the faculty who are members
of our new union, a couple of things have come up consistently.So one of them is, is
compensation, especially for part time faculty. Part time faculty make a pretty low rate of
pay and aren't eligible for a lot of really core benefits. And so increasing their
compensation. For full time faculty, it's increasing job security. That's been one of the, one
of the primary goals is that we have a system right now that has lots of people who are on
these rotating one year or two year contracts who are in that position that I was describing
earlier. They're never sort of really secure. The college has kinds of contracts that offer
that sort of security for non tenure track faculty. But they haven't been extended to a lot of
the faculty who are currently here. So we're fighting to create that kind of stability so that
professors can be here and can be fully present for their students. And then finally, it's
protecting the benefits that people have already that they really love. The college right now
has a great system of benefits for full time faculty members, and a lot of faculty rely on
them. And so we want to make sure that those are enshrined in the bargaining language,
to make sure that they can never go away or they can't go away without the college
negotiating. That's one of the things I think I have brought with me from previous job
experience is that, like, knowing that even if you feel, like, you've got a great relationship
with the administration, even if things feel like they're going great, feeling like things won't
change isn't protection to say that they can't change. And so putting things in the
bargaining language means they can't change. And so it's been a priority to get things that
people really love about their jobs just memorialized and safe.
Sophia [00:19:21] Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. And kind of going, following that vein
of, how do you feel like the administration response has been to the union in terms of like
supportive, non supportive?

�Eileen [00:19:37] I think it has been, it's been neutral to supportive so far. I've been, I've
been pleasantly surprised by how how things have been going. I will say at previous
institutions, I have seen things rise to a level of, like, real aggression and real anger. And
so far, that hasn't been the case. I think that also Skidmore has recognized that this is
something that is core to its value system. At Skidmore one of the things that I've been so
impressed with arriving here and that seems to really define the community, is a real
dedication to, like, social justice and an awareness of, like, inequality of power in the world
and on campus. And frankly, I think if the college wants to continue saying that it supports
those values, it has to sort of be open to improving working conditions here on this
campus.
Sophia [00:20:32] Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. In that same kind of question, how has
the support been from the tenured faculty or what has been kind of their involvement being
like adjacent to this whole thing?
Eileen [00:20:50] I've had nothing but supportive conversations with tenure track faculty.
It's been really great. I think that they recognize that the work of the whole faculty body is
necessary, that we are doing the same kinds of work, that we are supporting students in
the same way, and that that labor is equal to the kinds of labor that they are putting into
the classroom. They know how hard it is to, to make the ship run. And so they they see
that. I also think that right now the academic job market is, is really, really poor. Right. That
there are hundreds of Ph.D. holders or hundreds of eligible and suitable candidates for
every position that gets listed. And a lot of them were also on the job market for many
years, or a lot of them have also had a history of being a graduate student instructor or
being an adjunct instructor or being a contingent instructor. And so I think increasingly
other professors are recognizing that, like, the difference between these levels of faculties
is disappearing, like that we are we are all bringing the same credentials to the table and
that we could very easily be in one another's place. And so I think that that has increased
this, the sense of solidarity.
Sophia [00:22:03] Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Like things could, things could change.
It's yeah, kind of luck of the draw in that way. What would you say the biggest challenges
to the union are at this time?
Eileen [00:22:20] I think one of the big challenges is, is building the kind of community and
solidarity across departments and disciplines. You know, we had, it was a really great
experience. I was working on some bargaining demands with a faculty member in in the
Chemistry department. And we became immediately obvious that, like, neither of us
understood how the other person's job worked, right? Like, that we were, our contracts
looked different. The way we accounted for our work looked different. And then you fold in
somebody from music who's an instructor who, like, accounts for their labor and their work
and their relationship with students in totally other ways. And so finding the space to really
understand the kinds of work that we all do, like, how our jobs look kind of different on the
surface, and then using those differences to actually find the core values of, like, what are
the things that we share? What are the ways like what are the ways that we can build
common goals out of those differences? That's something that requires a lot of trust. It
requires a lot of relationship building. It requires a lot of time. So I think that that's been a
big challenge. But I also think that that will ultimately be one of the big strengths.
Sophia [00:23:31] Yeah. Like a cool part of it that just takes so much work.
Eileen [00:23:35] Yeah.

�Sophia [00:23:36] So, yeah. Do you think, I mean, hopefully the union just will build
strength over time through, like, the course of creating those bonds and community.
Eileen [00:23:44] Yeah. And I also think that this, the process of the first bargaining
agreement is such a difficult one, but can be such a rewarding one. One of the other things
that has been notable is that this is, it's sort of on generational lines, but not entirely, but
that for younger professors, it's much more likely that they would have gone to graduate
school and been in a graduate student union. Those have been increasing over the last
ten, twenty years. And so we have one part of the population who has a long history of
being unionized and knows what that kind of contract feels like, what it means to be part of
a union, what that experience would look like. And then you may have another portion of
the faculty who have never been a unionized worker before, like they've never been in a
faculty union that has never crossed their mind. And so the process of sort of education in
all of this is another, it's another struggle, but it's also going to be another kind of deeply
rewarding thing that these people, you know, who've never been a union member, who've
never been under a collective bargaining agreement, I think have a lot of fear of the
unknown. But I'm excited to, like, that sort of motivates me even more of, like, you know,
we have to secure a really strong bargaining agreement to sort of show people what we
can do when we all work together for something like this.
Sophia [00:25:05] Yeah, I think that's one of the classic, uh, like attributes of the union
process is, like, it is such a difficult process, but, like, ultimately such a rewarding process.
Eileen [00:25:15] Yeah.
Sophia [00:25:15] I think that's what, like, a lot of people feel about it. And kind of in that
same vein, what support would you say that the union needs the most from, from like the
student body, from the Skidmore community at large?
Eileen [00:25:35] Oh, that’s a great question. I mean, I think the support of recognizing,
recognizing the work that's going into it, like knowing that your faculty are working towards
this and recognizing the labor that people are putting in, that has been a huge, that's
always a huge morale boost for me when we've done like outreach events or we've been
out on campus and students come by and they're like, this is great. Like, you know, we're
so happy to see this. Like, well, like, let us know how we can support you, even if that's like
putting a sticker on your water bottle, wearing a pin around campus. Like, it's a good way
to know that the community is behind you. That makes a huge difference. And I think
learning more about the conditions of, of employment, the conditions of, like, the place that
you are living, right, that being at college is this weird place, you know, you're sort of,
you're a customer, but also a community member and also a student here, all these things.
But taking the opportunity to sort of learn the details of like how the community that you're
in, how it's working and the kinds of work that make it possible.
Sophia [00:26:35] Yeah. I mean, and considering that you kind of initially were drawn to
this kind of work in college, like, would you say this is an important time for, like, people to
start learning about it now?
Eileen [00:26:47] Absolutely. One of the tenure track faculty who'd supported us when we
sort of declared the, when we filed our cards, when we had declared that the, that the vote
was going to be scheduled, we held a little rally and she got up and said something that

�has, like, stuck with me of, like, one of the things that you all are doing that is such a value
here is that you're showing students what it means to, like, live into a set of values, to, like,
to, to recognize something in the world that you can try and make better and, like, try and
do that. And I've thought about that a lot over the past year of, like, that, that that's a
responsibility that we have as organizers, but also as educators to, like, show students
what it means to, to sort of commit to a value and to try to bring that into reality.
Sophia [00:27:34] Yeah, that's so interesting to be, like, considering your role as a union
member, but also an educator at the same time. Like, education based unions are so, like,
special in that way. That's incredible. Is there anything else you wanted to, like, add or
explain that you feel like we missed?
Eileen [00:27:53] No, I think that that covers it.
Sophia [00:27:55] Awesome.
Sophia [00:27:56] Well, thank you so much for coming in today. This has been a great
interview.
Eileen [00:27:59] You're so welcome.

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                    <text>Narrator: Natalya Lakhtakia
Interviewers: Cal Rogers, Zain Sundaram, and Hope Wahrman
Location of Interview: Saratoga Springs
Date of Interview: April 7th, 2024
Hope Wahrman [00:00:00] So, today is Sunday, April 7th. Um, It's around 10 a.m. This is
American Labor History, Oral History Project. I'm Hope Wahrman, I'm a sophomore. Other
group members...
Cal Rogers [00:00:16] I'm Cal Rogers, I'm a junior.
Zain Sundaram [00:00:19] I am Zain Sundaram, I'm also a junior.
Hope Wahrman [00:00:23] And our interviewee...
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:00:26] I'm Natalya Lakhtakia. I am a speech language pathologist,
who lives here in Saratoga Springs!
Hope Wahrman [00:00:32] Awesome. Okay so, um I think a good... or the perfect place to
sort of begin this interview um is asking or starting from the beginning. Asking about your
childhood, where are you from? Sort of, what was that like a little bit.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:00:49] Sure. So I am from State College, Pennsylvania. It's where
Penn State is, its what it's known for. Um, I am the daughter of two immigrants. So, my
Dad moved to the United States from India. My Mom moved to the United States from
Argentina, both to go to graduate school in Salt Lake City at the University of Utah, which
is where they met. And about a year after, well not even a year after they met, my dad got
offered a job at Penn State University as a postdoc and they moved to State College. And
I was born a few years later. So I grew up with two parents working at the university. And
unlike Skidmore, Penn State is very very large. When the students are there, it's doubling
the population of our community. So, the community is large. You know, the city itself is
larger than Saratoga, and then the population of students is very big. So the community is
very university centered. And so because of that, I think I got a really, I got an excellent
education. I had a lot of opportunities. I had, um a lot of chances to do things with the
university that you know, really enriched my life. And then my parents, who are both
academics and both from countries where the focus on education I think is a lot better than
the United States. I mean more complex, but there's a bigger focus on education than
there is in the United States. I had them also supplementing you know, my upbringing. So
in third grade my parents said, "Hey, this isn't meeting our child's needs. She is bored at
school." And the school is starting to blame me for being bored. And so they moved me to
a private school, which is complex as a person who as an adult only supports public
education. You know, that's a complex decision. And then when my private school didn't
have the resources to do certain things, my parents would fill in. So in sixth grade, you
know the sixth graders in public school got to dissect, um animal hearts. And so my mom
bought animal hearts for my private school. And so they were really focused on that. They
gave me a lot of chances to do things. I got to go to space camp, I got to go to journalism
camp, I got to do all sorts of really amazing things. Um, and then I went to Penn State for
my undergraduate degree with every intention of becoming an engineer. And after, uh the
first year I thought "that's not the right path for me." And, I decided to major in psychology.
As a junior in psychology I took psycholinguistics, and I was really, really, really excited
about it. And I talked to my professor and I said, "How do I do this as a job?" And she said,
"Well why don't you go to the Communication Sciences department and like see what you

�could do?" And so she connected me with Doctor Katherine Drager who said "Hey, come
work in my lab, do undergraduate research," and I did. So I did my research on, so autistic
children who are three and four years old who are using a communication device. I did my
research on how the other children were able to understand them, communicate with
them, play with them, etc. And so within you know, a few months I said I'm gonna apply to
grad school and I'm gonna go to grad school to become a speech language pathologist. I
didn't want to go into research, I wanted to do work. And so I wanted to do therapy. And so
when I did that and I applied, I thought that I was going to work at a veteran's hospital. I
said, "I'm going to work at a VA. It's a guaranteed job for life. There will always be people
who need you." Um, and I thought I was going to help people with swallowing and with
their voice disorders. So those are two really common things that you're seeing at a
veteran's hospital. Because, like war is really really hard on your body. And so those are
two things that will come from that: trouble eating and trouble speaking. And then I, as a
graduate student at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City which is where my parents
went too, I had to do two externships. And I did one in a public school, and I did one in a
skilled nursing facility. And I said, "That is not for me." I'm gonna work in a public school. I
had an idea of what swallowing disorders were like, but it's actually really really terrible
when someone tells you you can't eat. And so I put up with a lot of um, I don't want to say
it was abuse because it wasn't like... I understand it, I guess. Um, but people were really
really upset to not be able to eat. And I said this is not, I don't want to be the person who's
telling them they can't eat. Um, I want to be the person who's playing with kids and helping
them communicate. Um, and so I applied with the school district where I had done my
internship and they hired me. I did two years there before I said "I actually want to move
back to the East Coast." So I moved back here, and I had started dating a guy that I
actually went to preschool and also elementary school and also high school and also
college. So he was living in Massachusetts, so I moved there. And I ended up getting a job
doing early intervention in Rhode Island. So just like for the context of this interview: being
a union employee in Utah to being nonunion in Rhode Island. And then a couple of years
later, he got a job offer here in New York. So we moved here and I didn't work for almost
two years because I got pregnant very, very, very soon after we moved here and I had a
really sick pregnancy. And then I had a baby, and I didn't really know how to go back to
work. Um, the other thing that was complicated was moving to New York. It is really, really,
really hard to get licensed here. It is a lot of work. So in Rhode Island I was able to like get
my photograph taken at AAA, and fill out a sheet of paper and go to like the local like state
police department and and get fingerprinted. And I handed it all in and I had a license.
Here it was an enormous process including, like additional classes. I had to like, call my
high school to get specific dates of things like it was a really involved process. But when
my son was about eight months old, I got a call from a recruiter saying "Hey, the Santa Fe
Public Schools are looking for someone to do teletherapy. Would you want to do that?"
And I said "Yeah, that's great." And I will say at that time I didn't really understand a lot of
things about employment. And so I started as a contractor with them. So I was not a direct
employee of the schools, I had a contract with a company that had a contract with the
schools. I was essentially self-employed. But, and it being paid pretty badly I would say,
but it was worth it to me because then I could start work at 10 AM because of the time
difference. And so I did that for seven school years. And then just this past August, I got a
call from the head of special education where he was crying and said "The district has
made the decision to end all teletherapy. I have fought, I had even fought for it to just be
you who stays, like we don't want to lose you. But we don't have an option, you're out.
We're ending all teletherapy." And so um, that was horrible. I will say like, I was really
really upset. I didn't get to say goodbye to my students. Like, when you work in a school
you're really bonded with kids. But it's also the nature of being a contractor. Like, they can
just end your contract. And if you aren't even within the dates of a contract, which I

�technically wasn't because they called me a week before school started, they don't even
owe you anything. Like, I didn't get paid out a month. I didn't get anything. It was just your
contract's... not starting. And so, I took a little bit of time to figure out what I wanted to do.
I'm really actively involved in politics here, and I thought "Like I'm good at this. I could do
this as my job and I could, you know, continue to have kind of an easier job until my son
starts middle school." Um, and I found really quickly that it wasn't the right fit for me. I'm a
person who really needs structure, and needs to have a solid work day to stay happy. And
so I in December, applied to some local school districts and I got hired at Fort Edward
Schools. It's about 30 minutes from Saratoga Springs. It's a very, very, very small
community. Um of about 3000 people, there are fewer than 400 students in the pre-K
through 12 school. And I'm one of their two speech therapists. And I'm back to being in a
union and I'm a member of NYSUT (New York State United Teachers) and then a member
of my local, which is the Fort Edward Teachers Association. And I'm really, really excited
about that. So that's my history!
Cal Rogers [00:09:51] Yeah, awesome thank you.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:09:51] Sorry.
Hope Wahrman [00:09:53] (Laughs) No no, that was perfect. Um, yeah. There's so much
now that I want to like, ask you about from from that alone so that's great.
Hope Wahrman [00:10:03] Also I wanted to just say our professor, Professor Morser sent
us like your Linkedin. And so I'd seen that you went to Penn State, and I'm from
Philadelphia. There's like a map of Philly in my dorm. And like literally, I'm more
like...because I'm closer to Philly than like "state" like a lot of people end up going to like
Drexel or Temple. But like at least like 20% of my graduating class goes to Penn State.
So.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:10:31] Yes! I'm sure.
Hope Wahrman [00:10:31] Love Pennsylvania, love that. Yeah.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:10:35] I know, me too.
Hope Wahrman [00:10:37] So yeah, just wanted to.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:10:39] Awesome, no I love that.
Hope Wahrman [00:10:40] To make you feel more comfortable, with this. But okay, so
sort of talking about, um keeping on track with like your earlier experiences and how that
shaped your involvement today. Um, what was your first job? And that can be... You can
talk about like your first I guess like quote unquote, like "professional job." Maybe like right
out of grad school, but also maybe like your first job as a young adult as well.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:11:09] Sure, yeah. So as a young adult I, well, if you set aside
things like babysitting my freshman year of college I actually was a nanny for a cardiologist
in town. And I made so much money just from nannying during football games that I didn't
do anything else. Like that paid my, that paid for all the things I wanted it to pay for. But, I
want to say I was a sophomore in college when I got a job with what was then called
MBNA. I don't know what MBNA is now, but it's essentially a bank that gives out credit
cards. And I was sitting in like a big room really close to actually my parents house, and I

�was making phone calls basically trying to get people to accept a credit card. And, also
sometimes calling people who already had credit cards with us and upgrading them. And
like thinking about it in this context, so there was another... I think she was a junior who
worked with me, her name was Ellen. I don't know Ellen anymore. Like, we only worked
together for five months? Maybe. But Ellen and I did not smoke, like I don't smoke
cigarettes. And Ellen did not smoke cigarettes. But if you worked at MBNA, you got a 15
minute cigarette break every two hours. And Ellen and I were like, "But how come people
who smoke get to leave this like weird like warehouse of desks that we're in and go
outside for 15 minutes?! And we don't get to, just because we don't smoke?" And, I
probably at that time would not have been the person to push it. I was the person to
complain about it. Just to like, Ellen. Who was at the desk next to me! But Ellen was like,
"They can't stop us." We went outside one day and our you know, manager was like "You
guys aren't going outside to smoke, you can't smoke." And Ellen was like "Okay, I'll start
smoking cigarettes if that will let you, if that will make you let me go outside." And our
manager, like that was enough for our manager to be like,"Huh, yeah okay. Go outside."
And so it was a really interesting thing where like after a month, all of a sudden we had our
15 minute breaks the same as smokers did. Um, but I didn't stay there for very long. It
wasn't, um it was like the kind of job that I could do when the semester wasn't going on.
When the semester was going on, they didn't have any real trouble with like pushing and
pushing and pushing to take over more of my time. And I just was privileged enough to be
able to say "Like sorry, I actually don't need you." Um, and so I stopped working there. I
started working at Panera. Um, and then I left Panera for a local place a very Pennsylvania
place called the Carnegie House, where I was a server. And so, I did that. And I worked at
the Carnegie House up until I graduated and moved to Salt Lake City.
Hope Wahrman [00:13:58] Cool. Yeah, that definitely answers that question. And then I
also just had one other question, kind of based on what you had said earlier. And it's just,
so you grew up in a house that really like supported education and self-sufficiency. And
like it sounds like every opportunity your parents had to make your education better, they
took. And that's really awesome. And they themselves were educators. And so it's it's
funny that you you had no idea that that's kind of what you were really interested in like
that you went to college for engineering, um and all of that. And so I guess my question
maybe is like, do you take anything from your childhood and the way your parents raised
you and educate into your work today?
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:14:46] So I will say, like I doubt this is what you meant by "selfsufficiency." But I would actually say that both my parents are from very very communityminded societies compared to the United States, which is a very individualist society. And
so I think that the biggest thing that I have taken from them and like that upbringing is my
dad constantly saying like at least once a week, "No man is an island." Like you're not
doing anything by yourself, you're doing everything in the context of the people around
you. You are not like, if you do well in life you're not "self-made" like you're community
made and all of that. And so to me, that kind of a mindset is what leads you to
understand... unions. Because like, I cannot go to a school and do speech therapy by
myself. It doesn't exist like that. Like I'm only seeing kids for 30 to 90 minutes a week,
right? Like they're spending time with other people who are shaping them. We're not doing
it away from their parents, even if their parents never set foot in the school. Which is the
case sometimes, that parents are completely they feel disconnected from the schools and
they are disconnected from the schools. But we're not doing anything by ourselves. And so
I think that um...First of all, it wasn't until I was much older that I recognized that my dad
views himself first and foremost as a teacher. Um, because I would recognize him as a
researcher. And same thing with my mom. So my mom wasn't an instructor until I was in

�high school, my mom was doing research. And so, that's kind of how I viewed academia
just from like that perspective. And then my dad started to win teaching awards, and I was
like "oh huh...he is a teacher." But my dad's also a professor of engineering. So I would
say like my like, I was going to be an engineer like my dad. And so that's kind of how I was
viewing what he was doing. Um but again my parents are very focused on like, "everything
is in the context of community." And that's really difficult I will say. Like I don't know if you
have parents who are from other cultures, but like it is really difficult to be an American
student and especially at that time, and to have parents with that mindset when we are in
such like a rugged individualist society. And when my friends who were like American with
American parents, were living lives that felt very very different from mine. And I also did
have a lot of Indian friends who had Indian parents, but most of them had two Indian
parents then I didn't. And so that was also another thing where it was like I couldn't really...
It was hard to find out my place between these two worlds. And then I don't even know
that there was anybody in State College from Argentina at the time. So I don't know if that
answers your question, but that's I would say that's the biggest thing that I took from them.
And something I think about a lot and something that I actually tell people a lot like when
I'm talking about, um the labor movement or when I'm talking about socialism. Just these
are things that like you don't have to be like outright saying like "Hey, like I personally think
that socialism is a better way to do things than capitalism." You can talk about things in
that context of like nobody is self-made, everyone is community made. And, I think that
that's a way to kind of contextualize the world in a way that helps people see the things
that American education is kind of hiding from us.
Hope Wahrman [00:18:19] Yeah, that's awesome (laughs). Thank you.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:18:23] Sure.
Zain Sundaram [00:18:23] How did you end up working in the Saratoga area?
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:18:30] So, um we were living... My husband was working at um... I
think it was...I don't remember it went through a bunch of different names. I think it was
"Schneider Electric" at the time, in Massachusetts. And... But it had been like different
iterations. But they had taken a project that my husband was like, "something's going to go
wrong here. Like, we're not going to be able to finish this project, and I'm going to lose my
job." And, I was working in early intervention. Rhode Island early intervention is very
different from New York early intervention. Here you're a contractor, and you're working
with the counties. In Rhode Island, you're a direct employee of a company that's managing
all of that. And so, I was working for a company where I would say I was definitely being
exploited. I was being held to a different standard than my fellow speech therapists for a
couple reasons. I mean the first is that I'm bilingual, and the second is that I didn't live
physically on that island where our company was located. And so, I was doing a lot more
work than everybody else and I was really tired. And my husband said, "What if we start
looking for jobs in other areas?" And so he took a job in Clifton Park. And his boss told him
like, "You definitely want to live in Saratoga. It's such a great place to live, you'll love it, etc.
etc." We looked at a couple places to rent in Saratoga and could not afford them. And it's
obviously only gotten worse. So we took... we found an apartment in Ballston Lake, which
is like Exit 11. And we lived there for two years. And then actually... So I'm here in my
house in Saratoga, the house across the street...the dad I will say...so the dad grew up
with me and my husband in State College, he actually lived in the same neighborhood as
my husband. And then his wife went to Penn State, which is where they met. So when we
moved here, we like reconnected with them. And so she called me one day and said, "The
house across the street is going to go on the market tomorrow. You need to buy it. This is

�an affordable neighborhood in Saratoga, and it would be so great." I already had a baby.
She was pregnant. And she was like, "It would be so good. None of us have family here.
We could be each other's family and support. It's like you have to move there." And so,
that's what I did. Like I came here...my mom was visiting, we came, we toured the house. I
said, "This house is disgusting." And my mom said, "Nope, this is a good house and you
can paint it, like it'll be good." And we bought the house and we moved in. And I will say
again like going back to this community idea, like my parents live six hours away. My
extended family doesn't live in this country. Their families live more than six hours away. I
mean, I think everybody lives in Ohio basically, or DC. And, they don't have other family
that's here. But we get to be each other's families like our children are, and I understand
that they're not like siblings to each other, but they are. They have this really intense family
relationship where like for February break, like I took their daughter with us and we went to
go stay with my parents. Like we're doing these things together all the time. And so we got
to build our own little community. And I will say, having that kind of community in Saratoga
Springs is what keeps me here. Because I don't enjoy living in Saratoga Springs at least
80% of the time. It is a really really tough place to live. And I understand why my
husband's wealthy white boss was like, "Hey you should live in Saratoga Springs." But for
me it is, it is rough to live here. And so what keeps me here is my neighborhood, and
having that kind of a community.
Hope Wahrman [00:22:05] Um...really quickly, would you mind kind of talking a little bit
about like some of the difficulties in terms of living in Saratoga Springs?
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:22:37] So Saratoga is... It is a unique community in many ways. So
one of the ways that it is, is that unlike most municipalities in the United States it is getting
whiter. And so that is unlike the majority of the United States. So it's getting whiter, the
schools themselves are not getting whiter. The schools are actually getting less white
pretty, steadily. But there's such an influx here of older white people who do not have
children, and so there's that. Our county is one of 3% of counties in the United States that
votes in line with the winner of the presidential election. And so like, and I think that that's
been happening since George W Bush. But I might be wrong on that. But it's many many
years of like, "this county voted George W Bush and they voted for Obama and they voted
for Obama, and they voted for Trump, and they voted for Biden." And it is very likely that
however this county votes in the next election will also be the winner of the next
presidential election. And so what that has led to, is to our county being a kind of testing
ground. And with us being kind of the focal point of the county, a lot of that testing happens
here. And this makes me sound like a conspiracy theorist, but like we can track like this is
something I'm really interested in. And so, you can track that this is happening and you
can see. Like if you remember a few years ago, there was a big focus on critical race
theory. Not actual critical race theory but like what you know, conservatives were calling
"critical race theory" and how that was going to take over the schools. That entire cycle
played through in Saratoga Springs before it became a national news story. We had
already had an entire school board election here that was focused on critical race theory
and it played out in a way that was really interesting. I mean, that was three years ago.
And so the people that were elected through that election are now up for reelection here.
And so being a testing ground means that there is kind of a constant attack on the left, and
that's really tough. I would say that I do not view myself as liberal, because I view
liberalism as being very conservative. I am, you know, I'm a leftist. I view myself as being
very far to the left. And then because I'm not white and because I am a public figure here, I
get to be the target of things. I get to have different things -- I don't know if they're tested
on me or if people are just saying them. But there's kind of this like, regular attack on me
as a person. And that's really really tough. So it's not only tough to recognize that I'm

�raising my son, who I don't think you can see him, but and by all appearances is white.
Um, like gets to live in the world as a white child. And like as a tall, fairly well-off, very cute
white child which comes with a lot of privileges. So not only am I raising my kid in this very
homogenous society or homogenous community but also like... so there's like this, like
structural thing that's really tough for me and there's also the personal attacks that are
really tough for me. And then there's the other specific level of um, we are one of the we
are one of two communities in the entire state of New York that has our particular form of
government. Which is called the "commission form of government." The commission form
of government is literally illegal in some states. Like it is such a horrible form of
government, it was created immediately after... I think after Juneteenth, I think I think it
was like 1867ish. It was created to ensure that formerly enslaved people couldn't have the
same like ability to be in charge of their municipalities, as like wealthy white landowners.
And we still have it here in Saratoga Springs. Since I moved here, there have been a lot of
attempts to change that and they both failed. One of them failed by only ten votes, though.
Like I mean, there are some pretty close things that are happening. But so because of this
form of government, we just have kind of "rule by a specific mindset of person," Which has
been led to like very very blatant civil rights violations, specifically against Black people.
But also poor people, brown people, etc. And I think that that is something that our
community doesn't even really recognize. You know, I would consider myself to be a police
abolitionist. Like, I don't think that societies need policing the way that it exists right now in
the United States at all. But I think that specifically in Saratoga Springs, the form of
policing that we end up having here as a result of the commission form of government, and
as a result of the whiteness, and as a result of the wealth here has led to us just being in a
really dangerous situation. And again, I feel like a lot of the people around me don't
recognize that. And that's because of...and this is the last thing I'll say about Saratoga
Springs. I think that Saratoga Springs, being raised here from people who were also raised
here, leads to a lack of curiosity. And so there are a lot of people who are like "Why would
I leave Saratoga Springs when this is the best place to live? It's so good." Like it's... And it
is a good place to live, right? Like there's a lot of stuff to do. It's really beautiful. You're
close to things. In general, like your kids' needs are met. Like, there's a lot of good stuff
here. And so, I think that there's just these people who aren't leaving this community. Who
also have this particular type of like nativism where they're like, "If you're not from
Saratoga, then you're not a true Saratogian." Which I'm like, "Okay well, I don't really want
to be. I don't care about that." But I think that this has led to people having a very skewed
perspective of their community. And therefore, not standing up against the really
concerning parts of our community. And again I will say like, I'm making generalizations
here. And there are a lot of amazing people here who are standing up to that and who are
doing work, and who are trying to make it better. And I'm trying to do that too. But, it it is a
very particular type of community that kind of has all these different things going on. And
they do add up to being a hard place for me to live like, conceptually. Like I'm like, "Oh my
God, I can't believe I live in Saratoga Springs, New York." And also just in terms of like my
actual existence here like, "Natalya Lakhtakia living in Saratoga Springs" is having a really
really hard time because I am a focus. And, we have considered moving. Like we have
talked about it. Not this past December but the December before, somebody posted under
a fake name on Facebook. Like, they posted this thing about how like, I'm vermin and "we
need to bring out the big guns against Natalya and blah, blah, blah." And that, I will say
like having had so many things be said about me over the last five years...that particular
like dehumanization like using literal Nazi language against me was enough that I was like
"we need to move, like we need to go somewhere else." And my husband was like, "Great,
let's figure it out." But at the end of the day like many Americans, we are in some ways
stuck here because my husband's job is really really good. And like so we could move to
Niskayuna if we wanted to. Or we could move to Clifton Park if we wanted to. But we're

�really just staying within the area because my husband's job is so good. And a lot of
millennials don't get to have the kind of job that he has, and it's not worth it to give it up.
Because he gets raises every year, he's really protected, he gets time off, he gets PTO
and medical time off. He gets all these things that like millennials are getting less and less
of, and Gen Z is potentially not even getting at all. And it's really really hard to give that up
and if we're just going to move within the area, then we are giving up the benefits of our
neighborhood community. And I would rather that my son had that neighborhood
community and just like, look at social media a little bit less.
Hope Wahrman [00:31:04] Thank you. And also like I mean, of course it's difficult living in
Saratoga Springs. But yeah, this community really needs people like you. And the work
that you do makes Saratoga better. So, thank you...
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:31:17] Thank you.
Hope Wahrman [00:31:18] ...For staying in spite of all those things.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:31:20] I will also say like, the students in this community are super
rad. And, there are things happening in this community that I sometimes I'm like, "Oh my
God, like there's really, really good stuff here." So like this is just one thing, I really love
musical theater. But our high school just put on Head Over Heels. And, Head Over Heels
is a really in your face musical that is like very very blatantly spelling it out for anybody who
might not get it: pro-trans. And to have like our high school students put that on, and to see
essentially no pushback. No pushback that I saw as a school board member and as a
member of the community. And as the friend of parents of a lot of kids in the musical, there
was like one parent that was like. And all the other parents were like "Nope, the kids are
doing it." And that was the end of that. And I was like okay, that makes me feel good
because for us to be so far on the right side of that in terms of protecting trans students
and uplifting their stories... Like that to me, I'm like "okay, they're good things in Saratoga
too." So I can talk about the bad things all day long but there are a lot of good things here
too and I will say that.
Cal Rogers [00:32:33] I want to transition a little bit. I want to hear about what your work
looks like and your interactions with kids and like...just tell me about it.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:32:44] Yeah. So I'm a speech language pathologist and again, I
started this job um... Tuesday will be three months of me working in this particular school
district. So I am still learning a lot about it. But I work in a pre-K through 12 school building.
And then my particular caseload is grades one through six. And the other speech therapist
is doing pre-K, kindergarten, and then like seven through 12. And so my day generally
looks like most of the time pulling kids into my room, either individually or in small groups,
to do speech and language therapy with them. So it's two different things: either working
on their sounds, or working on the actual content of what they're saying or what they're
understanding. And then we have a really awesome, strong union and so I have a lot of
stuff built into my day that I didn't really realize I guess, what an awesome day I had, I
could have, until I started working here. So there are 30 kids on my caseload, that is
extremely low. In Santa Fe where I was a contractor, at one point I had 47 kids on my
caseload and I was like, "Oh my God, they're going to make me go to another school
because this is too low." So I usually had around 60 kids on my caseload. So here we're at
about half of that. I do see these kids more often than I saw kids before because I work on
a six day cycle. So like when I go back to work on Tuesday, I think it'll be day three. And
so I have like my day three schedule that I follow. But the following Tuesday will not be day

�three, right? It'll be like day one or whatever, I don't know what it is. So I follow that and
sometimes I'm going into classrooms, sometimes I'm pulling kids for testing. And then also
under our contract, I can sub for people that are absent for a period. So I can sub for a
teaching assistant, or a teaching aide, or I can sub for a teacher. And I get paid different
rates for that. And so sometimes I'm doing that as well. And then I have a lot of prep time.
But I am so used to not having prep time that I think that I've developed the skills that I
don't really need to prepare during that time, like I'll do some prep. A lot of my prep is
transitioning things that I previously had that were electronic to now being like printed out
and laminated so that we can reuse them over and over again. But usually I'm using that
prep time to do billing or to type reports. Then also right now we're in what they call CSE
seasons. So CSE is Committee for Special Education. And so I'll have meetings with
parents to go over our plans for next year. And then also as we get to like, you know, the
different marking period, and I'm typing up progress notes to let parents know how their
kids are doing. But the majority of my time is doing therapy, it's doing testing, it's doing
billing. There's a lot of billing to do in New York compared to Santa Fe. And the system
that we use is actually really inferior to the system we were using in Santa Fe. And I think
that's because New York kind of has, maybe because of the BOCES, I don't know. But
everybody's using the same system, so it doesn't have to get better because there's no
competition. So it's a really time consuming system to do all of my billing. My work day is
from 7:55 to 3:00 pm, except for on Fridays when I'm out at 2:45. And because I have a
little kid and because of my husband's work day, I get to work at like 7:54. I mean, I'm not
getting there before my contract time at all. In general, I'm not staying after my contract
time either. And part of that is because the other speech therapist, her husband is such
like a strong union guy that he's like "if you can't get your work done during your contract
hours, then they need to change how they're giving you work. It's not up to you to figure it
out outside of your contract hours. It's up to the district to give you an appropriate work
level." And if we stay after he will like jokingly, but also like it's only kind of a joke be like
"you guys are being union busters, like you're scabbing." And it's such a good perspective
to have from this like really strong union guy of like, "Yeah, why am I staying after? If I
didn't get my work done, I got to do it tomorrow." But like my contract hours are from 7:55
to 3. I'm not, I don't need to stay later. And I actually recently went through this, where I
contacted the Special Ed director and I said "Hey, I have three IEPs due, those are the
individualized education plans that we're writing for students who are in special education.
And I have to do all of my progress notes. I don't have time to do this and see my students.
What do I do?" And she said, "Oh, actually you get three days that you can request like as
time off, but it's only time off from therapy. You're still here doing your paperwork." And she
was like, "Why don't you put in for you know, two half days so you can do that?" And that's
what I did. And they got my stuff done. So, there's a lot of stuff in place to make sure that I
can do stuff. In terms of actually being with kids, we do a lot of "play therapy." So
communication in general, as I'm just like making a speech right here. But in general, it's a
turn taking exercise, right? Like you take a turn you say something, I take a turn and I say
something. And so because of that, it allows us to play a lot of turn taking games while we
do our work. And I do have a surprising number of students who need support with turntaking. I actually was not expecting how many of my kids would be in like third and fourth
grade and not know how to take communication turns. They know how to take turns on a
game, but they don't know how to translate that into their communication. So there are a
lot of times where I'm walking down the hallway and three children are talking to me all at
the same time. And I'm like, "oh my gosh like this is what we really need to focus on." So a
lot of times we're sitting there, we're playing a game, and we're working on whatever their
skill is. Sometimes we're reading, I'm reading or they're reading. And then we're you know,
working on vocabulary through that. We're working on using context clues to build their
inferencing skills. Or we're just working on sounds. There are a lot of kids who are making

�speech-sound errors, and I just do therapeutic work with them to help them be able to
develop those sounds. Because it's important that they be able to be understood.
Cal Rogers [00:39:29] Awesome, thank you. So what are, following up with that, what are
some advantages or disadvantages of your job?
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:39:40] Um, the work hours are really good. The only thing I would
change is if I could start work at like, 8:15. That would just give me a little bit more time
with my kid in the morning before I like, send him over to my neighbor's house. And I
would be happy to stay until 3:20 for that. But I would say when you work in education,
especially right now, you're really bonding experience with your coworkers. I mean, you're
responsible for children and there are a lot of families that are really really struggling. Fort
Edwards is a really depressed community. I'm still learning about it, but it's my
understanding that they used to have a really successful factory there. And when the
factory shut down, that really just impacted the community. So I have a lot of students that
don't just need to come to school to get an education and to learn how to be like humans
in the world and learn how to interact with each other, but they also need like love and
support because their parents are really really struggling. They you know... I think a lot of
times they think my son gets to like, enjoy breaks. I have kids on my caseload and I'm sure
this is the case everywhere, but kids on my caseload that break is like a daunting time for
them, and they're really relieved to come back to the structure of a school day. So I didn't
really understand it when I interviewed. And they were like, you will get so much love
working here. But it is definitely true. And I would call that both a benefit to my job which is
that like, my kids are really really sweet and loving and we have such a nice time together
and I just, I mean I love children in general. And also just a really sad part of my job, which
is to know that like they need love from me because their parents are in such a bad
position that they literally cannot meet the needs of their children the way that I can meet
the needs of my child. And so that's both good and bad. I really like my coworkers. I like
my school building. I like that I get to move around a lot. I spent a lot of time just sitting
literally here at this desk, for seven years doing work at this computer. And so it's really
nice to get to move around. You get to see, kids are so creative. You get to see what
they're creating. You get to create things with them. Like my big thing is if I go into a
classroom and they're doing an art project, me too. Like I want to do it as well. And to you
know, to do that you get to what my kids think. Kids are really radical. I always love to say
that "kids are the truest comrades." Because they are very very cool. And they're living in
this very specific way when they're attending public school that just really builds their
community ties. And then like as adults, we just don't get to have that in the same way.
Especially without having like community centers, the way that I think that we should have
them. And so I get to hear like a lot of really radical stuff from kids, and I love that. I get to
read books with them, like it's just it's really nice to work in a school. And I had think
forgotten that, working from home. Because working from home was fulfilling for me, and it
was easy for me. And I still got to see my kids, and it was really fun. But working in a
school, you just are in this very specific type of community that I think I wish could be
expanded out more. I think that there are education reforms that are needed, for sure. It's
not that I think public education is perfect, it's not. But I do think it is much better than just
our general communities and existing in that is really amazing, I love that. And then also I
will say, New York pays me really well. And I'm not saying that teachers don't deserve to
get paid more like, we do. Like I think that my job is a lot more valuable than someone who
plays basketball, for example. But I'm not a sports person in general but like I think like
what I do, like I love Taylor Swift. But I think that her writing beautiful music maybe doesn't
mean that she needs to be a billionaire when teachers should definitely get paid more for
the work that we do. But that said like I also get paid significantly better than I got paid

�before, in Utah and in New Mexico. Rhode Island was different because I worked you
know, 40 hours a week year round. But I get like, the pay is really good.
Cal Rogers [00:44:04] So going on to the Utah topic, my dad worked for a trucking
company called "Driver Tech" out of Salt Lake City. So uh...
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:44:11] That's cool.
Cal Rogers [00:44:11] The University of Utah was my first choice for school, but I didn't
get in.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:44:19] Well, that's their loss I'm sorry.
Cal Rogers [00:44:21] It's okay. So you kind of answered all of my questions, so I'm
gonna...
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:44:26] Oh, okay!
Cal Rogers [00:44:26] I'm gonna put it on the rest of the group, thank you.
Zain Sundaram [00:44:35] What would you say is, some of the current local union issues?
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:44:41] I mean Skidmore, honestly. It's really exciting that the nontenure track professors are, I guess instructors, are very close to getting you know their
collective bargaining agreement done... Is what I was recently reading. I know the RAs
were working on unionizing. Although I will admit that I lost track of where that was and
what was happening. I also know you know, we had an attempt at unionizing the ALB1
Amazon warehouse. Which is in, I still don't know how to say it. If its Schodack or Shodack
I forget. I think it's Schodack, about an hour away from here. But, you know people here
work there. We did a really awesome job with unionizing Starbucks. Although, I'm now
boycotting Starbucks. So for a while I was like, "I'm gonna go to the union ones." And now
I'm like, "I don't need to go to Starbucks at all." So there's that kind of stuff happening. I
know that there were some attempts at unionizing Spot Coffee, which was really exciting.
But I think that what I appreciate about the area is that there is a lot of just solidarity
between the unions. And I don't know how this compares to other places because I was
not involved in this stuff before I moved to New York. And I moved to New York in like
December 2014. So it hasn't even been you know, a decade yet. But here at least there's
a lot of solidarity in the entire region, and the capital region is huge. But there's a lot of
work that's being done to take care of each other. There's a lot of collaboration to like,
support each other. There's some big union only projects coming up. So when there's a
construction project there can be something called the PLA, a Project Labor Agreement.
Which means that all of the labor will be union. And also all of the materials will be from
union places like unionized...I don't know what the word is...industry? And so there's going
to be a few of those. I think that the airport is one of them. And then there's some other
bigger projects going on in terms of like the infrastructure in the area so like that's
happening. But I think also, there's a lot of discussion going on. And there's a lot of
solidarity when there are unions that don't have contracts. So, this is one thing that I can't
talk a ton about because I'm on the school board. But the Saratoga Springs Teachers
Association did not have a contract for two years. And, well that's misleading. They didn't
have a contract for a year and a half. But negotiations are usually about six months. So for
about two years they were working on a contract before they got one. And that included a
contract that was voted down at the end of last school year. And it was really amazing to

�me to watch the solidarity that was happening there and the work that they did. I mean, at
one point we had a school board meeting with like 250 teachers at it, all in their union tshirts to show up with signs to basically be like "make this happen." And I thought that that
was really amazing. I didn't really expect it I guess, even though I know that we have a
strong union. The other thing that I think is really amazing is that. Um, well okay. So
actually I will say the same thing happened at SUNY Empire where they didn't have a
contract, so they did picketing. And people from different unions are coming. And so what I
think is really amazing about unionizing is that you don't have to know the other people,
and you don't have to work with the other people to show up and support them. Right?
We're all in the working class, we're all together in this. Like the solidarity is so strong. And
so I think that that's really amazing to see. I know that like the head of our teachers union
was writing letters to Skidmore in support of the unionizing that was happening there. And
the head of our CSEA, which is like the staff members of the district, did the same thing.
And so they're showing up at pickets together. I think that's really incredible to see. And I
will say like even when I feel really, really, really down about the current state of things in
our country and world and like what I perceive to be the future. Or like what I'm worried will
be the future, seeing like this kind of renewed sense of like labor and like that the working
classes hold the tools to the future and the ruling classes clearly don't. I think that that's
what really gives me hope. So, yeah. There's also some concerning labor stuff happening
in the area, which I think is really interesting. And it gets back to kind of my view of
liberalism. Which is that, liberalism is nice as a concept but in practice kind of falls apart.
And so in Troy, we saw Capital Roots try to unionize. And they were like, "we're going to
unionize." I had a couple friends who work there, and they were like "we're so excited to
announce that we're going to do this work." And right away, the executive director and the
board were like "Nope we'll just we'll recognize your union. You guys are unionized now.
That's great. Like, you don't have to do all of the work. We'll just recognize it." And so
everyone was like "Cool, this is great!" And then Capital Roots is basically going to be
destroyed because of this. Because while they recognized the union, they then started to
actively target different people and fire people. And there was like a lot of retaliation. So
they like, recognize the union in concept because they knew that not doing that wouldn't
be good. But then they have like many active National Labor Review Board violations that
like they're found in the wrong. Capital Roots is falling apart. This is a group, I don't really
know enough about what they do but they do like community gardening. And then they
provide food to people in the area. So they're doing work that we can all agree is good. But
they went on this kind of retaliation spree. My husband and I got to go and like be there to
help picket with like Scabby the Rat and whatnot, which was really cool. My husband took
off work to do that. But it's a reminder of like, unions aren't a nice idea. Unions are an
ongoing, powerful practice. And so I think that sometimes in a place like New York where
we are very liberal, we are very blue. Even in you know, like "Red Saratoga County." But
like, it's not really right? Like Saratoga is very purple, that we can kind of recognize these
good things, but then not actually support the practice. And so Capital Roots is now falling
apart. And I think that that's really interesting. I also just like... This is weird to say because
I assume that you're all in Gen Z. But I just like Gen Z gives me, like endless hope.
Because I'm like. Gen Z with generally Gen X parents know so much and can see what
these practices should look like. And I'm really excited for that, because I do think that
we're going to see just kind of like a renewal of labor work.
Hope Wahrman [00:51:57] Um, Yeah. And I kind of like to that vein of talking about like
Gen Z and like their kind of hope for the future... Like what are what are some ways I
mean, on Skidmore's campus is like one thing, but what are some ways that you think
Skidmore students can sort of get involved in these unions?

�Natalya Lakhtakia [00:52:21] So I think that the best way for any Skidmore student to get
involved unfortunately costs money. But going to the labor breakfast. So the most recent
one was just two days ago, and unfortunately I couldn't be there. But the first Friday of
every month with a couple exceptions, I think May and September and July can kind of be
iffy for them. But in general, the first Friday of the month there is a labor breakfast that
happens at the Desmond Hotel. It's that hotel that's right off of Exit 4, so it's really close to
the airport. And, it's a Union hotel. And so there's this labor breakfast where labor leaders
and labor like union members and then also like electeds will all get together and talk
about what's going on in the area. Because I think that what's going on in the area
changes really rapidly from month to month. And so, you can learn about what's going on
there. That's actually where I met Eric (Morser). Because I was going there with Minita,
who is one of the city council members. And she was like "I'm going to bring my friend Eric
from work." And I was like "cool!" And so he came to see it, and so he came to a really
interesting one. Where we you know, we really just were talking about Palestine. And it
was really interesting to see some of the leaders of the group try to shut down that
conversation. And also really interesting to see one of the like, big labor leaders who the
executive director... um and what is he? Yeah, he's the executive director of PEF, which is
the Public Employees Federation. Get so angry about it, with him being in support of
Israel. That he like threatened a woman who is Israeli, and like told her that her baby
would be beheaded. Like it was really intense. So Eric got a very intense view of the labor
breakfast. But that said, like it is a really awesome way to learn what's going on it is
generally a really positive experience and the only reason why I can't go right now is
because I have a job that's in-person and doesn't start at 10AM. But it's kind of your
chance to learn what's going on in the area. And I think that that's really amazing. What I
do know is going on right now close to here, is that the county workers are saying that they
don't have a fair contract. And so there's some of the people who work for Saratoga
County, I think they're CSEA, and so I know that they're doing pickets around the area. So
I think that there's a way for students to get involved and to learn about that. I think it's
really interesting that we're a very politically divided society. But when we're talking about
the labor movement, that kind of doesn't matter as much, I guess. And I think that is
because again, like the solidarity of the working class is so strong when you're unionized
that views of like electoral politics just matter less. And I say that as somebody who like I
would generally identify electoral politics as like my sports. Like I love to follow it, I love to
be involved, I love to do my work, I love to know what's going on worldwide. But it's just
you can set that aside when you're doing labor work. And so I think that that's really
incredible to see. Because it doesn't really matter who's president. If you can't, like pay
your bills and if you can't eat. Like, what matters is that you do the work to be able to do
that with your one job. I also saw today that in Europe, something like 37% of people can
identify that their job serves no purpose. Like they're not doing anything that's like,
important to the continuing efforts of society. So I also know that, Bernie Sanders just
introduced like a four-day work week bill into Congress. And I think that that's something
that students should actively be involved in supporting. Because, like everybody could go
do a four-day work week and our society would continue and people would have better
lives and be happier and have more time for like, the joys of life. Without really very much
changing.
Hope Wahrman [00:56:28] Yeah. And I have one more, like our last question. But I also...
It was interesting because during the pandemic, my high school had like a four day
workweek. Like, the Friday of the week was "office hours." So like, you could go if you
needed help, but like if you didn't have anything you needed help with and you were ahead
on all your work like there was no class that day. And I think obviously there were some
discrepancies with just working online, but in general like we were able to finish like

�everything we had to for each unit. And like, learn the best that we could under those
conditions. So, I definitely think a 4 day work week is a super cool thing that we could see
in the future. That would work.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:57:11] And it's I mean, it's popular, right?
Hope Wahrman [00:57:14] Yeah.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:57:14] Like my dad talks about it. And my dad is in his late 60s and
is a professor. Like he's not working like in industry, right? Like he's he has like "a make
your own hours" type of a job. And even he has like "yeah, people should have a four day
workweek."
Hope Wahrman [00:57:29] Yeah. And so thank you so much for meeting with us and
talking to us. I could talk to you about this kind of thing for hours!
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:57:38] Yes, me too. I love labor.
Hope Wahrman [00:57:40] So I guess the final question is... Maybe it's a cheesy one I
don't know. But I guess what is your advice to younger labor union organizers. Younger
people just entering the workforce in general? Um, trying to kind of navigate their rights
and their workplaces.
Natalya Lakhtakia [00:58:04] Um...well. I don't think that I'm old, but I didn't know anything
about this when I started working. So like when I started working, when I started working
after grad school. When I started working in my school, they said "Check this box if you
want to pay your union dues." And I turned to the person next to me and said, "Why
wouldn't I pay my union dues?" And she was like, "There's no reason to not pay your union
dues, like the pay off is much more like just pay them." And I said "Okay," and I checked
that box. And that was like my total understanding of unions, was that my coworker said to
check the box. And so because it is an option to not pay your dues which really sucks, to
not pay into your society I guess into your community. But, so I would say like learning
about this understanding that like basically all the good things that we have in terms of like
the structures of society or because of the labor movement. And then also I will tell you, I
get a lot of recruiting calls. And so, I do think that you have to balance like being able to
live with having ideals. Like I strongly feel that. Like I have a lot of ideals, and I have a lot
of beliefs for how things should be, and I also know how things are. And so I think that
there needs to be a balance there where you can work for better, but also like you have to
be able to eat. And you have to be able to pay your bills and you have to also like, not be
just laying in bed in the dark because you don't have a job, right? Like so like there's all
these things going on. But what I do now is even though I'm not looking for a job, I think
I'm probably in it at Fort Edward for the long haul. I really like it, and I am happy there.
After three months but, still. Even though I'm not looking for a job, every single time that a
recruiter calls me, every single time I get an email or a text or a message on LinkedIn I
respond and I say "Is this a union job? Because I will only take a union job." And, it's really
interesting because some of the recruiters are not unionized either, they're doing their
jobs. And so it's one of those things where it opens up a conversation. And I've started to
kind of push for that. And what I'll tell people is "I will not take a job if it's not union." And I
encourage other people to do the same, because I'm certainly not the only one getting
these calls. And so I think that if you have the ability to do that, just getting out that kind of
a message matters. I also think even if you get a job that's not union like my last one, and
you have the ability to support union work in your area. Like being aware of what's going

�on and showing up to support is worth it every single time. And so... um well with one
exception, which is that I will say. Police say that they have unions, but they don't.
Because unions are for workers and police are not workers. And so what they have are
whatever they are called, um the...what are they called? Police Benevolence Associations.
And they can have solidarity with other workers when they want to have that like public
relations view. Of like, "Look, we stand with the teachers" or whatever. But I will never,
ever stand with them because that kind like police come from Pinkertons like they're union
breakers. They're not union supporters. But all of that aside, I think that any time you're
showing up for actual workers like you're making the world better. I'm a firm believer, as
even as somebody who doesn't who loves electoral work, that if you are organizing your
own community you are doing something that is vastly more important than any sort of
electoral work is. And there are times where I like...I will say, I do think that being on the
school board can at times put me at odds with my view of the working class. And I also still
think it's worthwhile to do it, because I think that having my viewpoint on the board is
important, and I'm not the only one with my viewpoint. But I think that if you are doing the
work to try to get a union job, getting your job and then doing the work to unionize it while
knowing your rights. I think if you are connecting with other unions to support them. And
then I just think in general,like even just setting union work aside, doing the work to
support the working class. Which is like, all of us. And not doing the work to support the
ruling class, gives you... It builds class consciousness. And understanding class, and how
this division of the classes and dividing us into different groups only supports the ruling
class, helps you navigate the world. And helps you have, I guess strong principles to
follow. And so even if you're not in a union job, and even if you feel like you're being
mistreated at work, it will help you move forward to something better. And I think that
having solidarity with your fellow workers is the only way we're going to move forward as a
society. Stay in New York! Because New York is like, I think the second most unionized
state.
Hope Wahrman [01:03:04] Wow. That's very impressive. And it's the second most?
Natalya Lakhtakia [01:03:08] I think so. I think I saw Hawaii is higher? Something like
that, I don't remember right now. But New York is like around 20%? This is...I actually
might be remembering this wrong. We're definitely second, though. So you may want to
look this up. But, if you stay in New York you have a higher chance of being in a union if
you work in public education or any sort of public office. Like if you're working for the
governor's office, or the state, or the federal government like you have a higher chance of
being in a union.... If you're a postal worker. And then you can work for better for you and
your fellow workers. But also you can unionize where you're at, my husband has looked
into it for his job.
Hope Wahrman [01:03:43] Yeah. Well yes, thank you so much again.
Natalya Lakhtakia [01:03:46] Yeah!
Zain Sundaram [01:03:46] Yeah, thank you.
Hope Wahrman [01:03:46] I like really appreciate you coming in and taking the time to
meet with us. Um, yeah. This was a wonderful interview.

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                <text>Natalya Lakhtakia is a speech-language pathologist in the Fort Edward School District and a proud NYSUT member. The daughter of immigrants and from a family of educators, she has been on the Saratoga Springs Board of Education since 2019 and has served as board vice-president, and on the finance, audit, policy, superintendent evaluation, DEI, and counseling committees. She is currently serving as board president. She lives in Saratoga Springs with her husband and son. She is active with Capital District DSA, NYS Break the Bonds, and does work with Skidmore’s Education Department to support future educators.</text>
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                    <text>Interview with Joan Berenguer by Lynne Gelber, Skidmore College Retiree Oral History
Project, Saratoga Springs, NY, August 13, 2024.
LYNNE GELBER: This is Lynne Gelber. I'm here today with Joan Berenguer, from the early
days of Skidmore. It's the 29th of June,, 2025, and we're with Susan BenderSUSAN BENDER: "Recording for."
LG: ... recording for the Skidmore Retiree Oral History Project. Well, Joan, it's really
nice to see you. And I want to start by asking where you grew up and if you could
describe your childhood, briefly.
JOAN BERENGUER: Okay. It's great to be here and thank you for inviting me to participate in
this program. I'm delighted to be a part of it. So, I was born in Southern California, and
grew up... My elementary school years were in the Santa Monica area of Southern
California. And then when I was 11, we moved to the Bay Area in Northern California
and I went to both middle school and high school in the Bay Area. And then I went off to
college, to Ohio, to Antioch College. And then I went to Granada for a program abroad
and I met my husband. And then we moved to Paris and lived there for seven years. Both
of my daughters were born in Paris.
And then we moved back to New York in 1974 because my husband was given a post at
SUNY Albany. And that was the year that I saw the advertisement for a post that was
available at the language department at Skidmore, and that's when I applied for the
department post. And started working in 1974, no, 1975, as a language instructor at theLG: In Spanish?
JB: In Spanish. Well, actually, I was hired for Spanish and French, but I only taught Spanish. Do
I continue on for that in terms of dates? So, I was an instructor in the language
department from '75 to '77, and then I was hired in '78... I'm sorry, from '74 to '78. And
then I was hired as an academic advisor for the school year of '78/'79. We moved to
Barcelona in '79. And then thanks to Lynne Gelber, chair of the department, who asked
me if I would be interested in setting up a (Junior Year Abroad) program for Skidmore...
at that point, my husband and I and my family were living in Barcelona, setting up a
program for Tufts starting in '80, 1980.
So, we ran the program for Skidmore, in conjunction with the program we were running
for Tufts University, from 1980 to 1985, and then we moved to Madrid in 1985 and ran
the program both in Madrid and in Alcalá de Henares until my retirement in 2009.
LG: Now, did you have a position also at the University Without Walls?
JB: I did. I didn't mention that? I'm sorry. In 1978, '79, before we moved to Spain, I worked as an
Academic Advisor in the University Without Walls.

Page 1 of 12

�LG: And what did you do?
JB: So, I worked with the students who were doing their individual projects and helping them
organize the academic aspects of the development of their projects. Because it's a very
independent program and they're not on campus. They're not taking, necessarily, courses,
but their doing a lot of independent work within their different degree requirements. It
was a very interesting job.
LG: Any outstanding students or projects that you can recall?
JB: I'm sorry, I don't remember.
LG: Okay.
JB: It was only one year. And everything seemed very interesting to me, but I can't remember
any specific projects.
LG: Do you remember what courses you were teaching in Spanish?
JB: Yes. I was teaching Spanish 3 and 4, and I was teaching Phonetics. Which, that was, for me,
my most interesting course. I was teaching Phonetics and it was something that I found
extremely useful because I saw that it could be helpful for students who were sincerely
interested in improving their phonetic performance in learning Spanish with
understanding how those sounds are produced in your mouth. It was incredible, the
improvement that people could make.
And so it was an interesting scientific course because of the way they found out about
how sounds are produced in your mouth, but it's also had great practical results for these
students because they were delighted to all of a sudden hear themselves speaking a more
phonetically correct Spanish. So that was a very fun course.
LG: So, why don't you talk a little bit about the program in Spain?
JB: So, as I mentioned before, we developed the program originally in Barcelona. So, I'm talking
now about the Skidmore College Junior Year Abroad Program in Spain, which started in
Barcelona in 1980. That was our very first year. We started working on its creation the
year before. And we set up the program with what they call the Central University of
Barcelona, La Universidad Central de Barcelona, which was in the downtown area of the
city. And I taught a class and my husband taught a class for the Skidmore and Tufts
University students, which we were running in conjunction, the two programs, at the
university itself. We were given classroom space at the university. Then we had space, an
apartment that we rented, we had space to use for the program where we had some of our
special events, lectures, recitals, special projects, at the office. And that's where we had
our administrative offices and ran the program.
LG: Joan, what kind of special programs? What kind of recitals?

Page 2 of 12

�JB: Well, we had Flamenco, and we had some of the singer/songwriters in those days, which
were very important because of their political implications. They'd been important during
the end of the Franco dictatorship and continued to be very popular. And some of them
were our friends and we had them give recitals to the students. And of course there was
the interest both in the music and also the political message that was coming through
thoseLG: Did the students get involved?
JB: Oh, absolutely. They were fascinated. And part of the program was, the philosophy of our
program was also to get students as integrated as possible in the culture. So there were
two special courses. My husband's, Angel’s, course in culture, and my course in
language, to help them with things that they wouldn't find at the university. But then they
all took two or three other courses at the university itself that were regular courses where
they sat with the Spanish students and did the same work the Spanish students did and got
their grades from the Spanish professors. Which we felt was very important for them to
be part of a real institution, to not have something just prepared for them on an American
type university.
And so they did the university, they lived individually with Spanish families, with
families in Barcelona. And cultural activities were actually part of their Culture course
with my husband, Angel, where they could choose several different types of activities but
they all had to do some kind of cultural activity, which could include going to Spanish
movies, seeing Spanish plays, going to Spanish music recitals or concerts, going to art
exhibits. Just generally being involved in Spanish culture for the same reason, that they
could become part of regular Spanish life, and not a tourist, and not a separate American
kind of in-house situation. This was something we always believed in very strongly, and
we saw how effective it could be with the students in terms of their outcomes.
LG: So, why did you have to move to Madrid?
JB: So, this is one of the very big challenges that we encountered. When we first moved to
Barcelona, there was some movement toward nationalistic Catalans recovering their
culture because they felt that they had been very oppressed during the Franco period with
the dictatorship. They couldn't use their language at school. I mean, there were lots of
things that we absolutely agreed with. But it went very far for our objectives with our
students because starting maybe the third year... We spent five years there. About the
third year, we saw we were losing the number of the most popular courses that students
would sign up for at the university itself (because they) were just being offered in
Catalan. So we had the problem with the course offerings at the university that our
students could take, but as well as thatLG: Catalan as opposed to?
JB: Right. The Catalan language is a separate romance language. It's as separate from Spanish as

Page 3 of 12

�French or Portuguese or Italian. So it's not mutually comprehensible. And none of our
students were specializing in Catalan so it was not a useful... We couldn't expect students
to be able to take a course in Catalan. So we had the problem at the university.
We also had a problem at all of these cultural activities we wanted them to be involved in
because, especially the theater, was being offered almost exclusively in Catalan. But even
the art exhibits would have the information only in Catalan because they were trying to
promote their language with such rigor that they were blocking out Spanish. And so even
on a social level... All of our families, of course, knew that they had to speak Spanish
with our students, but sometimes there was families that mostly spoke Catalan and that
was a division for our students to integrate into the families because they would be
speaking a language they didn't understand, and that could create also misunderstandings.
And on a social level, our students had a hard time making friends because a lot of the
students at the university didn't want to speak Spanish. They were using the Catalan
language. And so interestingly enough, our students, instead of having friends in the
university, they usually had friends that were immigrants from other parts of Spain that
didn't speak Catalan either. Taxi drivers, or waiters in the restaurants, or people that they
met in other occasions, but they weren't having that very rich experience with their peers
of being able to develop a lot of friendships.
So it was clear, I would say about the third year in our development, that we were going
to have to make a move. So in the fourth year, we started seriously looking at all the other
options in Spain. And after checking out several universities, there were lots of fine
places to go, but the best place for us, without a doubt, after checking it out and doing a
lot of research, was Madrid because Madrid has very good universities but it also offers
so much of everything else. Because our students weren't always Spanish majors. Some
of them were Spanish majors and some of them were Spanish minors, or some were
double majors, but there were many other majors that came on the program.
LG: Like what? Like art history?
JB: Art history. There were poly sci, there were business. We had lots of business. There were
lots of other interests. Psychology. We had lots of different... hm?
LG: Dance?
JB: Oh, and dance. Right. Dance, right. So we had a variety of majors that you wanted to be
able... One of the philosophies of our program was that students get involved in the
culture through their interests and continue on with their interests. And they did
internships, that was something we had started in Barcelona and we greatly expanded in
Madrid because they could find internships in their different areas of interest either for
hobbies’ sake or for majors in terms of the kinds ofLG: So what kind of internships?
JB: So, we had internships in schools where they helped with English teaching. We did

Page 4 of 12

�internships in different types of NGOs where they were working with social services. We
had internships with refugees with, I think it was like a UN agency of refugee aid where
our students were helping to do research about the different countries where refugee
applicants were coming from to help the lawyers prepare their cases with the refugees.
And we had some students interested in business working with financial institutions. I'm
trying to remember, there was another one. It was also an NGO that was very popular. A
lot of the social services where they were working with children in some cases.
That's all that comes to mind. There were a lot of different options. There was a student
who did an internship in movie making and found a place that did films where she could
develop her interest in movie making. So there was a whole lot of variety. And we
encouraged students, if we couldn't find something exactly that fit the bill, that they could
also look into opportunities.
LG: So, what were the highlights for you?
JB: Beyond a doubt, the biggest highlight for me... Because I loved this job. For me, it was a
dream job. I used to tell everybody that. But I think the most wonderful thing about it was
witnessing the kind of growth leaps that all students experienced and achieved in many
different areas, including intellectual growth, academic growth, cultural perspectives,
adaptability, social development. Of course language development was fundamental. But
there were all sorts of different ways in which students were able to take advantage of
these opportunities in their own individual experiences, and they all made huge leaps in
those growth opportunities.
After having taught at Skidmore, I saw it much more because it was more of a kind of
complete experience that they were having, and you could see these growth
developments. A 20-year-old American, in some cases, it was the first time they had ever
gotten on an airplane, in those days. It was their first time out of the country. Living in a
city, learning to deal with urban culture and urban logistics. Using a subway. All of these
were very important experiences for them in all sorts of different ways. And that, for me,
was not just fascinating but it was heartwarming to see how these students were meeting
these challenges and accomplishing what they were able to do in the structure of the
program.
LG: Nowadays, we talk about it as learning about diversity and living with it.
JB: And that is absolutely what they did. What I thought was interesting was that each student
had their own way of growth. It wasn't like a cookie-cutter experience. Each person
developed according to their own situation, their own interests, their own needs, but there
was always growth. You couldn't go through that program without major growth.
LG: So, Joan, what were the major challenges?
JB: I think the biggest challenge was having to move from Barcelona to Madrid. That was, for
me, it was a big disappointment. Barcelona is a wonderful city. It's just-

Page 5 of 12

�LG: It was the cultural center of Spain at the time, wasn't it?
JB: And it was the cultural center. It was much more interesting city than Madrid under the
dictatorship. It had a lot of communications with France and the rest of the democratic
world, and it was just more open. It welcomed a lot of the Latin American intellectuals
and writers from those times. So it was a very interesting place. That's one of the negative
outcomes of this nationalistic kind of closing in on yourself. The nationalistic movement
has closed Barcelona off to diversity. Basically, to diversity.
So anyway, it was very challenging, first of all, because it was a big disappointment that
we weren't able to stay there, because it just did not work for our program because of the
way we wanted students to integrate into the culture. But also, anybody who is interested
in my opinion knows that I never recommend anybody going to a program in Barcelona.
The programs that I'm aware of in Barcelona have becomeLG: Now?
JB: Now. Most of their instruction is English, but also they're very popular and well known as
fun programs. What do you call the schools that have... Was that mine?
LG: Yeah.
JB: Oh, it's mine. Oh, sorry. So, I'm talking about these programs in Barcelona today, from what
I've heard and people I've talked to, they've become very popular party schools where
students go because they don't have to work very hard, everything is in English, and they
have a lot of fun at the parties. Now, in Madrid, you could have fun at the parties, but you
had to do a lot of work and you had do a lot of other things besides partying. And I don't
think that's the best way to take advantage of the great opportunity that studying in
another country has to offer.
LG: Were you able to set up similar kinds of internships in Madrid?
JB: Oh, absolutely. We had very interesting internships. And also, in Alcalá, we had kind of a
mini program in Alcalá for students interested in a smaller town environment.
LG: Now, Alcalá was...
JB: So, Alcalá is where my husband, Angel Berenguer, was teaching at the university and we
developed a relationship with them to be able to set up a mini program. It's basically a
half hour train ride from Madrid to Alcalá. So our students were in Alcalá, they lived
with families in Alcalá, they went to the university for their courses, but they came into
Madrid once a week to do the basic culture program and also to make sure that they were
able to take advantage of Madrid as well as Alcalá. Some of these students preferred not
to have the big city experience, but we wanted them to have some kind of exposure to
Madrid. And so that worked well.

Page 6 of 12

�And I must mention that the other interesting thing about the program was that we set up,
with Skidmore College, a scholarship arrangement for the students from Alcalá. Usually
it was two students from the University of Alcalá and two students from the Autonomous
University of Madrid. Those are the two universities where our students were directly
enrolled in courses.
LG: Excuse me. So they could take courses at Alcalá or the university?
JB: Right. The University of Alcalá and the Autonomous University of Madrid. And so the
exchange arrangement with those two universities was that two of their students could
come to Skidmore for a year, tuition-free and room and board free, and work, I think it
was the lab part of the language courses that they were teaching, like conversation
courses, at the department here to help out with student language development. And then
they could sign up for the courses they needed to get credit for their university
requirements. That was also a great opportunity for the students who came back from the
program to have these Spanish students around as well, to be able to help them out in the
same experience that they had just had themselves in Spain. So that was also, I think, an
enrichment both for the students and the college as well.
LG: So, did the program grow over the course of those years?
JB: There was some growth and then there was some loss of students. When Skidmore actually
set up their own Programs Abroad Office, then there was a larger possibility of students
studying at other places besides our own programs. And so we for a couple of years, we
lost students that were going to programs in Latin America that were being offered by the
Programs Abroad. But they came back and they stayed pretty stable. [inaudible
00:24:31].
LG: But those programs, in Latin America, for example, were not Skidmore programs?
JB: They were not Skidmore programs. But they were approved by the Programs Abroad Office,
which it was and is a separate administrative entity that dealt with the logistics of signing
the students up.
And one thing that I haven't mentioned before, because we had an interesting relationship
with Regis Brodie, who was from the art department at Skidmore, and he helped us
develop opportunities for students interested in ceramics in Madrid. Because this was
another option. Besides the regular academic courses at the university, there were
possibilities of students taking, at other institutions where we had developed relationships
that we had vetted for their quality, students could take specialized type courses, for
example in ceramics. And so there's this wonderful ceramics school from the beginning
of the 20th century, beautiful place, where students were... These were people who were
going to become ceramists? No.
LG: Ceramicists.

Page 7 of 12

�JB: Ceramicists. So it was very high quality. But our students had a wonderful time. Regis,
who,.. he is internationally famous, and so they knew him and they knew his work. He
has work in several Spanish museums. They were delighted to be able to set up this
system where our students could go and take courses, and get the grades for those courses
and get credit transferred here to Skidmore, especially for our art majors. So those kinds
of opportunities were also available. And especially with Regis, it was wonderful because
he ran a program during the summerLG: Summer 6?
JB: Summer 6. Where he also, I think every two years, he brought one of those students from the
ceramics school for a summer experience. And that was also very popular and very
successful.
LG: Now one of the people whose name I remember is Rosa Ajenjo.
JB: Oh, right. Right. And she was a friend of ours and she taught English in a high school in
Spain. And she came to teach some Spanish courses here, one year? Was it one year or
one semester? I can't remember. But there was also these other kinds of exchange
experiences between the two countries that Skidmore was taking advantage of.
LG: So how did the finances work?
JB: So things worked out financially because Skidmore was charging students their regular
tuition, which is very expensiveLG: Room, board, and tuition.
JB: Right. Room, board, and tuition. And the basic expenses in Spain were less expensive
because Spain is less expensive and tuition is very cheap. And we weren't paying tuition
because we had the exchange system. So Skidmore was actually using their free tuition,
room, and board for the exchange students against our tuition at the University.
LG: Now, the room, board, and tuition, did that also include trips?
JB: Yes.
LG: And did it include air fare?
JB: It did not include air fare, but it included trips. We tried to take students to areas of the
country that they probably wouldn't go on their own, that were not so normal tourist
attractions. Which was interesting.
And also, something I haven't mentioned, because they were paying high tuition
compared to expenses in Spain, we also offered them... I mean, we covered lots of their
expenses. We covered their transportation pass. There's a youth transportation pass that

Page 8 of 12

�they could get to and from the university and any other place; all of their cultural
activities in the cities, to and fro from Alcalá. We covered their extra meal because they
had two meals with the family, but to give them more flexibility they got a lunch
allowance weekly to cover that third meal.
And then we also covered, besides the required cultural activities, they could also do
other cultural activities and write about these cultural activities and get reimbursed for
whatever expense the cultural activity had, which might include trips. So they could do
their own trips. We encouraged them to do trips with Spanish friends. But it didn't matter.
As long as they had a cultural experience that they could include in their journals. They
had journals about the experiences that they were having with the culture, with the
classes, etc.
And so all of those expenses were covered by the program. A lot of the students said that
they didn't spend practically any extra money in Spain because so much of the
experiences in Spain... Of course, the trips that we covered were always in Spain, which
is something else that I think is interesting because we really encouraged students to take
advantage of what is a very unique opportunity in life. A 20-year-old in a foreign
country, as a student, has many more opportunities to connect with all sorts of different
aspects of the people, the culture, the atmosphere, than any regular tourist has. And we
reminded them that they would have many, many opportunities to do tourism for the rest
of their lives. Which is also a wonderful experience, but it's very different and it's not
ever at the same level that these students could have with their integration into society.
A niece of mine, a different program, a different, perfectly acceptable American
University program, she just spent a semester on the program. And my cousin said, "Oh,
yeah. They set it up so that there were no classes on Friday so that everybody could
travel." Every single weekend, she traveled to a different European country. So this is a
student, who, when I heard she was going, I sent her messages, and she wrote back to me
in Spanish. Very good Spanish. I said, "Oh, your Spanish is excellent. I'm so happy.
You're going to have a great time in Madrid."
When she came back, when she ended the program, she wrote to me in English.
Somebody who had just spent a semester in Madrid and she writes to me in English.
Which, I think, says something about that kind of experience. Which is, it's just a waste
of time. This is so much against the way I think about the opportunity that programs
abroad should offer students. And that's the way we had based the philosophy in our
program.
LG: So, since you retired, what have you been up to?
JB: Well, I am loving retirement. Although, I kind of retired without being sure I was doing the
right thing, because I really love my job and I felt like I was having the best possible
work experience in the world. But I must say that I've really enjoyed retirement. Both my
husband and I, we retired at the same time so we've done lots of travel. We have family
that's kind of spread over the world, over the globe, so we have time to spend with all of
our family members in other parts of the world.

Page 9 of 12

�But the other thing that I just really enjoy is having the luxury of saying, "Oh, I'm
interested in this. I'm going to read this book about the different places that were settled
in the United States and how that impacted the culture development to this day." I mean,
interesting books like that that I never had time to... I always felt like I had to read in my
specialty and keep myself abreast. But having that luxury of being able to read in all sorts
of different areas. I've been reading about pre-Socratic philosophers in Ancient Greece. I
mean, there's so many things that are just fascinating to read about history. I love history.
And to have that luxury of being able to have plenty of free time is something I'm really
enjoying. It's something that's new in my life, so it's been great.
I haven't mentioned this, but we live, between the United States, we spend three months
in the Boston area, in Medford, and then basically three months in Spain, and then three
months in Medford, then three months in Spain, so we're kind of back and forth also in
terms of where we live our lives.
LG: Do you spend time in Abu Dhabi?
JB: Those are trips, not spending two months there.
LG: Seeing family.
JB: Right. We spend time in Abu Dhabi with our family there, and then we spend time in
England, where we have family there as well. And then we spend some time in California
where all of my family lives. I'm the only stray sheep.
LG: Anything else that we should mention?
JB: Well, I must mention that one of the things that I think helped me have a dream job was the
kind of support I always felt from the Skidmore administration. I never had any major
challenges from the Skidmore administration. I felt very supported in the kinds of
developments, the way we saw the program. I felt like people like you, people from the
department, were always on board with the kind of program that we wanted our students
to experience. And so I only had cooperation from the department and from the Skidmore
administration.
LG: Anybody in particular?
JB: You.
LG: No.
JB: Specifically you.
LG: Outside of that.
JB: The Lertoras were always very supportive, and Grace was always very supportive.

Page 10 of 12

�LG: So, the Lertoras, that's Juan Carlos Lertora andJB: Juan Carlos Lertora and Patricia Rubio, and Grace Burton, and... What's his name? Another
Spanish professor whose name... And Mike Madrovich. So I must say, all of the Spanish
professors were very helpful, very supportive, and I always felt like we were all on board
in terms of what our objectives were, how we should deal with the students. The kinds of
students that they sent on the program, they were all so well selected, because that
selection happened at Skidmore. I didn't select the students, they were selected by theLG: But did you meet with them?
JB: I met them. Right. They were selectedLG: So you would come back every year.
JB: Every semester. I came back in November and usually in April, and we interviewed all the
new students that were going to be coming the next semester and talked about what they
were looking forward to, what their expectations were, what their priorities were,
especially in terms of the kind of family they wanted to live with, to help them prepare
their trip. So I think that that's important, that having a job like that, which is a distance, a
far distance from the central administration, and feeling like you're being supported and
you've got people on board with you in terms of the way the program is run. And we
never had any major problem, whatsoever.
LG: When you were on campus, did you meet with people in business office or anyJB: Sometimes. And art, and theater, because of specific students that were working in one
project or another of interest. Or, sometimes, because there were some credit questions
about what kind of credit should we give and what different courses.
LG: There was an interdepartmental committee that was overseeing these programs that brought
in Spain and France. Did you meet with them?
JB: Yes. Yes, we met with them as well. And from my point of view, all of it worked very well,
and I felt extremely well taken care of in terms of not having any administrative
headaches. Which is something you really appreciate.
LG: Anything else?
JB: No. As you can hear, I had a wonderful experience and I feel very privileged to have been
able to have had this job for, I worked for Skidmore for like 29 years. No, I worked in
Spain for 29 years and if you count the other five years, that's like 34 years. So it was a
longLG: Not bad.

Page 11 of 12

�JB: ... long time, at Skidmore.
LG: Thank you, Joan.
JB: Thank you very much.

Page 12 of 12

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                <text>Joan Berenguer came to Skidmore in 1974.  She taught Spanish in the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures for two years and then served as an academic advisor for UWW in 1978-79.  When Skidmore began its own junior year abroad programs, Joan and her husband Angel ran the program in coordination with Tufts University, first in Barcelona and then in Madrid. In this interview Joan recalls the powerful influence of cultural integration, internships and student exchanges. Joan retired in 2009.</text>
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                    <text>Interview with Mark Hofmann by Leslie Mechem, Skidmore College Retiree Oral
History Project, Saratoga Springs, NY, August 13, 2024.
LESLIE MECHEM: This is Leslie Mechem interviewing Mark Hofmann for the Skidmore
Retiree Oral History Project on August 13, 2024 in the Skidmore Library. Good morning,
Mark, and welcome.
MARK HOFMANN: Good morning. Thank you.
LM: Where did you grow up? Can you tell us briefly about your childhood?
MH: Sure. I grew up in Pattersonville, New York, which is a little village halfway between
Schenectady and Amsterdam. I was the youngest of four boys. My father worked for
Knolls Atomic Power Lab as a project manager for nuclear power plants for aircraft
carriers and submarines. But Pattersonville is very out in the middle of nowhere, very
rural. It was ideal for a kid at that time. We spent a lot of time outside, spent a lot of time
in the woods, running around. In the summer times, we spent every summer on Canada
Lake in the Adirondacks, which was really idyllic and I feel very privileged that that
occurred. I mean, we would go up right after school started and we would come back
Labor Day. We were in a place where the only access to it was by boat or walking in. We
spent all summer outside, barefoot, and just enjoyed it. I feel very privileged.
LM: Great. When and how did you first come to Skidmore?
MH: When I graduated from graduate school, I was looking for small liberal arts college jobs,
because I went to Bates College, and it was a really good experience for me, so I knew
that's what I wanted to teach at. I didn't want to teach at a big university. So I applied to
what was available at the time, and it came down to St. Lawrence or Hamilton. I really
wanted the job at Hamilton, but they didn't give it to me, so I took a job at St. Lawrence,
and St. Lawrence is a very nice school. Canton, New York is a little isolated.
After three years there, our discussion was if I get tenure here, is that a blessing, or, is it a
sentence? So I started looking for other jobs and I applied to, at that point, maybe three or
four, one of which was Skidmore, one of which was Bates. Both Skidmore and Bates
offered me jobs. If you have ever been to Lewiston, Maine, it's Saratoga, Lewiston,
Saratoga, Lewiston, and particularly, we decided we didn't want to be in Lewiston even
though Bates was, at that time, a much more established school with a much better
reputation. So in 1985, we moved to Saratoga and I started at Skidmore.
LM: So what made the Skidmore offer so appealing? Was it primarily Saratoga or...
MH: Yes, yeah, yeah. It was location.
LM: Okay. Could you describe for us your position at Skidmore and the work that you did?
MH: Well, I was a professor in the Math Department, Assistant Professor, Associate Professor,
Full Professor, whatever, and did the usual teaching. I did very much enjoy service and

Page 1 of 8

�got involved with a lot of different committees. Eventually, I became department Chair. I
was department Chair for five years. During that time... Maybe it was during that time,
maybe it was before then, I was on the Search Committee for Phil Glotzbach. Prior to
that, I had been on CAPT, and I think that's why I was chosen to be on the Search
Committee, because when I was on CAPT, the College was searching for a president, and
the candidate was Jamie Studley.
CAPT didn't really like the process. We objected to the fact that there was only one
candidate. And so we were asked to endorse the candidate, and we refused to do that. We
said, "No, you haven't given us enough information." So when I was interviewed for
Phil's search committee, I talked about this, and I think that's why they said, "Oh, okay.
We'd like you to be on the committee." And I was very much the junior member of the
committee at the time. It was Terry Diggory, Caroline Anderson, Jeff Segrave, and me.
So it was like, I'm the little guy.
And then after that, I was actually Co-Chair of the Search Committee that hired Muriel
Poston. And after Muriel was hired, she asked me to be her Associate Dean and I was not
really wanting to do that, but I really felt that I couldn't say no if we're asking her to come
here and she was asking for help, then I couldn't say, "I'm sorry, I'm not going to help
you." So I agreed to be Associate Dean. But I agreed to be Associate Dean for two years,
because at the end of those two years, I was scheduled to teach in London, and there was
no way I was giving that up.
LM: What do you consider significant initiatives that you were involved in?
MH: Certainly the most significant was building up the sciences at Skidmore. And when Muriel
asked me to be Associate Dean, she was a scientist, she was hired primarily to build up
the sciences. That was what we were looking for in an Associate Dean at the time... Or,
I'm sorry, in a Dean of the Faculty at the time. But when I became Associate Dean, she
said, "I want you to handle the science side of it." So I said, "Okay." And during my
tenure as department Chair, there was this group that was established by Bob DeSieno. I
beg your pardon, that's not correct.
There was this group established by Barry Pritzker called the Science Planning Group.
And he established that primarily to look for common grant opportunities, but as
department Chair, we'd go to this meeting once a month, and I used to call it the Science
Moaning Group because essentially what happened was all the Chairs would complain
about not enough resources, da, da, da, da, and they would significantly complain about
each other, and the sciences were very un-unified in the sense that some of the sciences
felt that they were the Natural Sciences, and then there were the unnatural sciences,
primarily Psychology, Exercise Science, and whatever.
So when I was Dean, I was initially in charge of Science Planning Group, and then we
created a Science Task Force, and the biggest challenge was to get the science people to
talk to each other and realize that we weren't going to get anywhere until we started
working together. And that was the biggest challenge. Eventually, they came around. We
wrote a working paper that went to the Board, and eventually, the Board agreed after
many, many years. Actually, after I came out of the Dean's Office, I went to London.
When I came back, Muriel asked me again to lead the science initiative, and I agreed.

Page 2 of 8

�And it took us maybe four or five years to get the Board to agree that, "Oh, yeah, we
should build another building." And that was the biggest step and hurdle.
LM: Other initiatives that you were involved in?
MH: Apart from... I mean, nothing major. I mean, there was a lot of different committees. I was
on CEPP, I was on CAPT twice. I was on Porter Scholar Selection Committee for 20
years, and that was extremely rewarding. One other thing that gets lost is that Skidmore
had a Prison Program, and I taught in the Prison Program for 10 years, and that was one
of the most rewarding things in my career.
LM: What was rewarding about that?
MH: The difference in classroom attitude, particularly at the time because Skidmore went
through this period in, say, the '80s when student attitudes weren't as strong as they are
now, and there was some question about student motivation. But you'd go to the prison
and you'd walk in the room and they were motivated. I mean, you went in, when you
came out, you were just energized by the classroom experience.
LM: Weren't you also involved in the Engineering Program?
MH: Yes. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I was head of the Engineering Advisory Committee for five, six
years or so. Well, one of the things we did there was we had a articulation agreement
with Dartmouth and with Clarkson, and we formed one with RPI. And as I left, we were
trying to form one with Columbia, and I'm hoping that that's something that happened
with that, but maybe not yet.
LM: Mark, could you describe the Porter Scholar Program a little bit?
MH: Sure. Porter Scholars were established in honor of David Porter to increase students in
science. Initially, students were awarded $10,000 a year for their four years. It started off
pretty slowly. One of the issues was we had a committee who would sit down and just
look at applications and decide these students we want to be Porter Scholars. We'd award
them Porter Scholarships and they get this letter and they'd say, "What's that?" Which
makes me... Don't forget to talk about S3M.
LM: Okay.
MH: Yeah. Eventually what we did was require the students to write an essay. So they had to
indicate that they wanted to apply for the scholarship, and that really helped a lot. Over
the years, you could always tell the Porter Scholar in your class because you'd have a
class of students and there would be one or two really shining lights and you'd find out
afterwards they were Porter Scholars and you'd say, "Oh, of course."
And one of the best classes I ever had was in 19... No, it wasn't. It was in 2018, Honors
Calc III, and I think I had four Porter Scholars in it, including David Porter's
granddaughter. But it was just a wonderful class because age of cellphones, you go out of

Page 3 of 8

�the class, you come back in, and what are students doing? They're all scrolling through
their phones and whatever. I'd go out of the class and I'd come back in, and they'd be
talking about math and science and whatever, they'd got together and had integral solving
contests amongst themselves.
LM: Great.
MH: Yeah. So S3M when Muriel was Dean, we were looking for ways to increase diversity in
the sciences. And so there was a National Science Foundation Initiative for grants in that
direction, so we wrote... Actually, she wrote a proposal prior to my being in the Dean's
Office for the scholarships and the NSF turned us down. So when I was in the Dean's
Office, I rewrote the proposal and we submitted it again and we were approved. And so
that awarded money for students from diverse backgrounds, non-traditional in the
sciences, and it was like six to eight a year. The NSF funding ran out after four years.
They reapplied, and they said, "No," which I thought was understandable because the
program was to help you to establish a program, not to... So we convinced the board... I
beg your pardon, we convinced the President's Office to continue to fund it without the
NSF funding, and it's still going.
LM: How much was that?
MH: That's a little bit different in that it was much more need-based, and the first thing we did
was eliminate all Student Loans, and then they would up the other components. But the
other aspect about that, too was it was also a summer program where the students in their
second year, or between the first and second year, are invited on campus in the summer to
do research, and they form these different teams and hook up with different science
research experience.
LM: Yeah. That makes an important connectionMH: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
LM: ... among students and faculty. Yeah. What were the major changes that you experienced at
the college?
MH: I just think from 1985 and on, Skidmore's just been going up and up and up and up. I mean,
just a gradual increase in quality in students, increase student engagement, and it's not
one single event. It's just this rise that made it fun and made teaching very fun.
LM: So a little different from when you first came?
MH: Yes. Yes, quite different. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I don't know if you remember this term, the
smart slacker. I think admissions at one point recognized that Skidmore had a reputation
for recruiting the smart slacker. So it would be a student who did okay in high school but
didn't really push themselves and perhaps had ISAT scores, and that they were recruited
and they would come and they would be smart slackers. Then admissions at one point

Page 4 of 8

�started emphasizing high school performance over SAT score to the extent that now, as
far as I know, SAT scores are no longer required.
LM: I think that'sMH: I'm positive that that's trueLM: Yeah.
MH: Yeah. From looking at Porter Scholar stuff.
LM: What were the greatest challenges you faced during your time at Skidmore?
MH: Well, again, pushing the sciences, getting higher administration to recognize the importance
of the sciences, getting development to recognize the importance of the sciences. At one
point, I was chair of the Review Committee for the VP for Finance, rest his soul. But
there were a lot of people in... Not VP for Finance. VP for Advancement. A lot of people
thought, "Well, what we're doing for the sciences is enough," and that we shouldn't be
asking for more. "We don't need to advance the sciences at Skidmore." And there were
other people that recognized that it was the only way that we're really going to survive,
and I think that's one of the biggest changes is that now sciences are front and center, and
I think that's a good thing. Of course, I'm a little prejudiced.
LM: Were you involved in the planning of the science building?
MH: Not the science building. Once the board agreed to fund the thing, I said, "Okay, I'm done."
Because I had been working at it for eight years or so, and at that point some really smart
and ambitious people like Corey Freeman-Gallant and Karen Kellogg kind of took over.
And I said, "All right. I don't... Yeah, that's enough for me."
LM: Okay. What are your fondest memories of your time at Skidmore?
MH: Students primarily but also faculty colleagues, just it was a great place to work. And up
through the pandemic, I never ever felt like I didn't want to come to work. I mean, the
pandemic changed things a little bit, but I was kind of on my way out at that point
anyway. But working with faculty colleagues on various committees was very rewarding.
It was just a really great experience. Riding up to the prison with a car full of your fellow
faculty was also very interesting and rewarding. It was a great program for you to get to
know faculty from other departments.
LM: With whom did you ride and connect?
MH: Gerry Erchak, Jeffrey Segrave, Pat Oles, Rudy Sturm.
LM: Oh, wow.

Page 5 of 8

�MH: Just lots of different people.
LM: What activities have you been engaged in since retirement?
MH: Well, the primary thing is we sold our house. My wife, Linda's from Wales. We got married
in Wales in 1975. I lived over there for a couple of years before I came back to go to
graduate school because the UK government didn't want to fund me anymore. So we
spend a lot of time traveling to Wales. We bought a house in Wales in 2021, so we could
travel back and forth. We sold our house in Saratoga shortly after I retired, which was a
big project, and we bought a place in Ballston Spa, and we're kind of trying to sort our
lives out, and what does retirement mean, since then, and we're kind of getting there, but
I don't think we're quite there yet.
LM: Takes time.
MH: Yeah.
LM: Okay, Mark, that's great. Anything else you'd like to tell us about?
MH: Well, yeah, one of the things that was really great was teaching in London. I was able to do
that twice. Once in 2008, and once in 2014. Then after 2014, I applied every year and I
was told, "You'll never do it again." And unfortunately, I was not able to do it again. But
they were both great experiences. It was nice living in London at Skidmore's expense,
and Skidmore gave you enough funds to rent a place. The first time, we rented a terraced
house right near Waterloo Station, which was fantastic. The center for London at that
point was right next to the British Museum just a couple two or 300 yards down from the
British Museum.
It was great walking in every morning, crossing over the Thames. The foot traffic was
amazing. I mean, there was this kind of rush-hour commute of people walking to work.
And it was a great experience. I mean, the idea was you were asked to teach something
that involves London. And my LS course, which eventually became my First-year
Seminar course at Skidmore, was Math and the Art of Escher, which is not very Londoncentric. So I had read a book called Longitude by Dava Sobel, which is all about... if I
can remember his first name correctly, I think it's John Harrison's quest to find a working
ship clock, which he did manage to do, he did manage to successfully construct one, and
it's the key to finding one's longitude at sea. All of Harrison's clocks were at the British
Mu-... Oh, not the British Museum, at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, and
so, that was the natural connection. That was a great and fun course to teach.
I would start with Harrison's clocks, and then we'd go through modern GPS, which
allowed you to talk about the Theory of Relativity because if relativity's not taken into
account, the GPS clocks or GPS bearings would be accurate for about five seconds and
then they're no good anymore. So, each of these GPS satellites has an Atomic Clock in it,
which they use to set things correctly.
So I did that in 2008, and that was a fun experience. My classroom experience was a little
challenging at that time. At that time, the way that London worked was students didn't
apply to London, they were offered a position to London, and they would say, "Okay,

Page 6 of 8

�you can come to Skidmore but you've got to agree to go to London first." And the kids
that went had a great experience. Some of them resented that, though. And when I did it
in 2014, they changed that and said, okay, they would ask, "Would you like to go to
London?" It was almost exclusively students who wanted to go, and that made a huge
difference. One of the best classes I ever had was that 2014 class, and they became your
advisees as First-Year Experience students did. I really, really enjoyed that cohort of
students through their four years at Skidmore.
LM: So that program was designed for First-year students, right?
MH: Yes. Yes, it was. Yeah. The London courses you taught a First-Year Experience class over
there. Again, you had to come up with a class that involvedLM: London.
MH: ... London in some way or the UK.
LM: So you taught the same course?
MH: I taught the same course. I taught it once over there. I taught it a second time on campus
with the theory that, in the past, my experience with the Escher course and other things
like that is it was never any good until at least the third iteration. And I taught it in 2014
and it was a much better experience.
LM: Any other things you'd like to tell us about?
MH: No. I mean, the other thing, it was very rewarding, speaking of First-Year Experience, was
teaching math and Escher, and I learned a lot from that. I think that whole continuum of
Liberal Studies through First-Year Experience requiring faculty to get out of their
comfort zone and teach something they weren't really that experienced with was a great
experience and something that I learned a lot from. I taught my Escher course first as an
LS II course. No, I beg your pardon, first as an LS III course. When it was LS I, II, III,
IV, LS III was art and critical thinking, almost all the science people were doing LS IV,
which is Science and Society, and universally, they hated it.
But, when we transitioned to LS II, I moved my course to LS II. When we transitioned to
First-Year Experience, I taught it as a First-Year Experience course. The last time that I
taught it, I taught the Senior Seminar for the Senior class, and I taught the same subject.
And that was a lot of fun because in the course, what I tried to do as a first-year course,
tried to introduce students to complex mathematical ideas without getting their hands too
dirty. And you can do that with Escher because you can visualize a lot of things, and he
has a lot of visual representations of mathematical ideas. So when I taught it as a senior
seminar, I went back and did the same thing but got into the nitty-gritty math of it. And I
had three or four students who were in my LS, in my First-Year Experience class as
Seniors, and they really enjoyed that, and I enjoyed that.
LM: Well, thank you very much.

Page 7 of 8

�MH: You're welcome. Thank you. Thank you for inviting me.

Page 8 of 8

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                <text>Mark Hofmann came to Skidmore in 1985 as Assistant Professor in the Mathematics and Computer Science Department. He served as Chair of the department, became a Full Professor and from 2005-2008 served as an Associate Dean of the Faculty. In this interview Mark discusses his role in promoting the sciences through his work as Chair of the Science Task Force which proved instrumental in realizing the Tisch Center for Integrated Sciences. Furthermore, he details his part in choosing Porter Scholars and his joy in teaching those students. As a participant in the London FYE Program he relates his excitement about teaching his course "Escher and the Art of Math" in London in 2008 and again in 2014. He also speaks with affection about his time teaching in the prison program.  </text>
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                    <text>&amp;

RACING AT THE SPA.
CltMe

Finithei

for

th*

Ninth

Regular Day of the Meeting.

B W . Hoaodicg the lo**r t v a l a ' s tb*
ttrt'ch lv&gt;gi-lt »*r-t Krvw* Baaaty to tb*
frvot t a d the rtd-J aad*r t k t wtr* wttaer
it X Lt-.t rr»&gt;-j Kjtal'J. Oie* Boy a ct.&gt;4e
third.

A sura loot.

PRETT1LY_PLAYBD.

Higher Pricet ht
th«
1
Metal To-Day.

WAvratwuN TAKIM ANOTtuut K U » Shakespeare Produced e n the
" W a T T l T t T JSTM-1 * W , - o f wh+eb *W w
~ QfTrTd UnTorTUewrt;
**\oil; r a : n : - * II .*. d.'Utl betters *&lt;••
ool and tas-J. kortrt ei'.tred to bt to. 1 t.r
t i j u u w iir-j fill »t &lt; : » ; teUlLig a-.-&gt;«-

TKX KATE3U OITDO TUSfiMLTlS ON
T H * WF-ATHIB H.8AH AND E.NJOTA- • kt*«. ( v l l3.-d&gt;at*.
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ta l i i ' . i »&lt;*• « 1 : a i r a r a .
F a c i a l ta Tbt JonroaL
J l O CAJTVBflS TUB LASt BACJ2.
'Jl-;f. 1:15 I X
S i r t t ^ i . A ' i . 1 5 - T b a draautle *nC#I'.1J«; W i ^ t . - * ) I , 1 to 5 « c l CJt; B « &gt; tertaiaiue_t cf Sattirda/ treolaf la lb*
t r r l 1 u 1 i : l t to • ; LvT-J H I T / aaJ
Bpedal t3 T b t l e o r a t L
U&gt;|aa. eack S :o 1 a i d 5 to 1, L _ i B.^»- opra cojrt cf the (Jraad Unfca ||i7iel,
to X; CliJji:.-:. 15 t&gt; 1 * at ladtcj aa tlibo.-ate cmt~4oo* preaeaBaratca* Kact Track. A a*. l i . - T t e br'xbt au'ii, U w l u H
t»ti:a cf Sbelfs;^ar«'i pattoraj corneii;
S M beautiful w r t d u r , at well as t i t i t l 1 M I
Tb« tal'rt, hji+af
btta
ti'.r'j
aicceaagaawledg* thai 1 good t : t k t r » r j wa* ef- fal t i z t fir, o-jJJ tn c &gt; i t ! 3 j u tali bat "Aa Yoa U i e It-''
Tha » h . l » tvjit » M bh'-likatlx C!at e d the track tn the be«t coodUtlcii, War.tr»&gt;3. jr»-l ^oft^l la [be IOOA?/ oa
to i t t n r t a c e t t e r [ m l throog to aloi ua'U bia fri • wml c=: fro=i * to » to E)La:i-J n.-Ji riivtric. Utbta, gat and
» b i l * Ctiinej* l i i ' f m a aul «labcra-t»tr decoratthe . r i c e * to-day.
T i e n Were s U 3 l » A H m t - I wsa t e o o n l cbulce,

• e3 M tft* Btiklaf to tb« groaaa of tka
ehrrteaaa kagag ^ - t a j «( t*« fltr«tv la

WhH-

NEGLIGEE

AX acvoitMoce nemmtm tx vmox PA
CBTJC w&amp;a&lt;*m)*-4*CBmxt
MADS A
ftJOO BTAtattFIT - OOBOAQB A.XP
«lBl qw-OWW M i a T B I MtPTg-"
FAC OA£«-^A 8TB0MG OUBUNQ.

kadder •»«* ». B. Ferkiaa. aa*. *i * U
»:*4«M«4 tB *4to Jvaraal' * f e » i f •#».
aJ:boa«k a t v « a | aa ucelleal aa4 ftttMa
rt=a, fall • &lt;4BBB to tbt H*T T « * Mai,
eridaiuna
6 - 1 •—1 TtniBi I I M d*fNK»4 Tt«««#, aa*
W»» lort. Aag. IB, IX t.
l.'teraaraa a*f«r*d a w*a paa/td Mt «ttH
l o t era br Mat acore ••&lt; «—1 « - » . ThU narbee poaaattia tatt aMrcdag trta lea*
k n a a Wilaax a»4 lerUaa aloot la tbt tra^ort &lt;va« laat -rack, catj H—dlag, Xrlt
txt* Na» tkaf aJM* la Ua atagat* *Hlk aod Bt Paot aooa« raHroad ••oca*, aad
r^iacta vwf katgalj U aaro* af ta* lattar. Bosar a a o t t «a« MaatrUav murni* t»J
A! j &gt;oca WBeaa it a fta* pi a/
atrlmadoa, a*jlH «**a l i A*M taaatri tb*
; • # • a*aaa«aa ajaiau k It
Buatatttaaa «ar« afl«M la t t t txlraoM aad
1
&lt; V&lt;?t*4 taat k t t u u i t M
ten 4aaatt«e ta Tndaj • Vtaraal" aft«r «bt aartr aAraaiaa vara aaMtalij teat l a u
; thla I i i n a a m i la tbt do*Mta&gt; B t w a l a g It (bt hear.
rirat arle«a wrrt feneraUf atltbtlf alfba*
tr":i«r» bat* fetta* aid atarkvaatker, aiIrr wbaafc M I M U 4 BeatMar aarrvwtd tbas tbata cf Batordar. bat t i l / Baaar
s? oatttM ia M a not tj dtfaaUtg Trrrur abort* aa? ataxttatM, aaS aftar a ritt of T-«
per eaot, half of It v a t kjat
aa.1 Bavafm. e - a . a_4.
BazVoaA •bxbj trttaoat
Tb* aaataa bMwrea Ptrkdaa ao4 WVaes
KB artai lattrMt, aac aaaar coaflaed to rtrf aarKra- BaAu, t o 4 artrat
frata tbt
(f tM ebaraXag faaa »tr» ai IX o-eteck an r t aaf«7 aaaaaad abauistal/
gpta'.of. T t Jtaflnga rtaaaiatd
l ^ r l - l U r i J - A l l Lugaa -iuij .a&gt;^a» Ti«rHa«. | p j
mm laoralaf Is far attdra. rtatareleaa ttuvajboct. aod at l l o'clock tbt
Lord Harrf I M la Croat a', i-if-fall,
with
hat bf»a akfefae as4«f rttf rat % at waa daJ! aad atatnast.
hJ!» l i e j l i / naa cianxiln^l/ preaeu'.t-J T t f **
Lofao at •-•vol, i.Jt waa t t 4 « l bj l&gt;io-5a
at KHII/
Tbt aiib9«ae«(n«at of an tafifttaeot 6/ •
J*k«*Tji at ta» tara l i : o lbs :aaia track, b j B«e\l rlajer*t/ raallr Baa vaaiher of tat vaak. Tbt tjlUfoa nor a r&gt;M fbr atpbH bfoa|M BBoW
»bo carrlr-d the fle&lt;d u&gt; t i e ! &gt; » « far lora,
IX* "ItJiT" UJK&gt;3 wUch tha pl»y w*» retoMa wartaBCaVon: PwkSM wBdk Bead- daUotaa, bat ao rtarftea. Taa l a m m w t
t a d then died a » ^ / . i i Wart-r»jB, l)catre4 tr.srtiii i m i « » f n i;»3t iftecttd f'.&gt;r -"-* 'wva Br«« prtee of tMiH ataglea, « - L bid been rotaored (lurLBf Uw ear)/ tsccalag
a&amp;d U x » a pa.««cd ber ! i that c r i e r . The»«
« - i . • - • . BmwU^t
brotb«r« prtriuiMto aad AacradiuJ darraf tbt Brat boar.
tfcrta t a d a fi,,-!;!!:! S = ;.b do»n tb» m r t e h , lh» p_r[-. ? -, aid vhjih « u at ajmira- r^tt AraaM «|tB rnod-r* »-«, g_i. j&gt;„.
LCSAJO aaa a ba/rr of atocba darlaa; tka
M/ 4'Uii^l u ita irraeatatioa 11 &lt; l i kiai wlrt MBW Can ? v a baat B«v«n, Mia* axraaaa, eiceyt Ertt rhlck t a t aoM oa
Wat:«r»ja nia 'J/ w l a s n f b / a oeck from
B w t e e d . Lt&gt;t^3 third, a lecjth » » a y .
tha forrat of Ardta, wbera lb* a'.9t of Jobaaoa, • - tbt reportt of t i o BrfecheoeB't ttrlkt at
BoiTUo. Loodoa took ceo*derail» Nortbera
tb« p U ; U UiJ.
A Bumb« of jr.at
W O R r U «.'ATIT.KB3 T1US LAST RAC«.
Padftc prtftrrad ta aarttoolir. Tbt ItaeroTcwi'Jl b t t r l x k i n j
br«acb«a »-jd
S l i t h race, r - ^ » }SO0; a a a a ccaU.'-^ai tian
• t o t ta Cht ft-ict of ttltrr. afcorfflaa to tkt
• taddiBg in aemi-drde, eoclot*d a Ipaca
aj fiita race. e : i fzrkicffi.
eaMta, iraa repaoaafbU tot tbt exrrt (DBAJ". J. V a l t a t l a e ' j cb h Wcrtb. B, try Lnkt
of (rv«o ac-i rc^rfviofl (Teat, aud i n
Braa toct abroad, and It »aa »»M that 5
Mr*. Laaaia Owttct. vtft at Banraet . . pau waa betaj oostldered ta Lomtoti rttk
Blackbaro-reytoDa Barrj, ST, (Doaael 1 aucii a ibeattr ai LO art caa txcal or dar»
W. B. Joae»"» b f B&lt;4J«ood. a, IM, (Ta/Brova e&lt; tftt ftrta of Saooa, Btlekitf h tha Vtoa of porrjoaj np t t t brtca of&lt;tbt
Trutura k&gt; uni'Jit*. La lbs tnidat of tb*
Jort* 1 S*««_ »j&gt;ac»^M»M*L f of B&gt;»4 * * « • * » « a a g»&gt; jNLbaJMBLitrwa-: BIBBW* iltaiai j t
• &lt; * = )

on- t b » - p r ? * ^ a m m f , - - t a d - a l t n c ' C f n :
Beids weTt t « i t they rHIJ made op In
w h t l thty laikrd l a cambtr*. TUt
follow:
BADGE BT A LENGTH,
rae*, p o n e ITuo, of which |1 M to
,
tau-aac* 110. d i r . i W betweta • « Bad third. (&gt;&lt; 4-yrer-olda aad apwarea
lat v o n a race of t h t valu* ol
to. 18S1 or 18OT, b*altn and maldea
no**, on* tall* and a a eighth.
MaUtai't b B Btdge, a, by Th« 111
TJB»t-B«rooe*a, 118 tDoctete)
f . Marph/'a b C Aba*, 4. »7 (A. Corlng'

« 3 5

Ve'ie Gtt Too l*flj of TTrtml
BOWS GOES THE PIICEJ
^j—

All our fj.oo, $2.50 afld f i i j
now

put on « t e

#1.7457
They cost jrou now much lew than they
cost us.
SAUL, 51 &amp; 53 N. Pearl St
• . » - . . — .-'•V-"

-—-!•• oJ^faaiat»-^at«»U~»{^taii«ea»4 "•
w W e " i b o u t tS e «tdey_ were fowjToT'P5H&gt;^th
, j . . _ u —.
—- :
&lt;Baa a) ^ - Alloo waoi- r-e. w. om*ri;-njirtwBKiV3utj r w u i ••a BurUa^too,. v i a
aTrit-prw
wltidj "•erTwl~t&amp;r~pur- |-r*»&gt;&lt;i*a»a hart—tare*- rear*--aaa--w$ea~ KM
•Ubiai b ^» 7 ^
XUJUS.-XJC. tKoat); M . J . t&gt;«iy". e MeriT T*P*ew uf jAmueaiumii f g r "tfag « x j
IWMJLPWJMBJB-jaai
f*alkteVa."-*2i-?Hr&gt;'rrtrK«7»W0»"TObl*"*"b tnUatK**.TWre"
,
,
1:5TI-1
• a T _ B O « « _ W a a i * — rapidly
n
c l * a g o o , a^J^J^il^lcbJ. .aiil_lL_ilr*ill*f-#_. n a r - a n r - l l i e * ot-inrigt
?_f,?_my1li"™-_nnr
j ^ .
«-ttr8 mad aatrBaeeay- &lt; l t 4 t - l * * r « * « W 3 ^ g r . - j g - J o n e i ^ f e g l T J a r
aad^daarae -a-Xaryt etwt* aa^m»ffji; r»
- g a g t B H l l U t f l f l Hi-rTJ5cfrBa&gt; w t l irltJK fb4 «|&lt;en AIT, WH&amp;BVl'alif
.The fnaaral a t r n c w o f th* 4 a » Aaaa 3 t
d r a w s - "-^—:
"'
or lilatioa*.
: — —
- -TJaa wUbdrawal of Barlinfjoo. vboae'finf
Th* weather la tb* Wttt waa clear tad
Time, 1:15 1-1
PCfcB A»D WHOLSfdlQI OJtTAtfff
The atuhesce, whlcJi waa Tery Urge, Uthrep, Wtfb ef I&gt;arid Hewei, wfie tMed
DC« la ortr a year vaa eagerlr looked
la San rraaetaro, c - l . Auguat t, wffi&gt;B« want &lt;«** moral a* tad fa-rcrib!* to tht
Bfttlng: O.
to 5 «ad
to I;
l ba* • qaartattt to ootnpeLe. At tht Worth. 3 to 1 V&gt;". lC .ev l .a :11Belirc»l. S4 to X waa *-\ue\l In tfeonaasls o f chairi ar- held at tht Rural rrr-.&gt;tery ehapat to-tsor- crop*. Bot* wbea» aod eera at Chicago wart ComxDeadt to wabHe aaararal 90 43a*.
aa
te
riDgtil In amphllhe*t*r aetnl-tircl* form
Tenia IkroJd ltautttw rftM*"
Bad«« waa tbt farorlu at 6 to 5, and erek; rarar&gt;a. 1 to 1 i t 1 S M 2; Ver(nw aftcrBaaa t t I " o'clock.
W
areak.
Ftgt. I t U aleaatnk to fjM
im
a n t * aaoaar wanl la oa Klmberly tatlle. 8 to 1 a n l S to IT Merry t&gt;oie a a l a:«t oo^jicandiDg a food Tie* of vfi*
euatoga: fhabert trria. aced 68, of No. 4}
B*at*ow»ri .btpmttau of toad trtlgM «fre. actlnc gently oa taa Udaaya,
• # • waa errt from S to 5 ta 6 to S, vbilt L*aren«ka. earb SI to 1 and 8 to 1; Dtft al- ptage.
Ail th" acton and aotretat* are artfata TTeat rorrtetk btreet. New York, tied afttt the tnaak llaea from CSilcago laa* wt&lt;J wert bowel* to a e t a t a tht aytteaa
waaa back two pcinta.
Tht U«ht- ter. • SO t o 1 aad 10 u 1.
ar.d tbc:r tranalaticMt and e*pre**Hjn nt a tery brtaf blaew. at fhe Wladtor hotel 47J«8 tooa K*Ia*t 47.876 toot la tne ,cor- it protaote* th* health aad aot
aa* waa tlaw weU-backtO. her
tho parts were of a high nrder of An- 5rtarday. HU r t i w s i wert tea* to New rewnoodaaf week of 1«-'L
ThJi Wit another tri«k betting erent, O.
_ ,
who oa* It and with anUUoaa H ta
babag eat frarn T to 1 to 4 to L
Land a apleudid lirasd York. Mr. b a i n . Joha Boyd aad Aadraw
ISO a. at.—Daring tb* a*cood oonr vnioa beat t a d only remedy.
. waa oaly • brief delay al tbt pott, W. O K * . "Wort ft l-!(4»cit«l and T a n run traao merit.
ear* cajTjdnr&gt; losda of moaey. l a t w t e d free- Inion orcfaewtra faruiabed i t a InaLrumen- t i l l * wrr* rafalar Sjratcra tirmajer rtahtort Facta*
beeam* moderttely attire tad
. tbty wera tent away on »rtn term*
tal mtiiic.
f:r c a n y yaart. Tb-y wert all rich aad rt- ttroas oa th* report of th« road'1 net earn|L50 FXA F A U L
wadeb laAjor Corl&amp;ctoa (em A s c i CQ&gt; ly apoa «beci by th;Jr frlea U arnong the
ITi.- Saturday arrirala nuabcred 2.500 tJred
boataaaa
=-:.
ooDg*nlal
eoa- l o t a f a r Jaaa, which mad* the phenomenal
#p*colatora. Venirl!« n t tacked by tbt
Bar tb* rtc*. With Rico i t attecdAnt the
Th* Alhaty Dry Oood* Co. will aal} tail
po-^le, aad lb* Buod*/ Iraia from ihe p.::Joaa, and apptf'.l'.I^e of each, other. thowltg of a. |Hb of »5S5.00O. Th* atock
wn
BA t 5 * waot paak iht ttaod aad roonl the Canadian «mtfo)re = t. Ten mlatjlet
week ore case* Cacetal Crty 1 1-4 par*
north bruugbi a large contingent. I h e T^er were laaepa.-ih'.*. La*t wtater Mr.
tara fctto tb* backitrHrb, wb*r« Blra o n a i i m e d la fil»» brenk«. l a d fraiMi_ when hotels are njt full, b i : kher hare a great PTTI dred. Kcw Mr. L-rla It dead, tad Aa- opened-an eighth per etat h'gher tad ad- w«ot fwllag bUaktta, wWtcBlae tsx patadt,
^ ^ 1M^
•a. At tk* lowar far tnra Kimbw- the Hag drcv&gt;r«&gt;J Laarenjki wai la fitat t n d msny guewU. Tn^rt are WO at th* Uni- 0 : . T Uttl* ht l*ft«!cDt. Mr. Irwla wat 08- Tinced to 88 3-4.
•JMt abawid la frook at Attn, but cat- Harry Jonei t e o t h l a oat tot the race. Oat Unl State*, l.UUU at the Urand Union. r 11 • I ' • 1 Jatnnal' Tl I'*I AfrKknaey of Mr* Tht Atehltoa't report of t flla of |T9,*fl8 that were mad* to *«Q fer ta par pair, bat
k B bartt of *p«ed Atna took command on t b t mala traok aad to the lower tars be 875 at Ibe^ C&lt;««Tet».. 40U i t th* Clarvn- York died at hi* ho:el here hut Satarday, la grot, earnings during th* nr*t w . e i of wert aot properly Hearted la BV* Baitajtaf.
Itadtag let* tb* ftrttek br a neck carried the field, wltb 'Worth aecood and ii^, mon&gt; at t i e Kanjington, and all •*•&gt;! 88 r**r*~ 4 e w*4 oamarrlad.
Hit Aarut ttartod np that stock, which, tn big Wt madt a d a t a and now offer Cat** t l
•mbtrt/, Badge third a length awiy. Belwood third. Btoacll^a' ths tarn lato t b t t i e smaller haute* tad BTMJ ax* full.
cj-xi-r and titter Were Mfb bhn at bat dtath. traaaactk**, alawly g a l s t d V s pef^cent to tht ridtcatoo* arte* of fl-fa) per attf.
. wan •ttalghtvoed out Dairett cat atretch O c a a e tent Wortb In.ho lh» ran t a t
The ittewlanco at the churchea ye*ter- Tt&gt; remaia* war* a^at to 5ew Tort tor
The other rtn»*M ***********
**1
wttk Ba.df* aad eomtoc twaj bt won l o a r e i i A a . flallig the part too ho*, fpU day* tettiJSixl to the *:ltirg rapacity of b^f.al la Trttaty era-tery.
flaeac* of Atchltoa aad Vnloa PidSt, Bnr.,
QrfjmOll
br a leagtb from Ana*, who t**.t bao%, battea. la a paa!«Mi)f drir* Worth all of them, l'ecple ftrm other plieet
ltBFtfla which had toll down from 1013-11
"*" M I * &gt; I W . - I
won by a l e n t l b from Pelrood, who beat lave to hear th* v&lt;.&gt;:ce* of their own patDaaa*»m*: Haary K I I T , T year* of tg*,
O
a half lengtb for tbt plte*. v
MT xai'B-8, r*ay»« to vu.
waUa Kock.1 i , M k * d aa *r»ry day: ' B o » caa yoa atfl
AalBKNS
IX TAB TRTNTON Vtrtatllt i t fkr for t b t f l i c * .
tort, and aa moat of the | u l p i u were oc- it&gt;i her* Bahtrwty. Mr. EAlty wa* a taa*- Iilind, wbJeh had racetred ttetdy wpport
m % M ^ , ^ for » a tbac w* aar* always
cu|&lt;ed by dittinfuiAed chtine* from th* ter ateoaaaU ta wool work aad toe taa at 10
eTEAKJB.
1
t i l t see. tmf
Becaaa* w* ar* aa aha
bli
armt ciaea, the poople from theia home year* kerB Cat Xfeowrilli hotel U tkd* Tll- at srvtiTtneed to " l - - f , u |
•d race—TfCDton atakra; haadleap fbr
Readme .which » * ~ A
»'f
H t T , oeaa , 8 t b . eaaawraettrla,
raMt; kao **cb| botwea not declared THE CANOEISTS^ MEETING. ctvigreratioot went lib hfar Ihem preach. IJV. {!• wa* A Be»rjt*loaa in poUttat, tad bee a forced down from .08 « ^tod 58T-8, r . 1 ' , ^
1-3
wat
The Iter. Dr. John flill of New York •pent the laat f*w year* of bit lift oa bit
|X3 additional', the a w n i v O i r i v traaiae** tad know wbtr* to gtt them.
the lattar flwore*.
i atak* to b* 11,150, of wblca ISA lAlX BSADT FOB T i l l R.UTE* TO TAK1 and the Rer. Dr. Herrk* Johnaoa- of f i m etar bar*. Be leare* a wlf* aad atx aupported t t to noot war* 84.000 tharea.
The tale*
children.
COB'1 fan to aw* ottr |L50 blaakrt*. Ta*
Cblcajro both pjvached here /eaterday.
PLAGB OO-OAT.
•B aaaaaad. |T5 to tkird; Crre fnrtooga.
A "month'* mind" mtM waa celebratWest Troy: hfra. Fhoeb* Hirt 4!*d *ariy -Wettern TJntoa beoaat* o*t of th* acttr* Albany Vrr Good* Oa»
y . ^ f c ThikBPflVj e Tbja*i^Ahran*. try "
Bpedal to The Jonraaled ia 8 1 Beter'a Catholic churcb l i t t th!t moratag at t't hofi* oa Tfalrte«ati featvr* of tht trtdlnx. tilling up to DOS'!
r«*» Wtad, 108 Otaaoa) ^ r
\Alll»boroug4i Point, Aag. lS.-'ETwr- Baturdty for the H*r. John McMrnomy, ttreot. Eb* wa*. aVrat T5 yaart old, tnd —fhalf per cent abor* Batnrday'i doting
Tht pobtie t r * bayltad,
CL rkannoM* b « One, L d (Tan
X
thlnc waa • * quiet here yetterdny at gnn- the lite pastor. Thirty prieeti attended. wat the mothtfU-tiw of Allen a. Aadrrwa,
Northern Pactfle prtferrtd *old ap a half along the Deltwtr* tnraatk*, a) call at
JhwenX
. . .
1
K. D. ilttiulre and r i T. Terry of Al- tb* wtlf-knows earpeater.
dax !a town,. Serricek wer* held In t i e bany were jpreKeat. Th* terovob wa* deper ceat to 55 5-8.
Cfcarle* Smith't Hottt at NorranJtrille,
•f. * \ • a l i t o r b &lt; aomWaabiagtoo'.'lil
Now Torki.Mgdr Antfila Batten, wife cf
S p. tn.—Th* strength of tht nark el darU . Oanaatati)
. » . . a me** aarUion. So f i r the weather h»» Ur*rt&lt;d by P. V. Wlatel Df fit. Oernent"*
r.ecrge T. Smit% formerly of Albany, dlH lrg the evly afternoon coatlaael during tat where theywf!16nd oa* of ta*aiaatt plteo
1. V. Papaaia ek t d l l r a n 1U (Bttf); uol been rerr arreeaM*; II "Kit ralocd eoilrge,
along the road; a genial hott aad good
The new rooma of the Yoa&amp;q Men'a h*rt yetterday. Uf. boar, tad wat attended by Insetted
Baat* Aaft* atabita bay fdly by Bmronrr rTery day. Bat the" ca nx i i U caa alwtyi
tcrommodation* for a a a t a d beatt) jtul
acUr'.ry.
of Xorfrik^Taoaa, 07 (Let**), and R. Brad keep dry aad comfortablei T t * boya are Christian Association were "cxupicd yearaolrcca htAJuarr.
Ooraage prrferred wat tht specialty, td- two mllet from Albany.
Ufa bay colt by Ptalijo*—Ida B , 60 (H. going abemt clad in brigtrt yellow oil akin*, terday for the firtt lim* for a. SandAT terrice. Tho Iter. Dr. F. A. Notle-cl ChiH e * T c r l . A a * l*.-rt- "r, itetdy. Bfelnia, Tinciar, from 11T 8-8 to 1*01-1
Tbt eotaJBMB) aiao ran.
bigb rubber boota and aou'weiten. Tb* cago pr'.aWc-J, and the Iter. Dr. Herrick M,Ht bl«K talat, tfiM bLla. t l lat foUowlag tnoa alra=ced to X38— th* higher* prle* at
BL.WCKBT R4LB
' w . H. LaMo^Bsan'* rti c Wahiot and T.
uoUil-'ni:
• . fltoYeaa'i e a e rrtact Daeetrer were with- tenta. La apite of tb* hard rain, ara retf J'lhnaon of Chicago deiirered an add re**,
which It ever aoM.
Cobtlaned for oa* week loafer. Pried* art
ow txau
t l ftctl II
c&gt;mforUWe.
Tb&gt;-y are built on imall Harry Burleigh, colored, of Erie, f a . . V\7 MiUI
aawwa, « t b KeotMtaty Lada- wa* added.''
Toledo Aaa Arbor and North bCchLgan telllaf tnd ear rarpltaf it ttf.H1 m«Klt|
4 SO*) 111
Time. l &lt; 8 l l
4 t t a t » adraaced X X-4 per cent to 26 3-4.
plitfonaa a foot.or mora abort" tb* a n l r u - t heft 1 waiUr at the Grand Union, uiy n u t ipat-iui
asng "I'm the
Jd of a Kliijr"
VTiter T»i,«ati'3W gr-*»tl
1 I l l s II
IVettiDg: One, rres and 1 to 3; FW»e Ah- KTourui. The fool Ji excellent. Oa the
Th* irthcera contlaned their adraace. »wi/. i i r a S3 to 83 per eeil by bnyttf
The aacrv-l orct-rt in CotijrreM Park Winter VThetl t»Jr toltu't • • &lt; . . . . t i : A 4 » Bock W i a l telllBg up to 80 T-S aDd Atchltoa now. Wt oaly aak req *» look « b* tar*
« • , t to 1 asd er*o; Bote WaablnfTcm, 5
t tct&lt; K
11 tod 3 to 1; Mirer*. Ida B c»H aad X»a- brow of tb* hill back ol tha camp a la it eieuing waa attended by a JP*'*t Wlottr Wheat pikltw)
I c t t l M to S8 5-8 i t the dote. Wester* Union aJao of your bnylag- Tbt Art)*ay Dry Oood* Oa.
OarUtcd't Tenth Minnesota !&lt;-Vi.|
Latky, each 12 w 1 and 6 to 1; Paola large tlgnal pole bat boon placed, and a c ucenrao of pe-ople.
kt:rn*»oU (Itrvgfatl)
I U*)l 11 becamt actlte and told repeatedly i t 60 T-8.
«
red flag Is run t p when xneaJi are ready- Rf-gimeT.t baLi L constantly growiag la
BBf, 15 tn 1 M l t to t
Mfer wt* strong, aeillng n? to 88 8 4
food Then erery man ukp* hi* tppetite and favor.D 0 Mrs- \Y. S. Henry of Saratoga,
B t t Floar-? eady t l t i e * # 1 1 .
T W troop of W T M fumlahrt
cents,—or 15-S eeata tbor* the low qaota- With Joy w* hall Ckmbrlaat oM,
rl
w1!™.^ for tlia ereni-f, was
\«'b*at-Stea'T. BA-aipu.til.koO; u : e t , n i D o t
Wbaanw for ttxautrdoa, eapcdaUr for the foe* c e r t &gt; t i e meat patiUon. a large » j r
tloa of laat week.
"
Who left t gift more ilea, thaa fold,
ataaa. aa 0a* aria coooeded to b* tht beat Cullding- ibat will s e t t QDO. Mr. Otia mc*t fperaiateu:!/ encored, and rctpoiwled hu. e . ,An»-.,«*t,»'ept„»«»e&gt;MHe;Ott,M.&lt;(-44He:
1
Tbt aitrket doted atrotg.
Bat Hlnckeii mad* t b t gift to«r* dear,
wiih 'Home, Sweet Home," tnd fcAnn!e D * t f ' , t ) f : V i J U y , M i i » » J H e .
of (we tat oa tb* fxro aireada- tnowa by
Tbt total aalet wtr* 127.000 thires.
a^e^it«dT;we«aar»,*t»?t*.
Mca&gt; *«kt» Abreoa, «b* itiMe oorapanloo ol Ktl up a tery g ' » i table. He charge* I^uri*." T o i l e t SiMkretta Jonef, th*
Following .rt th. doting oaotttioaa at thij Wiea 0&gt;«y prodacad ««i» 0M i n * laatr,
BarVey-Nox L i t
poerlcsa
B'ji'i
I'arJ, from
Mldlaon
Oa*. a*aa texwd choice anaiag larentori and only a dollar a day, and generally get*
Corn-riraxT. Btfitlptt, lll.tf* btt. 8ilet,M.. Btock Ezchaagt, foralshej by J. 8- Btche A
Siusrc Girder, nrier the mtnigrmetit tMba. N a l ^ p t , J * V e t t X c ! K 4 . » , M ' » « t r .
T U B A L B A N T DUX GOODS 0 0 .
BbJM WaaUoatea third cbolce. Of coarte. i t
of Major J. B. Btcd, will be the toloftt
Oats—rina. Beoapaa, lO^tt b*&gt; tattt t , t n Oo, No. :« stit* street, Btmael Sessberi
Ma* taltat ware oa Oaa wblla It wa* ewlde«1
Blanket *alt o o t U a a t d t h k wtwk. Nrret
la. 8i*te,14ie«*«;wMtara,Uv(t}it«.
-...•...attaigeri
Th* weather li pir»**nt to-day, and ia t i e park c"t^rt.
a. - - - - - - - • - - - y
(rata tb* revolt that tb* owner of Oat and
Beet-Dull. krtralaeat, ai^MTAi
X
rtrt. A «
B ' t A l t . It U t history of Ahbaay b a r * M Bkuy
little "yearo'.-i Marirerit« Hart of AJr
. U a frleodt wert on hit ataWe cc-33pu;!oa. the race* will b» calkd. Stoat of tha
fork-Ea»i NewM*tt,tlA:»#it.itV /
n;«n
l«
A tab 1 see
f«S »H / • a r t f l . 4 4
blanket* been aaid I t « * • eaeft a t b f a t
ffaja* Ahrtoa. lit t*ve&gt; aecood aaklDg ihty raring we a a were cat aajllnjt rettrrday, biny *•*% tiren * rrvttr pink Hrthdiy
Urd-We.H-rat4l.rH.
pretty tight to tee their cl- party at Wa»h&gt;it'^n hall laat Barnrdaw,
A B . I n r a r . . . r ? 1W* Mich Can
•taw aeo* away with, fto»» Waatdcftca ta and it
b . u t r - S f . l T . Baa*tts, i a u rkga Ha It,
tb* paat aa*. t a r * av&gt;a«y by bayd&gt;f *»*•
«0 tTtf.i K W l ' 1
t l t t t &gt; t . . . UK 1«
airy, It^rr, cieatttry.lltMl'.s.
A B BaWL On* aecend aad Fake Abreha noe* with their apotlea* whit* aailt aklm- aad rte ifceired n,aay aoutentra tod conBur.s.B r. n it U t H l « A O . . M 17
grarulatlor.a.
Ut.ttt*-iu,'.r.
Baatttta,taai &gt;kga, l*tw. I « rjdo prefil e t &lt; M
1
•BBB. Tb*** poaVtton* «-«r« «ro«haoged at taiXL/ aboat lJt&lt;&gt; iwallow*.
5.T.AK. ». HH Mlf
The tl?w fr.Hij the camp la m r tlnf. t Tho«e wh^ rame hr*e frew Albany laat
lc;f*nc/ »vtr.*H+*He.
- '
'
l a a w sk atobtar
l o t * wffl ba
rtn.B Atton 111 H I
WorthWett...llT 1H«&lt;
•ra lat* tk* tD*l* track. Ootof to tht
f n * - r i m e r . Batetpia, IJ*t pkgt, I
C o . Pari J - . M
fu&lt;
da p r t r d l U w Ml
j aaro Boa* Waoatoa^on wwa aUQ la tht ACTOM the like c b e cJlea la Burlurton, | Batunlay atd to a; end Buoday wrr* J.
t o o l (ttOort). Tbalr taatk. ht
with tbi (Jrrcn-Meantaiaa ia the back- H. BJ?ekwt.-l. H i « M. E. Turner. J.
t a a Southern f ) \ M
"
« T C B H B . . 1 I I 11«H
%7_ * aera: tram t»&gt;* Ma B oott. Oat
k- r
1-tttts - l t t i
ind.
PirfcTlr north OBo l«aJi ortr i H. Gordon. Mr. a: d Mr*. I t C BlaekalL w• T T^W^a 4 -lI T liri*a .il iI fUOrtabtrt, • Iki 1B Btl I «} gt Btfaaaf* |1atw- Ce». Paolo':. :t
:»H V.t. 0 » * . . . l U t 1*4
a
l JBaUl awajajajjaj^BBav A *
l a l a 1 traTaB
*
' ! * &gt;
17 Ikwod « • n r a koto tb* atteteh Oj« J
B
i » tar " I T f
J ' • • *Kent Ft-.:, f S «
t c t c H t a
of mi&lt;r. Ju»t wttt ncroii the jW. Maxwell. rSuTeTritn, i r t t e ^
""""
enmanand from Bet* Waetdowton, ' bar ruEett^e AiV.rjnd.trk foothCli.
Ialow-t-.dT*l4k-iMOta
•lo Pref.I. WM UK
do prtTd. . . .
It
\ greu: D. BhoeUn. B. W. Wootter. Mr.
r
aa* raat war* botxtaol bebiml ail
Cbe*.AOh!o U V J l " Jtorf-B W...11V? II
t.
few
'
t»**«-ri.E. xa.f. ita. --+-r'-^^-~
ft* a r t f l . O K 44
m a tht whip, tn tb* ftaal drtrt TaUe Ah. &lt;• The ttcrta cf rMdar d*M«red * rifbt I -and k r t C. A. Hovck. L. M. Stewtrt,
6* pref 4 . . .
».&gt;me-nh*t, but they
J. W. Burdck, V . H. Pitkin, at tha
l«
«olii_pr»f. «1V ss''t « . T. l . 8 t U 11
Bops—Fra itttt&gt;t»a.
aaaa waw kr m half l*n««b Irom hit at*Mt catoc« Taul Batler't b-.-*t are all
w&amp;t one of
«* » r * r d . t 7 S 44
•I*
frofl-ato, Aug! U ~ W h t - t t - y o . I hard, f l U e ; C U A I M M
aaaaaaaJon Oae, Aoae Waahlaftoo tbiH. Tbe aaaln. injircl. lt;t at he carrio* hit wcrk- ! Grand Vui:a: J. W. &gt;fc&lt;HrriV. D . H,
d* l»tortl Tl
uTo»e
»
i Bmith, 1^. \Mr.i»m«. Mrs."MI. Gtnlgtn, Ko. I aorti rn, UMA, Wkaktr, doU; « &amp; t rid,
do prtfJ . »^ -i
Oa* **w3d b»T» taaUy laUhrJ firtt.
C*l. C o a t . . . li
A1S H.T. f . « W. ll&lt;&lt;
ihop with him, h» tooa repaired It, tnd I H. La Dne, B. J. Hclt. Jt. Otnlftn, t t l i t ; K a . H ' j f . i J i a i i .
A* ttwfd. M
at
On—atesd/. a * , t ytlWw, tt^e • jro. 1 eora, C b k a / a o u . i : u M«f
will eater th* taiUng rttTt t^-d.»r.
the Flazlfr; J. 8. C. Out*. Sir*. / . E.
OLWK mrBxre A GOOD FIELD
C b t l t a O. Nik! K1H K i n b A n t r . US' MS
too.
The Mohicant hare rcry fine r.'urtrrt Crai*. Mr«. W l i r i (Vat/, at the United
Cct.OllTr... V\ IT
Kiih.tCulM
K
oa»-8»-t.r. Ha I whlk, MH«i X*. I aaUtd,
B a c * — Handicap; intra* t ' u o , cf directly on th* ah or* of tht lake soar ! Bustet: Mr. ar.d Mrs. M. A. Shepiro',
do p t l . . . *i\ MS K a t C o r U t * .ir.HlsTtJ
ate
•aaMB'&amp;lOO to a t c o s i ; e r t r a a ^ | V \ | 1 0 &gt;1- be4dquart*n.
&gt; .
* . . : H liTH
! MIM Lanra 5&lt;her&gt;rvl, Mrv 1'. &gt;'. Fort,
it » r t f 4 . m t 111
Caaal Fr jhti-yTattt, let oat*, l ^ l | oora, tD taUO t* . W. .l l ii l s 137V
e m o a a l for bortet aot declared, ta b e dl»MU
* i l U T r M t n s *»w
Thot* who ar» hert t t pre* en I tr« ' J. H. Orihtm, t t the- HareMon; # . B. iSciaeed,: ,r.
_
aecoad t a d t t L - 1 8&lt;TCD far- Commodore Cbarle* V, Winae General Brewlow, W. C. Bnrrell, 1. Hunter. J.
Dft-ABJOOH
11
do p - e f d . WJI, a'44
do p r t f d . II
U\ n.ry.t
». 111 l i t
Robert Sb»w O'.irer, IV. A. AVte-&gt;!»r, W. Minrlua, Mr. \*i Mr*. T. «Jil'lr. D . MeHTB BtOCZ MAjtSSr.
D i s u n « - t . . . . u s '"H Ob&lt;o* Miss
.
aa'a b m i f abet Olean, *, b «
O Titua, Bert Titua, G*iTf C. Haloc.t, Creedr, J. Thicker/.. W. J. Stoop*. V.
BoFala, A*t ItgCalB* Beoelpn 1H toadi D H - t T l D IK H i OrtroaHtr
n
' t '
-ffharfoo-Calabwrgha, K» (tenOn) . . . . 1 E. T. fcoplt. I&gt;ra \ e i l'i • . flrwt rjrgeoo A. Benton. W. H. O n e r / . H. Gallieo. throiirby r.i aal*. Ta* taarkM it about ataady - d o p i d . . . «
It
.
fr**o*a.L.. »'&lt; MH
rred G.. Math
RK M«
k*d*k*tr. ttoeke
ttoekart B d i t w * ' . . . I I H IMS Umaha
Ru««e|l J oh neon. &gt;Vill J. A. BecVer, O. U Ibomat. 1 B. Lock t&lt; gvodgrt'b-t '
A o a a u R x . l M IM
co vewfd. 111 i n

^«usr^mx?}iP¥T-*stisr^s

FOB OTXB Firrr YBABS,
Mas. W m a x c w t BowtarxM trawy haaHlaa)
ated lor ehDdraa tsethlBa. It t**ta*t ia« eJaaA
tofstat tbt gait*, tliaya all pala, curat wovl eono,
«e*aaKk5&amp;r^
a* w^W»«al*ttd kowtthtll abetdd hawltkoat
Mb. Aak lor tbt gratia* arwaat, aa*a*xact*r*d
by br. T. *. B&gt; BM«*rt iBoav
BOKM I

DOW-la Albany, BaaaMy, Ang, 14, H»S. a attl
o Bat. Mr. aad Mrs. ?. LVRrwT^
cbl-HOBTHBOF-Jmx a. 18*1, W. M. Oax,
}r, aad Mata Ln*H* Sartarop, both of this cJty.
DIl

BBOWw—SBterad lato r*&lt;t, Meoday a s s t a i f .
...
d lat . .
A s f a t l U. lttJ, Bhsabefa B. Owstoh, wttt t l
14, l t t t , BAsabetk 8.
Sanratl, W . Brow*«- .
W. B r o w *
jiSSfJ&amp;TX
r a a t a t ^ a a a a a l a . *at
tare* o'clock.
It
HBWES-Aarast 8, lttt. tt ftaa Frtacttoa,
Cat, Aaaa aLLathroa. wtS tf D*TM H t w a a ^
Faaartl ttntott win M held it toe faral Cambtptaeac

r

ward Steinet, O OdeU i t

THE OFT-TOLD TALE

l l j

m

Ita*ay at

l*Cd toTts'. M T*t&gt;t*! f

nitArTT WTN« Trni rRivjrom
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81
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aradrt of Mora.
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t . t f I J I i tew ta
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Viflkg* Clerk DtiUa w.1 itart for rTliftri th***, chnrt to
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A r i l l wtl mtdt 01 tkt Las dry boa** tt
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r
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wat t l f r o In tr» t»rt^« of t h t B a m h a m la tbt fart a*&lt;f tWvtl tht ana. Tbtt atbtr O l ' i .
a«»t pre*«ea jntnpet tpe* o*i*t aad BIT*
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f

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tie ahcr* &lt;-f the l«k». la frwet cf the
different ti!&lt;w ir» »»jlr-oolorej JLMM,
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bfabtl OHna, » to 1 aod » to 1; O^T «i:h »v.!r.g «-d paddllrg cano*l.
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t ctrrle-l t h t l e l d c«» ca t^e rr»!a
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\ t \ In.
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by t leagth frnn t a i t a A a n v
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Untitled Document

Thomas M. Tryniski
309 South 4th Street
Fulton New York 13069

www.fultonhistory.com

i t a i f 4«fWf it&gt;tti
f»U *ajtk*,H*tiV

ftoattoaaliowtra.

S M I T H - I a Kew Tork d r y , Aofnat 14. Itrt,
M a r / A i a a l l * J * 4 * t B , wll* of e*xxaw F. lauth,
eT • 1 N I L — T a r i s t 14, Xfln, Goorg* fMtraaL
aged M years aod 4 axmiht.

L

tasjt

it

ObrtUary Notes,

T i : i J ~ u ^ r r TI r
• U p r i - w e i J J M m , »• l M ' l [ « t i &gt;

*at*l&gt;

^r»ti« af«

Powder

Of reductions to clear out stock
now comes from our Horse Goods
Dep»rtfy»etit.
It's aa odd lot of summer goods
we offer.
We have 3$ all-wool checked Lap
Robes, the $3.^0 quality, now selliftgtrt *!.08«ach.
There's a cheerfully cheap choice
t o b e h a d from 23 fine cloth Lap
Robes in light and dark color*, If
you want a big bargain don't wait
till these are ail gone.
About three dozen of the Hi.50
Class checked Horse Sheets, dark
Colors, wool finish, will be run off
at 08c each.
Pi.it) w r . K t . - c k Hottt Sheet!
are now only ^J'c f/acTi.
We have everything you want in
Horse Clothing.
Store ope* Friday twening.

JOHN G. MYERa
Ali o f

.-.•••••.,

0t»f Hifh.atl6«ci
h»«kwMr rwdwoed

a*tjw**araBaa*tja*ai*a*t*»

JtRW ADYBatTltlBtliBraTI
OUBlNllvajB
• fW

gB#ff|t*y B / M s t t a r t t a i

' ' * •

To 40 eta. steh.
Look In our blf
Window and »*t)
the dltfrtiy,

Aht^ttaty TJM Baaf&gt;

It la made of pure cream
of tartar and soda, no ammonia, no alum.
A like
3uantity goes farther and
oes better work.
It ia
therefore cheaper.
Cleveland's is the *&gt;aking
baklnj
er used iri the U. S.
Army and by teacher* of
cookery.
It never varies,
and always gives perfect
satisfaction. Try a can,
ry a

^

RILLIP &amp; HINMAN,
•a Mtyflts t^ttti

tt.

r THOMAS.
TV* WASBBCB* MAKDOL1X8 tad
L ^ i 1 ^ ' ^ " a t o - ? VaX^toZidt
Mtji.

i

WPft

tmm

••talT

W a W , ^ JB&gt;qt|&lt;»1 I

I; iVw5^1&amp;SySkt5^

tad att fttad t a t : tHrtasa,rosta, ton,
watte*f latkraatiat eat**, ttA, twx, baad. Week a o w BdViirwTtrfc

ta# M t a y * * M m Vfsa^VTtBBaTBt aaMMlaTatf

1 tatw**/ «rTa*aa, AaftsM tfck, t t t i , i F |
efeat, M taeat awaAaaarjArL
ST.

Bcattrf A-' WAttXet, I

D. R STEWART,
BaOVMB PAfTCTataTt,
orrtOB am» BMOY, IBS MAstaost AVS
Mgai Fatathaa, S u s i t i g t f W t a d t t a d M t M M a ,
OOtUag, O t t t a a f , l a t a &gt;

15 rillTMftEET.

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